“Friends of a Long Oppressed Race”: Hungarian Soldiers in the Colored Regiments in the American Civil War Cover Image

„A régóta elnyomottak barátai” (Magyar katonák az észak-amerikai polgárháború néger ezredeiben)
“Friends of a Long Oppressed Race”: Hungarian Soldiers in the Colored Regiments in the American Civil War

Author(s): István Kornél Vida
Subject(s): History
Published by: AETAS Könyv- és Lapkiadó Egyesület

Summary/Abstract: Although the history of the Kossuth Emigration, the first sizeable wave of Hungarian ex-patriates arriving in the United States in the 1850s, has been largely ignored by historians, the Hungarians‟ participation in the American Civil War is one the most written-about chapters of Hungarian-American historical links and contacts. However, most of the works scrutinizing this subject are riddled with errors, either because their writers‟ intended pur-pose was self-justification for the Hungarian-American community or simply due to their inadequate methodology. Recent research proved that many of the earlier claims have to be revised, including the Hungarians‟ approach towards the institution of slavery. In the first part of my study, I investigated how the Kossuth emigrés perceived the “peculiar in-stitution”, and analyzed what motivated some Hungarian soldiers to apply for commis-sions in the United States Colored Troops and serve along with African-Americans. The second part of my paper is devoted to the brief biographical list of these officers with spe-cial emphasis laid on their service in the colored regiments, and how they related to the men under their command

  • Issue Year: 2008
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 68-82
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: Hungarian