Forward, Fifty-Fourth, forward!—Col. Robert Gould Shaw
Following the Emancipation Proclamation, men from all over the North volunteered to serve in the 54th Massachusetts. In doing so, they joined an army that saw African American men as inferior soldiers. Forced to fight in segregated units and paid less than White soldiers, the regiment boldly resisted injustice. Soldiers boycotted unequal pay for 18 months and lobbied to be assigned to the frontlines. Their heroic charge at Fort Wagner on July 18, 1863, though not a military victory, eroded northern opposition to Black soldiers and helped inspire over 180,000 Black men to join the United States Army.
This gallery explores the service and sacrifice of the men who volunteered to fight in the 54th Massachusetts.
Gallery 1: Enlisting and Training
Leaders and activists—both national and local—worked to recruit soldiers to the 54th Massachusetts. Many recruits came from New England, New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. Others came as freedom seekers from the South, enlisting to end the institution of slavery they escaped. By doing so, they risked reenslavement or even execution if they were captured in battle. All of these recruits had to travel to Boston, and began their training just outside Boston at Camp Meigs in today's Hyde Park neighborhood.