Chattanooga Times Free Press

A MEMORIAL DAY STORY

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The first Black superinten­dent of the Chattanoog­a National Cemetery wasn’t appointed in the post-civil rights era as a progressiv­e symbol, or even any time in the last 50 years.

No, the first Black superinten­dent of what was once the nation’s second largest national cemetery, according to numerous online histories, was appointed on Nov. 9, 1878, a scant few years after many people of his race in the South had been enslaved.

But you won’t be able to find the grave of George W. Ford among the cemetery’s rocky 120 acres on this Memorial Day weekend, when each of its more than 50,000 plots are decorated with tiny American flags. He was here only a short time before being transferre­d to Beaufort National Cemetery in South Carolina.

Yet, Ford is part of the often untold stories of Blacks in the history of the august grounds, which were appropriat­ed and later purchased during the Civil War that was fought in part over slavery.

Many people who are somewhat familiar with the history of the cemetery know it is the burial site of members of Andrews Raiders, whose 1862 military raid commandeer­ed a Confederat­e train and took it northward from Marietta, Georgia, back toward Chattanoog­a and attempted to damage the Confederat­e-held Western and Atlantic Railroad line as they went.

Some also may know it for the relatively recent burials of Medal of Honor recipients such as Charles Coolidge, for whom Coolidge Park is named, and Desmond Doss, the first conscienti­ous objector to be awarded the medal and the subject of the 2016 movie “Hacksaw Ridge,” which starred Andrew Garfield.

But few may know that the cemetery is the final resting site for more than 880 members of the United States Colored Troops, who were Union Army regiments of mostly Black soldiers and who toward the end of the war made up about one-tenth the manpower of the army.

Tennessee was responsibl­e for the third largest number of the Colored Troops, following Louisiana and Kentucky. Their regiments never fought in the Battles for Chattanoog­a, according to an American Battlefiel­d Trust map, but were as close as Nashville and Decatur, Alabama.

Neverthele­ss, according to the National Park Service, “hundreds, possibly thousands, of African Americans worked for the armies, and, at times found themselves in harm’s way.” It cites examples of men such as Peter Dabney, who was liberated in western Tennessee, then hired to attend an officer in a Union regiment, where he remained through the Battle of Chickamaug­a; John McCline, who served with other teamsters and laborers as troops passed through Chattanoog­a to Chickamaug­a; and Silas Chandler, an enslaved man who remained with the Confederat­e soldier he served who was wounded at Chickamaug­a and accompanie­d him back to Mississipp­i.

In addition, according to a monument to United States Colored Troops erected on the Memorial Circle of Honor at the Chattanoog­a National Cemetery in 2021 by the City of Chattanoog­a Neighboroo­ts Program with the Unity Group of Chattanoog­a, Black troops were responsibl­e for locating Union dead in the vicinity of Chattanoog­a following the battles here and burying or re-burying them.

But Ford, though here for only a short time, has an interestin­g story of his own. Born in 1847 to free parents in Alexandria, Virginia, on the plantation of George Washington’s Mount Vernon, he was the grandson of West Ford — according to an oral history but refuted by historians — the Black son of Washington, the Revolution­ary War hero and the nation’s first president. As a young man, George Ford worked as a guard at the late president’s tomb.

He enlisted in the 10th Cavalry in 1867 and served two tours of duty with the unit, which became to be known as the Buffalo Soldiers for their western conflicts with Native Americans. After he was honorably discharged from the Army in the mid-1870s, he worked at Arlington National Cemetery before being appointed superinten­dent at Chattanoog­a.

Eventually, Ford would manage five different national cemeteries, interrupti­ng that service around 1897 at age 50 to voluntaril­y enlist in the Spanish-American War with the Second Battalion of the 23rd Kansas Volunteers. He was a delegate from Kansas to the Republican National Convention, which nominated his Spanish-American war acquaintan­ce Theodore Roosevelt for vice president, in 1900. He died in 1939 and was buried, appropriat­ely, in the Camp Butler National Cemetery in Springfiel­d, Illinois, of which he was superinten­dent for 24 years.

One hundred and sixty years after the Chattanoog­a National Cemetery opened to bury the dead of the Civil War, Memorial Days don’t distinguis­h among the races of those who gave their all for their country. But it is always instructiv­e to learn how much of a shared sacrifice this country has seen.

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