Civil War  |  Historic Site

African Americans Defend Washington

North Carolina

Corner of West Main and Gladden Streets
Washington, NC 27889
United States

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The Steamer 鈥淓scort鈥 Running the Rebel Batteries Near Washington, North Carolina. Illustration from an 1863 edition of Harper鈥檚 Weekly.
The Steamer 鈥淓scort鈥 Running the Rebel Batteries Near Washington, North Carolina. Illustration from an 1863 edition of Harper鈥檚 Weekly.

The African Americans who joined Union forces in defending Washington, North Carolina against a Confederate siege in March and April 1863 foreshadowed the significant role Black soldiers would play in the Civil War.

Union troops under General Burnside first entered Washington in March 1862 and soon drew escaping slaves to this strategic town where the Tar River becomes the tidal Pamlico River. Because of its access to the Pamlico Sound and the ocean beyond, the Confederates tried to retake the town, attacking the Federal garrison and laying siege using artillery and river obstructions to prevent resupply.

Sketch showing the Siege of Washington, NC March 29-April 16, 1863
Sketch showing the Siege of Washington, NC March 29-April 16, 1863

A Union officer had read the Emancipation Proclamation from the steps of Washington鈥檚 Presbyterian church on January 3, 1863. Fundamental to its 鈥渕ilitary necessity鈥 was the provision to receive freedmen 鈥渋nto the armed service of the United States.鈥 Some Black men served as armed Union pickets in Elizabeth City as early as October 1862, and others such as William Henry Singleton served as scouts and began drilling without weapons. But the order to recruit African Americans into the army did not come until May 22, 1863.

Before then, Union General Foster, who slipped into Washington with reinforcements on March 30, recalled for U.S. Secretary of War Edwin Stanton that 鈥渢he negroes applied to me for arms, and to strengthen my lines I armed about 120, all that I had arms for.鈥

At least two African American boatmen died while ferrying Union soldiers against the Confederates below Washington at Rodman鈥檚 Point on the night of March 30-31. William Wells Brown, a Black abolitionist and writer, later recounted the story of one of them, 鈥淏ig Bob,鈥 complete with a heroic poem. By mid-April, reinforcements and supplies carried on Union steamer 鈥淓scort鈥 broke the siege.

African Americans Defend Washington: What's Nearby

Washington, NC
Sycamore Hill Gateway Plaza/Sycamore Hill Missionary Baptist Church
Greenville, NC
Abraham Wooten Monument & Mount Zion Primitive Baptist Church
Princeville, NC
Rev War  |  Marker
Lafayette Tour Marker, Enfield, North Carolina (NC-9)
Enfield, NC
Civil War  |  Fort
Fort Macon State Park
Atlantic Beach, NC
Rev War  |  Marker
Lafayette Tour Marker, Halifax, North Carolina (NC-174)
Halifax, NC
Rev War  |  Marker
Lafayette Tour Marker, Jackson, North Carolina (NC-7)
Jackson, NC
Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site
Foar Oaks, NC
Rev War  |  Marker
Lafayette Tour Marker at Suffolk, Virginia (VA-21)
Rescue, VA
Rev War  |  Marker
Lafayette Tour Marker, Raleigh, North Carolina (NC-19)
Raleigh, NC
Rev War  |  Museum
Great Bridge Battlefield & Waterways Museum
Chesapeake, VA
Rev War  |  Marker
Lafayette Tour Marker at Portsmouth, Virginia (VA-23)
Portsmouth, VA
Hampton Roads Naval Museum
Norfolk, VA