
Freedmen's Camp - Dover, TN
Posted by:
ggmorton
N 36° 29.164 W 087° 50.835
16S E 424109 N 4038196
A historical sign marking the location of a nearby Underground Railroad Free State Community in Dover, TN.
Waymark Code: WM18EYT
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 07/21/2023
Views: 1
"Freedmen's Camps
After the Union victory at Fort Donelson, slaves escaping from nearby farms and iron foundries flocked to the area seeking freedom and protection. By March of 1863 some 300 refugees lived here at the freedmen's camp that came to be known as "Free State". The camp contained houses, a school, and a church. It was scattered in and around the town of Dover and throughout the entire Union encampment. It was the largest of the freedmen's camps established around Forts Henry, Heiman, and Donelson, and it lasted into the 1880s. The northern army used many of the resisdents of Free State as laborers to help build the Union Fort Donelson on part of the ground now occupied by the national cemetery. Benevolent societies, like the Western Freemen's Aid Society, assisted the Union Army by providing clothing and teachers to the freedmen, and administering religious and medical services. Many enlisted in the Union army as United States Colored Troops after Fort Donelson became an army recruiting station for African Americans in November 1863. These and others gave Union forces a decided edge in fighting the war in both the eastern and western theaters.
Freedmen's Camps in Tennessee
In 1860 about 25 percent of Tennessee's people were slaves. With the fall of Fort Donelson and the advance of Union armies into the state, many ram away from their owners in search of freedom. This resulted in a network of contraband camps being set up across middle and west Tennessee.
Bridadier General Ulysses S. Grant, General Order No. 14, February 26, 1862: "Such slaves as were within the lines at the time of the capture of Fort Donelson ... will be employed in the quartermaster's department, for the benefit of Government."
Education was a major priority amontg former slaves. By 1863 over 100 students attended the freedmen's school at Fort Donelson, which received praise from teachers and military officials alike."
From: Pictured sign.
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