THE
BLACK AND THE GRAY
An
Alternate History* Timeline of the War of Secession
by
Robert Perkins
Background:
In March 1865 the
Confederate States of America passed legislation authorizing the recruitment of
slaves as soldiers for the Confederate armies. By the time this legislation was
passed (March 13, 1865) and the War Department acted to implement the new law
(by General Order on March 23, 1865), the Confederacy had little time left to
live, and little came of the legislation. But what might have happened if the
legislation had been passed a year earlier? This is not so far-fetched as it may
seem, for by that time there was already a movement within the Confederacy,
centered in the Gulf States, to do just that. And in January 1864, Major General
Patrick Ronayne Cleburne made a proposal that, if it had not been squelched at
the order of President Davis before it could become public knowledge, might have
led to the passage of such legislation. The following is a time-line which
examines what might have followed from this possibility. Note that most of the
events leading up the passage of the legislation actually did happen...exactly
one year later...in history as WE know it.
PART
ONE: FROM A SINGLE ACORN...
PART
TWO: THE GILDED AGE, 1865-1899
PART
THREE: THE TWENTIETH CENTURY, 1899-2000

*For
the first time reader of alternate history timelines, some definitions of terms
which will prove helpful...
"Alternate
History" is an exercise in speculation over what might occur if some event
in history had happened differently.
"OTL"
is an abbreviation for "Our Time Line" or history as WE know it.
The
"Point of Departure" (sometimes abbreviated P.O.D.) is the point
in the time-line where an event or outcome is changed from what occurred
in actual history.
"ATL"
is an abbreviation for "Alternate Time-line," or the history which
results from the Point of Departure.

Some clipart on
this page is courtesy of

The music file of
THE BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM was composed and is copyrighted by Barry Taylor. For
more great tunes like this one, check out THE
CONTEMPLATOR'S FOLK MUSIC SITE.

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Copyright
2003-2006 by
Robert Paul Perkins. All rights reserved. Last updated on 17 July 2006.