This daguerreotype (ca.1850s) of a slave woman who served as a family nurse predates the Civil War but is a good example of what a house servant looked like during the war.
Papers of the Minor Family, #6055

While some scholars have argued that white mistresses were secret abolitionists, this fragment of an 1861 letter from Louisa Davis to Mrs. Alice Saunders illustrates that most mistresses firmly believed in the slave system. "I have not a single doubt about the rightfulness of slavery, so that I believe that we are fighting for our rights, & only our rights."
Papers of the Irvine, Saunders, Davis and Watts families, #38-33

State laws required free blacks to register their residency. These registers identified each by name, physical description, age, place of residence, and circumstances of manumission. This Washington County, Virginia, register includes several free black women who registered during the first months of the Confederacy: Mary Smith "sometimes called Mary Crow" (entry 122, January 29, 1861), and sisters Fannie and Emely Broddy (entries 124 & 125, February 26, 1861).
Register of Free Blacks, Washington County, #41-A

During the war, masters and mistresses continued to hire out their slaves. This January, 1862 receipt for Betsy Ann "a little negro girl" hired to Jack Shelton outlines what responsibilities a master had to his slave, responsibilities which included clothing Betsy Ann and "treat(ing) her well."
Papers of the Irvine, Saunders, Davis and Watts families, #38-33



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In September of 1862, Betty Saunders found herself in a difficult situation. In this letter to her mother, she describes the work she has been forced to do because so many of her slaves had fallen ill. However, this letter is a better indication of the sort of work slave women were doing since Betty Saunders "great deal to do" consisted of no more than instructing her slaves to fill in for those who were sick.
Papers of the Irvine, Saunders, Davis and Watts families, #38-33

There was little natural alliance between white women and black female slaves during the war. In this diary entry of February 24, 1863, Sigismunda Stribling Kimball of Shenandoah County, Virginia, angrily recorded the return of two runaway slaves with Union cavalry who liberated a slave woman named Fairinda and her children. When offered her choice of the plantation's goods Fairinda responded "she did not want anything but herself."
Sigismunda Stribling Kimball Diary, #2534

Letter, December 17, 1863, of a Virginia plantation mistress regarding the duplicity of Edmonia, a slave woman sent on an errand. However, the slave instead returned with a group of Union soldiers and with their encouragement opened her owner's trunks and "took all she could carry."
Micajah Woods Papers, #10279


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Slave wives and husbands, often separated because of residency on different plantations, sought to visit each other despite the war. In this January 9, 1864 certificate, W. C. Scott verifies his slave Willis Garland has permission to marry Martha Brown, a slave owned by a Mrs. Francis Cabell of Liberty Hall, Nelson County, Virginia. Scott adds that Garland will have visitation rights with Martha "at least three times annually."
Papers of the Cabell Family, #5084

Mrs. Fannie Berry joined other slaves in celebrating the South's defeat and the ending of slavery. Nearly seventy years after war, during a Works Progress Administration oral interview, Berry recalled a song the emancipated slaves sang upon learning of their freedom:"You are free,you are free."
Slavery-Virginia: Interviews With Ex-Slaves, #3429


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