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Oppression1775

Washington Initially Bars Black Men from Continental Army

In July 1775, the Continental Army's Cambridge headquarters formally prohibited the enlistment of Black men — free or enslaved. George Washington and a council of generals agreed to the exclusion, partly to appease Southern slaveholding delegates. The policy was reversed within months as manpower shortages became acute, but the initial exclusion reflected the Revolution's fundamental ambivalence toward Black freedom and service.