“Freedom in their Sights” combines audio, historic
re-enactment and dramatic readings to tell the story of the “U.S.
Colored Troops.” Presented by scholar and historic interpreter
Robert Davis, the event will explain the struggle to open the Union
army to African-Americans, the many battles they fought, the special
dangers they faced and their impact on the war.
The free event takes place Thursday, Oct. 1, at 6:30 p.m. in the
presidential museum’s Union Theater. Reserve your seat by visiting
www.presidentlincoln.illinois.gov and clicking “special
event reservations.”
Nearly 180,000 African-Americans fought in the Union army. More than
37,000 would die. Some were captured and sent back into slavery. In
other cases, Confederate troops massacred African-American soldiers
rather than take them prisoner.
Abraham Lincoln called the use of African-American troops “the
heaviest blow yet dealt to the rebellion” and said the war could not
be won without their help.
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The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum – now celebrating its 10th
anniversary – is home to an unparalleled collection of Lincoln documents,
photographs, artifacts and art. The museum combines scholarship with showmanship
to immerse visitors in Lincoln’s life and times.
For more about the library and museum, visit
www.presidentlincoln.illinois.gov.
[Shanta Thoele, Illinois Preservation
Agency] |