The History of Waterford, Virginia |
|
Waterford's African-American Experience Excerpted from, "Share with Us, Waterford, Virginia's African-American Experience", a booklet written by Bronwen and John Souders for the Waterford Foundation. More on the African-American experience in the Civil War » During the Civil War, several African Americans from Waterford joined the Union army to help end slavery and the oppression of their race.
After the war, Waterford's black community faced new challenges. Establishing their own school and church buildings were real accomplishments, but even these advances were evidence of continued segregation. Apologists for the defeated Confederacy reasserted their dominance in county politics, and opponents of black equality were not hard to find, even in relatively progressive Waterford, In one incident in the village in the 1870s, an angry group of whites upset the buggy of the black pastor, an episode the local paper denounced as a disgraceful riot. African Americans from Waterford continued to march off to America's wars, including both World Wars, but until the Korean conflict always in segregated units. A full century after the Civil War the long campaign to fully integrate Loudoun County was still being waged, and Waterford's black families were among the many who helped sweep away die final remnants of official segregation. Those who left Waterford over the past century in search of greater opportunity in the wider world have also enjoyed increasing success in surmounting less formal barriers to advancement. A granddaughter of Ed and Marietta Collins overcame the ravages of polio to graduate from Howard University in the early 1900s. (Ed had offered her blunt but loving encouragement as a young child: "If you're going to be a cripple, you might as well be an educated cripple." He, himself, was illiterate.) Other descendants have gone on to success in arenas as far-flung as Hollywood and New York's Metropolitan Opera, and as diverse as social action, information technology and university administration. For that, many credit the strength of their families - and one of the sources of that strength, the sense of belonging and self-worth gained from growing up in Waterford,
Union Cemetery (Fairfax Street) Union Cemetery was laid out early in the nineteenth century and was strictly segregated, with the black section to the rear. Both sections contain fine marble monuments, but many African Americans could afford no more than a roughly flat stone brought in from some field, or just a wooden marker that quickly weathered away. The resulting gaps In the rows testify eloquently to the inequalities of the day. Civil War veterans of both races - and both armies - lie peaceably together in the same cemetery. Their graves bear appropriate military markers. One designates the grave of James Lewis (born 1844) who traveled to Pittsburg during the war where he joined the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, a white-led black unit like the famous 54th that was Immortalized in the film, Glory James Lewis House (15525 Butchers Row)
african americans, blacks, negro's, colored people, history, quakers, one room schoolhouses, school house, waterford, va, virginia, waterford va, historic towns, loudoun county, civil war towns, villages, village, national historic landmark |
|
- 11/20/2004 |