Abraham Barker collection on the Free Military School for Applicants for the Command of Colored Regiments
Collection 1968
(circa 1863-1895, undated; bulk 1863-1864)(0.3 Linear feet ; 1 box, 1 volume, 2 flat files)
Table of Contents
Summary Information
- Repository
- The Historical Society of Pennsylvania
- Creator
- Barker, Abraham.
- Title
- Abraham Barker collection on the Free Military School for Applicants for the Command of Colored Regiments
- ID
- 1968
- Date
- (circa 1863-1895, undated; bulk 1863-1864)
- Extent
- 0.3 Linear feet ; 1 box, 1 volume, 2 flat files
- Author
- Finding aid prepared by Cary Majewicz
- Sponsor
- Processing made possible by a generous donation from the Abington Junior High School History Club.
- Language
- English
- Mixed materials [Box]
- 1
- Mixed materials [Volume]
- 1
- Mixed materials [Oversize]
- 1-2
- Abstract
- The Free Military School for Applicants for the Command of Colored Regiments opened in Philadelphia on December 26, 1863 under preceptor John H. Taggart, once a colonel of the 12th Pennsylvania Reserve. Applicants to the school underwent rigorous training and, once theypassed, were sent into the field with a regiment of African American soldiers. The school was formed and supported by the Philadelphia Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Regiments, which also appealed to the local community of free African Americans to join the ranks of the military by issuing announcements calling for them to fight for America, for those still enslaved, and to prove their equality as citizens. The school remained open until late 1864. This collection consists of a register of admission to the school and a disbound register and scrapbook that has been housed in one box and two flat files. Papers in the scrapbook include correspondence, printed items such as booklets and broadsides, clippings, and a few prints. Correspondents include chairman of the Free Military School Thomas Webster, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, Governor Andrew G. Curtin, and Maryland Congressman Henry Winter Davis.
Preferred Citation note
Cite as: [Indicate cited item or series here], Abraham Barker collection on the Free Military School for the Command of Colored Regiments (Collection 1968), The Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
Background note
In January 1863 Lincoln enacted the Emancipation Proclamation and deemed it necessary to raise regiments of African American troops to serve in the war. In response, the Philadelphia Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Regiments opened the Free Military School for Applicants for the Command of Colored Troops at 1210 Chestnut Street in December 1863. Under the guidance of Preceptor Colonel John L. Taggart, students attended a variety of classes from math and history to command tactics and army regulations. Some students even attained hands-on experience at the nearby Camp William Penn in Montgomery County, the area's first training grounds for African American soldiers that had been founded earlier in 1863. At the end of their education, students were sent before a Board of Examiners, and those who passed were commissioned a rank (from captain to colonel) and sent into the field with an African American regiment.
Thomas Webster, a businessman from Philadelphia, was one of the Free Military School's primary founders. He was one of the first people in Philadelphia to broach the notion of raising local African American regiments. Webster served as chairman of the Free Military School for its duration and, additionally, sought proper compensation for African American soldiers (who were then paid at about the half the rate as white soldiers and received no bounty). Webster became a well-known figure in national military circles and he kept in touch with those at the highest commands, including Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton and President Abraham Lincoln. The school itself remained a fixture on Chestnut Street until it closed in late 1864. During its year of service, the school helped raise eleven free African American regiments, including the 3rd Regiment under Colonel C. B. Tilghman, the 25th Regiment under Colonel G. A. Scroggs, and the 45th regiment under Lieutenant Colonel E. Thorn.
Among the Free Military School's supporters were numerous local figures such as Henry Carey Lea, Thomas P. Stotesbury, William H. Ashhurst, John A. McCallister, John S. Newbold, and Abraham Barker. Barker, an ardent abolitionist and member of the Union League of Philadelphia and the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, served as chairman of the finance committee for the Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Regiments. This committee helped raise money for both the Free Military School and Camp William Penn.
Scope and Contents note
The Abraham Barker collection relating to the Free Military School for Applicants for the Command of Colored Troops generally spans the period from 1863 to 1864, though a few items fall outside this range, and is housed in one box, two flat files, and one volume. The collection contains correspondence; pamphlets; printed circulars, form letters, and songs; registers; prints depicting and relating to African American soldiers; and a few clippings.
Barker compiled this collection mostly from the papers of Thomas Webster, chairman of the Free Military School. It is clear that almost all the correspondence is either to or from Webster, however it is not clear if he also collected all of the pamphlets and prints in the collection; it is possible some may have been added later by Barker. The materials in the box and flat files were also originally housed in a volume that has been disbound, so each folder retains old page numbers and remains in the order found (roughly chronological as Barker had arranged the papers). Items that fall outside the 1863-1864 date range include letters to Webster from 1865 (Box 1, Folder 31), letters from 1895 from members of the Webster family to Barker (Box 1, Folder 1), as well as a letter from Barker to the Historical Society of Pennsylvania from the same time period (Box 1, Folder 32); and a letter from 1882 from one G. P. Lathrop (Box 1, Folder 33).
Webster's correspondence and papers throughout Box 1 (from the disbound scrapbook) mostly document his efforts to form and maintain the Free Military School. But there are also several letters pertaining to the progression and approval of, and reactions to Maryland's 1864 constitution. Box 1, Folder 6, for example, contains a list of local subscribers who gave money to be sent to Maryland in support of Emancipation. The few reactions to the passage of the constitution are mostly positive. "My Maryland is free - freed by the soldiers who defend her," wrote Congressman Henry W. Davis in a 22 October 1864 telegram to Webster (Box 1, Folder 26). (The vote of Maryland soldiers, as Davis indicated, secured the passage of the constitution.) Webster, for his part, celebrated the constitution's passing with a large display, or "transparency," that was placed outside the Free Military School on 1 November 1864. Images of the display, as well as other printed items related to Maryland, are in Flat File 2.
Additional items that make up the disbound scrapbook in the collection include a number of pamphlets on the Free Military School (some are duplicates) and on African Americans in the military, such as Washington and Jackson on Negro Soldiers [1863] (Box 1, Folder 10).
There are also two registers in the collection. Volume 1 is titled “Record of Admissions to the Free Military School.” It was kept by the Philadelphia Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Regiments; dates from December 1863 to August 1864; and contains the names, ages, birthplaces, and professions of students who applied to the school. This register also shows the ranks attained by each student, places they had fought, where they were sent, the results of their examinations, and other remarks. This volume is about one-quarter full and contains students’ numbers 1 to 1031.
The second register in Flat File 2, entitled “Applications to enter the Free Military School from Candidates for Command of Colored Troops,” is similar to Volume 1 in that it also contains applicants’ names, birthplaces, ranks, and places stationed. It dates from 20 April to 29 August 1864 and contains students’ numbers 1126 to 2232.
Administrative Information
Publication Information
The Historical Society of Pennsylvania ; 2011
1300 Locust StreetPhiladelphia, PA, 19107
215-732-6200
Conditions Governing Access note
The collection is open for research.
Provenance
Gifts of Abraham Barker, 1895 and 1896.
Processing Information note
This collection was once cataloged under number Am .6958. The box of papers and flat files were also formerly catalogued under collection number AmS .51 and the volume was catalogued under collection number AmS .511 and collection number 847.
Controlled Access Headings
Corporate Name(s)
- Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Regiments (Philadelphia, Pa.).
Geographic Name(s)
- Maryland. Constitution (1864).
- United States--Army--Recruiting, enlistment, etc.--Civil War, 1861-1865.
- United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Participation, African American, [Indian, etc.]
- United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865.
Personal Name(s)
- Butler, Benjamin F. (Benjamin Franklin), 1795-1858.
- Curtin, Andrew Gregg, 1815-1894.
- Davis, Henry Winter, 1817-1865.
- Stanton, Edwin McMasters, 1814-1869.
- Webster, Thomas, 1818-1895.
Collection Inventory
Box | Folder | |||
Letters to Abraham Barker from Mrs. T. Webster and William W. Webster; obituary of Colonel Thomas Webster (1895) |
1 | 1 | ||
|
||||
Abraham Barker to Louis Wagner; Louis Wagner to Abraham Barker (23-24 July 1895) |
1 | 2 | ||
|
||||
Telegrams to Thomas Webster; Report of the Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Troops (June 1863, 1864) |
1 | 3 | ||
|
||||
Printed items; telegram to Thomas Webster; letter from Thomas Webster to Governor Curtin (1863) |
1 | 4 | ||
|
||||
By-laws and enlistments; "Amounts received by Chairman of the Finance Committee" (1863) |
1 | 5 | ||
|
||||
Printed items; "Subscribers to fund of $3000 to be sent to Maryland in order to secure Emancipation" (1863, 5 November 1863, undated) |
1 | 6 | ||
|
||||
Printed items - songs (circa 1863) |
1 | 7 | ||
|
||||
Form letter [blank] (circa 1863) |
1 | 8 | ||
|
||||
Form letters [blank]; Free Military School for the Command of Colored Troops (1863) |
1 | 9 | ||
|
||||
Free Military School for the Command of Colored Troops; Washington and Jackson on Negro Soldiers (1863, 1864) |
1 | 10 | ||
|
||||
Our Mercies of Re-Occupation by Phillip Brooks (1863) |
1 | 11 | ||
|
||||
Frederick Douglass to Major General George L. Stearns [copy] (12 August 1863) |
1 | 12 | ||
|
||||
N. H. Edgerton to Thomas Webster (27 June 1864) |
1 | 13 | ||
|
||||
Letters to Thomas Webster (February 1864) |
1 | 14 | ||
|
||||
J. W. Forney to Major General Levi Wallace; Thomas Webster to Edwin M. Stanton (17 March 1864; 22 February 1865) |
1 | 15 | ||
|
||||
Free Military School for the Command of Colored Troops wth roll of honor; J. W. Forney to Thomas Webster (1864, 29 March 1864) |
1 | 16 | ||
|
||||
Letters to Benjamin F. Butler, receipt, printed items (1863-1864) |
1 | 17 | ||
|
||||
Regarding a "special committee appointed to visit Washington" on matters "affecting the interests of Colored troops" (circa 1864) |
1 | 18 | ||
|
||||
Thomas Webster to Edwin M. Stanton (22 April 1864) |
1 | 19 | ||
|
||||
Thomas Webster to the Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Troops (1863) |
1 | 20 | ||
|
||||
Thomas Webster to Edwin M. Stanton; letters to Edwin M. Stanton on Thomas Webster's behalf (27 April 1864, May 1864) |
1 | 21 | ||
|
||||
Letters to Benjamin F. Butler (April-May 1864) |
1 | 22 | ||
|
||||
Letter to Thomas Webster; telegram from Abraham Lincoln (27 May 1864; 13 June 1864) |
1 | 23 | ||
|
||||
Letter to Thomas Webster; list of deposits to Farmers and Mechanics Bank (undated) |
1 | 24 | ||
|
||||
Circular; letters to Thomas Webster (4 September 1864, 4 October 1864, undated) |
1 | 25 | ||
|
||||
Telegrams to Thomas Webster (October 1864) |
1 | 26 | ||
|
||||
Letters to Major Bowman and Edwin M. Stanton from W. T. Sherman (October 1864) |
1 | 27 | ||
|
||||
Thomas Webster to Abraham Lincoln (27 October 1864) |
1 | 28 | ||
|
||||
Letters and telegram to Thomas Webster (October-December 1864) |
1 | 29 | ||
|
||||
Letters to Thomas Webster (June, October 1864) |
1 | 30 | ||
|
||||
Thomas Webster to Colonel C. W. Foster; letters to Thomas Webster (January, July 1865) |
1 | 31 | ||
|
||||
Letter from Abraham Barker to the Historical Society of Pennsylvania [photocopy] (7 October 1895) |
1 | 32 | ||
|
||||
Letter to Thomas Webster; "Account of the Supervisory Committee for Recruiting Colored Troops"; G. P. Lathrop letter (5 May 1865; circa 1864; 23 March 1882) |
1 | 33 | ||
|
||||
List of regiments placed, 1863-1864 [newspaper clipping] (undated) |
1 | 34 | ||
|
||||
Oversize | ||||
Applications to enter the Free Military School from Candidates for Command of Colored Troops (1864) |
1 | |||
|
||||
Oversize | Oversize | |||
Prints and images (circa 1863-1864, undated) |
2 | 2 | ||
|
||||
Volume | ||||
Record of Admissions to the Free Military School (1863-1864) |
1 | |||
|
||||