Friday, October 28, 2022

What did the ex-slaves and slaves eat in 1865

What did the slaves eat?



 

Slaves in West Africa before contact with Europeans lived mainly on a diet that was low in meat protein except for those who lived near the water where fish were plentiful. Their diet consisted mainly of maize,(corn) rice, peanuts, dried beans, and yams. After contact with Europeans and arriving in the U.S. the slave diet became a little richer based partly on the fact that a well-fed slave meant good productivity in the fields. So around the year 1865, near the end of slavery in this country, most slaves could depend on food rations that included some kind of meat or meat scraps, corn meal, lard, molasses, flour, greens, and peas. Those food items could sometimes be supplemented with fruit and nuts where available. 

As mentioned in the title (ex-slaves and slaves) in 1865 not all of the slaves in the United States were freed on June 19th, 1865 so for those that remained enslaved the above rations list was still in place. For the newly freed slaves, freedom from slavery meant the cutting off of their usual rations with the majority of fresh meat in their area being consumed by union troops taking over the southern stronghold in Galveston Texas, and throughout the south. So, I can be really sure just what the ex-slave feeding habits were immediately after slavery ended in the south. The Freedmen's Bureau would later be set up to address this issue. A year later though, around the time of the first official celebration of Juneteenth in June 1866, things were settled enough that at the first official celebration of the end of slavery in this country at the 1966 Juneteenth Celebration there were many of the food items we have today are on the menu. 

Peppered rabbit, okra soup, chicken, and Hominy (another form of corn usually made into grits) were a part of the first official celebration of Juneteenth. As the celebration spread outside of texas BBQed and grilled meats, greens, potato salad, cornbread, and a lot more familiar southern soul food dishes could be found at the Juneteenth Celebration. Something that has always been associated with the end of slavery celebration is the drinking of something red. Believed to be a West African tradition that survived in African people transported across the Atlantic Ocean to the U.S., the color red was associated with prosperity in West Africa. In the U.S. the color red also symbolized the blood spilled by the African people to be free. Long before the underground railroad slaves had been self-emancipating. Sometimes peacefully sometimes not. 

There was bloodshed in slave revolts and slave uprisings to go along with the bloodshed from the thousands of black lives who fought for this nation in the war for independence, in 1776, which did not make the slaves free. The Civil War, in 1865, did result in American Africans being set free. That is what makes the color red important to the Juneteenth Celebration. While today's descendants of the slaves, like me, may enjoy many of the same foods our enslaved ancestors did the food is still just a small part of the Juneteenth Celebration.

The main celebration of Juneteenth is all about freedom. A freedom our ancestors could only dream about. Juneteenth is also a celebration of family and a family celebration. The ancestors, slave families, could not depend on family gatherings and get-togethers because back in 1865 many slave families were separated by slavery, and sold apart from each other. Freedom from slavery meant that families could no longer be separated from each other by slavery, and that, while families might not live in the same house they could still come together for events like Juneteenth, the independence day that outshined the July 4th Celebration by making All Americans, including American Africans, free.

Add some good-tasting soul food with something red to drink, some African drum music, sports events, and a parade and you have a family holiday celebration that outshines all the others for American African people.

Saturday, October 8, 2022

The Emancipation Proclamation an Imperfect Document

Abraham Lincoln Emancipation Proclamation

The Emancipation Proclamation that freed the slaves in the southern United States was actually one of a few different Proclamations proposed over the years by the north and south. As to whether Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation was truly an imperfect document depended on whether you were a slave living in the north or south. When the Civil War ended in 1865 if you were a slave living in the south the Emancipation Proclamation distilled- down to General Order No. 3 was the perfect document for you, because it meant you were no longer a slave and that you were free. 

At that same time if you were a slave living in a friendly northern state the Emancipation Proclamation meant nothing to you, and you were not free. Fredrick Douglass and his supporters were aware of the imperfection within Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation so it probably didn't take them long to realize that the slaves were being used as ponds by the politicians, again. 

If Lincoln thought that by threatening the south with the loss of all their slaves if they didn't rejoin the union, it appears that things were a little too far gone by the time states began leaving the union of states. Abraham Lincoln's main job at the beginning of the Civil War was to preserve the union. He could not tell northern union soldiers that they were fighting to free the slave. So his Emancipation Proclamation was worded so that northern slave owners could keep their slaves, but the southern slave owners had to give up theirs.

Frederick Douglass wanted all of the slaves freed, not just some of them. Lincoln wanted what was best for the nation, a nation that was slowly pulling itself apart. Many of his best military officers from the Military Academy were leaving to fight with the southern states. At first, Lincoln rejected Fredrick Douglass' suggestion to let black men fight for the union and their freedom. There were many in congress who were uneasy about arming that many black people.



Abraham Lincoln would not live to see it, but all of the imperfections in the Emancipation Proclamation would be mended with the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. Black men and women would fight in the Civil War and southern lawmakers would be welcomed back into Washington D.C., and continue to fight for the south. The taking down of confederate monuments has resulted in a backlash against teaching black history in schools so while our unity in this nation may not be perfect, in much the same way, the Emancipation Proclamation wasn't perfect, it's still a lot better than it was in 1865.