In my play about Clara Brown, I have a character JORDAN, who is an African American Union soldier, and his 10-year-old daughter GRACE. JORDAN escaped slavery and enlisted in the Union army at Camp Nelson in Kentucky. His wife and daughter followed afterwards, as did many families of the black men who enlisted. The families lived at the camp as refugees, fending for themselves. Camp Nelson was established during the Civil War as a fortified base and supply depot where recruitment and training took place.
When I found out that Camp Nelson had been made into a National Monument adjacent to a National Cemetery where black soldiers have been buried, I made a weekend trip. It was over a 6-hour drive from Pittsburgh to Nicholasville, KY.
Jordan
1. I learned that the Union army, in its hypocrisy, hired enslaved men to help set up Camp Nelson. The men did the labor but pay went to the people who hired them out.
I had wondered how JORDAN and other men learned about the recruitment camp and how to get there. Now I have more backstory for JORDAN: He had been hired out, marked the way there, and told his family and probably other men about the camp and how to get there. It boggles my mind why the men were hired out since, even though Kentucky stayed with the Union, the state allowed slavery. Wouldn’t hiring men out to help the Union army contribute to the demise of slavery? Lots of contradictions in this part of the history.