Thursday, October 6, 2022

Prattville Dragoons SCV Camp 1524 Commander's Column for October 2022 - Hispanic Heritage Month

 

We are in the middle of Hispanic Heritage month.  Many in Camp 1524 are familiar with the Confederados of Brazil.  The Fraternidade Descendência Americana, or FDA, is a group founded by the descendants of Confederate families who fled North America following the War for Southern Independence and settled in Santa Bárbara and the neighboring city of Americana, Brazil.  For the past four decades, these FDA have hosted thousands from across Brazil at the annual Festa Confederada, or Confederate Festival to honor and celebrate the legacy of their Confederate ancestors.  The festival includes country music, antebellum reenactments and food including fried chicken and biscuits. Battle flags adorn the town including the chapel at Cemitério do Campo which has one of the largest Battle flags in the world on the plaza at the cemetery which also has a tall obelisk imprinted with the names of those original Confederate immigrants who settled here in the 1860s and 1870s.   “For us, the Confederate flag carries the symbolism of … resistance to tyranny, not the symbolism of slavery”, says João Padoveze, president of the FDA.  (https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Americas/2022/0816/New-law-could-mark-end-of-American-Confederacy-in-Brazil)  “It’s difficult for us to feel bad about something we’re proud of,” adds Mr. Padoveze.  “It’s a symbol of connection with our roots.” Unfortunately, similar to what is happening in the United States and in England, the PC woke crowd  is attacking the FA and the festival, condemning them while looking thru their lense of presentism to instead focus on the history of slavery in Brazil (which incidentally was abolished in 1888 by decree of Brazilian Princess Isabel of Bragança when she signed Imperial Law number 3,353, following a number of prior actions including the 1871 Law of the Free Womb which granted freedom to the children of all Brazilian slaves – all without the loss of 620,000 lives as sustained in the War Between the States). 

 

The Hispanic legacy in North America predates the Confederacy by hundreds of years with many Spanish conquistadors exploring North America in the 16th century.  The first permanent settlement in what is now the United States was in St. Augustine FL which was established in 1565.   In the run up to and during the WBTS, “In the Southeast, lands that had once been Spanish West Florida and Louisiana, Hispanics commonly supported the Confederate cause.  This population represented a rich mixture of cultures and languages: French, Spanish, Caribbean, American Indian, African, German, and Anglo American. These "Creoles" were often well-to-do planters with plantations or established merchants with homes in the bustling ports of New Orleans and Mobile. Many held slaves. Others made their money through the cotton trade that relied on the "peculiar institution" of slavery, part of the aristocracy of the region and joined their like-minded Southern neighbors and actively fought to preserve their way of life.” (https://www.nps.gov/articles/hispanics-and-the-civil-war.htm)  “New Orleans mustered nearly 800 Hispanics as part of the "European Brigade," a home guard of 4,500 to keep order and defend the city. The brigades of Brigadier General Harry T. Hays's and Brigadier General William E. Starke, popularly known as the "Louisiana Tigers," included native Louisianans of Anglo and Creole descent, plus men from Spain, Cuba, Mexico, and other Latin American countries. Both brigades campaigned with Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and fought at battles such as Antietam and Gettysburg.  One Alabama company, the Spanish Guards, was made up exclusively of men of Spanish ancestry and served as a home guard for the city of Mobile. Alabama's 55th Infantry, which served in the Vicksburg, Atlanta, and Nashville campaigns, and Florida's 2nd Infantry, which fought at Antietam and Gettysburg, included significant numbers of Hispanic soldiers as well.  One of the most daring officers in the Confederate navy was Capt. Michael Usina, a blockade runner who was born in St. Augustine, Florida, to Spanish parents; Usina started the war as a private in the 8th Georgia Volunteer Infantry and after suffering serious wounds in the battle at Manassas, joined the Confederate Navy.”

In the Southwest, the Hispanics were chiefly of Mexican descent and as slavery was outlawed in Mexico, “many Hispanics opposed the idea of bringing the institution into their homeland and endorsed Union efforts to prevent it.”  But, there were some “African American” slaves and native American “coerced labor” in Texas and New Mexico and so allegiances were mixed.    By the start of the War, Texas joined the CSA.  California remained in the Union although the southern portion dominated by Hispanics leaned toward the Confederacy.  In Texas in 1861, “Tejanos led by Antonio Ochoa marched on the Zapata (TX) County seat to prevent local officials from taking an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy. Confederate troops responded by forcing Ochoa to flee across the border into Mexico. There Ochoa gained the support of Juan Nepomuceno Cortina, a Mexican general and folk hero, who had already gained a reputation as a fearless defender of Mexican American rights. From the safety of Mexico, Ochoa, Cortina and others attacked military and economic targets in south Texas, keeping Confederate troops constantly preoccupied. In one brutal attack, pro-Union raiders commanded by Octaviano Zapata rode to the ranch of a Confederate county judge and hanged him. Confederate retaliation was swift. Capt. Refugio Benavides led a company of cavalry into Mexico in pursuit of Zapata, killing 18 and wounding 14 of his men.”  With the Union naval blockade along the SC, AL and LA ports, the ports in Texas at Laredo and Brownsville along with wagon trains into Mexico became critical in establishing a trade route; cotton “carried across the Río Grande and loaded on Mexican flagships could sail safely past Union warships. This trade, established largely through the efforts of the Cuban-born, Harvard-educated diplomat José Agustin Quintero, helped maintain a vital line of trade for the cash-strapped Confederacy.”  The last battle of the WBTS occurred in Texas when Union troops from Brazos Island “made one final foray toward Brownsville on May 12-13. Confederate troops including Hispanic soldiers responded, and on the coastal plains near the mouth of the Río Grande at Palmito Ranch, they defeated the Union forces--a final Confederate victory.” 

“For Hispanics, like all other Americans, the decision of which side to support in the Civil War (sic) often came down to personal motives and desires. Hispanic citizens in the South often acted to preserve a lifestyle and defend lands that they had occupied for generations.”  Many Hispanics held prominent positions in Confederate society, government and the military and served with distinction.  As we honor our Confederate ancestors so do they.  The Confederate forces were markedly diverse and the FDA and Hispanics, as us SCV members, rightfully “defend the Confederate soldier’s good name, guard his history, and perpetuate those principles which he loved and those ideals which made him glorious.”  Deo Vindice.

No comments:

Post a Comment