Henderson McRoberts
African-American Civil War Veteran
by Bob Brail
by Bob Brail
In the latter part of August, 1866, the
56th Infantry Regiment, United States Colored Troops, was ordered
from eastern Arkansas to St.
Louis to be mustered out of service. During the trip north, soldiers began dying
aboard the two steamboats transporting the regiment. Cholera was suspected, but a surgeon who
inspected the men could not confirm the presence of the deadly disease. When the men arrived in St.
Louis, however, they were kept on board overnight as a
precautionary measure. The next morning,
cholera was confirmed. The steamboats
were immediately order to a quarantine station where, during the next few
weeks, 179 members of the regiment died.
One of the survivors was Henderson McRoberts, probably a former
slave. McRoberts would spend the rest of
his life in southern St. Charles County.
Although it is impossible to prove, it seems
very likely that Henderson McRoberts was born into slavery. His 1919 death certificate lists his place of
birth as St. Charles County
and his age as “unknown, about 70 yrs.”
Based on his Civil War enlistment, it is much more likely he was about
75 when he died. This would mean he was
born around 1845; indeed, the federal census of 1880 indicates he was born in
1842 or 1843. While a slave did not
always use his master’s surname, it was common practice. Preston McRoberts is mentioned in 1844
circuit court records for St. Charles
County. The federal censuses of this era did not
count slaves, but the 1852 Missouri
state census did. Preston McRoberts, who
is listed in every federal census from 1850 until his death just after the turn
of the century as living in Callaway Township,
owned seven slaves, including three males, in 1852. He farmed about 500 acres on both sides of
what is now Highway N.
Preston McRoberts may have been the
owner of Peter McRoberts, a former slave who is listed in the 1870 and 1880
federal censuses as living in Femme Osage
Township in or near Augusta. Records indicate he was born around 1815 in
either Kentucky or St.
Charles County,
but Kentucky seems more
likely. On January 28, 1866, Peter McRoberts married Lucy Jane
Carter in Femme Osage
Township. The marriage certificate lists McRoberts’
children as Auvelia McRoberts, Henderson McRoberts, and John McRoberts. It is important to remember that slaves were
not allowed to marry, which explains why Henderson
was about twenty years old when his father finally married. If his father could not marry until after the
Civil War because he was a slave, it seems likely Henderson McRoberts, born in
the early 1840’s, was also a slave, perhaps one of the three males owned by
Preston McRoberts in 1852.
During the August, 1863, Henderson
McRoberts enlisted at St. Louis in Company E of the Arkansas Volunteers 3rd
Infantry Regiment (African Descent) which shortly thereafter became the 56th
Regiment, United States Colored Infantry.
This regiment was posted to the Helena, Arkansas,
area. Besides doing garrison duty, the
regiment was in action three times, fighting in minor battles at Indian
Bay, Meffleton Lodge, and Wallace’s
Ferry. It was during one of these
encounters that Henderson McRoberts was shot in the face near the right
eye. Pension records indicate that McRoberts
received four dollars every month because of this wound, after his application
was approved in 1881. When the regiment
was mustered out in 1866, after its tragic encounter with cholera, it had lost
twenty-five men in battle and 649 men to disease, about half of its original
strength.
Henderson McRoberts returned to southern St.
Charles County
after the war. His first son, Adam, had
been born in 1860, perhaps into slavery. In 1866 his first daughter, Julia, was
born. By this time had married Tiny
Bush. In 1871 Henderson
and Tiny were living in the Hamburg
area, where their son Henry was born. Six
other children would follow, including George and Ida sometime before 1876, and
Mary in 1879. Three children apparently
died at birth or as infants. In 1876 the
McRoberts family was living in Femme Osage
Township. Federal census records of 1880 suggest the
family was renting a house near the Chandler Hill Winery. McRoberts is described as a farm laborer. 1883 pension records give McRoberts’ address
as the Schluersburg post office.
Property of Henderson McRoberts in 1905 |
Sometime during the 1880’s Henderson
McRoberts, also known as “Hence,” purchased eighty acres almost exactly midway
between Howell and Hamburg, in what is now the Weldon Spring Conservation Area,
from Wilhemine Navo, the widow of Johanne Navo, who had died in 1873. McRoberts was also supplementing his farming
income by delivering mail around Howell and Hamburg. His annual pay as a mail contractor was $190 for
route 45837. He was still delivering
mail in 1907. It is somewhat of a
mystery as to how he was able to deliver mail since federal census records
indicate he was illiterate. The
McRobertses’ last child, Lillian, was born in 1901.
Henderson
McRoberts died of heart disease on May
4, 1919, and was buried in the McRoberts
Cemetery on his farm in an unmarked
grave. This former slave and wounded
veteran of the Civil War is a part of the area’s history that is certainly
worth remembering.
Sources: 56th United States Colored Troops Monument
(findagrave.com); 1852 Missouri Census - St. Charles County; 1868
Missouri State Census; 1876 Missouri State Census; 1883
Pensioners on the Roll, St. Charles, Missouri
(web.archive.org); 1905 Atlas Map of St. Charles County; The Black Phalanx
(J. T. Wilson and D. T. Cornish); Civil War Veterans of St. Charles County
(St. Charles County Geneological Society); Colored Paths: Marriages of
People of Color: Ex-Slaves of St. Charles County, Missouri, 1865-1871; Crow’s
Nest (Lilian Hays Oliver); Federal Censuses (1850-1910); Fold3.com; Missouri State
Board of Health death certificates (sos.mo.gov/archives); Official Register
of the United States, Vol. 2: The Postal Service (1907); St. Charles County
Historical Society; United States Colored Troops
(encyclopediaofarkansas.net).