A stolen warship. Five Confederate forts between him and the open sea. A captain’s coat, a straw hat, and the exact signals to blow at each checkpoint — because he was the one the Confederacy had trusted to give them. That was the gamble Robert Smalls made at three in the morning on May 13, 1862, with his wife and children below deck and the harbor guns above. He gave the signals. The sentries waved him through. He ran up a bedsheet and surrendered the Planter, its guns, and a map of Charleston’s minefield to the Union blockade. Then he won the vote, sat five terms in Congress, and wrote free public schooling into South Carolina law. The men who erased him are remembered. He carried himself from a cabin behind a slaveholder’s house to the floor of Congress — and the people who took it all back are the ones in the monuments. Robert Smalls needs to be remembered.
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