The Green Hill Cemetery, established in 1865, provides the citizens of Frankfort with a unique link to our community’s African American Civil War heritage. One of its most prominent features is a simple but impressive ten-foot tall limestone pillar bearing the names of 142 veterans of Kentucky’s United States Colored Troops (USCT) from Frankfort and the surrounding counties of central Kentucky.
The ten-foot tall limestone pillar bearing the names of 142 veterans of Kentucky’s United States Colored Troops (USCT)
The monument was dedicated on July 4, 1924 by the Women’s Relief Corps, an affiliate of the local African American Post of the Grand Army of the Republic, a Union Army veteran’s organization.
Officially, 23,703 African Americans in Kentucky responded to the call to arms by President Lincoln and Frederick Douglass to join the ranks of the newly organized USCT. Units were organized with men from across the Commonwealth, mustering into the Union Army at sites from Maysville to Paducah; Camp Nelson, located in Jessamine County, was the second largest recruiting and training facility for African Americans in the country.
Kentucky’s USCT were initially assigned to guard and garrison duty around the Commonwealth at places like Camp Nelson, Louisville, Crab Orchard, Danville, Camp Wildcat, Smithland, and Louisa. As Confederate guerrilla activity increased in the state, they became involved in skirmishes at Lexington, Harrodsburg, Haddix’s Ferry, Owensboro and Ghent.
Not all of Kentucky’s USCT units were confined to the boundaries of the Commonwealth. Units saw action at Union City, TN; Fort Donelson, TN; along the Northwestern Railroad; Johnsonville, TN; Nashville, TN; Saltville, VA; Bermuda, VA; Fort Fisher, NC; Sugar Loaf Hill, NC; Federal Point, NC; Kinston, NC; Goldsboro, NC; Cox’s Bridge, NC; Raleigh, NC; Bennett’s House, NC; and Duvall’s Bluff, AR.
Following the war, some of Kentucky’s USCT regiments did not immediately return home. Instead, they were sent to Texas as part of an American build-up intended to discourage French operations in Mexico. Several of Kentucky’s USCT regiments operated along the Rio Grande River until September 1866.
With the end of the war, martial law was still in effect within the Commonwealth. USCT units saw duty across Kentucky until December 20, 1867, when the 125th United States Colored Infantry was mustered out of service, thus becoming the last United States Colored Troops regiment to be discharged.
Hours: Dawn to Dusk.
Additional Information: The Capital City Museum holds records relating to historic burials at the Green Hill Cemetery. To view these records or other information at the museum, please request a research visit. To learn more about the contemporary part of the cemetery or to reserve a plot, please contact the Green Hill Cemetery Board.
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