Over the next two weeks, Rolla Preservation Alliance will be posting about the life of Rolla resident, John O. Jeffreys. As a former slave from Boone County, Missouri, Jeffreys became a soldier, educator and small business owner. We hope you enjoy this story about Jeffreys' life and his impact on the greater Rolla community.
Part I: Slave and Soldier
John Jeffreys |
Very little is known about the early life of Jeffreys. According to his death certificate, he was born March 31, 1844 in Virginia. His parents are listed as "unknown" as he was likely born into slavery and separated from his family. The first known documentation of Jeffreys occurred in 1863 when he enlisted with the 1st Missouri Colored Infantry on December 1, 1863. Jeffreys was listed as 18 years old, from Columbia, Missouri and the slave of Arthur Price.
Jeffreys was able to enlist in the army after provocative steps were taken by the Federal Government in 1863. On January 1st, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. This act freed enslaved Americans within the Confederacy not yet under federal control. The proclamation also permitted African Americans to enlist in the military. However, this law did not pertain to Missouri. During the Civil War, Missouri technically had dual Union and Confederate legislatures. During June of 1861, the Union Army ousted the southern sympathizing governor, Claiborne Jackson. His deposed government reassembled in Neosho, Missouri and voted to secede from the Union. However, his government did not have official power, yet they did have votes in the Confederate Congress. Even though Missouri was in the Union, the state sill practiced the institution of slavery. Lincoln's proclamation only applied to rebelling states, of which Missouri was technically not one. Slavery would not be legally abolished in Missouri until January 11, 1865.
Missourians remained hesitant about the recruitment of African Americans. Finally on November 14, 1863, General John Schofield, Union Commander of the Department of Missouri, issued General Order Number 135. The order allowed all provost marshals to recruit "all Negroes, free or slave." If slave owners could prove their loyalty, they would receive $300 for each slave recruited. Ultimately, Missouri furnished 8,344 African American troops in five regiments.
After enlisting in the 1st Missouri Colored Infantry, Jeffreys traveled to St. Louis and was
Palmito Ranch Battlefield |
During the the Battle of Palmito Ranch, Confederate authority began to collapse in Texas. After the news of Lee's surrender on April 9, 1865, the desertion of Confederate soldiers became rampant. Those soldiers who vowed to fight, found a populace that was dissolving into general mayhem. The end of hostilities in Texas occurred on June 2, 1865 with the surrender of the Army of the Trans-Mississippi. Union troops, which included Jeffreys and the 62nd, did not restore order in Texas until June 19, 1865. Jeffreys was on duty at various points in Texas until he was mustered out of service on March 31st, 1866, his 22nd birthday. During his nearly three years of service, Jeffreys had attained the rank of Sergeant Major.
John Jeffreys' military career was over and he was now a free man. He left Brownsville, Texas en route for Jefferson City, where he had enlisted for the army. Upon his return he gained employment as a church sexton and was boarding with the Franklin Rose family. His purpose for returning to Jefferson City was not to toil at the maintenance of a local church, but to nurture an educational institution for African Americans he helped create during his tenure in the army.
Very interesting. Looking forward to Part II.
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