Sunday, December 17, 2006

Essay 1445


From The Washington Post…

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Post-Revolutionary Recognition
Slave Honored as ‘African American Patriot’ at Capitol

By Sue Anne Pressley Montes
Washington Post Staff Writer

For years, he was known only as the faithful servant. Through the long campaigns of the Revolutionary War, he toiled alongside his famous master. In a painting that has hung in the U.S. Capitol since 1899, he is the figure by the fire, roasting sweet potatoes (depicted above).

Now Oscar Marion is anonymous no longer. He has had his name restored.

In a ceremony yesterday at the Capitol, Marion was recognized as the “African American Patriot” he always was. A proclamation signed by President Bush expressed the thanks of a “grateful nation” and recognized Oscar Marion’s “devoted and selfless consecration to the service of our country in the Armed Forces of the United States.”

The occasion was a triumph for his distant cousin, genealogist Tina C. Jones, who researched his identity and pressed officials to honor him.

“He is not just some obscure figure in the background,” said Jones, president of the American Historical Interpretation Foundation Inc. in Rockville. “This person had a name. He had a life and a separate contribution.”

[Click on the essay title above to read the full story.]

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