{"id":3906,"date":"2024-01-03T17:13:08","date_gmt":"2024-01-03T17:13:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/?p=3906"},"modified":"2025-12-29T14:57:32","modified_gmt":"2025-12-29T14:57:32","slug":"the-1864-camp-nelson-stampede-part-3-freedom-and-community","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/the-1864-camp-nelson-stampede-part-3-freedom-and-community\/","title":{"rendered":"The 1864 Camp Nelson Stampede: Part 3: Freedom and Community"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>This post is the third of three posts on the Camp Nelson Stampede:\u00a0 see also <a href=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/the-1864-camp-nelson-stampede-part-1\/\">Initial Stampede (Part 1)<\/a> and <a href=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/the-1864-camp-nelson-stampede-part-ii-enslaved-women-resist-expulsion\/\">Enslaved Women (Part 2)<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><strong>DATELINE:<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\"> MARCH 1865<\/span><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">,\u00a0<\/span>GARRARD COUNTY, KY<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">\u201cI told my master that I wanted to go to Camp Nelson.\u201d With those words, Martha Cooley boldly challenged her slaveholder&#8217;s authority in early March 1865. Months earlier, her husband Simon had gone to Camp Nelson and enlisted in the US army, only to be killed in action shortly thereafter. Newly widowed, Cooley hoped to gather her four children and journey to Camp Nelson. But slaveholder John Nave would have none of it. \u201cHe said, \u2018I will give you Camp\u2019 and immediately took a large hickory stick with which he commenced beating me.&#8221; After Nave\u2019s successive beatings broke her left arm, Cooley \u201cwatched my chance and ran away.\u201d She reached Camp Nelson in mid-March, but only after making the difficult decision \u201cto leave my children behind with my master.\u201d Cooley told US army officials that she was \u201cvery anxious to get my children.\u201d [1]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Following the US army\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/the-1864-camp-nelson-stampede-part-ii-enslaved-women-resist-expulsion\/\">controversial November 1864 expulsion of enslaved women and children<\/a>, Black families pressured Congress to act. In March 1865, lawmakers finally did, declaring free the family members of Black US soldiers.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\"> The new law emboldened Black women like Martha Cooley to head for Camp Nelson, even as Kentucky slaveholders tried everything to stop them. The influx of freedom seekers prompted US army officials to construct the Refugees Home, a community of 100 cottages to house freedpeople. But US victory in 1865 underscored Black Kentuckians&#8217; tenuous foothold in freedom. Army officials wanted to demobilize the army and close wartime contraband camps like Camp Nelson&#8217;s Refugee Home. Freedpeople resisted, and in a remarkable turn of events, secured title to the land and put down permanent roots, founding the community of Ariel (later renamed Hall). At Camp Nelson, freedpeople<\/span><span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\"> transformed a wartime stampede into a permanent community which outlasted the war.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><strong>MAIN NARRATIVE<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Of the 400 women and children expelled from camp, around 250 returned to Camp Nelson. On December 2, 1864, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton ordered army officials to provide permanent quarters for the refugees.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\"> [2] <\/span>Stanton hoped to prevent further suffering during the winter months, but the haphazard accommodations provided by the army still remained far from ideal\u2013\u2013especially for women and children still recovering from exposure during the expulsion. Throughout January and February 1865, as many as 102 of the 250 returning refugees perished. \u00a0Among the deceased were Pvt. Joseph Miller, whose heartrending testimony helped spur Congressional action, and his entire family. [3]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">US officials worried that the overcrowding in Camp Nelson would only get worse after March 1865, when Congress passed a law freeing the enslaved family members of Black US soldiers. US general John Palmer decided to designate Camp Nelson \u201ca general rendezvous for all these people in Ky.&#8221; [4] Palmer tapped quartermaster Theron E. Hall to supervise the construction of housing for the expected influx of Black women and children: a village of 100 cabins called the Refugees Home. Led by Hall and his assistant superintendent, freedom seeker and preacher Gabriel Burdett, Black refugees performed much of the physical labor. The resulting cottages measured 32 by 16 feet, divided into two 16 by 16 foot rooms. Each room was \u201cdesigned to accommodate 10 persons, possibly 12,\u201d meaning that every cottage could house at least 20-24 people. Work proceeded fast. \u201cThese cottages are now being built by the government at the rate of three per day,\u201d reported one observer in late April 1865, \u201cthus far making shelter for 60 newcomers daily.\u201d [5]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Even so, construction of the Refugees Home struggled to keep pace with the influx of freedom seekers; as word of Congress\u2019s new law spread across Kentucky, more and more Black women felt emboldened to head for Camp Nelson. An enslaved woman named Lucinda learned of the new congressional law when she received a letter dictated by her husband, a Black soldier at Camp Nelson, informing her \u201cthat she was free\u201d and advising her to either demand wages from her slaveholder or else leave and seek work elsewhere. Two weeks later, Lucinda\u2019s former slaveholder William Pratt awoke to find \u201cthe kitchen in the morning, swept, garnished, &amp; Empty\u201d\u2014Lucinda and her daughter had vanished during the night, presumably bound for Camp Nelson. [6]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Reaching Camp Nelson remained as perilous as ever, with slaveholders and local authorities continuing to obstruct their path. Married couple William and Marilda Jones learned about the new congressional law and resolved to head to Camp Nelson together. \u201cDesiring to enlist and thus free my wife,\u201d William later explained, \u201cI ran away from my master in company with my wife\u2026. Our clothes were packed up and some money we had saved from our earnings we carried with us.\u201d However, local constables in Lexington seized the couple to prevent them from \u201cgoing to Camp Nelson,\u201d instead returning them to their slaveholder and pocketing the Jones\u2019s hard-earned savings. Undeterred, Willian and Marilda escaped again and reached Camp Nelson towards the end of March. [7]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Also in March, Frances Johnson gathered her children and headed for Camp Nelson, only to cross paths with Theophilus Bracey, her slaveholder\u2019s son-in-law. Bracey drew a pistol and \u201ctold me that if I did not go back with him he would shoot me.\u201d Bracey held Johnson\u2019s seven-year-old daughter \u201cand kept her as an Hostage\u201d to dissuade Johnson from trying to escape again. Early the next morning, Johnson made the difficult decision to slip away by herself. \u201cI found I could not get away from Braceys with my children, and determined to get away myself hoping by this means to obtain possession of them afterwards.\u201d Once at Camp Nelson, Johnson pleaded with US officials to help her secure her children. \u201cI am anxious to have them but I am afraid to go near them,&#8221; Johnson told US army officials, &#8220;knowing that Bracey would not let me have them and fearing lest he would carry out his threat to shoot me.\u201d [8]<\/p>\n<p>Mary Wilson also faced angry reprisals following her husband Lewis Wilson&#8217;s enlistment in the 119th U.S. Colored Troops. Although Wilson knew &#8220;that under the laws of Congress she is entitled to her freedom&#8221; by virtue of her husband&#8217;s enlistment, it did not prevent former enslaver William Adams from enacting vengeance. First, Adams continued to hold her son Richard hostage. Then in late May 1865, when Wilson ran away to live in Lexington, Adams dispatched two Lexington policemen to kidnap her back to his farm three miles outside Lexington.\u00a0As Wilson later testified to officials at Camp Nelson, Adams and the policemen stripped her naked and &#8220;tied her in a Slaughter house to a rafter or beam,&#8221; beating her with a leather buggy trace. Several weeks later, Adams reenacted the terror with a second abduction and beating. Although Mary Wilson &#8220;promptly laid&#8221; her complaints &#8220;before the Military Authorities in the City of Lexington Ky.,&#8221; US army officials in the city did not provide her &#8220;any redress for the said wrongs and outrages inflicted upon her body&#8221; or help her rescue her son. By June 1865, Wilson sought out the safety of Camp Nelson, where she appealed to the army to help reunite her with her son. [9]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Despite slaveholders&#8217; best efforts to deter them, Black women and children continued to head to Camp Nelson in large numbers throughout the spring of 1865. A representative of the American Missionary Association calculated that as of April 1, there were 1,266 people living in the Refugees Home, \u201cnearly all of them women and children.\u201d Over the ensuing 11 days, 354 more refugees arrived. By the end of April, the AMA official had lost count\u2014he simply reported that \u201cthere cannot be less than 2000\u201d people residing in the Refugees Home.\u00a0 \u201cThey came to the city of refuge hopeful and as a general thing earnest for improvement \u2014 for religious culture, for mental training.\u201d [10]<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><strong>AFTERMATH<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">The end of the war thrust Camp Nelson\u2019s community of freedpeople into yet more uncertainty. With US victory assured, the federal government ceased recruiting Black soldiers in late April 1865. [11] <span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>But slavery remained legal in Kentucky until the ratification of the 13<span class=\"s3\"><sup>th<\/sup><\/span> Amendment in December 1865; the persistence of legal bondage rendered it dangerous for freedpeople to travel outside Camp Nelson. Moreover, Kentucky whites\u2019 antipathy towards Black soldiers and their families had only deepened in the wake of US victory. In April 1865, a Kentucky judge declared unconstitutional Congress&#8217;s March 1865 law freeing the family members of Black US soldiers. US general John Palmer swept aside the judge&#8217;s ruling, but it underscored white Kentuckians&#8217; continued resistance to emancipation. [12] <span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">Months later in June 1865, the Kentucky legislature demanded that the US army to remove all Black soldiers from the state. <\/span>\u201cTheir presence is a source of great irritation to their former owners and the citizens generally,&#8221; legislators thundered. [13]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Freedpeople across Kentucky understood that their freedom\u2014and their physical safety\u2014hinged on the US military\u2019s continued presence. In June 1865, a delegation of Black Kentuckians told President Andrew Johnson that if he \u201cshould give up the State to the control of her civil authorities there is not one of these [Black] Soldiers who will Not Suffer all the grinding oppression of her most inhuman[e] laws if not in their own persons yet in the persons of their wives their children their mothers.\u201d [14] Superintendent Theron Hall echoed freedpeople\u2019s warning. \u201cNot a day passes during which I am not entreated by some poor defenceless wife or child to interfere for their protection against the furry of their master,\u201d Hall explained from Camp Nelson in June. \u201cI beg you to examine this subject carefully ere you decide to discontinue this \u2018Home,\u2019 this \u2018City of refuge\u2019 to which they can flee and be safe.\u201d [15]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">The dangers facing freedpeople were real and many, but senior federal policymakers remained determined to close Camp Nelson. The war had ended, and federal officials feared that freedpeople would become dependent on federal resources indefinitely. \u201cMy positive instructions from Washington are \u2018to break up the Refugee Home at Camp Nelson at the earliest possible day consistent with humanity,\u2019\u201d explained Maj. Gen. Clinton B. Fisk, the regional commissioner for the Freedmen\u2019s Bureau. [16] \u201cEverything to break up the camp and not entail suffering,\u201d Fisk instructed his subordinates. \u201cThere will be some suffering [but] do the best we can.\u201d [17] Throughout the summer and fall of 1865, Fisk and Freedmen\u2019s Bureau agents tried to prod freedpeople to leave Camp Nelson and establish their own homes, where they could farm and support themselves. [18]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">So long as slavery remained legal in Kentucky,<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\"> however, <\/span>slaveholders and state officials refused to recognize the freedom of the Black soldiers and their families who called Camp Nelson home. Throughout the fall of 1865, Kentucky lawmakers adopted a rash of new slave codes restricting African Americans\u2019 movement. Kentucky lawmakers fined anyone caught transporting enslaved people without their owners\u2019 consent, including government wagons transporting freedpeople out of Camp Nelson. Legislators also passed a new law penalizing anyone who hired enslaved people, severely limiting the opportunities for freedpeople to find work outside Camp Nelson. [19]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Despite the Freedmen\u2019s Bureau\u2019s efforts to push them out, freedpeople stayed put. The federal government returned ownership of the land on which Camp Nelson sat to its prewar owner, a white Unionist named Joseph Moss. In a surprising turn, Moss indicated that he was willing to sell the land to freedpeople. But Moss\u2019s irate white neighbors would have none of it; they menaced freedpeople with violence and strong-armed Moss into backing out of the original deal. Instead, Moss sold 130 acres of Camp Nelson land to John Fee, a white minister. Fee and his wife Matilda sold lots to Black veterans and refugees. [20]<\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">Freedpeople rechristened their community Ariel (later changed to Hall). The community offered religious community and education, but Kentucky whites\u2019 continued hostility prompted some residents to leave. In 1877, Gabriel Burdett, a freedom seeker and formerly the assistant superintendent of the Refugees Home, led a number of residents westward, where they resettled in Nicodemus, Kansas. Still other families remained at Ariel. By 1895, a Louisville paper reported <span class=\"s4\">that \u201cthere is now upon the site of the camp a negro village of some three hundred souls\u2026It is a rather thrifty village, and has one of the best private schools utilized for negroes in Kentucky.\u201d <\/span><span class=\"s5\">Descendants of Black U.S. soldiers and the freedom seekers continue to live at Ariel (Hall) to this day.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\"> [21]<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>FURTHER READING<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 1rem;\">The community of freedpeople at Camp Nelson has been richly documented in the records of the US army, the Freedmen&#8217;s Bureau, as well as various humanitarian and religious organizations. A good starting place is Richard Sears&#8217;s <\/span><span class=\"s1\" style=\"font-size: 1rem;\"><em>Camp Nelson, Kentucky\u00a0<\/em>(2002), an edited collection of primary sources covering the camp&#8217;s existence. The Freedmen and Southern Society Project&#8217;s <em>Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation <\/em>series 1 (The Destruction of Slavery) and series 2 (The Black Military Experience), also features primary sources related to the community of freedpeople at Camp Nelson. [22]<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Amy Taylor&#8217;s <em>Embattled Freedom\u00a0<\/em>(2018) explores the Freedmen&#8217;s Bureau&#8217;s efforts to close the Refugees Home and freedpeople&#8217;s determination to stay. [23]<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>NOTES<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>[1] Affidavit of Martha Cooley, March 24, 1865, <span class=\"s1\">in Richard D. Sears,\u00a0<em>Camp Nelson, Kentucky: A Civil War History<\/em> (Lexington, KY: The University Press of Kentucky, 2002), <\/span>186-187.<\/p>\n<p>[2] B<span class=\"s2\">urbridge to Fry, November 27, 1864, in Sears, <i>Camp Nelson<\/i>, 137; Townsend to Quartermaster General of the U.S. Army, December 2, 1864, in Sears, <i>Camp Nelson<\/i>, 146.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\">[3] <span class=\"s4\">Amy Murrell Taylor, <em>Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War&#8217;s Slave Refugee Camps<\/em> (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2018), 203;<\/span> Affidavit of Albert A. Livermore (sexton at Camp Nelson), June 26, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 220-221.<\/p>\n<p>[4] T.E. Hall to M.E. Strieby, March 24, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 184-185.<\/p>\n<p>[5] E. Davis to Executive Committee of the American Missionary Association, April 28, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 196-197; Theron Hall to Oliver Otis Howard, June 22, 1865, in <span class=\"s4\"><em>Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation<\/em> (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982), ser. 2 (The Black Military Experience),<\/span>\u00a0vol. 2, 717-718;\u00a0Taylor, <em>Embattled Freedom<\/em>, 203-204.<\/p>\n<p>[6] William Pratt diary, April 2, 1865, in Sears, <i>Camp<\/i> <em>Nelson<\/em>, 192-193.<\/p>\n<p>[7] Affidavit of William Jones, March 29, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 192.<\/p>\n<p>[8] Affidavit of Frances Johnson, Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>,188-190.<\/p>\n<p>[9] <a href=\"https:\/\/stampedes.dickinson.edu\/document\/affidavit-mary-wilson-june-17-1865\">Affidavit of Mary Wilson, June 17, 1865, Camp Nelson, Jessamine County, Ky., RG 105, Records of the Assistant Commissioner for the State of Tennessee, Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1865\u20131869, Registered Letters Received, Entered in Register 1, E \u2013 L, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC.<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[10] E. Davis to Executive Committee of the American Missionary Association, April 28, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 196-197.<\/p>\n<p>[11] James B. Fry to Lorenzo Thomas, April 29, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 198.<\/p>\n<p>[12] <em>Freedom<\/em> ser. 1 (The Destruction of Slavery), vol. 1, 617-619.<\/p>\n<p>[13] Resolution of the General Assembly of Kentucky, June 3, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 209.<\/p>\n<p>[14] <em>Freedom<\/em> ser. 1 (The Destruction of Slavery), vol. 1, 624-626.<\/p>\n<p>[15] T.E. Hall to Oliver Otis Howard, June 22, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 219-220.<\/p>\n<p>[16] Fisk to John G. Fee, August 4, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp<\/em> <em>Nelson<\/em>, 236.<\/p>\n<p>[17] Fisk to D.C. Jaquess, August 15, 1865, in Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>, 239-240.<\/p>\n<p>[18] Taylor, <em>Embattled Freedom<\/em>,\u00a0222-223.<\/p>\n<p>[19] Taylor, <em>Embattled Freedom<\/em>, 224.<\/p>\n<p>[20] Taylor, <em>Embattled Freedom<\/em>, 221-230, 237-238.<\/p>\n<p>[21] On Ariel \/ Hall, see<a href=\"https:\/\/www.nps.gov\/cane\/community-of-ariel-hall-and-fee-memorial-church.htm\"> https:\/\/www.nps.gov\/cane\/community-of-ariel-hall-and-fee-memorial-church.htm<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>[22] Sears, <em>Camp Nelson<\/em>; <em>Freedom<\/em> ser. 1 (The Destruction of Slavery), and ser. 2 (The Black Military Experience.<\/p>\n<p>[23] Taylor, <em>Embattled Freedom<\/em>, 221-230, 237-238.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This post is the third of three posts on the Camp Nelson Stampede:\u00a0 see also Initial Stampede (Part 1) and Enslaved Women (Part 2) DATELINE: MARCH 1865,\u00a0GARRARD COUNTY, KY \u201cI told my master that I wanted to go to Camp Nelson.\u201d With those words, Martha Cooley boldly challenged her slaveholder&#8217;s authority in early March 1865. [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":130,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[21281],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3906","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-ky-narratives"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3906","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/130"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3906"}],"version-history":[{"count":18,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3906\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4142,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3906\/revisions\/4142"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3906"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3906"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/housedivided.dickinson.edu\/sites\/stampedes\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3906"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}