These African Americans included two groups of people; one was free blacks and another was black slaves. The Emancipation Proclamation, which was the moral purpose of the war, enrolled those blacks in the Union by letting them take place on the front lines. After that time in 1862, Congress regulated a new law the Military Act for enrolling those blacks in the military and naval service; and declared that “the slaves of any person who supported the rebellion would be free if they fell into Union hands” (Gillon, pg.551). Many blacks, definitely, joined the Union army to fight for their freedom and families. Solomon Bradley, who was one of those blacks, expressed his feeling that “[he] used to pray the Lord for this opportunity to be released from bondage and to fight for my liberty, and I could not feel right so long as I was not in the regiment” (Gillon, pg.551). However, these African American soldiers were still limited their rights more than white troops were. They were used for freeing white soldiers for combat service, and they were also “stationed in areas where white troops had been decimated by yellow fever and malaria” (Gillon, pg. 551). That made the medical expenses rapidly bump up. Not only those worse things which blacks had experienced but their subsidies which they received were less than whites did. “Black troops earned …show more content…
These women were served as volunteers for the armies by taking a position to be a nurse and caretakers; and some also worked in the manufacturing. Moreover, African Americans were served directly in the Union army by being as a troop and a soldier for requiring their freedom and