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Buffalo Soldier

Buffalo Soldiers originally were members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army, formed on September 21, 1866, at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. This nickname was given to the Black Cavalry[1] by Native American tribes who fought in the Indian Wars. The term eventually became synonymous with all of the African American regiments formed in 1866:

Buffalo Soldiers
Buffalo Soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment in 1890
Active1866–1951
Country United States
Branch United States Army
Nickname(s)"Buffalo Soldiers"
ColorsBlue
Engagements

Although several African American regiments were raised during the Civil War as part of the Union Army (including the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry and the many United States Colored Troops Regiments), the "Buffalo Soldiers" were established by Congress as the first peacetime all-black regiments in the regular U.S. Army.[2] On September 6, 2005, Mark Matthews, the oldest surviving Buffalo Soldier, died at the age of 111. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.[3]

Etymology

 
Buffalo soldier sites from 1860-1900

Sources disagree on how the nickname "Buffalo Soldiers" began. According to the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum the name originated with the Cheyenne warriors in the winter of 1877, the actual Cheyenne translation being "Wild Buffalo". However, writer Walter Hill documented the account of Colonel Benjamin Grierson, who founded the 10th Cavalry regiment, recalling an 1871 campaign against Comanches. Hill attributed the origin of the name to the Comanche, due to Grierson's assertions. The Apache used the same term ("We called them 'buffalo soldiers,' because they had curly, kinky hair ... like bison") a claim supported by other sources.[4][5][6][7][8] Another possible source could be from the Plains Indians who gave them that name because of the bison coats they wore in winter.[9] The term Buffalo Soldiers became a generic term for all black soldiers. It is now used for U.S. Army units that trace their direct lineage back to any of the African-American regiments formed in 1866.

 
Head of an American bison

Service

During the Civil War, the U.S. government formed regiments known as the United States Colored Troops, composed of black soldiers and Native Americans. The USCT was disbanded in the fall of 1865. In 1867 the Regular Army was set at ten regiments of cavalry and 45 regiments of infantry. The Army was authorized to raise two regiments of black cavalry (the 9th and 10th (Colored) Cavalry) and four regiments of black infantry (the 38th, 39th, 40th, and 41st (Colored) Infantry), who were mostly drawn from USCT veterans. The first draft of the bill that the House Committee on Military Affairs sent to the full chamber on March 7, 1866, did not include a provision for regiments of black cavalry, however, this provision was added by Senator Benjamin Wade prior to the bill's passing on July 28, 1866.[10] In 1869 the Regular Army was kept at ten regiments of cavalry but cut to 25 regiments of Infantry, reducing the black complement to two regiments (the 24th and 25th (Colored) Infantry). The 38th and 41st were reorganized as the 25th, with headquarters in Jackson Barracks in New Orleans, Louisiana, in November 1869. The 39th and 40th were reorganized as the 24th, with headquarters at Fort Clark, Texas, in April 1869. The two black infantry regiments represented 10 percent of the size of all twenty-five infantry regiments. Similarly, the two black cavalry units represented 20 percent of the size of all ten cavalry regiments.[10]

During the peacetime formation years (1865–1870), the black infantry and cavalry regiments were composed of black enlisted soldiers commanded by white commissioned officers and black noncommissioned officers. These included the first commander of the 10th Cavalry Benjamin Grierson, the first commander of the 9th Cavalry Edward Hatch, Medal of Honor recipient Louis H. Carpenter, and Nicholas M. Nolan. The first black commissioned officer to lead the Buffalo Soldiers and the first black graduate of West Point, was Henry O. Flipper in 1877.

From 1870 to 1898, the total strength of the US Army totaled 25,000 service members, with black soldiers maintaining their ten percent representation.[10]

History

Indian Wars

From 1867 to the early 1890s, these regiments served at a variety of posts in the Southwestern United States and the Great Plains regions. They participated in most of the military campaigns in these areas and earned a distinguished record. Thirteen enlisted men and six officers from these four regiments earned the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars. In addition to the military campaigns, the Buffalo Soldiers served a variety of roles along the frontier, from building roads to escorting the U.S. mail. On April 17, 1875, regimental headquarters for the 10th Cavalry was transferred to Fort Concho, Texas. Companies actually arrived at Fort Concho in May 1873. The 9th Cavalry was headquartered at Fort Union from 1875 to 1881.[11] At various times from 1873 through 1885, Fort Concho housed 9th Cavalry companies A–F, K, and M, 10th Cavalry companies A, D–G, I, L, and M, 24th Infantry companies D–G, and K, and 25th Infantry companies G and K.[12] From 1879 to 1881, portions of all four of the Buffalo Soldier regiments were in New Mexico pursuing Victorio and Nana and their Apache warriors in Victorio's War.[13] The 9th Cavalry spent the winter of 1890 to 1891 guarding the Pine Ridge Reservation during the events of the Ghost Dance War and the Wounded Knee Massacre. Cavalry regiments were also used to remove Sooners from native lands in the late 1880s and early 1890s.

 
Buffalo Soldier in the 9th Cavalry, 1890

In total, 23 Buffalo Soldiers received the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars.[14]

Johnson County War

A lesser known action was the 9th Cavalry's participation in the fabled Johnson County War, an 1892 land war in Johnson County, Wyoming, between small farmers and large, wealthy ranchers. It culminated in a lengthy shootout between local farmers, a band of hired killers, and a sheriff's posse. The 6th Cavalry was ordered in by President Benjamin Harrison to quell the violence and capture the band of hired killers. Soon afterward, however, the 9th Cavalry was specifically called on to replace the 6th. The 6th Cavalry was swaying under the local political and social pressures and was unable to keep the peace in the tense environment.

The Buffalo Soldiers responded within about two weeks from Nebraska, and moved the men to the rail town of Suggs, Wyoming, creating "Camp Bettens" despite a hostile local population. One soldier was killed and two wounded in gun battles with locals. Nevertheless, the 9th Cavalry remained in Wyoming for nearly a year to quell tensions in the area.[15][16]

1898–1918

 
Buffalo Soldiers who participated in the Spanish–American War

After most of the Indian Wars ended in the 1890s, the regiments continued to serve and participated in the 1898 Spanish–American War (including the Battle of San Juan Hill) in Cuba, where five more Medals of Honor were earned.[17][18]

The men of the Buffalo Soldiers were the only African Americans that fought in Cuba during the war.[19] Additionally, the 6th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment had a company of African-American soldiers, company L, that saw action in Puerto Rico.[20] Up to 5,000 "Black men" enlisted in volunteer regiments in the Spanish–American War in Alabama, Illinois, Kansas, North Carolina, Ohio and Virginia, and some had all black officers.[21] Several other African-American regiments of United States Volunteer Infantry (USVI) were formed and nicknamed "Immune Regiments", as they were mistakenly believed to be resistant to tropical diseases, but only the 9th Immunes served overseas in the war.[22][23]

The Buffalo Soldier regiments also took part in the Philippine–American War from 1899 to 1903 and the 1916 Mexican Expedition.[17][18] There was strong opposition to war in the Philippines among African Americans.[24] Many black soldiers established a rapport with "the brown-skinned natives on the islands," and an unusually large number of black troops deserted during the campaign, some of whom joined the Filipino rebels, of whom the most famous was the celebrated David Fagen.[25][26]

In 1918, the 10th Cavalry fought at the Battle of Ambos Nogales during the First World War, where they assisted in forcing the surrender of the federal Mexican and Mexican militia forces.[17][18][27] In 1917, after being stationed in Houston, Texas, members of the 24th Infantry Regiment participated in the Houston riot of 1917 in which soldiers mutinied and marched on the city of Houston, killing over a dozen whites.[28]

Buffalo soldiers fought in the last engagement of the Indian Wars, the small Battle of Bear Valley in southern Arizona which occurred in 1918 between U.S. cavalry and Yaqui natives.[17][18]

Park Rangers

Another little-known contribution of the Buffalo Soldiers involved eight troops of the 9th Cavalry Regiment and one company of the 24th Infantry Regiment who served in California's Sierra Nevada as some of the first national park rangers. In 1899, Buffalo Soldiers from Company H, 24th Infantry Regiment briefly served in Yosemite National Park, Sequoia National Park, and General Grant (Kings Canyon) National Parks.[29]

U.S. Army regiments had been serving in these national parks since 1891, but until 1899, the soldiers serving were white. Beginning in 1899, and continuing in 1903 and 1904, African American regiments served during the summer in the second and third oldest national parks in the United States (Sequoia and Yosemite). Because these soldiers served before the National Park Service was created in 1916, they were "park rangers" before the term was coined.

A lasting legacy of the soldiers as park rangers is the campaign hat they wore (popularly known as the Smokey Bear hat). Although not officially adopted by the Army until 1911, the distinctive hat crease, called a Montana peak, (or pinch) can be seen being worn by several of the Buffalo Soldiers in park photographs dating back to 1899. Soldiers serving in the Spanish–American War began to re-crease the Stetson hat with a Montana "pinch" to better shed water from the torrential tropical rains. Many retained that distinctive crease upon their return to the U.S. The park photographs, in all likelihood, show Buffalo Soldiers who were veterans from that war.

One particular Buffalo Soldier stands out in history: Captain Charles Young, who served with Troop I, 9th Cavalry Regiment in Sequoia National Park during the summer of 1903. Young was the third African American to graduate from the United States Military Academy. At the time of his death, he was the highest-ranking African American in the U.S. military. He made history in Sequoia National Park in 1903 by becoming Acting Military Superintendent of Sequoia and General Grant National Parks. Young was also the first African American superintendent of a national park. During Young's tenure in the park, he named a giant sequoia for Booker T. Washington. Recently, another giant sequoia in Giant Forest was named in Captain Young's honor. Some of Young's descendants attended the ceremony.[30]

 
Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in Houston
 
Entrance to Buffalo Soldiers National Museum
 
The Richard Allen Cultural Center in Leavenworth, Kansas, includes the home of a former black U.S. Army soldier. The museum shares the histories of African Americans living on the Kansas frontier during pioneer days to the present, especially those serving in the U.S. Army as Buffalo Soldiers.

In 1903, 9th Cavalrymen in Sequoia built the first trail to the top of Mount Whitney, the highest mountain in the contiguous United States. They also built the first wagon road into Sequoia's Giant Forest, the most famous grove of giant sequoia trees in Sequoia National Park.

In 1904, 9th Cavalrymen in Yosemite built an arboretum on the South Fork of the Merced River in the southern section of the park. This arboretum had pathways and benches, and some plants were identified in both English and Latin. Yosemite's arboretum is considered to be the first museum in the National Park System. The NPS cites a 1904 report, where Yosemite superintendent (Lt. Col.) John Bigelow, Jr. declared the arboretum "To provide a great museum of nature for the general public free of cost ..." Unfortunately, the forces of developers, miners, and greed cut the boundaries of Yosemite in 1905 and the arboretum was nearly destroyed.[31]

In the Sierra Nevada, the Buffalo Soldiers regularly endured long days in the saddle, slim rations, racism, and separation from family and friends. As military stewards, the African American cavalry and infantry regiments protected the national parks from illegal grazing, poaching, timber thieves, and forest fires. Yosemite Park Ranger Shelton Johnson researched and interpreted the history in an attempt to recover and celebrate the contributions of the Buffalo Soldiers of the Sierra Nevada.[32]

West Point

 

On March 23, 1907, the United States Military Academy Detachment of Cavalry was changed to a colored unit. It had been proposed in 1897 at the "Cavalry and Light Artillery School" at Fort Riley, Kansas that West Point cadets learn their riding skills from the black noncommissioned officers who were considered the best. The 100-man detachment from the 9th,[33] and 10th[34] Cavalry served to teach future officers at West Point riding instruction, mounted drill, and tactics until 1947.[33]

The West Point "Escort of Honour" detachment of the 10th Cavalry was distinguished in 1931 by being the last regular army unit to be issued with the M1902 blue dress uniform for all ranks. This parade uniform had ceased to be worn by other regiments after 1917.[35]

The last commanding officer of the West Point detachment of the Buffalo Soldiers, (9th and 10th Cavalry,) was Lt. Col. John "Duke" Nazzaro. Nazzaro was known and recognized for standing with his detachment on and off the field. He established a college scholarship for descendants of the Buffalo Soldiers in his son, Thomas Nazzaro's name.[36]

Prejudice

The Buffalo Soldiers were often confronted with racial prejudice from other members of the U.S. Army. Civilians in the areas where the soldiers were stationed occasionally reacted to them with violence. Buffalo Soldiers were attacked during racial disturbances in Rio Grande City, Texas, in 1899,[37] Brownsville, Texas, in 1906,[38] and Houston, Texas, in 1917.[39][40]

During the Spanish-American War, the 9th Cavalry faced violent conflict with white citizens in multiple cities in Florida including Lakeland and Tampa.[41]

During the Indian Wars from 1866 to 1891, 416 soldiers were awarded the Medal of Honor. Although the Buffalo Soldiers comprised 12% of the U.S. Army infantry force and 20% of the cavalry force in this era, Buffalo Soldiers were awarded less than 4% of all Medals of Honor awarded. Other regiments during the era received a greater number of Medals of Honor but were not distinguished enough to see duty in Cuba for the Spanish–American War. For example, the 8th Cavalry Regiment with 84 Medals of Honor, were not assigned duty to fight in Cuba in 1898. Scholars have hypothesized that commanders were reticent to award behavior that they expected from soldiers, the bureaucracy impeded awards, and the posting of black soldiers to remote outposts reduced the visibility of black soldiers (the 1st Cavalry participated in twenty-one campaigns and the 2nd cavalry participated in nineteen campaigns during this era, compared to the 9th Cavalry's eight campaigns). Historian Thomas Philips counted 2,704 engagements with native tribes during this era, of which the four black regiments participated in 141 or about 4%.[42]

John J. Pershing

General of the Armies John J. Pershing is a controversial figure regarding the Buffalo Soldiers. He served with the 10th Cavalry Regiment from October 1895 to May 1897, starting as a first lieutenant when he took command of a troop of the 10th in October 1895.[43]

In 1897, Pershing became an instructor at West Point, where he joined the tactical staff. West Point cadets upset over Pershing's disciplinary treatment and high standards took to calling him "Nigger Jack", because he had learned to have full respect for black soldiers while leading them.[43] Later during the Spanish–American War, where Pershing served with the 10th for six months in Cuba, the press softened the term to "Black Jack", which they continued to use in World War I.[44][45]

At the start of the Spanish–American War, First Lieutenant Pershing was offered a brevet rank and commissioned a major of volunteers on August 26, 1898. He fought with the 10th Cavalry (Buffalo Soldiers) on Kettle and San Juan Hills in Cuba and was cited for gallantry.[43]

During World War I, Pershing was the Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) on the Western Front. While earlier a champion of the African-American soldier, at this time he did not defend their full participation on the battlefield, but bowed to the racist policies of President Woodrow Wilson, Secretary of War Newton D. Baker, and the Southern Democratic Party with its "separate but equal" philosophy.[44]

Baker was cognizant of the many problems of domestic and allied political involvement in military decision-making during wartime, and gave Pershing unmatched authority to run his command as he saw fit, but Pershing practiced careful realpolitik where black participation was concerned, not engaging in issues that might distract or diminish his command. Even so, Pershing allowed American soldiers (African Americans) to be under the command of a foreign power for the first time in American history.[44]

The Punitive Expedition, U.S.–Mexico border, and World War I

The outbreak of the Mexican Revolution in 1910 against the long-time rule of President Porfirio Díaz initiated a decade-long period of high-intensity military conflict along the U.S.–Mexico border as different political/military factions in Mexico fought for power. The access to arms and customs duties from Mexican communities along the U.S.–Mexico boundary made border towns such as Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Ojinaga, Chihuahua, and Nogales, Sonora, important strategic assets. As the various factions in Mexico vied for power, the U.S. Army, including the Buffalo Soldier units, was dispatched to the border to maintain security. The Buffalo Soldiers played a key role in U.S.–Mexico relations as the maelstrom that followed the ousting of Díaz and the assassination of his successor Francisco Madero intensified.[citation needed]

 
Buffalo Soldiers of the U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment who were taken prisoner during the Battle of Carrizal, Chihuahua, Mexico in 1916

By late 1915, the political faction led by Venustiano Carranza received diplomatic recognition from the U.S. government as the legitimate ruling force in Mexico. Francisco "Pancho" Villa, who had previously courted U.S. recognition and thus felt betrayed, then attacked the rural community of Columbus, New Mexico, directly leading to further border tensions as U.S. President Woodrow Wilson unilaterally dispatched the Punitive Expedition into Chihuahua, Mexico, under General John Pershing to apprehend or kill Villa. The 9th and 10th regiments were deployed to Mexico along with the rest of Pershing's units. Although the manhunt for Villa failed, small-scale confrontations in the communities of Parral and Carrizal nearly brought about a war between Mexico and the United States in the summer of 1916. Tensions cooled through diplomacy as the captured Buffalo Soldiers from Carrizal were released. Despite the public outrage over Villa's Columbus raid, Wilson and his cabinet felt that the U.S.'s attention ought to be centered on Germany and World War I, not the apprehension of the "Centauro del Norte". The Punitive Expedition exited Mexico in early 1917, just before the U.S. declaration of war against Germany in April 1917.[citation needed]

The Buffalo Soldiers did not participate with the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) during World War I, but experienced noncommissioned officers were provided to other segregated Black units for combat service—such as the 317th Engineer Battalion.[46] The soldiers of the 92nd and the 93rd infantry divisions were the first Americans to fight in France. The four regiments of the 93rd fought under French command for the duration of the war.

 
The U.S.-Mexico border in Nogales in 1898: International Street/Calle Internacional runs through the center of the image between Nogales, Sonora (left), and Nogales, Arizona (right). Note the wide-open international boundary. A Customs House is located near the center of the image.

On August 27, 1918, the 10th Cavalry supported the 35th Infantry Regiment in a border skirmish in the border towns of Nogales, Arizona, and Nogales, Sonora, between U.S. military forces, Mexican Federal troops, and armed Mexican civilians (militia) in the Battle of Ambos Nogales. This was the only incident in which German military advisers allegedly fought along with Mexican soldiers against United States soldiers on North America soil during World War I.[18][27]

Battle of Ambos Nogales

The 35th Infantry Regiment was stationed at Nogales, Arizona, on August 27, 1918, when at about 4:10 p.m., a gun battle erupted unintentionally when a Mexican civilian attempted to pass through the border, back to Mexico, without being interrogated at the U.S. Customs house. After the initial shooting, reinforcements from both sides rushed to the border. On the Mexican side, the majority of the belligerents were angry civilians upset with the killings of Mexican border crossers by the U.S. Army along the vaguely defined border between the two cities during the previous year (the U.S. Border Patrol did not exist until 1924). For the Americans, the reinforcements were the 10th Cavalry, off-duty 35th Regiment soldiers, and militia. Hostilities quickly escalated, and several soldiers were killed, and others wounded on both sides, including the mayor of Nogales, Sonora, Felix B. Peñaloza (killed when waving a white truce flag/handkerchief with his cane). A cease-fire was arranged later after the US forces took the heights south of Nogales, Arizona.[18][27][47]

Due in part to the heightened hysteria caused by World War I, allegations surfaced that German agents fomented this violence and died fighting alongside the Mexican troops they led. U.S. newspaper reports in Nogales before the August 27, 1918, battle documented the departure of part of the Mexican garrison in Nogales, Sonora, to points south that August in an attempt to quell armed political rebels.[48][49][50]

Despite the Battle of Ambos Nogales controversy, the presence of the Buffalo Soldiers in the community left a significant impact on the border town. The famed jazz musician Charles Mingus was born in the Camp Stephen Little military base in Nogales in 1922, son of a Buffalo Soldier.[51] The African American population, centered on the stationing of Buffalo Soldiers such as the 25th Infantry in Nogales, was a significant factor in the community, though they often faced racial discrimination in the binational border community in addition to racial segregation at the elementary-school level in Nogales's Grand Avenue/Frank Reed School (a school reserved for black children).[52] The redeployment of the Buffalo Soldiers to other areas and the closure of Camp Little in 1933 initiated the decline of the African American community in Nogales.

World War II

 
With colors flying and guidons down, the lead troops of the famous 9th Cavalry pass in review at the regiment's new home in rebuilt Camp Funston, Ft. Riley, Kansas, May 1941.

Before World War II, the black 25th Infantry Regiment was based at Ft Huachuca. During the war, Ft Huachuca served as the home base of the Black 92nd and 93rd Infantry Divisions. The 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments were mostly disbanded, and the soldiers were moved into service-oriented units, along with the entire 2nd Cavalry Division. The 92nd Infantry Division, the "Buffalo Division", served in combat during the Italian campaign. The 93rd Infantry Division—including the 25th Infantry Regiment—served in the Pacific theater.[53] Separately, independent Black artillery, tank, and tank destroyer battalions, as well as quartermaster and support battalions served in World War II. All of these units to a degree carried out the traditions of the Buffalo Soldiers.

Despite some official resistance and administrative barriers, Black airmen were trained and played a part in the air war in Europe, gaining a reputation for skill and bravery (see Tuskegee Airmen). In early 1945, after the Battle of the Bulge, American forces in Europe experienced a shortage of combat troops, so the embargo on using black soldiers in combat units was relaxed. The American Military History says:

Faced with a shortage of infantry replacements during the enemy's counteroffensive, General Eisenhower offered black soldiers in service units an opportunity to volunteer for duty with the infantry. More than 4,500 responded, many taking reductions in grade to meet specified requirements. The 6th Army Group formed these men into provisional companies, while the 12th Army Group employed them as an additional platoon in existing rifle companies. The excellent record established by these volunteers, particularly those serving as platoons, presaged major postwar changes in the traditional approach to employing Black troops.

Korean War and integration

 
Buffalo Soldier Monument on Fort Leavenworth, Kansas

In 1948, President Harry Truman signed Executive Order 9981, which desegregated the military and marked the first federal piece of legislation that went against the societal norms implemented through Jim Crow laws. During the Korean War, black and white troops operated in integrated units for the first time.

The 24th Infantry Regiment saw combat during the Korean War and was the last segregated regiment to engage in combat. The 24th was deactivated in 1951, and its soldiers were integrated into other units in Korea. On December 12, 1951, the last Buffalo Soldier units, the 27th Cavalry and the 28th (Horse) Cavalry, were disbanded. The 28th Cavalry was inactivated at Assi-Okba, Algeria, in April 1944 in North Africa, and marked the end of the regiment.[54]

Monuments to the Buffalo Soldiers are in Kansas at Fort Leavenworth and Junction City.[55] Then–Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell, who initiated the project to get a statue to honor the Buffalo Soldiers when he was posted as a brigadier general to Fort Leavenworth, was guest speaker for the unveiling of the Fort Leavenworth monument in July 1992.

Controversy

In the 21st century, the employment of the Buffalo Soldiers by the United States Army in the Indian Wars has led some to call for the critical reappraisal of the African American regiments. In the opinion of some,[56] the Buffalo Soldiers were used as mere shock troops or accessories to the forceful expansionist goals of the U.S. government at the expense of the Native Americans and other minorities.[56][57] However, there is little evidence to support these opinions. In fact, many Buffalo Soldiers, such as Lieutenant Henry Flipper (the first black man to graduate from the West Point Military Academy[58]), willingly pursued military careers.[58] A poem written by one of the Buffalo Soldiers of the 9th Cavalry reads:

The rest have gone home, To meet the blizzard's wintry blast. The Ninth, the willing Ninth, Is camped here till the last, We were the first to come, Will be the last to leave. Why are we compelled to stay, Why this reward receive? In warm barracks, Our recent comrades take their ease, While we poor devils, And the Sioux, are left to freeze.[59]

Further evidence of their willing participation and their skill can be found in a letter written by Francis Roe, an officer's wife, writing in 1873. Her letter was the first recorded text to refer to the Buffalo Soldiers by their common name. She writes: "These 'Buffalo Soldiers' are active, intelligent, and resolute men; are perfectly willing to fight the Indians, whenever they may be called upon to do so, and appear to me to be rather superior to the average of white men recruited in time of peace."[59] Other primary sources include the letters of Lt. Powhattan H. Clarke, who served with the 10th Cavalry in Arizona. He swore that "There is not a troop in the U.S. Army that I would trust my life to as quickly as this K troop of ours",[59] and an Army paymaster ambushed in 1889 and saved by the Buffalo Soldiers later remarked, "I never witnessed better courage or better fighting than shown by these colored soldiers."[59] Such accounts led to their reputation as legendary soldiers.

Evidence from court martial documents also suggest that the Buffalo Soldiers willingly participated in various actions and were able to dissent if they so wished. Cpl. Charles Woods was tried by a general court-martial at Austin, Texas, on June 4, 1867. There were several charges in the case, including mutiny, striking his superior officer, and desertion. Corporal Woods pleaded "not guilty" to the first two charges and "guilty" to the third charge of desertion. Woods was found guilty of all three charges and sentenced to death. Because of facts brought out during the case, including the harsh treatment by an officer toward his men, the judge advocate general recommended that Woods's sentence be remitted. In writing to the adjutant general, the judge advocate general wrote, "But in view of the extraordinary circumstances developed by the testimony, showing that there was no disposition on the part of the prisoner either to mutiny or to desert, but that his conduct, and that of his company, was the result of outrageous treatment on the part of one of the commissioned officers, and in view of the suffering he has already endured, the sentence is remitted and the prisoner will be restored to duty." A November 20 regimental order reduced Woods to the rank of private.[60]

Many reports exist to detail the daily life of the Buffalo Soldier. The report of an infantryman serving under Sergeant Joseph Luckadoe about the night of an attack on a Texas Mail Station in 1873 states:

"While sitting in the Station our attention was attracted by the dogs barking at what we at the time, supposed to be a Cayote, to be sure, I told [Private Joshua L.] Newby to get his gun and see what they were barking at. When he got near the Haystack, he was fired upon by some one, the ball merely passing him and imbeded itself in one of the Corral posts. We seized our guns, and rushed out of doors when they discharged some 8 shots at us, the balls striking the stone and flatt[en]ing out with the exception of two, one is imbeded in one of the uprights for our Arbor, the other, as I turned around, struck my Cap brim, cutting away a portion of the cloth and pasteboard but did not hurt me ... I told [Private Henry] Williams to fire on them, this he done, when one of them fell at the second shot – at daybreak we found that he had bled all over the stones at least a half gallon of blood, they taken him off with them ... I do not think they were Indians they were to[o] bold and defiant although there are plenty of Moccasin tracks in the gulch. I think that more than one of the party was hurt. I think we killed the one that bled so much – we did not sleep any on the 31st, we are all well, and on the lookout. Please ask the Col. To send some more ammunition we have 130 rounds ... and please send those Beans to the station keeper and some vegetables, if you have some to spare."[61]

Writing in the veterans' newspaper Winners of the West, Scott Lovelace summarized the 10th Cavalry's activities during the late 1870s as "chasing the redskins to help blaze a right of way for the settlers of the wild west". Another 10th Cavalry veteran, George W. Ford, reflected: "Our sacrifices and hardships opened up a great empire to civilization."[61]

Many of the Buffalo Soldiers went on to lead prosperous lives. Samuel Bridgwater joined the 24th Infantry Regiment in the 1880s. In 1892, he married Mamie Anderson and brought her to Fort Huachuca, Arizona. After being wounded fighting in the Philippines, he served as a cook. Eventually, the Bridgwaters established themselves in Helena, Montana, buying property, raising their children, and becoming active in community affairs.[62] Many of his and his family's portraits can be seen in the archives of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.

Born in the Indian territory of Oklahoma in 1897, Benjamin B. Blayton and his twin brother joined the 92nd Division in 1918. Having left their small town for Washington, D.C., both men were eager to see the world. Blayton fought in the 365th regiment, which saw combat in the decisive Meuse-Argonne battle in France. For his heroic service, Blayton garnered two battle clasps on his World War I Victory Medal. Blayton married Oletha Brown, who had come to the capital to help the war effort by sewing uniforms. Blayton went on to work in the Patent Office and Postal Service.[62]

Legacy

Historical markers

In popular culture

  • The song and music of "Soul Saga (Song of the Buffalo Soldier)" has had several renditions. In 1974, it was produced by Quincy Jones in the album Body Heat.[63] In 1975, the album Symphonic Soul contained another variation and was released by Henry Mancini and his Orchestra.[64]
  • The song "Buffalo Soldier", co-written by Bob Marley and King Sporty, first appeared on the 1983 album Confrontation. Many Jamaicans, especially Rastafarians like Marley, identified with the "Buffalo Soldiers" as an example of black men who performed with exceeding courage, honor, valor, and distinction in a field that was dominated by whites and persevered despite endemic racism and prejudice.[65]
  • The song "Buffalo Soldier" by The Flamingos specifically refers to the 10th Cavalry Regiment. The song was a minor hit in 1970.[66] A cappella group The Persuasions remade the song on their album Street Corner Symphony. This version was produced by David Dashev and Eric Malamud.[67][68]
     
    Buffalo Soldier Memorial of El Paso, in Fort Bliss, depicting CPL John Ross, I Troop, 9th Cavalry, during an encounter in the Guadalupe Mountains during the Indian Wars
  • A 1961 episode of the television series Rawhide ("Incident of the Buffalo Soldier", season 3, episode 10, aired January 6, 1961) was about a former top sergeant Buffalo Soldier stationed at Fort Wingate.[69]
  • A 1964 episode of Rawhide ("Incident at Seven Fingers", season 6, episode 30, aired May 7, 1964) was about a top sergeant of Troop F, 110th Cavalry Regiment (played by William Marshall) who is accused of being a coward and a deserter. Other Buffalo Soldiers and an officer track him down.[70]
  • A 1968 episode of television series The High Chaparral ("The Buffalo Soldiers", season 2, episode 10, aired November 22, 1968), starring Yaphet Kotto, had the 10th Cavalry, C Company called in to establish martial law at the request of the citizens of Tucson, to help relieve it from the grip of a crime boss.[71]
  • The 1976 film Joshua, starring Fred Williamson, tells the story of a black soldier who, returned from fighting for the Union in the Civil War, becomes a bounty hunter determined to track down his mother's killers.[72]
  • The 2017 Netflix Western series Godless has a camp of former Buffalo Soldiers that have turned to farming (their fighting days behind them). In the series it is explained that the term "Buffalo Soldier" is derived from when John Randall held off 70 Indians with only a pistol, having killed 13 of them while he sustained multiple wounds. This explanation however is largely fictitious.[73]

Medal of Honor recipients (1866–1918)

 
 
Memorial to Medal of Honor recipient Corporal Clinton Greaves, 9th US Cavalry, at Fort Bayard, New Mexico
 
Sgt. John Harris of the 10th U.S. Cavalry with a Sharps rifle, c. 1868.

This list is of the officers and men who received the Medal of Honor for service with the original units called "Buffalo Soldiers".

Other prominent members

This list is of other notable African Americans who served in the original units as "Buffalo Soldiers" from 1866 to 1918.

See also

  United States portal

References

  1. ^ Mills, Charles K. (2011). Harvest of Barren Regrets: The Army Career of Frederick William Benteen 1834–1898. University of Nebraska Press. p. 331. ISBN 978-0-8032-3684-4.
  2. ^ Chap. CCXCIX. 14 Stat. 332 from "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U. S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774–1875". Library of Congress, Law Library of Congress. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  3. ^ Shaughnessy, Larry (September 19, 2005), Oldest Buffalo Soldier to be Buried at Arlington, CNN, retrieved April 24, 2007
  4. ^ Mills, Charles K. p. 332
  5. ^ Lehmann, H., 1927, 9 Years Among the Indians, 1870-1879, Von Boeckmann-Jones Company, p. 121
  6. ^ National Park Service, (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on January 4, 2007, retrieved May 1, 2007
  7. ^ Brief History (Buffalo Soldiers National Museum) (PDF), 2008, retrieved November 30, 2009
  8. ^ The Smithsonian Institution, The Price of Freedom: Printable Exhibition, retrieved May 1, 2007
  9. ^ DVD cover of the 1960 Western film Sergeant Rutledge (Issued in 2016 by the Warner Brothers Archive Collection.
  10. ^ a b c Schubert, Frank N. (1997). Black Valor: Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor, 1870–1898. Scholarly Resources Inc. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0-8420-2586-7.
  11. ^ Schubert, Frank N. (1997). Black Valor: Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor, 1870-1898. Scholarly Resources Inc. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-8420-2586-7.
  12. ^ Fort Concho National Historic Landmark, San Angelo, TX: Fort Concho NHL, retrieved January 2, 2009
  13. ^ Schubert, Frank N. (1997). Black Valor: Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor, 1870-1898. Scholarly Resources Inc. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-8420-2586-7.
  14. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipients: Indian Wars Period".
  15. ^ Fields, Elizabeth Arnett. Historic Contexts for the American Military Experience August 29, 2002, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Schubert, Frank N. "The Suggs Affray: The Black Cavalry in the Johnson County War". The Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 1 (January 1973), pp. 57–68.
  17. ^ a b c d . US Army. Archived from the original on November 27, 2005.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Finely, James P. (1996), Buffalo Soldiers at Huachuca: The Battle of Ambo Nogales, Fort Huachuca, AZ: Huachuca Museum Society, p. Vol. 2, part 6, ISBN 978-0-929757-96-4, LCCN 93-206790, retrieved January 18, 2010
  19. ^ Cunningham, Roger D. (October 16, 2015). "The Black "Immune" Regiments in the Spanish–American War". ArmyHistory.org.
  20. ^ Cunningham, Roger (Summer 2001). ""We are an orderly body of men": Virginia's Black "Immunes" in the Spanish–American War" (PDF). Historic Alexandria Quarterly: 12.
  21. ^ Clodfelter, Micheal. Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualties and Other Figures, 1494-2007
  22. ^ Coston, Hilary (1971) [c. 1899]. The Spanish–American War volunteer. Freeport, NY: Books For Libraries Press. pp. 7. ISBN 9780836988437.
  23. ^ Glasrud, Bruce (2011). Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers. University of Missouri Press. p. 5.
  24. ^ Zinn, Howard (November 17, 2015). A People's History of the United States. p. 319. ISBN 978-0-06-239734-8.
  25. ^ Hoffman, Phillip W. (2017). David Fagen: Turncoat Hero. ISBN 978-1-939995-25-4.
  26. ^ Morey, Michael (February 5, 2019). An African American Renegade in the Philippine-American War. ISBN 978-0-299-31940-3.
  27. ^ a b c Wharfield, Harold B., Colonel, USAF retired (1965), Tenth Cavalry and Border Fights, El Cajon, CA: Self published, pp. 85–97
  28. ^ "17 Killed; 21 Are Injured in Wild Night". Houston Chronicle. August 24, 1917. p. 1.
  29. ^ Johnson, Shelton Invisible Men: Buffalo Soldiers of the Sierra Nevada October 10, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Park Histories: Sequoia NP (and Kings Canyon NP), National Park Service. Retrieved: 2007-05-18.
  30. ^ Leckie, William H. (1967), The Buffalo Soldiers: A Narrative of the Black Cavalry in the West, Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, LCCN 67015571
  31. ^ Wallis, O. L. (September 1951), "Yosemite's Pioneer Arboreetum" (PDF), Yosemite Nature Notes, Yosimite Natural History Association, Inc., vol. XXX, Number 9, p. 83, retrieved May 5, 2010
  32. ^ Johnson, Shelton, , archived from the original on May 12, 2007, retrieved April 24, 2007
  33. ^ a b Buckley, Gail Lumet, American Patriots: The Story of Blacks in the Military from the Revolution to Desert Storm, Random House; 1st edition (May 22, 2001).
  34. ^ Brandon O'Connor (September 5, 2018) Honoring Buffalo Soldiers legacy with annual ceremony
  35. ^ Randy Steffen, page 72 "The Horse Soldier, Volume IV, 1917-1943", University of Oklahoma Press 1979
  36. ^ "Mission-History".
  37. ^ Christian, Garna (August 17, 2001), Handbook of Texas Online: Rio Grande City, Texas, retrieved April 24, 2007
  38. ^ Christian, Garna (February 17, 2005), Handbook of Texas Online: Brownsville, Texas, retrieved April 24, 2007
  39. ^ Haynes, Robert (April 6, 2004), Handbook of Texas Online: Houston, Texas, retrieved April 24, 2007
  40. ^ , archived from the original on September 27, 2007, retrieved April 24, 2007
  41. ^ Knetsch, Joe (2011). Florida in the Spanish-American War. Charleston, SC: The History Press. pp. 131–132. ISBN 9781609490881.
  42. ^ Schubert, Frank N. (1997). Black Valor: Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor, 1870-1898. Scholarly Resources Inc. pp. 164–165. ISBN 978-0-8420-2586-7.
  43. ^ a b c . www.nps.gov. Archived from the original on September 15, 2007.
  44. ^ a b c Frank E. Vandiver, Black Jack: The Life and Times of John J. Pershing – Volume I (Texas A&M University Press, Third printing, 1977) ISBN 0-89096-024-0, 67.
  45. ^ Bak, Richard, Editor. "The Rough Riders" by Theodore Roosevelt. Page 172. Taylor Publishing, 1997.
  46. ^
  47. ^ Clendenen, Clarence (1969), Blood on the Border: The United States Army and the Mexican Irregulars, New York: Macmillan, ISBN 978-0-02-526110-5
  48. ^ General DeRosey C. Cabell, "Report on Recent Trouble at Nogales, 1 September 1918", Battle of Nogales 1918 Collection, Pimeria Alta Historical Society (Nogales, AZ). See also DeRosey C. Cabell, "Memorandum for the Adjutant General: Subject: Copy of Records to be Furnished to the Secretary of the Treasury. 30 September 1918", Battle of Nogales 1918 Collection, Pimeria Alta Historical Society (Nogales, AZ). Furthermore, an investigation by Army officials from Fort Huachuca, Arizona, could not substantiate accusations of militant German agents in the Mexican border community and instead traced the origins of the violence to the abuse of Mexican border crossers in the year before the Battle of Ambos Nogales. The main result of this battle was the building of the first permanent border fence between the two cities of Nogales.
  49. ^ "Military Commanders Hold Final Conference Sunday", Nogales Evening Daily Herald (Nogales, AZ), September 2, 1918; Daniel Arreola, "La Cerca y Las Garitas de Ambos Nogales: A Postcard Landscape Exploration", Journal of the Southwest, vol. 43 (Winter 2001), pp. 504-541. Though largely unheard of in the U.S. (and even within most of Mexico), the municipal leaders of Nogales, Sonora, successfully petitioned the Mexican Congress in 1961 to grant the Mexican border city the title of "Heroic City", leading to the community's official name, Heroica Nogales, a distinction shared with other Mexican cities such as Heroica Huamantla, Tlaxcala, and Heroica Veracruz, Veracruz, communities that also saw military confrontation between Mexicans and U.S. military forces.
  50. ^ Carlos F. Parra, "Valientes Nogalenses: The 1918 Battle Between the U.S. and Mexico That Transformed Ambos Nogales", Journal of Arizona History, Vol. 51 (Spring 2010), p. 26.
  51. ^ "Mingus Biography - Charles Mingus: The Official Site".
  52. ^ Francisco Castro, "Overcoming Prejudice: Limitations Against Blacks in Nogales Did Not Stop Them from Accomplishments" March 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, In the Steps of Esteban, Tucson's African American Heritage.
  53. ^ Hargrove, Hondon B. (1985), Buffalo Soldiers in Italy: Black Americans in World War II, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, ISBN 0-89950-116-8
  54. ^ , archived from the original on December 20, 2007, retrieved April 24, 2007
  55. ^ , archived from the original on June 27, 2007, retrieved April 24, 2007
  56. ^ a b , archived from the original on September 29, 2007, retrieved July 24, 2007
  57. ^ Mullin, Matthew. "Buffalo Soldier-Dreadlock Rasta? The Buffalo Soldier of the West and the Elimination of the Native American Race". The Dread Library. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  58. ^ a b "Buffalo Soldiers and Indian Wars - 2015 - Questions of the Month". Jim Crow Museum. Ferris State University.
  59. ^ a b c d "We Can, We Will". TPW magazine. April 2006.
  60. ^ "Researching African Americans in the U.S. Army, 1866–1890". August 15, 2016.
  61. ^ a b "Buffalo Soldiers". April 13, 2017.
  62. ^ a b "Buffalo Soldiers". April 24, 2017.
  63. ^ Soul Saga (Song of the Buffalo Soldier), Jones, Quincy, 1974, A&M. 1988, Album Body Heat. ASIN: B000W0248E
  64. ^ Soul Saga (Song of the Buffalo Soldier), Mancini, Henry, 1975, RCA CPL1-0672 (Quadraphonic) album Symphonic Soul".
  65. ^ Black Heretics, Black Prophets: Radical Political Intellectuals – Bogues, Anthony, Page 198, via Google Books. Accessed 2008-06-28.
  66. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2000). Top Pop Singles 1955-1999. Menomonee Falls, WI: Record Research, Inc. p. 227. ISBN 0-89820-140-3.
  67. ^ Buffalo Soldier, The Persuasions, 1971, Capitol Records. 1993, Album Street Corner Symphony. ASIN: B0000008N7
  68. ^ 'Buffalo Soldier' by The Persuasions on Discogs
  69. ^ "Incident of the Buffalo Soldier" on tv.com and The Rawhide Trail. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
  70. ^ "Incident at Seven Fingers" on tv.com and The Rawhide Trail. Retrieved May 16, 2014.
  71. ^ "The High Chaparral Episode 2.36".
  72. ^ Ian Jane (August 16, 2011). "Cut-Throats Nine / Joshua". DVD Talk.
  73. ^ The 13 Indians were not killed by Randall, but rather by the soldiers coming to rescue him. While Indians started to use the term Buffalo Soldiers around that time, there is no direct connection to the incident with Randall. See for instance: William H. Leckie, Shirley A. Leckie. The Buffalo Soldiers: A Narrative of the Black Cavalry in the West. University of Oklahoma Press, 2012, ISBN 978-0-8061-8389-3, pp. 26-27

Further reading

  • Billington, Monroe Lee. New Mexico's Buffalo Soldiers, 1866–1900 (University Press of Colorado, 1991)
  • Downey, Fairfax. The Buffalo Soldiers in the Indian Wars (McGraw-Hill, 1969)
  • Field, Ron, and Alexander M. Bielakowski. Buffalo Soldiers: African American Troops in the US Forces, 1866–1945 (Osprey Pub., 2008)
  • Glasrud, Bruce A, and Michael N. Searles, eds. Buffalo Soldiers in the West: A Black Soldiers Anthology (Texas A&M University Press, 2007) ISBN 978-1-58544-620-9
  • Horne, Gerald. Black and Brown: African Americans and the Mexican Revolution, 1910–1920 (New York University Press, 2005) ISBN 978-0-8147-3673-9
  • Kenner, Charles L. Buffalo Soldiers and Officers of the Ninth Cavalry, 1867–1898: Black and White Together (University of Oklahoma Press, 1990) ISBN 978-0-8061-3158-0
  • Leckie, William H., and Shirley A. Leckie. The Buffalo Soldiers: A Narrative of the Black Cavalry in the West (University of Oklahoma Press, 2012)
  • Schubert, Frank N. (1997). Black Valor: Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor, 1870-1898. Scholarly Resources Inc. ISBN 978-0-8420-2586-7.
  • Schubert, Frank N. Buffalo Soldiers, Braves, and the Brass: The Story of Fort Robinson, Nebraska (White Mane Publishing Company, 1993)
  • Smith, Sherry L. "Lost Soldiers: Re-searching the Army in the American West." Western Historical Quarterly (1998): 149–163. in JSTOR

External links

  • Buffalo Soldiers at San Juan Hill August 3, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  • Buffalo Soldier National Museum
  • Photograph Gallery of Buffalo Soldiers On the Eve of War (World War II) at the United States Army Center of Military History
  • Buffalo Soldiers from the Handbook of Texas Online
  • , a website devoted to remembering the contributions of the buffalo soldiers of the Sierra Nevada, by Park Ranger Shelton Johnson, Yosemite National Park
  • A Path to Lunch Liberation Day and the Liberation of America, Buffalo Soldiers in Lunigiana and Versilia, Italy.
  • Buffalo Soldiers during WW2 Captain Merrel Moody instructs Privates Enichel Kennedy, Oscar Davis, B. D. Kroninger and Will Johnson of Infantry School Stables, on the proper way to clean a saddle. Date: July 25, 1941.

buffalo, soldier, this, article, about, nickname, given, african, american, army, personnel, marley, song, song, other, uses, disambiguation, originally, were, members, 10th, cavalry, regiment, united, states, army, formed, september, 1866, fort, leavenworth, . This article is about the nickname given to African American U S Army personnel For the Bob Marley song see Buffalo Soldier song For other uses see Buffalo Soldier disambiguation Buffalo Soldiers originally were members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army formed on September 21 1866 at Fort Leavenworth Kansas This nickname was given to the Black Cavalry 1 by Native American tribes who fought in the Indian Wars The term eventually became synonymous with all of the African American regiments formed in 1866 9th Cavalry Regiment 10th Cavalry Regiment 24th Infantry Regiment 25th Infantry Regiment Second 38th Infantry RegimentBuffalo SoldiersBuffalo Soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment in 1890Active1866 1951Country United StatesBranchUnited States Army 9th Cavalry Regiment 10th Cavalry Regiment 24th Infantry Regiment 25th Infantry Regiment Second 38th Infantry RegimentNickname s Buffalo Soldiers ColorsBlueEngagementsAmerican Indian WarsSpanish American WarPhilippine American WarMexican Border WarWorld War IWorld War II Although several African American regiments were raised during the Civil War as part of the Union Army including the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry and the many United States Colored Troops Regiments the Buffalo Soldiers were established by Congress as the first peacetime all black regiments in the regular U S Army 2 On September 6 2005 Mark Matthews the oldest surviving Buffalo Soldier died at the age of 111 He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery 3 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Service 3 History 3 1 Indian Wars 3 2 Johnson County War 3 3 1898 1918 4 Park Rangers 5 West Point 6 Prejudice 7 John J Pershing 8 The Punitive Expedition U S Mexico border and World War I 8 1 Battle of Ambos Nogales 9 World War II 10 Korean War and integration 11 Controversy 12 Legacy 12 1 Historical markers 13 In popular culture 14 Medal of Honor recipients 1866 1918 15 Other prominent members 16 See also 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksEtymology Edit Buffalo soldier sites from 1860 1900 Sources disagree on how the nickname Buffalo Soldiers began According to the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum the name originated with the Cheyenne warriors in the winter of 1877 the actual Cheyenne translation being Wild Buffalo However writer Walter Hill documented the account of Colonel Benjamin Grierson who founded the 10th Cavalry regiment recalling an 1871 campaign against Comanches Hill attributed the origin of the name to the Comanche due to Grierson s assertions The Apache used the same term We called them buffalo soldiers because they had curly kinky hair like bison a claim supported by other sources 4 5 6 7 8 Another possible source could be from the Plains Indians who gave them that name because of the bison coats they wore in winter 9 The term Buffalo Soldiers became a generic term for all black soldiers It is now used for U S Army units that trace their direct lineage back to any of the African American regiments formed in 1866 Head of an American bisonService EditDuring the Civil War the U S government formed regiments known as the United States Colored Troops composed of black soldiers and Native Americans The USCT was disbanded in the fall of 1865 In 1867 the Regular Army was set at ten regiments of cavalry and 45 regiments of infantry The Army was authorized to raise two regiments of black cavalry the 9th and 10th Colored Cavalry and four regiments of black infantry the 38th 39th 40th and 41st Colored Infantry who were mostly drawn from USCT veterans The first draft of the bill that the House Committee on Military Affairs sent to the full chamber on March 7 1866 did not include a provision for regiments of black cavalry however this provision was added by Senator Benjamin Wade prior to the bill s passing on July 28 1866 10 In 1869 the Regular Army was kept at ten regiments of cavalry but cut to 25 regiments of Infantry reducing the black complement to two regiments the 24th and 25th Colored Infantry The 38th and 41st were reorganized as the 25th with headquarters in Jackson Barracks in New Orleans Louisiana in November 1869 The 39th and 40th were reorganized as the 24th with headquarters at Fort Clark Texas in April 1869 The two black infantry regiments represented 10 percent of the size of all twenty five infantry regiments Similarly the two black cavalry units represented 20 percent of the size of all ten cavalry regiments 10 During the peacetime formation years 1865 1870 the black infantry and cavalry regiments were composed of black enlisted soldiers commanded by white commissioned officers and black noncommissioned officers These included the first commander of the 10th Cavalry Benjamin Grierson the first commander of the 9th Cavalry Edward Hatch Medal of Honor recipient Louis H Carpenter and Nicholas M Nolan The first black commissioned officer to lead the Buffalo Soldiers and the first black graduate of West Point was Henry O Flipper in 1877 From 1870 to 1898 the total strength of the US Army totaled 25 000 service members with black soldiers maintaining their ten percent representation 10 History EditIndian Wars Edit Main article Indian Wars From 1867 to the early 1890s these regiments served at a variety of posts in the Southwestern United States and the Great Plains regions They participated in most of the military campaigns in these areas and earned a distinguished record Thirteen enlisted men and six officers from these four regiments earned the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars In addition to the military campaigns the Buffalo Soldiers served a variety of roles along the frontier from building roads to escorting the U S mail On April 17 1875 regimental headquarters for the 10th Cavalry was transferred to Fort Concho Texas Companies actually arrived at Fort Concho in May 1873 The 9th Cavalry was headquartered at Fort Union from 1875 to 1881 11 At various times from 1873 through 1885 Fort Concho housed 9th Cavalry companies A F K and M 10th Cavalry companies A D G I L and M 24th Infantry companies D G and K and 25th Infantry companies G and K 12 From 1879 to 1881 portions of all four of the Buffalo Soldier regiments were in New Mexico pursuing Victorio and Nana and their Apache warriors in Victorio s War 13 The 9th Cavalry spent the winter of 1890 to 1891 guarding the Pine Ridge Reservation during the events of the Ghost Dance War and the Wounded Knee Massacre Cavalry regiments were also used to remove Sooners from native lands in the late 1880s and early 1890s Buffalo Soldier in the 9th Cavalry 1890 In total 23 Buffalo Soldiers received the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars 14 Johnson County War Edit Main article Johnson County War A lesser known action was the 9th Cavalry s participation in the fabled Johnson County War an 1892 land war in Johnson County Wyoming between small farmers and large wealthy ranchers It culminated in a lengthy shootout between local farmers a band of hired killers and a sheriff s posse The 6th Cavalry was ordered in by President Benjamin Harrison to quell the violence and capture the band of hired killers Soon afterward however the 9th Cavalry was specifically called on to replace the 6th The 6th Cavalry was swaying under the local political and social pressures and was unable to keep the peace in the tense environment The Buffalo Soldiers responded within about two weeks from Nebraska and moved the men to the rail town of Suggs Wyoming creating Camp Bettens despite a hostile local population One soldier was killed and two wounded in gun battles with locals Nevertheless the 9th Cavalry remained in Wyoming for nearly a year to quell tensions in the area 15 16 1898 1918 Edit Buffalo Soldiers who participated in the Spanish American War After most of the Indian Wars ended in the 1890s the regiments continued to serve and participated in the 1898 Spanish American War including the Battle of San Juan Hill in Cuba where five more Medals of Honor were earned 17 18 The men of the Buffalo Soldiers were the only African Americans that fought in Cuba during the war 19 Additionally the 6th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment had a company of African American soldiers company L that saw action in Puerto Rico 20 Up to 5 000 Black men enlisted in volunteer regiments in the Spanish American War in Alabama Illinois Kansas North Carolina Ohio and Virginia and some had all black officers 21 Several other African American regiments of United States Volunteer Infantry USVI were formed and nicknamed Immune Regiments as they were mistakenly believed to be resistant to tropical diseases but only the 9th Immunes served overseas in the war 22 23 The Buffalo Soldier regiments also took part in the Philippine American War from 1899 to 1903 and the 1916 Mexican Expedition 17 18 There was strong opposition to war in the Philippines among African Americans 24 Many black soldiers established a rapport with the brown skinned natives on the islands and an unusually large number of black troops deserted during the campaign some of whom joined the Filipino rebels of whom the most famous was the celebrated David Fagen 25 26 In 1918 the 10th Cavalry fought at the Battle of Ambos Nogales during the First World War where they assisted in forcing the surrender of the federal Mexican and Mexican militia forces 17 18 27 In 1917 after being stationed in Houston Texas members of the 24th Infantry Regiment participated in the Houston riot of 1917 in which soldiers mutinied and marched on the city of Houston killing over a dozen whites 28 Buffalo soldiers fought in the last engagement of the Indian Wars the small Battle of Bear Valley in southern Arizona which occurred in 1918 between U S cavalry and Yaqui natives 17 18 Park Rangers EditAnother little known contribution of the Buffalo Soldiers involved eight troops of the 9th Cavalry Regiment and one company of the 24th Infantry Regiment who served in California s Sierra Nevada as some of the first national park rangers In 1899 Buffalo Soldiers from Company H 24th Infantry Regiment briefly served in Yosemite National Park Sequoia National Park and General Grant Kings Canyon National Parks 29 U S Army regiments had been serving in these national parks since 1891 but until 1899 the soldiers serving were white Beginning in 1899 and continuing in 1903 and 1904 African American regiments served during the summer in the second and third oldest national parks in the United States Sequoia and Yosemite Because these soldiers served before the National Park Service was created in 1916 they were park rangers before the term was coined A lasting legacy of the soldiers as park rangers is the campaign hat they wore popularly known as the Smokey Bear hat Although not officially adopted by the Army until 1911 the distinctive hat crease called a Montana peak or pinch can be seen being worn by several of the Buffalo Soldiers in park photographs dating back to 1899 Soldiers serving in the Spanish American War began to re crease the Stetson hat with a Montana pinch to better shed water from the torrential tropical rains Many retained that distinctive crease upon their return to the U S The park photographs in all likelihood show Buffalo Soldiers who were veterans from that war One particular Buffalo Soldier stands out in history Captain Charles Young who served with Troop I 9th Cavalry Regiment in Sequoia National Park during the summer of 1903 Young was the third African American to graduate from the United States Military Academy At the time of his death he was the highest ranking African American in the U S military He made history in Sequoia National Park in 1903 by becoming Acting Military Superintendent of Sequoia and General Grant National Parks Young was also the first African American superintendent of a national park During Young s tenure in the park he named a giant sequoia for Booker T Washington Recently another giant sequoia in Giant Forest was named in Captain Young s honor Some of Young s descendants attended the ceremony 30 Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in Houston Entrance to Buffalo Soldiers National Museum The Richard Allen Cultural Center in Leavenworth Kansas includes the home of a former black U S Army soldier The museum shares the histories of African Americans living on the Kansas frontier during pioneer days to the present especially those serving in the U S Army as Buffalo Soldiers In 1903 9th Cavalrymen in Sequoia built the first trail to the top of Mount Whitney the highest mountain in the contiguous United States They also built the first wagon road into Sequoia s Giant Forest the most famous grove of giant sequoia trees in Sequoia National Park In 1904 9th Cavalrymen in Yosemite built an arboretum on the South Fork of the Merced River in the southern section of the park This arboretum had pathways and benches and some plants were identified in both English and Latin Yosemite s arboretum is considered to be the first museum in the National Park System The NPS cites a 1904 report where Yosemite superintendent Lt Col John Bigelow Jr declared the arboretum To provide a great museum of nature for the general public free of cost Unfortunately the forces of developers miners and greed cut the boundaries of Yosemite in 1905 and the arboretum was nearly destroyed 31 In the Sierra Nevada the Buffalo Soldiers regularly endured long days in the saddle slim rations racism and separation from family and friends As military stewards the African American cavalry and infantry regiments protected the national parks from illegal grazing poaching timber thieves and forest fires Yosemite Park Ranger Shelton Johnson researched and interpreted the history in an attempt to recover and celebrate the contributions of the Buffalo Soldiers of the Sierra Nevada 32 West Point Edit On March 23 1907 the United States Military Academy Detachment of Cavalry was changed to a colored unit It had been proposed in 1897 at the Cavalry and Light Artillery School at Fort Riley Kansas that West Point cadets learn their riding skills from the black noncommissioned officers who were considered the best The 100 man detachment from the 9th 33 and 10th 34 Cavalry served to teach future officers at West Point riding instruction mounted drill and tactics until 1947 33 The West Point Escort of Honour detachment of the 10th Cavalry was distinguished in 1931 by being the last regular army unit to be issued with the M1902 blue dress uniform for all ranks This parade uniform had ceased to be worn by other regiments after 1917 35 The last commanding officer of the West Point detachment of the Buffalo Soldiers 9th and 10th Cavalry was Lt Col John Duke Nazzaro Nazzaro was known and recognized for standing with his detachment on and off the field He established a college scholarship for descendants of the Buffalo Soldiers in his son Thomas Nazzaro s name 36 Prejudice EditThe Buffalo Soldiers were often confronted with racial prejudice from other members of the U S Army Civilians in the areas where the soldiers were stationed occasionally reacted to them with violence Buffalo Soldiers were attacked during racial disturbances in Rio Grande City Texas in 1899 37 Brownsville Texas in 1906 38 and Houston Texas in 1917 39 40 During the Spanish American War the 9th Cavalry faced violent conflict with white citizens in multiple cities in Florida including Lakeland and Tampa 41 During the Indian Wars from 1866 to 1891 416 soldiers were awarded the Medal of Honor Although the Buffalo Soldiers comprised 12 of the U S Army infantry force and 20 of the cavalry force in this era Buffalo Soldiers were awarded less than 4 of all Medals of Honor awarded Other regiments during the era received a greater number of Medals of Honor but were not distinguished enough to see duty in Cuba for the Spanish American War For example the 8th Cavalry Regiment with 84 Medals of Honor were not assigned duty to fight in Cuba in 1898 Scholars have hypothesized that commanders were reticent to award behavior that they expected from soldiers the bureaucracy impeded awards and the posting of black soldiers to remote outposts reduced the visibility of black soldiers the 1st Cavalry participated in twenty one campaigns and the 2nd cavalry participated in nineteen campaigns during this era compared to the 9th Cavalry s eight campaigns Historian Thomas Philips counted 2 704 engagements with native tribes during this era of which the four black regiments participated in 141 or about 4 42 John J Pershing EditMain article John J Pershing General of the Armies John J Pershing is a controversial figure regarding the Buffalo Soldiers He served with the 10th Cavalry Regiment from October 1895 to May 1897 starting as a first lieutenant when he took command of a troop of the 10th in October 1895 43 In 1897 Pershing became an instructor at West Point where he joined the tactical staff West Point cadets upset over Pershing s disciplinary treatment and high standards took to calling him Nigger Jack because he had learned to have full respect for black soldiers while leading them 43 Later during the Spanish American War where Pershing served with the 10th for six months in Cuba the press softened the term to Black Jack which they continued to use in World War I 44 45 At the start of the Spanish American War First Lieutenant Pershing was offered a brevet rank and commissioned a major of volunteers on August 26 1898 He fought with the 10th Cavalry Buffalo Soldiers on Kettle and San Juan Hills in Cuba and was cited for gallantry 43 During World War I Pershing was the Commander in Chief C in C of the American Expeditionary Force AEF on the Western Front While earlier a champion of the African American soldier at this time he did not defend their full participation on the battlefield but bowed to the racist policies of President Woodrow Wilson Secretary of War Newton D Baker and the Southern Democratic Party with its separate but equal philosophy 44 Baker was cognizant of the many problems of domestic and allied political involvement in military decision making during wartime and gave Pershing unmatched authority to run his command as he saw fit but Pershing practiced careful realpolitik where black participation was concerned not engaging in issues that might distract or diminish his command Even so Pershing allowed American soldiers African Americans to be under the command of a foreign power for the first time in American history 44 The Punitive Expedition U S Mexico border and World War I EditMain article Punitive Expedition United States The outbreak of the Mexican Revolution in 1910 against the long time rule of President Porfirio Diaz initiated a decade long period of high intensity military conflict along the U S Mexico border as different political military factions in Mexico fought for power The access to arms and customs duties from Mexican communities along the U S Mexico boundary made border towns such as Matamoros Tamaulipas Ojinaga Chihuahua and Nogales Sonora important strategic assets As the various factions in Mexico vied for power the U S Army including the Buffalo Soldier units was dispatched to the border to maintain security The Buffalo Soldiers played a key role in U S Mexico relations as the maelstrom that followed the ousting of Diaz and the assassination of his successor Francisco Madero intensified citation needed Buffalo Soldiers of the U S 10th Cavalry Regiment who were taken prisoner during the Battle of Carrizal Chihuahua Mexico in 1916 By late 1915 the political faction led by Venustiano Carranza received diplomatic recognition from the U S government as the legitimate ruling force in Mexico Francisco Pancho Villa who had previously courted U S recognition and thus felt betrayed then attacked the rural community of Columbus New Mexico directly leading to further border tensions as U S President Woodrow Wilson unilaterally dispatched the Punitive Expedition into Chihuahua Mexico under General John Pershing to apprehend or kill Villa The 9th and 10th regiments were deployed to Mexico along with the rest of Pershing s units Although the manhunt for Villa failed small scale confrontations in the communities of Parral and Carrizal nearly brought about a war between Mexico and the United States in the summer of 1916 Tensions cooled through diplomacy as the captured Buffalo Soldiers from Carrizal were released Despite the public outrage over Villa s Columbus raid Wilson and his cabinet felt that the U S s attention ought to be centered on Germany and World War I not the apprehension of the Centauro del Norte The Punitive Expedition exited Mexico in early 1917 just before the U S declaration of war against Germany in April 1917 citation needed The Buffalo Soldiers did not participate with the American Expeditionary Forces AEF during World War I but experienced noncommissioned officers were provided to other segregated Black units for combat service such as the 317th Engineer Battalion 46 The soldiers of the 92nd and the 93rd infantry divisions were the first Americans to fight in France The four regiments of the 93rd fought under French command for the duration of the war The U S Mexico border in Nogales in 1898 International Street Calle Internacional runs through the center of the image between Nogales Sonora left and Nogales Arizona right Note the wide open international boundary A Customs House is located near the center of the image On August 27 1918 the 10th Cavalry supported the 35th Infantry Regiment in a border skirmish in the border towns of Nogales Arizona and Nogales Sonora between U S military forces Mexican Federal troops and armed Mexican civilians militia in the Battle of Ambos Nogales This was the only incident in which German military advisers allegedly fought along with Mexican soldiers against United States soldiers on North America soil during World War I 18 27 Battle of Ambos Nogales Edit Main article Battle of Ambos Nogales The 35th Infantry Regiment was stationed at Nogales Arizona on August 27 1918 when at about 4 10 p m a gun battle erupted unintentionally when a Mexican civilian attempted to pass through the border back to Mexico without being interrogated at the U S Customs house After the initial shooting reinforcements from both sides rushed to the border On the Mexican side the majority of the belligerents were angry civilians upset with the killings of Mexican border crossers by the U S Army along the vaguely defined border between the two cities during the previous year the U S Border Patrol did not exist until 1924 For the Americans the reinforcements were the 10th Cavalry off duty 35th Regiment soldiers and militia Hostilities quickly escalated and several soldiers were killed and others wounded on both sides including the mayor of Nogales Sonora Felix B Penaloza killed when waving a white truce flag handkerchief with his cane A cease fire was arranged later after the US forces took the heights south of Nogales Arizona 18 27 47 Due in part to the heightened hysteria caused by World War I allegations surfaced that German agents fomented this violence and died fighting alongside the Mexican troops they led U S newspaper reports in Nogales before the August 27 1918 battle documented the departure of part of the Mexican garrison in Nogales Sonora to points south that August in an attempt to quell armed political rebels 48 49 50 Despite the Battle of Ambos Nogales controversy the presence of the Buffalo Soldiers in the community left a significant impact on the border town The famed jazz musician Charles Mingus was born in the Camp Stephen Little military base in Nogales in 1922 son of a Buffalo Soldier 51 The African American population centered on the stationing of Buffalo Soldiers such as the 25th Infantry in Nogales was a significant factor in the community though they often faced racial discrimination in the binational border community in addition to racial segregation at the elementary school level in Nogales s Grand Avenue Frank Reed School a school reserved for black children 52 The redeployment of the Buffalo Soldiers to other areas and the closure of Camp Little in 1933 initiated the decline of the African American community in Nogales World War II Edit With colors flying and guidons down the lead troops of the famous 9th Cavalry pass in review at the regiment s new home in rebuilt Camp Funston Ft Riley Kansas May 1941 Before World War II the black 25th Infantry Regiment was based at Ft Huachuca During the war Ft Huachuca served as the home base of the Black 92nd and 93rd Infantry Divisions The 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments were mostly disbanded and the soldiers were moved into service oriented units along with the entire 2nd Cavalry Division The 92nd Infantry Division the Buffalo Division served in combat during the Italian campaign The 93rd Infantry Division including the 25th Infantry Regiment served in the Pacific theater 53 Separately independent Black artillery tank and tank destroyer battalions as well as quartermaster and support battalions served in World War II All of these units to a degree carried out the traditions of the Buffalo Soldiers Despite some official resistance and administrative barriers Black airmen were trained and played a part in the air war in Europe gaining a reputation for skill and bravery see Tuskegee Airmen In early 1945 after the Battle of the Bulge American forces in Europe experienced a shortage of combat troops so the embargo on using black soldiers in combat units was relaxed The American Military History says Faced with a shortage of infantry replacements during the enemy s counteroffensive General Eisenhower offered black soldiers in service units an opportunity to volunteer for duty with the infantry More than 4 500 responded many taking reductions in grade to meet specified requirements The 6th Army Group formed these men into provisional companies while the 12th Army Group employed them as an additional platoon in existing rifle companies The excellent record established by these volunteers particularly those serving as platoons presaged major postwar changes in the traditional approach to employing Black troops Korean War and integration Edit Buffalo Soldier Monument on Fort Leavenworth Kansas In 1948 President Harry Truman signed Executive Order 9981 which desegregated the military and marked the first federal piece of legislation that went against the societal norms implemented through Jim Crow laws During the Korean War black and white troops operated in integrated units for the first time The 24th Infantry Regiment saw combat during the Korean War and was the last segregated regiment to engage in combat The 24th was deactivated in 1951 and its soldiers were integrated into other units in Korea On December 12 1951 the last Buffalo Soldier units the 27th Cavalry and the 28th Horse Cavalry were disbanded The 28th Cavalry was inactivated at Assi Okba Algeria in April 1944 in North Africa and marked the end of the regiment 54 Monuments to the Buffalo Soldiers are in Kansas at Fort Leavenworth and Junction City 55 Then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell who initiated the project to get a statue to honor the Buffalo Soldiers when he was posted as a brigadier general to Fort Leavenworth was guest speaker for the unveiling of the Fort Leavenworth monument in July 1992 Controversy EditIn the 21st century the employment of the Buffalo Soldiers by the United States Army in the Indian Wars has led some to call for the critical reappraisal of the African American regiments In the opinion of some 56 the Buffalo Soldiers were used as mere shock troops or accessories to the forceful expansionist goals of the U S government at the expense of the Native Americans and other minorities 56 57 However there is little evidence to support these opinions In fact many Buffalo Soldiers such as Lieutenant Henry Flipper the first black man to graduate from the West Point Military Academy 58 willingly pursued military careers 58 A poem written by one of the Buffalo Soldiers of the 9th Cavalry reads The rest have gone home To meet the blizzard s wintry blast The Ninth the willing Ninth Is camped here till the last We were the first to come Will be the last to leave Why are we compelled to stay Why this reward receive In warm barracks Our recent comrades take their ease While we poor devils And the Sioux are left to freeze 59 Further evidence of their willing participation and their skill can be found in a letter written by Francis Roe an officer s wife writing in 1873 Her letter was the first recorded text to refer to the Buffalo Soldiers by their common name She writes These Buffalo Soldiers are active intelligent and resolute men are perfectly willing to fight the Indians whenever they may be called upon to do so and appear to me to be rather superior to the average of white men recruited in time of peace 59 Other primary sources include the letters of Lt Powhattan H Clarke who served with the 10th Cavalry in Arizona He swore that There is not a troop in the U S Army that I would trust my life to as quickly as this K troop of ours 59 and an Army paymaster ambushed in 1889 and saved by the Buffalo Soldiers later remarked I never witnessed better courage or better fighting than shown by these colored soldiers 59 Such accounts led to their reputation as legendary soldiers Evidence from court martial documents also suggest that the Buffalo Soldiers willingly participated in various actions and were able to dissent if they so wished Cpl Charles Woods was tried by a general court martial at Austin Texas on June 4 1867 There were several charges in the case including mutiny striking his superior officer and desertion Corporal Woods pleaded not guilty to the first two charges and guilty to the third charge of desertion Woods was found guilty of all three charges and sentenced to death Because of facts brought out during the case including the harsh treatment by an officer toward his men the judge advocate general recommended that Woods s sentence be remitted In writing to the adjutant general the judge advocate general wrote But in view of the extraordinary circumstances developed by the testimony showing that there was no disposition on the part of the prisoner either to mutiny or to desert but that his conduct and that of his company was the result of outrageous treatment on the part of one of the commissioned officers and in view of the suffering he has already endured the sentence is remitted and the prisoner will be restored to duty A November 20 regimental order reduced Woods to the rank of private 60 Many reports exist to detail the daily life of the Buffalo Soldier The report of an infantryman serving under Sergeant Joseph Luckadoe about the night of an attack on a Texas Mail Station in 1873 states While sitting in the Station our attention was attracted by the dogs barking at what we at the time supposed to be a Cayote to be sure I told Private Joshua L Newby to get his gun and see what they were barking at When he got near the Haystack he was fired upon by some one the ball merely passing him and imbeded itself in one of the Corral posts We seized our guns and rushed out of doors when they discharged some 8 shots at us the balls striking the stone and flatt en ing out with the exception of two one is imbeded in one of the uprights for our Arbor the other as I turned around struck my Cap brim cutting away a portion of the cloth and pasteboard but did not hurt me I told Private Henry Williams to fire on them this he done when one of them fell at the second shot at daybreak we found that he had bled all over the stones at least a half gallon of blood they taken him off with them I do not think they were Indians they were to o bold and defiant although there are plenty of Moccasin tracks in the gulch I think that more than one of the party was hurt I think we killed the one that bled so much we did not sleep any on the 31st we are all well and on the lookout Please ask the Col To send some more ammunition we have 130 rounds and please send those Beans to the station keeper and some vegetables if you have some to spare 61 Writing in the veterans newspaper Winners of the West Scott Lovelace summarized the 10th Cavalry s activities during the late 1870s as chasing the redskins to help blaze a right of way for the settlers of the wild west Another 10th Cavalry veteran George W Ford reflected Our sacrifices and hardships opened up a great empire to civilization 61 Many of the Buffalo Soldiers went on to lead prosperous lives Samuel Bridgwater joined the 24th Infantry Regiment in the 1880s In 1892 he married Mamie Anderson and brought her to Fort Huachuca Arizona After being wounded fighting in the Philippines he served as a cook Eventually the Bridgwaters established themselves in Helena Montana buying property raising their children and becoming active in community affairs 62 Many of his and his family s portraits can be seen in the archives of the Smithsonian s National Museum of American History Born in the Indian territory of Oklahoma in 1897 Benjamin B Blayton and his twin brother joined the 92nd Division in 1918 Having left their small town for Washington D C both men were eager to see the world Blayton fought in the 365th regiment which saw combat in the decisive Meuse Argonne battle in France For his heroic service Blayton garnered two battle clasps on his World War I Victory Medal Blayton married Oletha Brown who had come to the capital to help the war effort by sewing uniforms Blayton went on to work in the Patent Office and Postal Service 62 Legacy EditHistorical markers Edit Fort Concho Fort Clark Fort McKavett Fort Davis National Historic Site Buffalo Soldiers serving at Fort Davis Fort ElliottIn popular culture EditThe song and music of Soul Saga Song of the Buffalo Soldier has had several renditions In 1974 it was produced by Quincy Jones in the album Body Heat 63 In 1975 the album Symphonic Soul contained another variation and was released by Henry Mancini and his Orchestra 64 The song Buffalo Soldier co written by Bob Marley and King Sporty first appeared on the 1983 album Confrontation Many Jamaicans especially Rastafarians like Marley identified with the Buffalo Soldiers as an example of black men who performed with exceeding courage honor valor and distinction in a field that was dominated by whites and persevered despite endemic racism and prejudice 65 The song Buffalo Soldier by The Flamingos specifically refers to the 10th Cavalry Regiment The song was a minor hit in 1970 66 A cappella group The Persuasions remade the song on their album Street Corner Symphony This version was produced by David Dashev and Eric Malamud 67 68 Buffalo Soldier Memorial of El Paso in Fort Bliss depicting CPL John Ross I Troop 9th Cavalry during an encounter in the Guadalupe Mountains during the Indian Wars A 1961 episode of the television series Rawhide Incident of the Buffalo Soldier season 3 episode 10 aired January 6 1961 was about a former top sergeant Buffalo Soldier stationed at Fort Wingate 69 A 1964 episode of Rawhide Incident at Seven Fingers season 6 episode 30 aired May 7 1964 was about a top sergeant of Troop F 110th Cavalry Regiment played by William Marshall who is accused of being a coward and a deserter Other Buffalo Soldiers and an officer track him down 70 A 1968 episode of television series The High Chaparral The Buffalo Soldiers season 2 episode 10 aired November 22 1968 starring Yaphet Kotto had the 10th Cavalry C Company called in to establish martial law at the request of the citizens of Tucson to help relieve it from the grip of a crime boss 71 The 1976 film Joshua starring Fred Williamson tells the story of a black soldier who returned from fighting for the Union in the Civil War becomes a bounty hunter determined to track down his mother s killers 72 The 2017 Netflix Western series Godless has a camp of former Buffalo Soldiers that have turned to farming their fighting days behind them In the series it is explained that the term Buffalo Soldier is derived from when John Randall held off 70 Indians with only a pistol having killed 13 of them while he sustained multiple wounds This explanation however is largely fictitious 73 Medal of Honor recipients 1866 1918 Edit Memorial to Medal of Honor recipient Corporal Clinton Greaves 9th US Cavalry at Fort Bayard New Mexico Sgt John Harris of the 10th U S Cavalry with a Sharps rifle c 1868 This list is of the officers and men who received the Medal of Honor for service with the original units called Buffalo Soldiers Edward L Baker Jr Dennis Bell Thomas Boyne Benjamin Brown George Ritter Burnett Louis H Carpenter Powhatan Henry Clarke John Denny Pompey Factor Clinton Greaves Henry Johnson George Jordan Fitz Lee Isaiah Mays William McBryar Adam Paine Isaac Payne Thomas Shaw Emanuel Stance Freddie Stowers William H Thompkins Augustus Walley George H Wanton John Ward Moses Williams William Othello Wilson Brent WoodsOther prominent members EditThis list is of other notable African Americans who served in the original units as Buffalo Soldiers from 1866 to 1918 John Hanks Alexander Allen Allensworth Lewis Broadus Henry Ossian Flipper Edward W Pearson Sr Charles Young Cathay Williams Major George W FordSee also EditBicycle infantry Bisbee Riot Battle of the Saline River one of the first combats of the 10th Black Seminoles Cimarrones Black Seminole Scouts List of African American Medal of Honor recipients Military history of African Americans Racial segregation in the United States Armed Forces Camp Lockett Buffalo Soldier tragedy of 1877 also known as the Staked Plains Horror Colonel Charles Long The Buffalo Saga memoirs of James H Daugherty of the 92nd Infantry in World War II Tuskegee Airmen 1st Louisiana Native Guard 2nd Cavalry Division 92nd Infantry Division 93rd Infantry Division 366th Infantry Regiment 761st Tank Battalion 784th Tank Battalion MV Buffalo Soldier a maritime prepositioning ship used by the Military Sealift Command Tangipahoa African American Heritage Museum amp Black Veteran Archives Buffalo Soldiers MC a motorcycle club United States portalReferences Edit Mills Charles K 2011 Harvest of Barren Regrets The Army Career of Frederick William Benteen 1834 1898 University of Nebraska Press p 331 ISBN 978 0 8032 3684 4 Chap CCXCIX 14 Stat 332 from A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 Library of Congress Law Library of Congress Retrieved March 26 2012 Shaughnessy Larry September 19 2005 Oldest Buffalo Soldier to be Buried at Arlington CNN retrieved April 24 2007 Mills Charles K p 332 Lehmann H 1927 9 Years Among the Indians 1870 1879 Von Boeckmann Jones Company p 121 National Park Service Buffalo Soldiers PDF archived from the original PDF on January 4 2007 retrieved May 1 2007 Brief History Buffalo Soldiers National Museum PDF 2008 retrieved November 30 2009 The Smithsonian Institution The Price of Freedom Printable Exhibition retrieved May 1 2007 DVD cover of the 1960 Western film Sergeant Rutledge Issued in 2016 by the Warner Brothers Archive Collection a b c Schubert Frank N 1997 Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 Scholarly Resources Inc pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0 8420 2586 7 Schubert Frank N 1997 Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 Scholarly Resources Inc p 41 ISBN 978 0 8420 2586 7 Fort Concho National Historic Landmark San Angelo TX Fort Concho NHL retrieved January 2 2009 Schubert Frank N 1997 Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 Scholarly Resources Inc p 73 ISBN 978 0 8420 2586 7 Medal of Honor Recipients Indian Wars Period Fields Elizabeth Arnett Historic Contexts for the American Military Experience Archived August 29 2002 at the Wayback Machine Schubert Frank N The Suggs Affray The Black Cavalry in the Johnson County War The Western Historical Quarterly Vol 4 No 1 January 1973 pp 57 68 a b c d 10th Cavalry Squadron History US Army Archived from the original on November 27 2005 a b c d e f Finely James P 1996 Buffalo Soldiers at Huachuca The Battle of Ambo Nogales Fort Huachuca AZ Huachuca Museum Society p Vol 2 part 6 ISBN 978 0 929757 96 4 LCCN 93 206790 retrieved January 18 2010 Cunningham Roger D October 16 2015 The Black Immune Regiments in the Spanish American War ArmyHistory org Cunningham Roger Summer 2001 We are an orderly body of men Virginia s Black Immunes in the Spanish American War PDF Historic Alexandria Quarterly 12 Clodfelter Micheal Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualties and Other Figures 1494 2007 Coston Hilary 1971 c 1899 The Spanish American War volunteer Freeport NY Books For Libraries Press pp 7 ISBN 9780836988437 Glasrud Bruce 2011 Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers University of Missouri Press p 5 Zinn Howard November 17 2015 A People s History of the United States p 319 ISBN 978 0 06 239734 8 Hoffman Phillip W 2017 David Fagen Turncoat Hero ISBN 978 1 939995 25 4 Morey Michael February 5 2019 An African American Renegade in the Philippine American War ISBN 978 0 299 31940 3 a b c Wharfield Harold B Colonel USAF retired 1965 Tenth Cavalry and Border Fights El Cajon CA Self published pp 85 97 17 Killed 21 Are Injured in Wild Night Houston Chronicle August 24 1917 p 1 Johnson Shelton Invisible Men Buffalo Soldiers of the Sierra Nevada Archived October 10 2006 at the Wayback Machine Park Histories Sequoia NP and Kings Canyon NP National Park Service Retrieved 2007 05 18 Leckie William H 1967 The Buffalo Soldiers A Narrative of the Black Cavalry in the West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press LCCN 67015571 Wallis O L September 1951 Yosemite s Pioneer Arboreetum PDF Yosemite Nature Notes Yosimite Natural History Association Inc vol XXX Number 9 p 83 retrieved May 5 2010 Johnson Shelton Shadows in the Range of Light archived from the original on May 12 2007 retrieved April 24 2007 a b Buckley Gail Lumet American Patriots The Story of Blacks in the Military from the Revolution to Desert Storm Random House 1st edition May 22 2001 Brandon O Connor September 5 2018 Honoring Buffalo Soldiers legacy with annual ceremony Randy Steffen page 72 The Horse Soldier Volume IV 1917 1943 University of Oklahoma Press 1979 Mission History Christian Garna August 17 2001 Handbook of Texas Online Rio Grande City Texas retrieved April 24 2007 Christian Garna February 17 2005 Handbook of Texas Online Brownsville Texas retrieved April 24 2007 Haynes Robert April 6 2004 Handbook of Texas Online Houston Texas retrieved April 24 2007 The Officer Down Memorial Page Police Officer Rufus E Daniels archived from the original on September 27 2007 retrieved April 24 2007 Knetsch Joe 2011 Florida in the Spanish American War Charleston SC The History Press pp 131 132 ISBN 9781609490881 Schubert Frank N 1997 Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 Scholarly Resources Inc pp 164 165 ISBN 978 0 8420 2586 7 a b c Black Jack Pershing www nps gov Archived from the original on September 15 2007 a b c Frank E Vandiver Black Jack The Life and Times of John J Pershing Volume I Texas A amp M University Press Third printing 1977 ISBN 0 89096 024 0 67 Bak Richard Editor The Rough Riders by Theodore Roosevelt Page 172 Taylor Publishing 1997 317th Engineer Battalion Clendenen Clarence 1969 Blood on the Border The United States Army and the Mexican Irregulars New York Macmillan ISBN 978 0 02 526110 5 General DeRosey C Cabell Report on Recent Trouble at Nogales 1 September 1918 Battle of Nogales 1918 Collection Pimeria Alta Historical Society Nogales AZ See also DeRosey C Cabell Memorandum for the Adjutant General Subject Copy of Records to be Furnished to the Secretary of the Treasury 30 September 1918 Battle of Nogales 1918 Collection Pimeria Alta Historical Society Nogales AZ Furthermore an investigation by Army officials from Fort Huachuca Arizona could not substantiate accusations of militant German agents in the Mexican border community and instead traced the origins of the violence to the abuse of Mexican border crossers in the year before the Battle of Ambos Nogales The main result of this battle was the building of the first permanent border fence between the two cities of Nogales Military Commanders Hold Final Conference Sunday Nogales Evening Daily Herald Nogales AZ September 2 1918 Daniel Arreola La Cerca y Las Garitas de Ambos Nogales A Postcard Landscape Exploration Journal of the Southwest vol 43 Winter 2001 pp 504 541 Though largely unheard of in the U S and even within most of Mexico the municipal leaders of Nogales Sonora successfully petitioned the Mexican Congress in 1961 to grant the Mexican border city the title of Heroic City leading to the community s official name Heroica Nogales a distinction shared with other Mexican cities such as Heroica Huamantla Tlaxcala and Heroica Veracruz Veracruz communities that also saw military confrontation between Mexicans and U S military forces Carlos F Parra Valientes Nogalenses The 1918 Battle Between the U S and Mexico That Transformed Ambos Nogales Journal of Arizona History Vol 51 Spring 2010 p 26 Mingus Biography Charles Mingus The Official Site Francisco Castro Overcoming Prejudice Limitations Against Blacks in Nogales Did Not Stop Them from Accomplishments Archived March 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine In the Steps of Esteban Tucson s African American Heritage Hargrove Hondon B 1985 Buffalo Soldiers in Italy Black Americans in World War II Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company ISBN 0 89950 116 8 The 28th Cavalry The U S Army s Last Horse Cavalry Regiment archived from the original on December 20 2007 retrieved April 24 2007 Services Buffalo Soldier Monument archived from the original on June 27 2007 retrieved April 24 2007 a b The shame of the Buffalo Soldiers archived from the original on September 29 2007 retrieved July 24 2007 Mullin Matthew Buffalo Soldier Dreadlock Rasta The Buffalo Soldier of the West and the Elimination of the Native American Race The Dread Library Retrieved November 25 2021 a b Buffalo Soldiers and Indian Wars 2015 Questions of the Month Jim Crow Museum Ferris State University a b c d We Can We Will TPW magazine April 2006 Researching African Americans in the U S Army 1866 1890 August 15 2016 a b Buffalo Soldiers April 13 2017 a b Buffalo Soldiers April 24 2017 Soul Saga Song of the Buffalo Soldier Jones Quincy 1974 A amp M 1988 Album Body Heat ASIN B000W0248E Soul Saga Song of the Buffalo Soldier Mancini Henry 1975 RCA CPL1 0672 Quadraphonic album Symphonic Soul Black Heretics Black Prophets Radical Political Intellectuals Bogues Anthony Page 198 via Google Books Accessed 2008 06 28 Whitburn Joel 2000 Top Pop Singles 1955 1999 Menomonee Falls WI Record Research Inc p 227 ISBN 0 89820 140 3 Buffalo Soldier The Persuasions 1971 Capitol Records 1993 Album Street Corner Symphony ASIN B0000008N7 Buffalo Soldier by The Persuasions on Discogs Incident of the Buffalo Soldier on tv com and The Rawhide Trail Retrieved June 13 2012 Incident at Seven Fingers on tv com and The Rawhide Trail Retrieved May 16 2014 The High Chaparral Episode 2 36 Ian Jane August 16 2011 Cut Throats Nine Joshua DVD Talk The 13 Indians were not killed by Randall but rather by the soldiers coming to rescue him While Indians started to use the term Buffalo Soldiers around that time there is no direct connection to the incident with Randall See for instance William H Leckie Shirley A Leckie The Buffalo Soldiers A Narrative of the Black Cavalry in the West University of Oklahoma Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 8061 8389 3 pp 26 27Further reading EditBillington Monroe Lee New Mexico s Buffalo Soldiers 1866 1900 University Press of Colorado 1991 Downey Fairfax The Buffalo Soldiers in the Indian Wars McGraw Hill 1969 Field Ron and Alexander M Bielakowski Buffalo Soldiers African American Troops in the US Forces 1866 1945 Osprey Pub 2008 Glasrud Bruce A and Michael N Searles eds Buffalo Soldiers in the West A Black Soldiers Anthology Texas A amp M University Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 58544 620 9 Horne Gerald Black and Brown African Americans and the Mexican Revolution 1910 1920 New York University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 8147 3673 9 Kenner Charles L Buffalo Soldiers and Officers of the Ninth Cavalry 1867 1898 Black and White Together University of Oklahoma Press 1990 ISBN 978 0 8061 3158 0 Leckie William H and Shirley A Leckie The Buffalo Soldiers A Narrative of the Black Cavalry in the West University of Oklahoma Press 2012 Schubert Frank N 1997 Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 Scholarly Resources Inc ISBN 978 0 8420 2586 7 Schubert Frank N Buffalo Soldiers Braves and the Brass The Story of Fort Robinson Nebraska White Mane Publishing Company 1993 Smith Sherry L Lost Soldiers Re searching the Army in the American West Western Historical Quarterly 1998 149 163 in JSTORExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buffalo soldiers Buffalo Soldiers at San Juan Hill Archived August 3 2010 at the Wayback Machine Buffalo Soldier Monument Fort Leavenworth Kansas Buffalo Soldier National Museum Photograph Gallery of Buffalo Soldiers On the Eve of War World War II at the United States Army Center of Military History Buffalo Soldiers from the Handbook of Texas Online shadowsoldier wilderness net a website devoted to remembering the contributions of the buffalo soldiers of the Sierra Nevada by Park Ranger Shelton Johnson Yosemite National Park A Path to Lunch Liberation Day and the Liberation of America Buffalo Soldiers in Lunigiana and Versilia Italy Engagements by the Buffalo Soldiers and Seminole Black Indian Scouts Buffalo Soldiers during WW2 Captain Merrel Moody instructs Privates Enichel Kennedy Oscar Davis B D Kroninger and Will Johnson of Infantry School Stables on the proper way to clean a saddle Date July 25 1941 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buffalo Soldier amp oldid 1129402064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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