COMBAHEE RIVER RAID”
Last week during our time at Tybee Island, we took time to visit the historical marker at the Combahee River, riding over the Harriet Tubman Memorial Bridge, to cross the River. I posted photos and a short narrative about Harriet Tubman’s leading Union soldiers to make a raid on Confederate rice plantations and to free as many enslaved people as possible. After that posting, several people thanked me for it and also expressed surprise about this raid. In the raid, Tubman actually freed more enslaved people than she had in all her trips down South during the 1850’s.
In light of that surprise, I want to go into a bit more detail and encourage you to read more about it on your own. It is one of the many sagas of Tubman’s life, a life filled with courage, risk, danger, and liberation. The best version of the River Raid is Edda L. Fields-Black’s “Combee: Harriet Tubman, the Combahee River Raid, and Black Freedom During the Civil War.” It won the Pulitzer Prize last year.
After a decade of leading people to freedom in the decade of the 1850’s, Tubman signed up to work for the Union after the Civil War began. She worked as a spy, scout, nurse, and cook, and then she was assigned to Port Royal, South Carolina in 1862 to work with people who had formerly been enslaved. Port Royal was part of the Beaufort, South Carolina area, and it had been captured by Union troops in 1861. The white planters had fled, leaving behind 10,000 newly freed people. Tubman was assigned to work with them and begin to help them acclimate to life as free people. All of this work was called the Port Royal Experiment, in which the Union wanted to see how easily formerly enslaved people could transfer into freedom.
The Union Army leaders quickly saw Tubman’s extraordinary abilities, even though she was illiterate. They asked her if she would be willing to continue her role as a spy in enemy territory. She agreed to do it, and she left the relative safe territory of Port Royal and went to islands and even inland to make contact with people still held in slavery, as well as to pick up information on the movements of the Confederate army. Though she had some trouble understanding the language of the Gullah based people held in slavery there, her innate intelligence and skills soon helped her relate to those still held in slavery.
During this time, she came up with a plan that had several purposes: a guerilla raid on the mainland to free enslaved people and to destroy the crops of the white planters, to give the Black Union soldiers experience in facing off with the Confederate army, and to be used as a weapon of terror for the Confederacy: the Black Union soldiers were invading white territory and freeing enslaved people, while destroying crops and plantations. The Union commanders were skeptical at first, but Tubman and Union colonel James Montgomery, who was trained in guerilla warfare, convinced the leaders to try it. Montgomery would lead the 300 Black troops, while Tubman would provide the intelligence and guide the boats up the Combahee River. Tubman then spent time as a spy in the area around the river, alerting the enslaved people that a possible escape was on the way – they should be ready to go on a moment’s notice. The notice that it was time to go: the steam whistles of the Union boats blowing several times.
On June 2, 1863, three Union boats went up the Combahee River and landed near the place where the ferry crossed the river. The steam whistles blew, and in short order, enslaved people poured out of the woods, acting like the Hebrews leaving quickly from Egypt. Tubman’s friend and first biographer Sarah Bradford recorded Tubman’s narrative in 1869, and here is part of it:
“I nebber see such a sight. We laughed, an' laughed, an' laughed. Here you'd see a woman wid a pail on her head, rice a smokin' in it jus' as she'd taken it from de fire, young one hangin' on behind, one han' roun' her forehead to hold on, t'other han' diggin' into de rice-pot, eatin' wid all its might; hold of her dress two or three more; down her back a bag with a pig in it. One woman brought two pigs, a white one an' a black one; we took 'em all on board; named de white pig named Beauregard and the black pig named Jeff Davis. Sometimes de women would come wid twins hangin' roun' der necks; 'appears like I never see so many twins in my life; bags on der shoulders, baskets on der heads, and young ones taggin' behin', all loaded; pigs squealin', chickens screamin', young ones squallin'.” Tubman later told another interviewer that it reminded her of the story of the children of Israel fleeing Egypt.
Tubman and the Union army freed at least 735 people that day – it was chaotic and dangerous and stunning. Tubman had led a raid that stabbed at the heart of the Confederacy – freeing their enslaved people and destroying the rice plantations (which the Africans had taught the white people to grow). Less than a month later, the Union Army drove the Confederates back at Gettysburg, and Grant captured Vicksburg (and my hometown of Helena), giving the Union control of most of the Mississippi River. Tubman also put the idea of guerilla warfare into the minds of the Union generals. Two years later General Sherman would employ much of the same tactics as he led the March to the Sea in Georgia.
Tubman was extraordinary in all that she did, and we should honor her and give thanks for her magnificent witness. Yet, we dishonor her if we lift her so high that we lose sight of her ordinary beginnings as an illiterate, enslaved woman on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. She had cunning and courage for sure, but her story reminds us that we can do some of that too. In these days of the sewage of the Trumpster flowing over the land, we will need to find ways to tap into that cunning and courage of Harriet Tubman. May she be our North Star in these troubled days
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