in the public streets of this city; and the force
and majesty of the law were powerless to protect
them. Seven brief months have passed and a
thousand of these despised and persecuted men
marched through the city in the garb of the
United States soldiers, in vindication of their own
manhood and with the approval of a countless
multitude—in effect saving from inevitable and
distasteful conscription the same number of those
who hunted their persons and destroyed their
homes during those days of humiliation and disgrace. This is noble vengeance—a vengeance taught by Him who commanded, ‘Love them that hate you; do good to them that persecute you.’ ”
The enlistment of Negroes caused difficulty and friction among the white troops. In South Carolina General Gilmore had to forbid the white troops using Negro troops for menial service in cleaning up the camps. Black soldiers in uniform often had their uniforms stripped off by white soldiers.
“I attempted to pass Jackson Square in New Orleans one day in my uniform when I was met by two white soldiers of the 24th Conn. They halted me and then ordered me to undress. I refused, when they seized me and began to tear my coat off. I resisted, but to no good purpose; a half dozen others came up and began to assist.