Freedman's Village - Arlington
National Cemetery
From a contemporary press report: 1997
Most people who
visit Arlington National Cemetery know ahead of time at least a couple of the
memorials or grave sites. But how many people know that in the southern end of
the cemetery, formerly part of the Arlington Estate, there used to be a village
for fugitive and liberated slaves?
Tucked away on the
other side of the cemetery, in Section 27, near the Netherlands Carillon and
the Marine Corps Memorial, stand more than 3,800 grave markers with
inscriptions bearing the words "civilian" and "citizen."
The people buried there were once residents of Freedman's Village during and
after the Civil War.
Freedman's Village
was established on the Arlington Estate in June 1863 as a camp for Civil War
contrabands.
The name
"contrabands" is traced back to Major General Benjamin F. Butler,
commander at Fort Monroe. Many slaves from Virginia and Maryland escaped to
Washington, D.C., seeking freedom after President Abraham Lincoln emancipated
the district's slaves in 1862. Butler, who did not want runaway slaves turned
away, rationalized that because slaves were considered property in the South,
they could be used to help the Confederate war effort. Therefore, these
"contrabands" who fled to Washington, D.C., would not be returned to
their masters. They would be set free instead.
Initially the
contrabands joined free blacks and were housed in several camps, including one
in the Old U.S. Capitol, but because of poor conditions, including overcrowding
and rapid spread of smallpox and other diseases it was necessary to move
locations.
A camp was finally
established in May 1863 on the Arlington Estate. The exact location of
Freedman's Village is not known, but generally it is believed to have been in
what is now the southern section of Arlington National Cemetery, Sections 8, 47
and 25, along Eisenhower Drive. The village was dedicated December 4, 1863.
Although the camp
was set up to provide temporary refuge for freed slaves, the shelter lasted for
more than 30 years.
The village was
run by the Freedman's Bureau during most of its existence, and at one point
used U.S. Colored Troops to protect fugitive slaves from their former slave
owners.
Freedman's Village
began as little more than a tent camp and grew into a community not only for
refugees, but also for many of the former Arlington slaves. As the community
grew, the village was able to provide housing, education, training for
employment skills, church services, medical care and food for the former
slaves.
Homes in the
village were wooden and housed two to four families each. The first school,
which opened shortly after the camp dedication, began with 150 students and
peaked with 900 students. In addition to children, adults could be counted
among the student population.
The training
center was an industrial school where people could train to become blacksmiths,
wheelwrights, carpenters, shoemakers and tailors. The apprentices and trainees
supported their village in such ways as making clothes and shoes for the
villagers and chairs and desks for the school.
"Homes"
were set up for the aged and infirm who were incapable of caring for
themselves; Abbott Hospital, created in 1866, had 50 beds and a 14-member
staff.
There were frequent
outbreaks of scarlet fever, measles and whooping cough. Although the average
death rate was two per day, it was lower than the five-per-day average in
Washington, D.C.
There were several
Baptist and Methodist churches in the area, as well a church in the village.
In addition to
subsidizing the Army rations the villagers ate, farm workers grew wheat, corn,
potatoes and other vegetables to sell for profit.
After the war,
motivation to help the freed slaves dwindled. In 1882, the U.S. Supreme Court
closed Freedman's Village. The federal government obtained the rights to the
Custis estate, and the land was given to the military, meaning that the
civilians at Freedman's Village had to leave. On December 7, 1887, the people
at the village were given 90 days to leave.
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.com/freedman.htm