
Often lost in all of the Memorial Day barbecuing, parading and flag-waving is not just the day's true meaning - remembering fallen American soldiers- but the day's true origins.
The first ever Memorial Day was celebrated on May 1, 1865 in Charleston, South Carolina by former African-American slaves. They called their celebration Decoration Day, and it was in honor of some 250 or so Union Soldiers who died in an encampment on the site of an old horseracing track.
This bit of history has largely been lost, tucked away in the dusty recesses of Southern archives, forgotten, perhaps with intention, by those in the late 18th Century who sought to control the historical narrative and the meaning of the Civil War.
While oral histories passed down through black families in Charleston of a glorious day in 1865 when more than 10,000 blacks marched and sang and prayed over the graves of the Union soldiers buried there, the story had remained the stuff of hushed legend until David Blight, a historian at Yale University, stumbled upon it in the late 1990s while doing research for a book he was writing.
He was parsing through a "hopelessly disorganized" trove of material at the Houghton Library at Harvard University when he made a fascinating discovery inside a box of papers. It was a folder labeled "First Decoration Day," and when he cracked it open a piece of cardboard-like paper slid out.
On it was a handwritten narrative, probably written by a Civil War veteran, describing in detail what happened that day at the racetrack.
"When I read it I could hardly believe my eyes," said Blight, the author of several books, including 'Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory.'
The more research he did the more detail he uncovered and a clear picture emerged of what is likely (though several other states have laid claim) the very first celebration of scale of the war's dead.
The end of the Civil War had just come, leaving behind a trail of death and destruction from North to South. About 620,000 soldiers from both sides of the Mason Dixon were killed. And of the 180,000 or so black soldiers that fought for the Union military, roughly 20 percent of them were killed. Southern cities like Charleston lay in rubble.

President Abraham Lincoln had been assassinated in April of 1865. Gen. Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederate troops, had surrendered in the first week of May. The country, particularly the South, was in ruins, soaked in the blood let by war. The slaves had been freed. The North and South were just beginning a long and arduous road to healing, if such a notion could have been imagined at the time.
This was the backdrop of what happened that day in May some 146 years ago. It was a Monday morning on the grounds of an old racecourse in Charleston, which at one time was a gem of the city's gentry, its socialites and its wealthy, according to Blight and various histories.
But in the waning last year of the war the course's grounds had been turned into a prison camp and a burial ground for hundreds of Union soldiers who died there. For weeks after the war officially ended, former slaves, about 25 in all, did the dirty work of burying those dead soldiers.
Thousands upon thousands of former slaves, black school children and soldiers came together to honor those that died there. They sang 'John Brown's Body,' according to accounts. The black grave-diggers, according to Blight, built a fence around the cemetery and constructed an archway, which read "Martyrs of the Racetrack," or something close to it.
But how could such a huge event involving 10,000 people, 10,000 black people in the Deep South, be forgotten?
"It is, on the surface, hard to believe an event including ten thousand people could get lost," Blight said. "It got lost because the people in control of public memory by the mid to late 1870s were not the people who wanted to remember this."
In 1876, 11 years after the Civil War ended, with the white Southern elite tearing away at Reconstruction, a white-supremacist Democrat, Wade Hampton, became governor. They called him the "redeemer Governor," Blight said. "Redeeming white supremacy and control."
The era of the "lost cause" began then, and the powers started to define their version of the war, and by the 1880s and 1890s, there would be no recollection of the event in the official public memory in Charleston.
Since Blight's discovery about a dozen or so years ago, Charleston, which like so many other American cities is fraught with lingering racial divisions, has embraced the history. Last year some 200 black re-enactors, the mayor and other city officials, as well as various historians including Blight, marched across the site of the racetrack, ironically named after Wade Hampton, and placed a memorial plaque at the site.
"To the extent that it matter who was first," Blight said, "this particular event has a right to claim that distinction."


Comments: (19)
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By: wallstreetbulls on 5/30/2011 11:15AM
I am still waiting for the Black Spin article that claims Africans were the first to intentionally start and use fire as a tool. I know its coming.
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By: Coreen Fields on 5/30/2011 3:26PM
* know you will reject this: MANKIND ORIGINATED IN EAST AFRICA!! If you can understand the writings of Geneticists, you will understand and accept the fact that EVERYONE REGARDLESS OF THEIR RACE, CARRIES AFRICAN GENES!!.. I refer you to the book "Jouney of Man" written by Dr. Spencer Wells, an English Geneticist. If you decide to reject Dr. Wells premise, read the works of any academically prepared Geneticist. However, I personally reject the rants of preachers who believe in Creationism and have no academic preparation . I also reject the rantings of white supremecy groups like the KKK who believe in the superiority of one race.
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By: Big Daddy on 5/30/2011 8:28PM
Probably, considering the earliest human remains were discovered in Africa,not Europe. Most theologians believe the Garden Of Eden is actually in Northern Africa and Jesus probably looked more like me than like Tab Hunter (but that's just my opinion).
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By: Larry on 5/30/2011 1:07PM
The truth is and always has been hard for some people to take. WWI, WWII, Korean War, Vietnam, Gulf War, Iraq War, Afghanistan War all have seen Black sacrifice. Most of the Black history of that participation and acts of heroism were written out of history prior to the war in Vietnam when cameras were there to prevent this kind of diode history. Thanks BV!
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By: Mr.drsmith on 5/31/2011 11:34PM
Thank you for this wonderful piece of our history. We should never forget the atrocities we've suffered the burdens we bare and the grace in which we share. The question is: Have we forgiven the offense or have we accepted these things to be our reality?
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By: Vindiciamus on 5/30/2011 5:47PM
I think BV is full of BS.
V.
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By: Toni Banks on 5/30/2011 6:05PM
Thank you Trymain for all of your investigative research and reporting! This article means a lot to me since my Mom's family originated in Charleston SC although they came North in the 30s and I've never been there. The picture of those women is outstanding and I'd love to know it's origin. At age 72, I try in every way to pass our legacy on to my great-grandchildren now that I have more time in retirement.
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By: Big Daddy on 5/30/2011 8:31PM
Now that's an intelligent comment. You make the Donald look brillant. Thank you
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By: divaras on 5/30/2011 9:05PM
Excellent article! My only critique is that the persons allegedly obstructing the publication of this information immediately after the Civil War would have lived in the late 19th century, not the late 18th.
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By: abcd on 5/30/2011 9:41PM
....Thank you BV for this.My great,great grandfather was with the 5th Vermont and it's a wonder he came home in one piece. Many from Vermont didn't. My family oral history of the war was very simple. We fought to free the slaves.
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