The 4th United States Colored Troops (USCT) regiment saw
considerable action in the eastern theater of operations from late
1863 to mid-1865. The regiment—drawn largely from freedmen and
liberated slaves in the Middle Atlantic and New England
states—served in Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler’s Army of the James,
whose mission was to capture the Confederate capital at Richmond.
From May to December 1864, the 4th saw action in the Bermuda
Hundred and Richmond-Petersburg campaigns, and in early 1865 helped
capture the defenses of Wilmington, North Carolina, the last open
seaport of value to the Confederacy. Citing recently discovered and
previously unpublished accounts, author Edward G. Longacre goes
beyond the battlefield heroics of the 4th USCT, blending his unique
insights into political and social history to analyze the motives,
goals, and aspirations of the African American enlisted men. The
author also emphasizes how these soldiers overcame what one of
their commanders called “stupid, unreasoning, and quite vengeful
prejudice” and shows how General Butler, a supporter of black
troops, gave the unit opportunities to prove itself in battle,
resulting in a combat record of which any infantry regiment, black
or white, could be proud.