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Military history of African Americans

The military history of African Americans spans from the arrival of the first enslaved Africans during the colonial history of the United States to the present day. African Americans have participated in every war fought by or within the United States.

Tuskegee Airmen of the 332nd Fighter Group, United States Army Air Forces (USAAF), attend a briefing at Ramitelli Airfield, Italy in March 1945.

Including the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican–American War, the Civil War, the Spanish–American War, World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the War in Afghanistan, and the Iraq War.

Revolutionary War edit

 
Crispus Attucks was an iconic patriot; engaging in a protest in 1770, he was shot by royal soldiers in the Boston Massacre.

African Americans, both as slaves and freemen, served on both sides of the Revolutionary War. Gary Nash reports that recent research concludes there were about 9,000 black soldiers who served on the American side, counting the Continental Army and Navy, state militia units, as well as privateers, wagoneers in the Army, servants, officers and spies.[1] Ray Raphael notes that while thousands did join the Loyalist cause, "A far larger number, free as well as slave, tried to further their interests by siding with the patriots."[2]

Black soldiers served in Northern militias from the outset, but this was forbidden in the South, where slave-owners feared arming slaves. Lord Dunmore, the Royal Governor of Virginia, issued an emancipation proclamation in November 1775, promising freedom to runaway slaves who fought for the British; Sir Henry Clinton issued a similar edict in New York in 1779.[3] Over 100,000 slaves escaped to British lines, although only roughly 1,000 served on the front lines. Many Black Loyalist migrated to Nova Scotia and later to Sierra Leone. Many of the Black Loyalists performed military service in the British Army, particularly as part of the only Black regiment of the war, the Black Pioneers, and others served non-military roles.

In response, and because of manpower shortages, Washington lifted the ban on black enlistment in the Continental Army in January 1776. All-black units were formed in Rhode Island and Massachusetts; many were slaves promised freedom for serving in lieu of their masters; another all-African-American unit came from Haiti with French forces. At least 5,000 African-American soldiers fought as Revolutionaries, and at least 20,000 served with the British.

Peter Salem and Salem Poor are the most noted of the African-American Patriots during this era, and Colonel Tye was perhaps the most noteworthy Black Loyalist.

African Americans also served with various of the South Carolina guerrilla units, including that of the "Swamp Fox", Francis Marion,[4] half of whose force sometimes consisted of free Blacks. These Black troops made a critical difference in the fighting in the swamps, and kept Marion's guerrillas effective even when many of his white troops were down with malaria or yellow fever.[citation needed]

The first black American to fight in the Marines was John Martin, also known as Keto, the slave of a Delaware man, recruited in April 1776 without his owner's permission by Captain of the Marines Miles Pennington of the Continental brig USS Reprisal. Martin served with the Marine platoon on the Reprisal for a year and a half and took part in many ship-to-ship battles including boardings with hand-to-hand combat, but he was lost with the rest of his unit when the brig sank in October 1777.[5] At least 12 other black men served with various American Marine units in 1776–1777; more may have been in service but not identified as blacks in the records. However, in 1798 when the United States Marine Corps (USMC) was officially re-instituted, Secretary of War James McHenry specified in its rules: "No Negro, Mulatto or Indian to be enlisted".[5] Marine Commandant William Ward Burrows instructed his recruiters regarding USMC racial policy, "You can make use of Blacks and Mulattoes while you recruit, but you cannot enlist them."[5] The policy was formulated to set a higher standard of unit cohesion for Marines, with the unit to be made up of only one race, so that the members would remain loyal, maintain shipboard discipline and help put down mutinies.[5] The USMC maintained this policy until 1942.[6][7]

War of 1812 edit

 
Painting of Battle of Lake Erie depicting one of Perry's African-American oarsmen in the boat and another African-American sailor in the water[8]

During the War of 1812, about one-quarter of the personnel in the American naval squadrons of the Battle of Lake Erie were black, and portrait renderings of the battle on the wall of the nation's Capitol and the rotunda of Ohio's Capitol show that blacks played a significant role in it. Hannibal Collins, a freed slave and Oliver Hazard Perry's personal servant, is thought to be the oarsman in William Henry Powell's Battle of Lake Erie.[9] Collins earned his freedom as a veteran of the Revolutionary War, having fought in the Battle of Rhode Island. He accompanied Perry for the rest of Perry's naval career, and was with him at Perry's death in Trinidad in 1819.[10]

No legal restrictions regarding the enlistment of blacks were placed on the Navy because of its chronic shortage of manpower. The law of 1792, which generally prohibited enlistment of blacks in the Army became the United States Army's official policy until 1862. The only exception to this Army policy was Louisiana, which gained an exemption at the time of its purchase through a treaty provision, which allowed it to opt out of the operation of any law, which ran counter to its traditions and customs. Louisiana permitted the existence of separate black militia units which drew its enlistees from freed blacks.[citation needed]

A militia unit, In Louisiana, the 2nd Battalion of Free Men of Color, was a unit of black soldiers from Santo Domingo led by a Black free man and Santo-Domingue emigre Joseph Savary offered their services and were accepted by General Andrew Jackson in the Battle of New Orleans, a victory that was achieved after the war was officially over.[11]

Blacks fought at the Battle of Bladensburg August 24, 1814, many as members of Commodore Joshua Barney's naval flotilla force. This force provided crucial artillery support during the battle. One of the best accounts is that by Charles Ball (born 1785). Ball served with Commodore Joshua at the Battle of Bladensburg and later helped man the defenses at Baltimore. In his 1837 memoir, Ball reflected on the Battle of Bladensburg: "I stood at my gun, until the Commodore was shot down… if the militia regiments, that lay upon our right and left, could have been brought to charge the British, in close fight, as they crossed the bridge, we should have killed or taken the whole of them in a short time; but the militia ran like sheep chased by dogs."[12] Barney's flotilla group included numerous African Americans who provided artillery support during the battle. Modern scholars estimate blacks made up between 15 and 20%, of the American naval forces in the War of 1812.[13]

Just before the battle Commodore Barney on being asked by President James Madison "if his negroes would not run on the approach of the British?" replied: "No Sir…they don't know how to run; they will die by their guns first."[14] The Commodore was correct, the men did not run, one such man was young sailor Harry Jones (no. 35), apparently a free black. Harry Jones was wounded in the final action at Bladensburg. Due to the severity of Jones wounds, he remained a patient at the Naval Hospital Washington DC for nearly two months.[15]

 
African-American seaman Harry Jones is enumerated patient no. 35 on this 1814 Register of Patients, Naval Hospital Washington. Register states "Harry Jones black boy wound Bladensburg". "Boy", in this context, was a reference to rank. Boys in early navy were simply young sailors in training aged 12 to 18.

African Americans also served with the British. On April 2, 1814, Vice Admiral Alexander Cochrane issued a proclamation to all persons wishing to emigrate, similar to the aforementioned Dunmore's Proclamation some 40 years previous. Any persons would be received by the British, either at a military outpost or aboard British ships; those seeking sanctuary could enter His Majesty's forces, or go "as free settlers to the British possessions in North America or the West Indies".[16][17][18] Among those who went to the British, some joined the Corps of Colonial Marines, an auxiliary unit of marine infantry, embodied on May 14, 1814. British commanders later stated the new marines fought well at Bladensburg and confirm that two companies took part in the burning of Washington including the White House. Following the Treaty of Ghent, the British kept their promise and in 1815 evacuated the Colonial Marines and their families to Halifax Canada and Bermuda.[19]

1815 to 1840 edit

"Despite Southern attempts to restrict their movements with the Negro Seaman Acts, African American sailors continued to enlist in the Navy in substantial numbers throughout the 1820s and 1830s."[20] From the Treaty of Ghent to the Mexican-American War, African Americans made up a significant part of the peacetime navy. Data collected by Dr. Elnathan Judson USN, for his 1823 report, to the Secretary of the Navy,contains detailed information re the number of seamen vaccinated in the Boston area. This report which covers four months listed 161 men and boys of which, Dr. Judson enumerated 30 as black or 18.7% of the total.[21] Commodore William Bainbridge in a 14 September 1827 letter to Secretary of the Navy Samuel L. Southhard, reported 102 men had been received from the Philadelphia area of which 18 were Black or 17.6%. Bainbridge concluded by informing the Southard "I ordered the Recruiting Officer not to enter anymore until further notice."[22] Data for 1839 was collected by Commodore Lewis Warrington and forwarded to the Secretary of the Navy as a memorandum with the number of recruits from 1 September 1838 to September 17, 1839. This document provides data for five naval recruiting stations which in total reflect 1016 men entered or naval service, "of which 122 were Black" or 12% of the total.[23]

Mexican–American War edit

A number of African Americans in the Army during the Mexican–American War were servants of the officers who received government compensation for the services of their servants or slaves. Also, soldiers from the Louisiana Battalion of Free Men of Color participated in this war. African Americans also served on a number of naval vessels during the Mexican–American War, including the USS Treasure, and the USS Columbus.[11]

The involvement of African Americans in this war was one where they were not included as actual soldiers. There were however, a few cases of African Americans joining in the fighting and these people became known as "Black Toms". Many slaves that were brought into assist the army officers escaped to Mexico. However, whenever the American Army would encounter these African Americans they viewed them as stolen property and dissolved them back into the racial hierarchy of the army.[24]

American Civil War edit

 
Company I of the 36th Colored Regiment.USCT

The history of African Americans in the U.S. Civil War is marked by 186,097 (7,122 officers, 178,975 enlisted)[25] African-American men, comprising 163 units, who served in the Union Army during the Civil War, and many more African Americans served in the Union Navy. Both free African Americans and runaway slaves joined the fight.

On the Confederate side, blacks, both free and slave, were used for labor. In the final months of the war, the Confederate Army was desperate for additional soldiers so the Confederate Congress voted to recruit black troops for combat; they were to be promised their freedom. Units were in training when the war ended, and none served in combat.[26]

Indian Wars edit

 
Buffalo Soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment, 1890

From 1863 to the early 20th century, African-American units were utilized by the Army to combat the Native Americans during the Indian Wars.[27] The most noted among this group were the Buffalo Soldiers:

At the end of the U.S. Civil War the army reorganized and authorized the formation of two regiments of black cavalry (the 9th and 10th US Cavalry). Four regiments of infantry (the 38th, 39th, 40th and 41st US Infantry) were formed at the same time. In 1869, the four infantry regiments were merged into two new ones (the 24th and 25th US Infantry). These units were composed of black enlisted men commanded by white officers such as Benjamin Grierson, and occasionally, an African-American officer such as Henry O. Flipper. The "Buffalo Soldiers" served a variety of roles along the frontier from building roads to guarding the U.S. mail.[28]

These regiments served at a variety of posts in the southwest United States and Great Plains regions. During this period 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.[29]

Spanish–American War edit

 
Segregated company during the Spanish–American War; Camp Wikoff 1898
 
Tenth Dragoons exercise in Cuba

After the Indian Wars ended in the 1890s, the regiments continued to serve and participated in the Spanish–American War (including the Battle of San Juan Hill), where five more Medals of Honor were earned.[30] They took part in the 1916 Punitive Expedition into Mexico and in the Philippine–American War.

Units edit

In addition to the African Americans who served in regular army units during the Spanish–American War, five African-American Volunteer Army units and seven African-American National Guard units served.[citation needed]

Volunteer Army:

National Guard:

Of these units, only the 9th U.S., 8th Illinois, and 23rd Kansas served outside the United States during the war. All three units served in Cuba and suffered no losses to combat.[citation needed]

Philippine–American War edit

After the Treaty of Paris, the islands of the Philippines became a colony of the United States. When the U.S. military started to send soldiers into the islands, native rebels, who had already been fighting their former Spanish rulers, opposed U.S. colonization and retaliated, causing an insurrection. In what would be known as the Philippine–American War, the U.S. military also sent colored regiments and units to stop the insurrection. However, due to the discrimination of African-American soldiers, some of them defected to the Philippine Army.

One of those that defected was David Fagen, who was given the rank of captain in the Philippine Army. Fagen served in the 24th Regiment of the U.S. Army, but on November 17, 1899,[32] he defected to the Filipino army.[33] He became a successful guerrilla leader and his capture became an obsession to the U.S. military and American public. His defection was likely the result of differential treatment by American occupational forces toward black soldiers, as well as common American forces derogatory treatment and views of the Filipino occupational resistance, who were frequently referred to as "niggers" and "gugus".[34]

After two other black deserters were captured and executed, President Theodore Roosevelt announced he would stop executing captured deserters.[35] As the war ended, the US gave amnesties to most of their opponents. A substantial reward was offered for Fagen, who was considered a traitor. There are two conflicting versions of his fate: one is that his was the partially decomposed head for which the reward was claimed, the other is that he took a local wife and lived peacefully in the mountains.[36]

World War I and interwar period edit

 
Officers of the 366th Infantry Regiment returning home from World War I service.
 
Soldiers of the 369th (15th N.Y.) who won the Croix de Guerre for gallantry in action, 1919

When the war broke out, several African-Americans joined Allied armies. Most notably, Eugene Bullard and Bob Scanlon joined the French Foreign Legion within weeks of the start of the war. Of the twelve African-Americans who joined the Legion at the start, only two survived the war.[37]: 6–10 

The U.S. armed forces remained segregated through World War I as a matter of policy and practice, and despite the effort of Black leadership to overcome that discrimination. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) had been formed in 1909 to move Black equality of opportunity forward, but with the declaration of war in 1917 civil rights leader W.E.B. Du Bois declared an acceptable fall-back in the effort. "First your country, then your rights!" became the NAACP slogan.[38]

Furthermore, Du Bois also argued that the so called 'double consciousness' (a phrase coined by himself in the early 1900's) became more pronounced with this return of troops. African American soldiers who had fought for American and European freedom and democracy overseas now returned to the segregated and discriminatory American society's, intensifying their awareness of their dual identity.

The optimistic belief was that by serving valiantly in the nation's war effort Blacks would gain the respect and equality that had been elusive thus far. But it was pitted against an underlying unwillingness by the War Department to become a vehicle for social change. Secretary of War Newton D. Baker had made it clear that, though African Americans would be fairly treated in the military, the department could not "undertake at this time to settle the so-called race question."[39] Instead, the practices that limited equality and opportunity in civilian society were carried over to military society.

Prospective Black enlistees in the war effort were turned away, in large part because there were not enough segregated Black units to take them in. Those Blacks who were successfully enlisted were kept in the same restricted channels of their civil lives. Segregated transportation took them to segregated military bases and regiments that were rarely deployed to much more than the tasks of support and maintenance.[40] Black men made up a third of the army's labour force.[41] And in those jobs they were subject to treatment of indignities by white officers such as eating in the rain, having no facilities to wash clothes or bath, no toilets and sleeping in tents with no floors.[42][43] In some quarters. African Americans were so cramped that they walked on trunks to move about the room.[41] Still, many African Americans volunteered to join the military following America's entry into the war. By the time of the armistice with Germany on November 11, 1918, over 200,000 African Americans had served with the American Expeditionary Force on the Western Front, while 170,000 remained in the United States.[44][45]

The most graphic reminder of Jim Crow remaining during the war and after the soldiers returned came in the form of lynching.[41] African American soldier Wilbur Little was lynched in Georgia after returning from fighting for wearing a uniform in public and refusing to take it off.[46] This confirmed the message that the sacrifices of black soldiers for European freedom would not equate to racial progression.

Not all American public opinion was anti-African American when the black soldiers returned home. In New York, 3000 of the Harlem Hellfighters were greeted with a parade.[47] The New York Herald Tribune wrote an article on the parade, describing its popularity and support:

"Up the wide avenue they swung. Their smiles outshone the golden sunlight... New York turned out to tender its dark-skinned heroes a New York welcome...Never have white Americans accorded so heartfelt and hearty a reception to a contingent of their Black country-men... Racial lines were for the time displaced. The color of their skin had nothing to do with the occasion. The blood they had shed in France was as red as any other."[47]

Though most African-American units were largely relegated to support roles and did not see combat, some African Americans played a notable role in America's war effort. For example, the 369th Infantry Regiment, known as the "Harlem Hellfighters", was assigned to the French Army and served on the front lines for six months. 171 members of the 369th were awarded the Legion of Merit. However, the American War Department restricted black soldiers from fighting where possible, as shown by the forced retirement of Lieutenant Colonel Charles Young as they did not want the black officer commanding white soldiers or leading a full black combat division.[41]

 
German propaganda targeting the African-American troops in WWI

Germany attempted to sway the African American troops with propaganda challenging their race-related rights back in the United States.[48]

Corporal Freddie Stowers of the 371st Infantry Regiment that was seconded to the 157th French Army division called the Red Hand Division in need of reinforcement under the command of the General Mariano Goybet was posthumously awarded a Medal of Honor—the only African American to be so honored for actions in World War I.[citation needed] During action in France, Stowers had led an assault on German trenches, continuing to lead and encourage his men even after being twice wounded. Stowers died from his wounds, but his men continued the fight and eventually defeated the German troops. Stowers was recommended for the Medal of Honor shortly after his death, but the nomination was, according to the Army, misplaced. In 1990, under pressure from Congress, the Department of the Army launched an investigation. Based on findings from this investigation, the Army Decorations Board approved the award of the Medal of Honor to Stowers.[49] On April 24, 1991–73 years after he was killed in action—Stowers' two surviving sisters received the Medal of Honor from President George H. W. Bush at the White House. The success of the investigation leading to Stowers' Medal of Honor later sparked a similar review that resulted in six African Americans being posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for actions in World War II. Vernon Baker was the only recipient who was still alive to receive his award.[50]

Units edit

Some of the African-American units that served in World War I were:

 
351st Field Artillery troops on the deck of the Louisville

Support units included:

A complete list of African-American units that served in the war is available.[55]

African Americans Veterans faced heavy persecution when they returned home from World War I and many African American veterans were lynched after returning from WWI. The prediction of equality by W.E.B. Du Bois and the NAACP would not be realized, and racial antagonism was expanded by the claims that any talk of Black valor and positive contribution were lies meant to cover up cowardice and incompetence, which was counteracted by claims of prejudiced and harmful white leadership and the use of Blacks as cannon fodder for white troops that followed them into combat.[49]

Experience of soldiers in France edit

African Americans were typically placed into labor battalions with around 160,000 of the 200,000 African Americans who were shipped out to France in 1917 finding themselves placed in one. These labor battalions were viewed as being the "dregs of the military forces" and the men in them were "driven to the brink of physical and emotional exhaustion".[56] Jim Crow was extended to the camps where the African American soldiers were stationed and white officers would frequently remind African American soldiers of this. The 370th Infantry Regiment were informed a black member of a labor battalion had recently been hanged in the same square the unit was now assembling in a small town outside the Lorraine region.[57]

In support of an attempt to impose American racial policy on France, U.S. military authorities sent a memo to the mayors of the Meuse division upon the arrival of the African American 372nd Infantry Regiment (The "Red Hand") in 1918. It asked that the French not integrate the Black troops into French society:[58]

The question is of great importance to the French people and even more so to the American towns, the population of which will be affected later when the troops return to the United States. It therefore becomes necessary for both the colored and white races that undue mixing of these two be circumspectly prevented.

The request was generally disregarded by the French.

The way they were treated by white Americans in France differed markedly from the way they were treated by French troops and civilians who dealt with them roughly as equals. This left the African Americans disillusioned.[59] edit

African American soldiers interacted with colonial troops stationed in France, and they had already read about them in African American newspapers. The French military had reframed the debate for African Americans at home, in that France recognized that Blacks had an "important combatant role in the defence of the nation". These stories and experiences fuelled African American racial pride which contributed to their mass disillusionment when they returned home.[60]

YMCA services in France were also segregated sixty African American y-secretaries, among them twenty-three African American women served the 200,000 black soldiers stationed in France, only three of these arrived before the armistice – including Addie W. Hunton and Kathryn M. Johnson. The YMCA work provided entertainment, recreation, and education to the vast majority of African American troops as they had more time on their hands since they served in labor battalions.[61]

African American WWI veterans role in the civil rights movement:

According to the historian Chad L Williams, "African American soldiers' experiences in the war and their battles with the pervasive racial discrimination in the U.S. military informed their postwar disillusionment and subsequent racial militancy as veterans".[62] Examples of this racial militancy can be seen in the prominent roles which some African American WWI veterans played in the civil rights movement. For example, William N. Colston, an African American veteran who had served in the 367th infantry during the war, published several essays in the US's leading radical African American magazine- the Messenger. These articles aimed to illustrate the experiences which African Americans soldiers had throughout the war. African American's wartime experiences also played a key role in the formation of the League for Democracy which was a Civil Rights movement formed by African American soldiers serving in the 92nd Division with its key aim being to combat racial discrimination within the military.[63]

Deteriorated diplomatic ties with other nations during the inter-war period edit

As previously mentioned, the mistreatment of numerous African Americans upon their return home after World War I, coupled with the economic downturn and the demobilisation of millions of troops, resulted in a discontented population. This mistreatment and discrimination against African American soldiers and the domestic racial violence, such as the Red Summer of 1919, had international implications. Other nations, especially those with non-white populations, took notice of these issues and began to view the United States through a more critical lens. The diplomatic tensions resulting from racial issues strained relations with countries that had non-white populations. In particular, Japan is highlighted as an example. The mistreatment of African Americans and racial violence may have been seen by other nations as contradictory to the democratic and egalitarian principles that the U.S. claimed to uphold . Japan, being one of the countries with a non-white population, might have been particularly sensitive to racial issues. These diplomatic tensions strained international relations, as the racial issues raised questions about the United States' commitment to principles of equality and human rights. Impacting trade, alliances (as demonstrated by the disagreements over racial issues at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference), and overall perceptions of the U.S. on the global stage. Historians such as David Kennedy briefly mentions this in his book ''Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945",[64] arguing that America isolated itself from cultures and ideas within this Interwar Period largely due to the treatment of African-Americans, or in this case the returning soldiers.

Second Italo-Abyssinian War edit

On October 4, 1935, Fascist Italy invaded Ethiopia. Being the only non-colonized African country besides Liberia, the invasion of Ethiopia caused a profound response amongst African Americans.[65] In New York City, clashes took place between African Americans and the Italian immigrant community, many of whom vocally supported Mussolini's invasion. A rally held at Madison Square Garden on Sept. 26, less than a week before the invasion, brought out more than 10,000 to hear civil rights leader W.E.B. Du Bois, Paul Robeson and others speak about the impending disaster. Samuel Daniels, head of the Pan-African Reconstruction Association, toured major American cities to recruit volunteers.[66] African Americans organized to raise money for medical supplies, and several thousand volunteered to fight for the African kingdom.[67] Most volunteers were blocked from leaving the United States due to the American government's desire to remain neutral in the conflict.[68]

Volunteer John C. Robinson, a pilot and graduate of Tuskegee University, made his way to Ethiopia to assist with training pilots for Ethiopia's new air force. Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie soon personally named Robinson commander of the entire air force. Robinson was given the nickname the "Brown Condor" by Ethiopian forces for his service.[69]

Many years later Haile Selassie I would comment on the efforts: "We can never forget the help Ethiopia received from Negro Americans during the crisis. ... It moved me to know that Americans of African descent did not abandon their embattled brothers, but stood by us."[67]

Spanish Civil War edit

When General Franco rebelled against the newly established secular Spanish Republic, a number of African Americans volunteered to fight for Republican Spain. Many African Americans who were in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade had Communist ideals. Among these, there was Vaughn Love who went to fight for the Spanish loyalist cause because he considered Fascism to be the "enemy of all black aspirations."

African-American activist and World War I veteran Oliver Law, fought in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade during the Spanish Civil War[70]

James Peck was an African-American man from Pennsylvania who was turned down when he applied to become a military pilot in the US. He then went on to serve in the Spanish Republican Air Force until 1938.[71] Peck was credited with shooting down five Aviación Nacional planes, two Heinkel He-51s from the Legion Condor and three Fiat CR.32 Fascist Italian fighters.

Salaria Kea was a young African-American nurse from Harlem Hospital who served as a military nurse with the American Medical Bureau in the Spanish Civil War. She was one of the two only African-American female volunteers in the midst of the war-torn Spanish Republican areas.[72] When Salaria came back from Spain she wrote the pamphlet "A Negro Nurse in Spain" and tried to raise funds for the beleaguered Spanish Republic.[73]

World War II edit

We call upon the president and congress to declare war on Japan and racial prejudice in our country. Certainly we should be strong enough to whip them both.

The Pittsburgh Courier[74]

The Pittsburgh Courier was one of the most influential African American newspapers of WWII, and the source of what came to be called the Double V Campaign. A letter to the editor of the paper in 1941 asked why a “half American” should sacrifice his life in the war and suggested that Blacks should seek a double victory. “The first V for a victory over our enemies from without, the second V for a victory over our enemies from within.” The idea would become a national cause, and eventually extend into a call for action in the factories and services that supported the war effort.[75]

Despite a high enlistment rate in the U.S. Army, African Americans were still not treated equally. At parades, church services, in transportation and canteens, they were kept separate. A quota of only 48 nurses was set for African-American women, and the women were segregated from white nurses and white soldiers for much of the war. Eventually more black nurses enlisted. They were assigned to care for black soldiers. Black nurses were integrated into everyday life with their white colleagues.

 
Phyllis Mae Dailey was sworn into the United States Navy Nurse Corps as the first African-American servicewoman in World War II.

The first African-American woman sworn into the Navy Nurse Corps was Phyllis Mae Dailey, a Columbia University student from New York. She was the first of only four African-American women to serve as a Navy nurse during World War II.[76]

Many black American soldiers served their country with distinction during World War II. There were 125,000 African Americans who were overseas in World War II (6.25% of all abroad soldiers). Famous segregated units, such as the Tuskegee Airmen and 761st Tank Battalion and the lesser-known but equally distinguished 452nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Battalion,[77] proved their value in combat, leading to desegregation of all U.S. armed forces by order of President Harry S. Truman in July 1948 via Executive Order 9981.

 
Battery A of the 452nd AAA Battalion, November 9, 1944

Benjamin O. Davis Jr. served as commander of the Tuskegee Airmen during the war. He later went on to become the first African-American general in the United States Air Force. His father, Benjamin O. Davis Sr., had been the first African-American brigadier general in the Army (1940).

 
Admiral Chester W. Nimitz pins Navy Cross on Doris Miller, at ceremony on board warship in Pearl Harbor, May 27, 1942

Doris Miller, a Navy mess attendant, was the first African-American recipient of the Navy Cross, awarded for his actions during the attack on Pearl Harbor. Miller had voluntarily manned an anti-aircraft gun and fired at the Japanese aircraft, despite having no prior training in the weapon's use.

On April 14, 1943, Joseph C. Jenkins became the first African-American commissioned officer in the United States Coast Guard. He was joined first by Clarence Samuels on August 31, 1943, and then by Harvey C. Russell Jr. in February 1944.[78]

In March 1944, the Golden Thirteen became the Navy's first African-American commissioned officers. Samuel L. Gravely, Jr. became a commissioned officer the same year; he would later be the first African American to command a US warship, and the first to be an admiral.

The Port Chicago disaster on July 17, 1944, was an explosion of about 2,000 tons of ammunition as it was being loaded onto ships by black Navy sailors under pressure from their white officers to hurry. The explosion in Northern California killed 320 military and civilian workers, most of them black. It led a month later to the Port Chicago Mutiny, the only case of a full military trial for mutiny in the history of the U.S. Navy against 50 African-American sailors who refused to continue loading ammunition under the same dangerous conditions. The trial was observed by the then young lawyer Thurgood Marshall and ended in conviction of all of the defendants. The trial was immediately and later criticized for not abiding by the applicable laws on mutiny, and it became influential in the discussion of desegregation.[79]

During World War II, African-American soldiers served in all fields of service, though they were used mostly to support labor.[80] Initially, in Britain, there was a reluctance to accept black American servicemen. President Roosevelt, however, was under an obligation to allow black troops to travel to all theatres of war,[80] and during his re-election in 1940, Roosevelt had relied heavily on the black vote. Eager to meet demands calling for change, including racial integration in the military, Roosevelt seized the opportunity to work towards and end to discrimination in the defense industries and began sending American servicemen, known as GIs, including African-Americans, to Britain in 1942. In the next three years, approximately 3 million American GIs passed through the country, approximately 8 percent (240,000) being African-American.[80]

In the midst of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, General Eisenhower was severely short of replacement troops for existing all-white companies. Consequently, he made the decision to allow 2000 black servicemen volunteers to serve in segregated platoons under the command of white lieutenants to replenish these companies.[81] These platoons would serve with distinction and, according to an Army survey in the summer of 1945, 84% were ranked "very well" and 16% were ranked "fairly well". No black platoon received a ranking of "poor" by those white officers or white soldiers that fought with them. These platoons were often subject to racist treatment by white military units in occupied Germany and were quickly sent back to their old segregated units after the end of hostilities in Germany. Despite their protests, these brave[according to whom?] African-American soldiers ended the war in their old non-combat service units. Though largely forgotten after the war, the temporary experiment with black combat troops proved a success - a small, but important step toward permanent integration during the Korean War.[82][83] A total of 708 African Americans were killed in combat during World War II.[84]

During World War II, officer training expanded to include African-American Soldiers. Before the U.S. entered the war in 1941, there were only five black officers, which rose to 7,000 by the end of the war. In 1945, Frederick C. Branch became the first African-American United States Marine Corps officer. However, the military remained segregated all through the war, and African-American officers were never allowed to command white troops.[80]

A blue plaque commemorating the contribution of African-American soldiers based in Wales during World War II was installed by the Nubian Jak Community Trust at RAF Carew Cheriton on the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings, June 6, 2019.[85][86][87]

The presence of African-American soldiers in the U.K. and subsequent encounters with the native population has been shown to have reduced the racial prejudice against black people if even decades later,[88] and, for the most part, African American soldiers were more welcome in the countries of European Allies than U.S. officials wished them to be. In the U.K especially, generally all GIs were commended for their generosity and bravery, and in some cases, the British public gained a special affection for African American soldiers that were thought to have better manners than the white Americans.[80] But they were not welcome in some other parts of the world, which became a problem to be solved for Brig. Gen Dwight D. Eisenhower. In 1942, he told the War Department that, by his research, Black troops would not be welcomed for various reasons in Australia, Alaska, most of the south Caribbean nations, the British West Indies, Panama and Liberia. And U.S. military leaders themselves did not want them in Iceland, Greenland, Labrador and the British Isles. The War Department response to the information was mixed, and by 1944 the war had progressed into a need for all troops that could be deployed.[89] As in World War I, Black soldiers were primarily channeled to support labor, most of them as members of the Quartermaster Corps. Among the most crucial and difficult of Quartermaster responsibilities was burial of the dead and the construction of temporary and permanent cemeteries. The best-known work of the Quartermaster Corps in World War II was the brief Red Ball Express, which ferried food, supplies and fuel along the rapid advance of Allied forces from the Normandy Invasion to the incursion into Germany. Six thousand trucks operating 24 hours a day, most with two African American drivers on circular routes carried 400,000 tons of supplies through increasingly liberated Europe between August 25 and November 16, 1944. The work was relentless, exhausting and dangerous, and credited with helping to bring about the ultimate success of the Normandy Invasion. A 1952 movie, The Red Ball Express,[90] brought more attention to the effort, but underplayed its African American aspect.[91]

Units edit

 
333rd Field Artillery Battalion African-Americans captured during the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944
 
12th Armored Division soldier with German prisoners of war, April 1945
 
The Tuskegee Airmen were the first African-American pilots in United States military history; they flew with distinction during World War II. Portrait of Tuskegee airman Edward M. Thomas by photographer Toni Frissell, March 1945.
 
Several Tuskegee airmen at Ramitelli, Italy, March 1945
 
African-American soldiers in Burma stop work briefly to read President Truman's Proclamation of Victory in Europe, May 9, 1945
 
Unarmed combat training Marine Corps Base Montford Point. (NARA)
 
D-Day, Peleliu, African Americans of one of the two segregated units that supported the 7th Marines – the 16th Marine Field Depot or the 17th Naval Construction Battalion Special take a break in the 115 degree heat, September 15, 1944 – NARA - 532535

Army:

Army Air Corps:

United States Marine Corps

United States Navy

United States Navy Seabees

 
80th Seabees color guard
 
Seabee divers of the 34th CB at Gavutu in the Solomon Islands 8 Nov 1943 installing a marine railway.
 
"17th Special" Seabees with the 7th Marines on Peleliu made national news in an official U.S. Navy press release.[102] NARA-532537
 
A Seabee of the 34th CB finishing a road.
 
LTA airship Hangar built by the 80th CB at Carlsen Air Force Base on Trinidad.
 
Lt Cmdr. Edward Swain Hope CEC of the Seabee officer corps was the most senior African American officer in the United States Navy during WWII.[103] He was the Public Works officer at the Manana barracks installation.
  • 34th Naval Construction Battalion
  • 80th Naval Construction Battalion
  • 15 USN Special Construction Battalions (stevedore) were segregated.
    • 15th Special Naval Construction Battalion
    • 17th Special Naval Construction Battalion
    • 20th Special Naval Construction Battalion
    • 21st Special Naval Construction Battalion
    • 22nd Special Naval Construction Battalion
    • 23rd Special Naval Construction Battalion
    • 30th Special Naval Construction Battalion

In February 1942 CNO Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark recommended African Americans for ratings in the construction trades. In April the Navy announced it would enlist African Americans in the Seabees. Even so, there were just two CBs that were "colored" units, the 34th and 80th.[104] Both had white Southern officers and black enlisted. Both battalions experienced problems with that arrangement that led to the replacement of the officers. The men of the 34th went on a hunger strike which made national news. The Commander of the 80th had 19 enlisted dishonorably discharged for sedition. The NAACP and Thurgood Marshall got 14 of those reversed. In 1943 the Navy drew up a proposal to raise the number of colored CBs to 5 and require that all non-rated men in the next 24 CBs be colored. The proposal was approved, but not acted on.

The lack of stevedores in combat zones was a huge issue for the Navy. Authorization for the formation of cargo handling CBs or "Special CBs" happened mid-September 1942.[105] By wars end 41 Special CBs had been commissioned of which 15 were "colored". They were the first fully integrated units in the U.S. Navy.[104] V-J Day brought the decommissioning of all of them. The Special CBs were forerunners of today's Navy Cargo Handling Battalions of the Navy Expeditionary Logistics Support Group (United States). The arrival of 15 colored Special CBs in Pearl Harbor made segregation an issue for the Navy.[106] For some time the men slept in tents, but the disparity of treatment was obvious even to the Navy.[106] The 14th Naval District felt they deserved proper shelter with at least separate but equal barracks.[106] Manana Barracks and Waiawa Gulch became the United States' largest colored military installation with over 4,000 Seabee stevedores segregated there.[106] It was the site of racial strife to the point that the camp was fenced in and placed under armed guard.[106] The Seabees would be trucked back and forth to the docks in cattle trucks.[106] Two naval supply depots were located at Waiawa Gulch.

Of note were the actions of the 17th Special Naval Construction Battalion and the 16th Marine Field Depot on Peleliu, September 15–18, 1944. On D-Day the 7th Marines were in a situation where there were not enough of them to man the lines and get the wounded to safety. Coming to their aid were the two companies of the 16th Marine Field Depot(segregated) and the 17th Special Seabee (segregated). That night the Japanese mounted a counter-attack at 0200 hours. The Field Depot Marines are recorded as again having humped ammunition, to the front lines on the stretchers they brought the wounded back on and picked up rifles to become infantrymen. By the time it was over nearly the entire 17th CB had volunteered alongside them. The Seabee record states that besides humping ammo and helping wounded they volunteered to man the line where the wounded had been, man 37mm artillery that had lost gun crews and volunteered for anything dangerous. The 17th remained with the 7th Marines until the right flank had been secured D-plus 3.[107][108][109][110][111][112] According to the Military History Encyclopedia on the Web, were it not for the "Black Marine shore party personal" the counterattack on the 7th Marines would not have been repulsed.[113]

  • On Peleliu, the white shore party detachments from the 33rd and 73rd CBs received Presidential Unit Citations along with the primary shore party, 1st Marine Pioneers.[114] The Commander of the 17th Special CB (segregated) received the same commendatory letter as the Company Commanders of the 7th Marine Ammo Co. (segregated) and the 11th Marine Depot Co.(segregated). Before the battle was even over, Major General Rupertus USMC wrote to each that: "The negro race can well be proud of the work preformed [by the 11th Marine Depot Company/ 7th Marine Ammunition Company/ 17th CB]. The wholehearted co-operation and untiring efforts which demonstrated in every respect that they appreciated the privilege of wearing a marine uniform and serving with the marines in combat. Please convey to your command these sentiments and inform them that in the eyes of the entire division they have earned a "Well done"."[115][116] The Department of the Navy made an official press release of a copy of the 17th CB's "Well Done" letter on November 28, 1944.[117]

On Okinawa the 34th CB worked with the 36th CB constructing Awase Airfield once the rains allowed work to go forward. The 34th also built the Joint Communications Station at Awase.[118] Today the Navy maintains a Low Frequency communications station for submarines on the site created by the 34th CB.

Medal of Honor recipients edit

On January 13, 1997, President Bill Clinton, in a White House ceremony, awarded the nation's highest military honor—the Medal of Honor—to seven African-American servicemen who had served in World War II.[121]

The only living recipient was First Lieutenant Vernon Baker.

The posthumous recipients were:

Blue discharges edit

African-American troops faced discrimination in the form of the disproportionate issuance of blue discharges. The blue discharge (also called a "blue ticket") was a form of administrative discharge created in 1916 to replace two previous discharge classifications, the administrative discharge without honor and the "unclassified" discharge. It was neither honorable nor dishonorable.[122] Of the 48,603 blue discharges issued by the Army between December 1, 1941, and June 30, 1945, 10,806 were issued to African Americans. This accounts for 22.2% of all blue discharges, when African Americans made up 6.5% of the Army in that time frame.[123] Blue discharge recipients frequently faced difficulties obtaining employment[124] and were routinely denied the benefits of the G. I. Bill by the Veterans Administration (VA).[125] In October 1945, Black-interest newspaper The Pittsburgh Courier launched a crusade against the discharge and its abuses. Calling the discharge "a vicious instrument that should not be perpetrated against the American Soldier", the Courier rebuked the Army for "allowing prejudiced officers to use it as a means of punishing Negro soldiers who do not like specifically unbearable conditions". The Courier printed instructions on how to appeal a blue discharge and warned its readers not to quickly accept a blue ticket out of the service because of the negative effect it would likely have on their lives.[126]

The House Committee on Military Affairs held hearings in response to the press crusade, issuing a report in 1946 that sharply criticized its use and the VA for discriminating against blue discharge holders.[127] Congress discontinued the blue discharge in 1947,[128] but the VA continued its practice of denying G. I. Bill benefits to blue-tickets.[125]

Integration of the armed forces edit

On July 26, 1948, President Harry S. Truman signed Executive Order 9981 integrating the military and mandating equality of treatment and opportunity. It also made it illegal, per military law, to make a racist remark. Desegregation of the military was not complete for several years, and all-black Army units persisted well into the Korean War. The last all-black unit was not disbanded until 1954.

In 1950, Lieutenant Leon Gilbert of the still-segregated 24th Infantry Regiment was court martialed and sentenced to death for refusing to obey the orders of a white officer while serving in the Korean War. Gilbert maintained that the orders would have meant certain death for himself and the men in his command. The case led to worldwide protests and increased attention to segregation and racism in the U.S. military. Gilbert's sentence was commuted to twenty and later seventeen years of imprisonment; he served five years and was released.

The integration commanded by Truman's 1948 Executive Order extended to schools and neighborhoods as well as military units. Fifteen years after the Executive Order, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara issued Department of Defense Directive 5120.36. "Every military commander", the Directive mandates, "has the responsibility to oppose discriminatory practices affecting his men and their dependents and to foster equal opportunity for them, not only in areas under his immediate control, but also in nearby communities where they may gather in off-duty hours."[129] While the directive was issued in 1963, it was not until 1967 that the first non-military establishment was declared off-limits. In 1970 the requirement that commanding officers first obtain permission from the Secretary of Defense was lifted, and areas were allowed to be declared housing areas off limits to military personnel by their commanding officer.[130]

Since the end of military segregation and the creation of an all-volunteer army, the American military saw the representation of African Americans in its ranks rise dramatically.[131]

Korean War edit

 
African-American prisoners of war in Korea in 1950.

Jesse L. Brown became the U.S. Navy's first black aviator in October 1948. He died when his plane was shot down during the Battle of Chosin Reservoir in North Korea. He was unable to parachute from his crippled F4U Corsair and crash-landed successfully. His injuries and damage to his aircraft prevented him from leaving the plane. A white squadron mate, Thomas Hudner, crash-landed his F4U Corsair near Brown and attempted to extricate Brown but could not and Brown died of his injuries. Hudner was awarded the Medal of Honor for his efforts. The U.S. Navy honored Jesse Brown by naming a frigate after him—the USS Jesse L. Brown (FF-1089).[132]

James H. Harvey (born July 13, 1923) became the U.S. Air Force's first African-American jet fighter pilot to engage in combat during the Korean War.[133]

Two enlisted men from the 24th Infantry Regiment (still a segregated unit), Cornelius H. Charlton and William Thompson, posthumously received the Medal of Honor for actions during the war.

U.S President Harry Truman issued the order to desegregate the armed forces on July 26, 1948.[134] Truman believed that passing this order would help end racial discrimination. In 1950, North Korea invaded South Korea and the United States entered to war. African American troops composed part of the task force.

On November 24, 1950, 300,000 Chinese troops stormed across the Yalu River, and the majority black 503rd Battalion found themselves directly in the line of fire.[134] The ill-equipped unit lost the battle and many soldiers were killed or taken prisoner by the Chinese. The conditions in these prisons were cold with not enough food. The African American soldiers spent up to three years in the prisons. The Chinese captors believed that African Americans were particularly vulnerable to anti-American propaganda because of the discrimination they faced back home and in their units. As a result, the Chinese subjected African Americans to anti-capitalist and anti-imperial brainwashing more than their white counterparts.[134]

About 600,000 African Americans served in the armed forces during the war and 5,000 died in combat. Many were awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star, and Bronze Star.[135]

Vietnam War edit

 
A U.S. soldier of 1st Battalion, 503rd U.S. Infantry battles for Hill 882, southwest of Dak To, November 1967

The Vietnam War saw many great accomplishments by many African Americans, including twenty who received the Medal of Honor for their actions. African Americans were over-represented in hazardous duty and combat roles during the conflict, and suffered disproportionately higher casualty rates. Civil-rights leaders protested this disparity during the early years of the war, prompting reforms that were implemented in 1967–68 resulting in the casualty rate dropping to slightly higher than their percentage of the total population.[136][137][138][139]

In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson presented the Medal of Honor to U.S. Army Specialist Five Lawrence Joel, for a "very special kind of courage—the unarmed heroism of compassion and service to others." Joel was the first living African American to receive the Medal of Honor since the Mexican–American War. He was a medic who in 1965 saved the lives of U.S. troops under ambush in Vietnam and defied direct orders to stay to the ground, walking through Viet Cong gunfire and tending to the troops despite being shot twice himself. The Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, is dedicated to his honor.[140]

On August 21, 1968, with the posthumous award of the Medal of Honor, U.S. Marine James Anderson, Jr. became the first African-American U.S. Marine recipient of the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions and sacrifice of life.[citation needed]

On December 10, 1968, U.S. Army Captain Riley Leroy Pitts became the first African-American commissioned officer to be awarded the Medal of Honor. His medal was presented posthumously to his wife, Eula Pitts, by President Lyndon B. Johnson.

Four out of the 23 African-American Medal of Honor recipients were Army Special Forces, also known as Green Berets, who served in Vietnam. Sergeant First Class Melvin Morris, SFC. Eugene Ashley, Jr., and SFC. William Maud Bryant were members of the 5th Special Forces Group. Paris Davis, COL, was a member of the 10th Special Forces Group.

Melvin Morris received the Medal of Honor 44 years after the action in which he earned the Distinguished Service Cross. Sergeant Ashley's medal was posthumously awarded to his family at the White House by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on December 2, 1969.

Paris Davis received the Medal of Honor 58 years after the action in which he earned the Silver Star and the Purple Heart. He had been twice previously nominated for the Medal of Honor, but both times the paperwork relating to his nominations had disappeared.

Post-Vietnam to present day edit

 
General Colin Powell briefs President George H. W. Bush and his advisors on the progress of the Gulf War.
 
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin poses for a photo alongside U.S. Army soldiers in Afghanistan.

In 1989, President George H. W. Bush appointed Army General Colin Powell to the position of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, making Powell the highest-ranking officer in the United States military. Powell was the first, and is so far the only, African American to hold that position. The Chairman serves as the chief military adviser to the President and the Secretary of Defense. During his tenure Powell oversaw the 1989 United States invasion of Panama to oust General Manuel Noriega and the 1990 to 1991 Gulf War against Iraq. General Powell's four-year term as Chairman ended in 1993.[citation needed]

General William E. "Kip" Ward was officially nominated as the first commander of the new United States Africa Command on July 10, 2007, and assumed command on October 1, 2007.[citation needed]

Ronald L. Green, former Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps, is African-American.[citation needed]

On January 20, 2009, Barack Obama was inaugurated as President of the United States, making him ex officio the first African-American Commander-in-Chief of the United States Armed Forces.[citation needed]

On August 6, 2020, Charles Q. Brown Jr. became the first African-American chief of a United States military service branch, when he took over as Chief of Staff of the Air Force.[citation needed]

On January 22, 2021, Lloyd Austin became the first African-American Secretary of Defense.[citation needed]

Military history of African Americans in popular culture edit

Tuskegee Airmen were featured in Wings for This Man (1945)

The following is a list of notable African-American military members or units in popular culture.

Release Date (or Year) Name (or event) Notability Reference
1944 (1944) The Negro Soldier a Frank Capra recruitment documentary [141]
1945 (1945) Wings for This Man a propaganda short about the Tuskegee Airmen was produced by the First Motion Picture Unit of the Army Air Forces. The film was narrated by Ronald Reagan. [142]
1949 (1949) Home of the Brave This film combines 3 of the top film genres of 1949: the war film, the psychological drama and the problems suffered by African-Americans. The film is based on a 1946 play by Arthur Laurents were it originally featured the protagonist as Jewish rather than black.
1951 (1951) The Steel Helmet an early Samuel Fuller film about black and white soldiers fighting side by side in Korea, with racial tensions tightened by a redneck sergeant and a North Korean agitator [143]
1959 (1959) Pork Chop Hill a film directed by Lewis Milestone, starring Gregory Peck and Woody Strode. It depicts the first Battle of Pork Chop Hill towards the end the Korean War.
1960 (1960) All the Young Men a Korean War feature film directed by Hall Bartlett and starring Alan Ladd and Sidney Poitier dealing with desegregation in the United States Marine Corps.
1960 (1960) Sergeant Rutledge a John Ford western film about a fictional court-martial of a 1st Sgt. in the 9th U.S. Cavalry who is acquitted when the real criminal is discovered.
1965–1971 (1965–1971) Hogan's Heroes In this sitcom, set in a German prisoner-of-war (POW) camp during World War 2, Ivan Dixon played the role of Staff Sergeant James Kinchloe (seasons 1-5), the electronics/communications expert. Casting an African-American actor as a positively-shown supporting character was a major step forward for a television show in the mid-1960's. Dixon left the show prior to the final season and was replaced by another African-American actor, Kenneth Washington as Sgt. Richard Baker.
1966–1969 (1966–1969) Star Trek (the original series) Actress Nichelle Nichols played the role of Lieutenant Nyota Uhura. Her portrayal in the series, in the role of an African female officer was groundbreaking for African American actresses on American television.
1972 (1972) DC Comics John Stewart of the Green Lanterns was created as an African-American Marine
1984 (1984) A Soldier's Story a 1984 drama film directed by Norman Jewison, based upon Charles Fuller's Pulitzer Prize-winning Off Broadway production A Soldier's Play. A black officer is sent to investigate the murder of a black sergeant in Louisiana near the end of World War II. [144]
1989 (1989) Glory film featuring the 54th Union regiment composed of African-American soldiers. Starring Denzel Washington and Matthew Broderick
1990 (1990) The Court-Martial of Jackie Robinson A film about the early life of the baseball star in the army, particularly his court-martial for insubordination regarding segregation.
January 31, 1992 (1992-01-31) Family Matters
ABC TV series
In the episode entitled "Brown Bombshell", Estelle (portrayed by actress Rosetta LeNoire) is determined to share the stories of her late fighter-pilot husband and World War II's Tuskegee Airmen to an uninterested Winslow clan. Eventually, she is invited to share her stories to Eddie's American history class. [145]
1992 (1992) The Liberators: Fighting on Two Fronts in World War II Documentary film co-produced by Bill Miles and Nina Rosenblum and narrated by actors Louis Gossett Jr. and Denzel Washington. It tells the story of the primarily black 761st Tank Battalion (United States) and 183rd Combat Engineers during World War II.
1993 (1993) Posse The first part of the film shows Buffalo Soldiers from the US Army's 10th Cavalry Regiment during the Spanish–American War in Cuba.
1994 (1994) Assault at West Point: The Court-Martial of Johnson Whittaker Shown as a flashback (narrative), the film retraces when, in 1880, Johnson Chesnut Whittaker, one of the first African-American cadets at West Point, is assaulted by three white cadets. The academy instead court-martials Whittaker in the belief that he staged his own attack, supposedly to avoid a philosophy exam.
1996 (1996) The Tuskegee Airmen Produced and aired by HBO and starring Laurence Fishburne. [146]
1997 (1997) G.I. Joe action figure series The Tuskegee Airmen are represented. [147]
1997 (1997) Buffalo Soldiers (1997 film) Set in 1880, the film tells the true story of the black cavalry corps known as the Buffalo Soldiers, who patrolled and protected the Western territories after the end of the American Civil War.
1999 (1999) Mutiny TV made film of the 1944 Port Chicago disaster
2001 The Wild Blue: The Men and Boys who Flew the B-24s over Germany Book by Stephen Ambrose in which the Tuskegee Airmen are mentioned and honored. [148]
2001–2005 (2001–2005) JAG The Commander Peter Ulysses Sturgis Turner (played by Scott Lawrence) is an African-American Navy Officer in the JAG TV series. Former submarine officer, he serves now as lawyer in JAG
2002 (2002) JAG: "Port Chicago" The television drama features the incident
2002 (2002) Antwone Fisher Biographical drama film about an African-American United States Navy sailor
2002 (2002) Hart's War a film about a World War II prisoner of war (POW) based on the novel by John Katzenbach
2004 (2004) Silver Wings and Civil Rights: The Fight to Fly this documentary was the first film to feature information regarding the "Freeman Field Mutiny", the struggle of 101 African-American officers arrested for entering a white officers' club. [149]
2005 Willy's Cut & Shine a play by Michael Bradford depicting African-American World War II soldiers and the troubles they encounter upon returning home to the Deep South. [150]
2006 (2006) Flyboys (film) Film set during World War 1 about the Lafayette Escadrille (the 124th air squadron formed by the French in 1916). It was mostly composed of volunteer American pilots before the United States entered the war. One of the pilots is Eugene Skinner (played by Abdul Salis). This character is based on Eugene Bullard, one of the first African-American military pilots.
2007 (2007) A Distant Shore: African Americans of D-Day A television documentary that was produced for The History Channel by Flight 33 Productions. It tells the story of African American soldiers who went ashore in France during the 1944 Invasion of Normandy (D-Day).
2008 (2008) Miracle at St. Anna Italian epic war film set primarily in Italy during German-occupied Europe in World War II. Directed by Spike Lee, the film is based on the eponymous 2003 novel by James McBride, who also wrote the screenplay. [151]
2009 (2009) Fly a play about the Tuskegee Airmen [152]
2010 (2010) For Love of Liberty a PBS documentary television series that portrays African-American servicemen and women and their dedicated allegiance to the United States military. [153]
2011 (2011) The Wereth Eleven This film retraces the steps of eleven African-American G.I.s from the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion (United States) after their unit was overrun at the start of the Battle of the Bulge.
2012 (2012) Red Tails George Lucas announced he was planning a film about the Tuskegee Airmen. In his release Lucas says, "They were the only escort fighters during the war that never lost a bomber so they were, like, the best." [154]
2020 (2020) The 24th Historical war drama film surrounding the events prior, during and after the Houston riot of 1917.
2022 (2022) The Railway Children Return Towards the end of the film, an African-American U.S. Army general discharges from military service an African-American soldier on being informed that the said soldier is only 14 years old and had lied about his age when he enlisted.
2022 (2022) Devotion In this film, based on a true story, actor Jonathan Majors plays the role of Jesse Brown, the first African-American aviator to complete the U.S. Navy's flight naval program and later saw combat while fighting in the Korean War.
2022 (2022) Amsterdam In this film, there is a scene were African American soldiers are made to wear French Army uniforms prior to the Meuse-Argonne offensive (26/09/1918 - 11/11/1918).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gary B. Nash, "The African Americans Revolution", in Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution (2012) edited by Edward G Gray and Jane Kamensky, pp. 250–70, at p. 254.
  2. ^ Ray Raphael, A People's History of the American Revolution (2001), p. 281.
  3. ^ "Selig, Robert A. "The Revolution's Black Soldiers" orig. published summer, 1997". AmericanRevolution.org. Retrieved April 30, 2017.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ Gray, Jefferson M., "Francis Marion Foils the British", Military History Quarterly, August 3, 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d Shaw, Henry I. Jr.; Donnelly, Ralph W. (2002). "Blacks in the Marine Corps" (PDF). Washington, DC: History and Museums Division, Headquarters USMC. Retrieved June 1, 2011.
  6. ^ Morris, Steven (December 1969). "How Blacks Upset The Marine Corps: 'New Breed' leathernecks are tackling racist vestiges". Ebony. Vol. 25, no. 2. pp. 55–58. ISSN 0012-9011.
  7. ^ MacGregor, Morris J. (1981). Center of Military History, U.S. Army (ed.). Integration of the Armed Forces, 1940–1965. Government Printing Office. pp. 100–102. ISBN 0-16-001925-7.
  8. ^ "U.S. Senate: Battle of Lake Erie". Senate.gov. Retrieved April 30, 2017.
  9. ^ Copes, p. 63. This is in some dispute. See here January 22, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Battie, Charles A. (1932). "Rhode Island African American Data: Hannibal Collins". Negroes of Rhode Island. Rhode Island Genealogy Trails. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  11. ^ a b . NPS.gov. Archived from the original on April 6, 2011. Retrieved April 30, 2017.
  12. ^ Charles Ball (1837). Slavery in the United States: A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Charles Ball, a Black Man, Who Lived Forty Years in Maryland, South Carolina and Georgia, as a Slave Under Various Masters, and was One Year in the Navy with Commodore Barney, During the Late War. New York: John S. Taylor. p. 468.
  13. ^ Charles E. Brodine, Michael J. Crawford and Christine F. Hughes, editors Ironsides! The Ship, the Men and the Wars of the USS Constitution (Fireship Press, 2007), 50.
  14. ^ Elizabeth Dowling Taylor A Slave in the White House: Paul Jennings and the Madison's Palgrave (McMillen: New York 2012), p. 49.
  15. ^ Register of Patients at Naval Hospital Washington DC 1814 With the Names of American Wounded from the Battle of Bladensburg Transcribed with Introduction and Notes by John G. Sharp Harry Jones was patient number 35 and see note 8. Accessed 22 May 2018.
  16. ^ The text of the proclamation has been widely published, and copies of the printed original are in UK National Archives WO 1/143 f31 and ADM 1/508 f579.
  17. ^ Morriss, p. 98.
  18. ^ William S. Dudley, editor The Naval War of 1812: A Documentary History Volume II. (Naval Historical Center: Washington, DC 1992), 324–325.
  19. ^ Alan Taylor, The Internal Enemy Slavery and War In Virginia. 1772–1832 (WW Norton & Company: New York, 2013), pp. 300–305 and Appendix B.
  20. ^ Davis, Michael Shawn, Many of Them Are Among My Best Men: The United States Navy Looks at its African American Crewmen, 1755-1955 , 2011, Kansas State University,Manhattan Kansas, PHD thesis, p.32, https://krex.k-state.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2097/7065/MichaelDavis2011.pdf?sequence=1
  21. ^ Sharp, John, G.M., Dr. Elnathan Judson's 1823 report to the Secretary of the Navy re the successful vaccination of 161 naval seamen in the Boston area for small pox with related demographic and ethnic data http://www.usgwarchives.net/va/portsmouth/shipyard/sharptoc/judson.html accessed 15 September 2021
  22. ^ Bainbridge to Southard,14 September 1827, Letters Received from Captains ("Captains Letters"), Volume 113, 30 July 1827 - 6 October 1827,Letter number 51, RG 260, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C.
  23. ^ Sharp, John G.M., The Recruitment of African Americans in the U.S. Navy 1839, Naval History and Heritage Command 2019. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
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References edit

  • Bérubé, Allan (1990). Coming Out Under Fire: The History of Gay Men and Women in World War Two. New York, The Penguin Group. ISBN 0-452-26598-3 (Plume edition 1991).
  • Copes, Jan M. (Fall 1994). "The Perry Family: A Newport Naval Dynasty of the Early Republic". Newport History: Bulletin of the Newport Historical Society. Newport, RI: Newport Historical Society. 66, Part 2 (227): 49–77.
  • Jones, Major Bradley K. (January 1973). "The Gravity of Administrative Discharges: A Legal and Empirical Evaluation" The Military Law Review 59:1–26.
  • McGuire, Phillip (ed.) (1993). Taps for a Jim Crow Army: Letters from Black Soldiers in World War II. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-0822-5.
  • Morriss, Roger (1997). Cockburn and the British Navy in Transition: Admiral Sir George Cockburn, 1772–1853. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 1-57003-253-X
  • Shilts, Randy (1993). Conduct Unbecoming: Gays & Lesbians in the U.S. Military Vietnam to the Persian Gulf. New York, St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-09261-X

Further reading edit

  • Alt, William E.; Alt, Betty L. (2002). Black Soldiers, White Wars: Black Warriors from Antiquity to the Present. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-97621-7.
  • Buckley, Gail (2001). American Patriots: The Story of Blacks in the Military from the Revolution to Desert Storm. Random House. ISBN 978-0-375-76009-9.
  • Dalessandro, Robert J.; Gerald Torrence (2009). Willing Patriots: Men of Color in the First World War. Schiffer. ISBN 978-0-7643-3233-3.
  • David, Jay; Crane, Elaine (1971). The Black Soldier. William Morrow and Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-688-06037-4.
  • Delmont, Matthew (2022). Half American: The Epic Story of African-Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad. New York: Viking. ISBN 9781984880390. OCLC 1289239822.
  • Dickon, Chris, and Kirkels, Mieke. (2020). Dutch Children of African American Liberators: Race, Military Policy and Identity in World War II and Beyond. United States: McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers.
  • Dixon, Chris (2018). African Americans and the Pacific War, 1941–1945: Race, Nationality, and the Fight for Freedom. Cambridge University Press.
  • Fletcher, Marvin E. (1974). The Black Soldier and Officer in the United States Army 1891–1917. University of Missouri. ISBN 978-0-8262-0161-4.
  • Foner, Jack D. (1974). Blacks and the Military in American History. Praeger.
  • Gibson, Truman K. Jr.; Steve Huntley (2005). Knocking Down Barriers: My Fight for Black America. Northwestern University Press. ISBN 0-8101-2292-8.
  • Höhn, Maria; Martin Klimke (2010). A Breath of Freedom: The Civil Rights Struggle, African American GIs, and Germany. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-10473-0.
  • Knauer, Christine (2014). Let Us Fight as Free Men: Black Soldiers and Civil Rights. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Lindenmeyer, Otto (1970). Black and Brave: The Black Soldier in America. McGraw-Hill Book Company. ISBN 978-0-07-037876-6.
  • Nell, William C. (1855). The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution.
  • Schubert, Frank N. (1997). Black Valor: Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor, 1870–1898. Scholarly Resources Inc. ISBN 9780842025867.
  • Scott, Emmett J. Scott's Official History of The American Negro in the World War. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  • Sutherland, Jonatha. (2004). African Americans at War: An Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-746-7
  • White, Steven (2019). World War II and American Racial Politics: Public Opinion, the Presidency, and Civil Rights Advocacy. Cambridge University Press.
Navy specific
  • Aptheker, Herbert. "The Negro in the Union Navy". Journal of Negro History (1947): 169–200. JSTOR 2714852.
  • Bennett, Michael J. Union Jacks: Yankee Sailors in the Civil War: Yankee Sailors in the Civil War (University of North Carolina Press, 2005)
  • Bureau of Naval Personnel. The Negro in the Navy in World War II . Washington, 1947. 103 pp.
  • Davis, Michael Shawn. "Many of Them Are Among My Best Men": The United States Navy Looks at Its African American Crewmen, 1755–1955. PhD dissertation, Kansas State University (2011). With detailed bibliography, pp. 216–241.
  • Jackson, Luther P. "Virginia Negro Soldiers and Seamen in the American Revolution". Journal of Negro History (1942): 247–287. JSTOR 2715325.
  • Langley, Harold D. "The Negro in the Navy and Merchant Service—1789–1860 1798". Journal of Negro History (1967): 273–286. doi:10.2307/2716189. JSTOR 2716189.
  • Miller, Richard E. (2004). The Messman Chronicles: African Americans in the U.S. Navy, 1932–1943. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-539-X.
  • Miller, Richard E. "The Golden Fourteen, Plus: Black Navy Women in World War One". Minerva: A Quarterly Report on Women and the Military 8.3&4 (1995): 7–13.
  • Nelson, Dennis D. The Integration of the Negro into the U.S. Navy, 1776–1947 (NY: Farrar Straus, 1951)
  • Ramold, Steven J. Slaves, Sailors, Citizens: African Americans in the Union Navy (2002)
  • Reddick, Lawrence D. "The Negro in the United States Navy During World War II". Journal of Negro History (1947): 201–219.
  • Schneller, Robert J. Jr. Blue & Gold and Black: Racial Integration of the U.S. Naval Academy (Texas A&M University Press, 2008)
  • Sharp, John G. M., The Recruitment of African Americans in the U.S. Navy 1839, Naval History and Heritage Command, 2019.https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/r/the-recruitment-of-african-americans-in-the-us-navy-1839.html Retrieved March 6, 2019.
  • Valuska, David L. The African American in the Union Navy, 1861–1865 (Garland Pub., 1993)
  • Williams, Charles Hughes III. "We Have ... Kept the Negroes' Goodwill and Sent Them Away": Black Sailors, White Dominion in the New Navy, 1893–1942, PhD Dissertation. Texas A&M University, 2008.

External links edit

  • McDaniels III, Pellom: African American Soldiers (USA), in: 1914–1918 online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Sheffer, Debra J.: Racism in the Armed Forces (USA), in: 1914–1918 online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • "African Americans in the U.S. Army". U.S. Army.
  • "Blacks in the U.S. Army: Then and Now". U.S. Army.
  • . U.S. Army. Archived from the original on September 26, 2010. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  • Simpson, Diana (compiled by) (February 1999). "African-Americans in Military History". Air University Library, Maxwell Air Force Base.
  • . Historical Information. arlingtoncemetery.org. An unofficial website. Archived from the original on 2000-08-17. Retrieved 2007-07-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • "Black Military World".
  • . Father Ryan High School. Archived from the original on 2007-04-03. Retrieved December 23, 2005.
  • . Archived from the original on 2009-10-02.
  • First Kansas Colored Infantry flag, Civil War, Kansas Museum of History
  • The "Colored" Soldiers, Kansas Historical Society
  • African Americans in World War II: Legacy of Patriotism and Valor (1997) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
  • "The Tuskegee Airmen of World War II at Pritzker Military Museum and Library".

military, history, african, americans, also, racism, against, african, americans, military, military, history, african, americans, spans, from, arrival, first, enslaved, africans, during, colonial, history, united, states, present, african, americans, have, pa. See also Racism against African Americans in the U S military The military history of African Americans spans from the arrival of the first enslaved Africans during the colonial history of the United States to the present day African Americans have participated in every war fought by or within the United States Tuskegee Airmen of the 332nd Fighter Group United States Army Air Forces USAAF attend a briefing at Ramitelli Airfield Italy in March 1945 Including the Revolutionary War the War of 1812 the Mexican American War the Civil War the Spanish American War World War I World War II the Korean War the Vietnam War the Gulf War the War in Afghanistan and the Iraq War Contents 1 Revolutionary War 2 War of 1812 3 1815 to 1840 4 Mexican American War 5 American Civil War 6 Indian Wars 7 Spanish American War 7 1 Units 8 Philippine American War 9 World War I and interwar period 9 1 Units 9 1 1 Experience of soldiers in France 9 1 2 The way they were treated by white Americans in France differed markedly from the way they were treated by French troops and civilians who dealt with them roughly as equals This left the African Americans disillusioned 59 9 1 3 Deteriorated diplomatic ties with other nations during the inter war period 9 2 Second Italo Abyssinian War 9 3 Spanish Civil War 10 World War II 10 1 Units 10 2 Medal of Honor recipients 10 3 Blue discharges 11 Integration of the armed forces 12 Korean War 13 Vietnam War 14 Post Vietnam to present day 15 Military history of African Americans in popular culture 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 Further reading 20 External linksRevolutionary War editMain article African Americans in the Revolutionary War nbsp Crispus Attucks was an iconic patriot engaging in a protest in 1770 he was shot by royal soldiers in the Boston Massacre African Americans both as slaves and freemen served on both sides of the Revolutionary War Gary Nash reports that recent research concludes there were about 9 000 black soldiers who served on the American side counting the Continental Army and Navy state militia units as well as privateers wagoneers in the Army servants officers and spies 1 Ray Raphael notes that while thousands did join the Loyalist cause A far larger number free as well as slave tried to further their interests by siding with the patriots 2 Black soldiers served in Northern militias from the outset but this was forbidden in the South where slave owners feared arming slaves Lord Dunmore the Royal Governor of Virginia issued an emancipation proclamation in November 1775 promising freedom to runaway slaves who fought for the British Sir Henry Clinton issued a similar edict in New York in 1779 3 Over 100 000 slaves escaped to British lines although only roughly 1 000 served on the front lines Many Black Loyalist migrated to Nova Scotia and later to Sierra Leone Many of the Black Loyalists performed military service in the British Army particularly as part of the only Black regiment of the war the Black Pioneers and others served non military roles In response and because of manpower shortages Washington lifted the ban on black enlistment in the Continental Army in January 1776 All black units were formed in Rhode Island and Massachusetts many were slaves promised freedom for serving in lieu of their masters another all African American unit came from Haiti with French forces At least 5 000 African American soldiers fought as Revolutionaries and at least 20 000 served with the British Peter Salem and Salem Poor are the most noted of the African American Patriots during this era and Colonel Tye was perhaps the most noteworthy Black Loyalist African Americans also served with various of the South Carolina guerrilla units including that of the Swamp Fox Francis Marion 4 half of whose force sometimes consisted of free Blacks These Black troops made a critical difference in the fighting in the swamps and kept Marion s guerrillas effective even when many of his white troops were down with malaria or yellow fever citation needed The first black American to fight in the Marines was John Martin also known as Keto the slave of a Delaware man recruited in April 1776 without his owner s permission by Captain of the Marines Miles Pennington of the Continental brig USS Reprisal Martin served with the Marine platoon on the Reprisal for a year and a half and took part in many ship to ship battles including boardings with hand to hand combat but he was lost with the rest of his unit when the brig sank in October 1777 5 At least 12 other black men served with various American Marine units in 1776 1777 more may have been in service but not identified as blacks in the records However in 1798 when the United States Marine Corps USMC was officially re instituted Secretary of War James McHenry specified in its rules No Negro Mulatto or Indian to be enlisted 5 Marine Commandant William Ward Burrows instructed his recruiters regarding USMC racial policy You can make use of Blacks and Mulattoes while you recruit but you cannot enlist them 5 The policy was formulated to set a higher standard of unit cohesion for Marines with the unit to be made up of only one race so that the members would remain loyal maintain shipboard discipline and help put down mutinies 5 The USMC maintained this policy until 1942 6 7 War of 1812 edit nbsp Painting of Battle of Lake Erie depicting one of Perry s African American oarsmen in the boat and another African American sailor in the water 8 During the War of 1812 about one quarter of the personnel in the American naval squadrons of the Battle of Lake Erie were black and portrait renderings of the battle on the wall of the nation s Capitol and the rotunda of Ohio s Capitol show that blacks played a significant role in it Hannibal Collins a freed slave and Oliver Hazard Perry s personal servant is thought to be the oarsman in William Henry Powell s Battle of Lake Erie 9 Collins earned his freedom as a veteran of the Revolutionary War having fought in the Battle of Rhode Island He accompanied Perry for the rest of Perry s naval career and was with him at Perry s death in Trinidad in 1819 10 No legal restrictions regarding the enlistment of blacks were placed on the Navy because of its chronic shortage of manpower The law of 1792 which generally prohibited enlistment of blacks in the Army became the United States Army s official policy until 1862 The only exception to this Army policy was Louisiana which gained an exemption at the time of its purchase through a treaty provision which allowed it to opt out of the operation of any law which ran counter to its traditions and customs Louisiana permitted the existence of separate black militia units which drew its enlistees from freed blacks citation needed A militia unit In Louisiana the 2nd Battalion of Free Men of Color was a unit of black soldiers from Santo Domingo led by a Black free man and Santo Domingue emigre Joseph Savary offered their services and were accepted by General Andrew Jackson in the Battle of New Orleans a victory that was achieved after the war was officially over 11 Blacks fought at the Battle of Bladensburg August 24 1814 many as members of Commodore Joshua Barney s naval flotilla force This force provided crucial artillery support during the battle One of the best accounts is that by Charles Ball born 1785 Ball served with Commodore Joshua at the Battle of Bladensburg and later helped man the defenses at Baltimore In his 1837 memoir Ball reflected on the Battle of Bladensburg I stood at my gun until the Commodore was shot down if the militia regiments that lay upon our right and left could have been brought to charge the British in close fight as they crossed the bridge we should have killed or taken the whole of them in a short time but the militia ran like sheep chased by dogs 12 Barney s flotilla group included numerous African Americans who provided artillery support during the battle Modern scholars estimate blacks made up between 15 and 20 of the American naval forces in the War of 1812 13 Just before the battle Commodore Barney on being asked by President James Madison if his negroes would not run on the approach of the British replied No Sir they don t know how to run they will die by their guns first 14 The Commodore was correct the men did not run one such man was young sailor Harry Jones no 35 apparently a free black Harry Jones was wounded in the final action at Bladensburg Due to the severity of Jones wounds he remained a patient at the Naval Hospital Washington DC for nearly two months 15 nbsp African American seaman Harry Jones is enumerated patient no 35 on this 1814 Register of Patients Naval Hospital Washington Register states Harry Jones black boy wound Bladensburg Boy in this context was a reference to rank Boys in early navy were simply young sailors in training aged 12 to 18 African Americans also served with the British On April 2 1814 Vice Admiral Alexander Cochrane issued a proclamation to all persons wishing to emigrate similar to the aforementioned Dunmore s Proclamation some 40 years previous Any persons would be received by the British either at a military outpost or aboard British ships those seeking sanctuary could enter His Majesty s forces or go as free settlers to the British possessions in North America or the West Indies 16 17 18 Among those who went to the British some joined the Corps of Colonial Marines an auxiliary unit of marine infantry embodied on May 14 1814 British commanders later stated the new marines fought well at Bladensburg and confirm that two companies took part in the burning of Washington including the White House Following the Treaty of Ghent the British kept their promise and in 1815 evacuated the Colonial Marines and their families to Halifax Canada and Bermuda 19 1815 to 1840 edit Despite Southern attempts to restrict their movements with the Negro Seaman Acts African American sailors continued to enlist in the Navy in substantial numbers throughout the 1820s and 1830s 20 From the Treaty of Ghent to the Mexican American War African Americans made up a significant part of the peacetime navy Data collected by Dr Elnathan Judson USN for his 1823 report to the Secretary of the Navy contains detailed information re the number of seamen vaccinated in the Boston area This report which covers four months listed 161 men and boys of which Dr Judson enumerated 30 as black or 18 7 of the total 21 Commodore William Bainbridge in a 14 September 1827 letter to Secretary of the Navy Samuel L Southhard reported 102 men had been received from the Philadelphia area of which 18 were Black or 17 6 Bainbridge concluded by informing the Southard I ordered the Recruiting Officer not to enter anymore until further notice 22 Data for 1839 was collected by Commodore Lewis Warrington and forwarded to the Secretary of the Navy as a memorandum with the number of recruits from 1 September 1838 to September 17 1839 This document provides data for five naval recruiting stations which in total reflect 1016 men entered or naval service of which 122 were Black or 12 of the total 23 Mexican American War editA number of African Americans in the Army during the Mexican American War were servants of the officers who received government compensation for the services of their servants or slaves Also soldiers from the Louisiana Battalion of Free Men of Color participated in this war African Americans also served on a number of naval vessels during the Mexican American War including the USS Treasure and the USS Columbus 11 The involvement of African Americans in this war was one where they were not included as actual soldiers There were however a few cases of African Americans joining in the fighting and these people became known as Black Toms Many slaves that were brought into assist the army officers escaped to Mexico However whenever the American Army would encounter these African Americans they viewed them as stolen property and dissolved them back into the racial hierarchy of the army 24 American Civil War edit nbsp Company I of the 36th Colored Regiment USCTMain article Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War The history of African Americans in the U S Civil War is marked by 186 097 7 122 officers 178 975 enlisted 25 African American men comprising 163 units who served in the Union Army during the Civil War and many more African Americans served in the Union Navy Both free African Americans and runaway slaves joined the fight On the Confederate side blacks both free and slave were used for labor In the final months of the war the Confederate Army was desperate for additional soldiers so the Confederate Congress voted to recruit black troops for combat they were to be promised their freedom Units were in training when the war ended and none served in combat 26 54th Massachusetts Infantry RegimentIndian Wars edit nbsp Buffalo Soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment 1890From 1863 to the early 20th century African American units were utilized by the Army to combat the Native Americans during the Indian Wars 27 The most noted among this group were the Buffalo Soldiers 9th Cavalry Regiment 10th Cavalry Regiment 24th Infantry Regiment 25th Infantry RegimentAt the end of the U S Civil War the army reorganized and authorized the formation of two regiments of black cavalry the 9th and 10th US Cavalry Four regiments of infantry the 38th 39th 40th and 41st US Infantry were formed at the same time In 1869 the four infantry regiments were merged into two new ones the 24th and 25th US Infantry These units were composed of black enlisted men commanded by white officers such as Benjamin Grierson and occasionally an African American officer such as Henry O Flipper The Buffalo Soldiers served a variety of roles along the frontier from building roads to guarding the U S mail 28 These regiments served at a variety of posts in the southwest United States and Great Plains regions During this period 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 29 Spanish American War editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Segregated company during the Spanish American War Camp Wikoff 1898 nbsp Tenth Dragoons exercise in CubaAfter the Indian Wars ended in the 1890s the regiments continued to serve and participated in the Spanish American War including the Battle of San Juan Hill where five more Medals of Honor were earned 30 They took part in the 1916 Punitive Expedition into Mexico and in the Philippine American War Units edit In addition to the African Americans who served in regular army units during the Spanish American War five African American Volunteer Army units and seven African American National Guard units served citation needed Volunteer Army 7th United States Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 8th United States Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 9th United States Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 10th United States Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 11th United States Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed National Guard 3rd Alabama Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 8th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops 31 Companies A and B 1st Indiana Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 23rd Kansas Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 3rd North Carolina Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 9th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed 6th Virginia Volunteer Infantry Colored Troops citation needed Of these units only the 9th U S 8th Illinois and 23rd Kansas served outside the United States during the war All three units served in Cuba and suffered no losses to combat citation needed Philippine American War editAfter the Treaty of Paris the islands of the Philippines became a colony of the United States When the U S military started to send soldiers into the islands native rebels who had already been fighting their former Spanish rulers opposed U S colonization and retaliated causing an insurrection In what would be known as the Philippine American War the U S military also sent colored regiments and units to stop the insurrection However due to the discrimination of African American soldiers some of them defected to the Philippine Army One of those that defected was David Fagen who was given the rank of captain in the Philippine Army Fagen served in the 24th Regiment of the U S Army but on November 17 1899 32 he defected to the Filipino army 33 He became a successful guerrilla leader and his capture became an obsession to the U S military and American public His defection was likely the result of differential treatment by American occupational forces toward black soldiers as well as common American forces derogatory treatment and views of the Filipino occupational resistance who were frequently referred to as niggers and gugus 34 After two other black deserters were captured and executed President Theodore Roosevelt announced he would stop executing captured deserters 35 As the war ended the US gave amnesties to most of their opponents A substantial reward was offered for Fagen who was considered a traitor There are two conflicting versions of his fate one is that his was the partially decomposed head for which the reward was claimed the other is that he took a local wife and lived peacefully in the mountains 36 World War I and interwar period edit nbsp Officers of the 366th Infantry Regiment returning home from World War I service nbsp Soldiers of the 369th 15th N Y who won the Croix de Guerre for gallantry in action 1919When the war broke out several African Americans joined Allied armies Most notably Eugene Bullard and Bob Scanlon joined the French Foreign Legion within weeks of the start of the war Of the twelve African Americans who joined the Legion at the start only two survived the war 37 6 10 The U S armed forces remained segregated through World War I as a matter of policy and practice and despite the effort of Black leadership to overcome that discrimination The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP had been formed in 1909 to move Black equality of opportunity forward but with the declaration of war in 1917 civil rights leader W E B Du Bois declared an acceptable fall back in the effort First your country then your rights became the NAACP slogan 38 Furthermore Du Bois also argued that the so called double consciousness a phrase coined by himself in the early 1900 s became more pronounced with this return of troops African American soldiers who had fought for American and European freedom and democracy overseas now returned to the segregated and discriminatory American society s intensifying their awareness of their dual identity The optimistic belief was that by serving valiantly in the nation s war effort Blacks would gain the respect and equality that had been elusive thus far But it was pitted against an underlying unwillingness by the War Department to become a vehicle for social change Secretary of War Newton D Baker had made it clear that though African Americans would be fairly treated in the military the department could not undertake at this time to settle the so called race question 39 Instead the practices that limited equality and opportunity in civilian society were carried over to military society Prospective Black enlistees in the war effort were turned away in large part because there were not enough segregated Black units to take them in Those Blacks who were successfully enlisted were kept in the same restricted channels of their civil lives Segregated transportation took them to segregated military bases and regiments that were rarely deployed to much more than the tasks of support and maintenance 40 Black men made up a third of the army s labour force 41 And in those jobs they were subject to treatment of indignities by white officers such as eating in the rain having no facilities to wash clothes or bath no toilets and sleeping in tents with no floors 42 43 In some quarters African Americans were so cramped that they walked on trunks to move about the room 41 Still many African Americans volunteered to join the military following America s entry into the war By the time of the armistice with Germany on November 11 1918 over 200 000 African Americans had served with the American Expeditionary Force on the Western Front while 170 000 remained in the United States 44 45 The most graphic reminder of Jim Crow remaining during the war and after the soldiers returned came in the form of lynching 41 African American soldier Wilbur Little was lynched in Georgia after returning from fighting for wearing a uniform in public and refusing to take it off 46 This confirmed the message that the sacrifices of black soldiers for European freedom would not equate to racial progression Not all American public opinion was anti African American when the black soldiers returned home In New York 3000 of the Harlem Hellfighters were greeted with a parade 47 The New York Herald Tribune wrote an article on the parade describing its popularity and support Up the wide avenue they swung Their smiles outshone the golden sunlight New York turned out to tender its dark skinned heroes a New York welcome Never have white Americans accorded so heartfelt and hearty a reception to a contingent of their Black country men Racial lines were for the time displaced The color of their skin had nothing to do with the occasion The blood they had shed in France was as red as any other 47 Though most African American units were largely relegated to support roles and did not see combat some African Americans played a notable role in America s war effort For example the 369th Infantry Regiment known as the Harlem Hellfighters was assigned to the French Army and served on the front lines for six months 171 members of the 369th were awarded the Legion of Merit However the American War Department restricted black soldiers from fighting where possible as shown by the forced retirement of Lieutenant Colonel Charles Young as they did not want the black officer commanding white soldiers or leading a full black combat division 41 nbsp German propaganda targeting the African American troops in WWIGermany attempted to sway the African American troops with propaganda challenging their race related rights back in the United States 48 Corporal Freddie Stowers of the 371st Infantry Regiment that was seconded to the 157th French Army division called the Red Hand Division in need of reinforcement under the command of the General Mariano Goybet was posthumously awarded a Medal of Honor the only African American to be so honored for actions in World War I citation needed During action in France Stowers had led an assault on German trenches continuing to lead and encourage his men even after being twice wounded Stowers died from his wounds but his men continued the fight and eventually defeated the German troops Stowers was recommended for the Medal of Honor shortly after his death but the nomination was according to the Army misplaced In 1990 under pressure from Congress the Department of the Army launched an investigation Based on findings from this investigation the Army Decorations Board approved the award of the Medal of Honor to Stowers 49 On April 24 1991 73 years after he was killed in action Stowers two surviving sisters received the Medal of Honor from President George H W Bush at the White House The success of the investigation leading to Stowers Medal of Honor later sparked a similar review that resulted in six African Americans being posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for actions in World War II Vernon Baker was the only recipient who was still alive to receive his award 50 Units edit Some of the African American units that served in World War I were nbsp 351st Field Artillery troops on the deck of the Louisville92nd Infantry Division 51 366th Infantry Regiment 93rd Infantry Division 369th Infantry Regiment Harlem Hellfighters formerly the 15th New York National Guard 370th Infantry Regiment Black Devils formerly the 8th Illinois 52 53 371st Infantry Regiment 372nd Infantry RegimentSupport units included Butchery Companies Nos 322 and 363 Stevedore Regiments Nos 301 302 and 303d Stevedore Regiment and Stevedore Battalions Nos 701 702 Army Corps of Engineers Engineers Service Battalions Nos 505 to 567 inclusive but skipping 531 532 538 537 563 57 total about 1008 personnel per battalion Labor Battalions Nos 304 to 315 inclusive Nos 317 to 327 inclusive Nos 329 to 348 inclusive and No 357 Labor Companies Nos 301 to 324 inclusive Pioneer Infantry Battalions Nos 801 to 809 inclusive No 811 and Nos 813 to 816 inclusive 54 A complete list of African American units that served in the war is available 55 African Americans Veterans faced heavy persecution when they returned home from World War I and many African American veterans were lynched after returning from WWI The prediction of equality by W E B Du Bois and the NAACP would not be realized and racial antagonism was expanded by the claims that any talk of Black valor and positive contribution were lies meant to cover up cowardice and incompetence which was counteracted by claims of prejudiced and harmful white leadership and the use of Blacks as cannon fodder for white troops that followed them into combat 49 Experience of soldiers in France edit African Americans were typically placed into labor battalions with around 160 000 of the 200 000 African Americans who were shipped out to France in 1917 finding themselves placed in one These labor battalions were viewed as being the dregs of the military forces and the men in them were driven to the brink of physical and emotional exhaustion 56 Jim Crow was extended to the camps where the African American soldiers were stationed and white officers would frequently remind African American soldiers of this The 370th Infantry Regiment were informed a black member of a labor battalion had recently been hanged in the same square the unit was now assembling in a small town outside the Lorraine region 57 In support of an attempt to impose American racial policy on France U S military authorities sent a memo to the mayors of the Meuse division upon the arrival of the African American 372nd Infantry Regiment The Red Hand in 1918 It asked that the French not integrate the Black troops into French society 58 The question is of great importance to the French people and even more so to the American towns the population of which will be affected later when the troops return to the United States It therefore becomes necessary for both the colored and white races that undue mixing of these two be circumspectly prevented The request was generally disregarded by the French The way they were treated by white Americans in France differed markedly from the way they were treated by French troops and civilians who dealt with them roughly as equals This left the African Americans disillusioned 59 edit African American soldiers interacted with colonial troops stationed in France and they had already read about them in African American newspapers The French military had reframed the debate for African Americans at home in that France recognized that Blacks had an important combatant role in the defence of the nation These stories and experiences fuelled African American racial pride which contributed to their mass disillusionment when they returned home 60 YMCA services in France were also segregated sixty African American y secretaries among them twenty three African American women served the 200 000 black soldiers stationed in France only three of these arrived before the armistice including Addie W Hunton and Kathryn M Johnson The YMCA work provided entertainment recreation and education to the vast majority of African American troops as they had more time on their hands since they served in labor battalions 61 African American WWI veterans role in the civil rights movement According to the historian Chad L Williams African American soldiers experiences in the war and their battles with the pervasive racial discrimination in the U S military informed their postwar disillusionment and subsequent racial militancy as veterans 62 Examples of this racial militancy can be seen in the prominent roles which some African American WWI veterans played in the civil rights movement For example William N Colston an African American veteran who had served in the 367th infantry during the war published several essays in the US s leading radical African American magazine the Messenger These articles aimed to illustrate the experiences which African Americans soldiers had throughout the war African American s wartime experiences also played a key role in the formation of the League for Democracy which was a Civil Rights movement formed by African American soldiers serving in the 92nd Division with its key aim being to combat racial discrimination within the military 63 Deteriorated diplomatic ties with other nations during the inter war period edit As previously mentioned the mistreatment of numerous African Americans upon their return home after World War I coupled with the economic downturn and the demobilisation of millions of troops resulted in a discontented population This mistreatment and discrimination against African American soldiers and the domestic racial violence such as the Red Summer of 1919 had international implications Other nations especially those with non white populations took notice of these issues and began to view the United States through a more critical lens The diplomatic tensions resulting from racial issues strained relations with countries that had non white populations In particular Japan is highlighted as an example The mistreatment of African Americans and racial violence may have been seen by other nations as contradictory to the democratic and egalitarian principles that the U S claimed to uphold Japan being one of the countries with a non white population might have been particularly sensitive to racial issues These diplomatic tensions strained international relations as the racial issues raised questions about the United States commitment to principles of equality and human rights Impacting trade alliances as demonstrated by the disagreements over racial issues at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference and overall perceptions of the U S on the global stage Historians such as David Kennedy briefly mentions this in his book Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 64 arguing that America isolated itself from cultures and ideas within this Interwar Period largely due to the treatment of African Americans or in this case the returning soldiers Second Italo Abyssinian War edit On October 4 1935 Fascist Italy invaded Ethiopia Being the only non colonized African country besides Liberia the invasion of Ethiopia caused a profound response amongst African Americans 65 In New York City clashes took place between African Americans and the Italian immigrant community many of whom vocally supported Mussolini s invasion A rally held at Madison Square Garden on Sept 26 less than a week before the invasion brought out more than 10 000 to hear civil rights leader W E B Du Bois Paul Robeson and others speak about the impending disaster Samuel Daniels head of the Pan African Reconstruction Association toured major American cities to recruit volunteers 66 African Americans organized to raise money for medical supplies and several thousand volunteered to fight for the African kingdom 67 Most volunteers were blocked from leaving the United States due to the American government s desire to remain neutral in the conflict 68 Volunteer John C Robinson a pilot and graduate of Tuskegee University made his way to Ethiopia to assist with training pilots for Ethiopia s new air force Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie soon personally named Robinson commander of the entire air force Robinson was given the nickname the Brown Condor by Ethiopian forces for his service 69 Many years later Haile Selassie I would comment on the efforts We can never forget the help Ethiopia received from Negro Americans during the crisis It moved me to know that Americans of African descent did not abandon their embattled brothers but stood by us 67 Spanish Civil War edit When General Franco rebelled against the newly established secular Spanish Republic a number of African Americans volunteered to fight for Republican Spain Many African Americans who were in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade had Communist ideals Among these there was Vaughn Love who went to fight for the Spanish loyalist cause because he considered Fascism to be the enemy of all black aspirations African American activist and World War I veteran Oliver Law fought in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade during the Spanish Civil War 70 James Peck was an African American man from Pennsylvania who was turned down when he applied to become a military pilot in the US He then went on to serve in the Spanish Republican Air Force until 1938 71 Peck was credited with shooting down five Aviacion Nacional planes two Heinkel He 51s from the Legion Condor and three Fiat CR 32 Fascist Italian fighters Salaria Kea was a young African American nurse from Harlem Hospital who served as a military nurse with the American Medical Bureau in the Spanish Civil War She was one of the two only African American female volunteers in the midst of the war torn Spanish Republican areas 72 When Salaria came back from Spain she wrote the pamphlet A Negro Nurse in Spain and tried to raise funds for the beleaguered Spanish Republic 73 World War II editWe call upon the president and congress to declare war on Japan and racial prejudice in our country Certainly we should be strong enough to whip them both The Pittsburgh Courier 74 The Pittsburgh Courier was one of the most influential African American newspapers of WWII and the source of what came to be called the Double V Campaign A letter to the editor of the paper in 1941 asked why a half American should sacrifice his life in the war and suggested that Blacks should seek a double victory The first V for a victory over our enemies from without the second V for a victory over our enemies from within The idea would become a national cause and eventually extend into a call for action in the factories and services that supported the war effort 75 Despite a high enlistment rate in the U S Army African Americans were still not treated equally At parades church services in transportation and canteens they were kept separate A quota of only 48 nurses was set for African American women and the women were segregated from white nurses and white soldiers for much of the war Eventually more black nurses enlisted They were assigned to care for black soldiers Black nurses were integrated into everyday life with their white colleagues nbsp Phyllis Mae Dailey was sworn into the United States Navy Nurse Corps as the first African American servicewoman in World War II The first African American woman sworn into the Navy Nurse Corps was Phyllis Mae Dailey a Columbia University student from New York She was the first of only four African American women to serve as a Navy nurse during World War II 76 Many black American soldiers served their country with distinction during World War II There were 125 000 African Americans who were overseas in World War II 6 25 of all abroad soldiers Famous segregated units such as the Tuskegee Airmen and 761st Tank Battalion and the lesser known but equally distinguished 452nd Anti Aircraft Artillery Battalion 77 proved their value in combat leading to desegregation of all U S armed forces by order of President Harry S Truman in July 1948 via Executive Order 9981 nbsp Battery A of the 452nd AAA Battalion November 9 1944Benjamin O Davis Jr served as commander of the Tuskegee Airmen during the war He later went on to become the first African American general in the United States Air Force His father Benjamin O Davis Sr had been the first African American brigadier general in the Army 1940 nbsp Admiral Chester W Nimitz pins Navy Cross on Doris Miller at ceremony on board warship in Pearl Harbor May 27 1942Doris Miller a Navy mess attendant was the first African American recipient of the Navy Cross awarded for his actions during the attack on Pearl Harbor Miller had voluntarily manned an anti aircraft gun and fired at the Japanese aircraft despite having no prior training in the weapon s use On April 14 1943 Joseph C Jenkins became the first African American commissioned officer in the United States Coast Guard He was joined first by Clarence Samuels on August 31 1943 and then by Harvey C Russell Jr in February 1944 78 In March 1944 the Golden Thirteen became the Navy s first African American commissioned officers Samuel L Gravely Jr became a commissioned officer the same year he would later be the first African American to command a US warship and the first to be an admiral The Port Chicago disaster on July 17 1944 was an explosion of about 2 000 tons of ammunition as it was being loaded onto ships by black Navy sailors under pressure from their white officers to hurry The explosion in Northern California killed 320 military and civilian workers most of them black It led a month later to the Port Chicago Mutiny the only case of a full military trial for mutiny in the history of the U S Navy against 50 African American sailors who refused to continue loading ammunition under the same dangerous conditions The trial was observed by the then young lawyer Thurgood Marshall and ended in conviction of all of the defendants The trial was immediately and later criticized for not abiding by the applicable laws on mutiny and it became influential in the discussion of desegregation 79 During World War II African American soldiers served in all fields of service though they were used mostly to support labor 80 Initially in Britain there was a reluctance to accept black American servicemen President Roosevelt however was under an obligation to allow black troops to travel to all theatres of war 80 and during his re election in 1940 Roosevelt had relied heavily on the black vote Eager to meet demands calling for change including racial integration in the military Roosevelt seized the opportunity to work towards and end to discrimination in the defense industries and began sending American servicemen known as GIs including African Americans to Britain in 1942 In the next three years approximately 3 million American GIs passed through the country approximately 8 percent 240 000 being African American 80 In the midst of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944 General Eisenhower was severely short of replacement troops for existing all white companies Consequently he made the decision to allow 2000 black servicemen volunteers to serve in segregated platoons under the command of white lieutenants to replenish these companies 81 These platoons would serve with distinction and according to an Army survey in the summer of 1945 84 were ranked very well and 16 were ranked fairly well No black platoon received a ranking of poor by those white officers or white soldiers that fought with them These platoons were often subject to racist treatment by white military units in occupied Germany and were quickly sent back to their old segregated units after the end of hostilities in Germany Despite their protests these brave according to whom African American soldiers ended the war in their old non combat service units Though largely forgotten after the war the temporary experiment with black combat troops proved a success a small but important step toward permanent integration during the Korean War 82 83 A total of 708 African Americans were killed in combat during World War II 84 During World War II officer training expanded to include African American Soldiers Before the U S entered the war in 1941 there were only five black officers which rose to 7 000 by the end of the war In 1945 Frederick C Branch became the first African American United States Marine Corps officer However the military remained segregated all through the war and African American officers were never allowed to command white troops 80 A blue plaque commemorating the contribution of African American soldiers based in Wales during World War II was installed by the Nubian Jak Community Trust at RAF Carew Cheriton on the 75th anniversary of the D Day landings June 6 2019 85 86 87 The presence of African American soldiers in the U K and subsequent encounters with the native population has been shown to have reduced the racial prejudice against black people if even decades later 88 and for the most part African American soldiers were more welcome in the countries of European Allies than U S officials wished them to be In the U K especially generally all GIs were commended for their generosity and bravery and in some cases the British public gained a special affection for African American soldiers that were thought to have better manners than the white Americans 80 But they were not welcome in some other parts of the world which became a problem to be solved for Brig Gen Dwight D Eisenhower In 1942 he told the War Department that by his research Black troops would not be welcomed for various reasons in Australia Alaska most of the south Caribbean nations the British West Indies Panama and Liberia And U S military leaders themselves did not want them in Iceland Greenland Labrador and the British Isles The War Department response to the information was mixed and by 1944 the war had progressed into a need for all troops that could be deployed 89 As in World War I Black soldiers were primarily channeled to support labor most of them as members of the Quartermaster Corps Among the most crucial and difficult of Quartermaster responsibilities was burial of the dead and the construction of temporary and permanent cemeteries The best known work of the Quartermaster Corps in World War II was the brief Red Ball Express which ferried food supplies and fuel along the rapid advance of Allied forces from the Normandy Invasion to the incursion into Germany Six thousand trucks operating 24 hours a day most with two African American drivers on circular routes carried 400 000 tons of supplies through increasingly liberated Europe between August 25 and November 16 1944 The work was relentless exhausting and dangerous and credited with helping to bring about the ultimate success of the Normandy Invasion A 1952 movie The Red Ball Express 90 brought more attention to the effort but underplayed its African American aspect 91 Units edit nbsp 333rd Field Artillery Battalion African Americans captured during the Battle of the Bulge December 1944 nbsp 12th Armored Division soldier with German prisoners of war April 1945 nbsp The Tuskegee Airmen were the first African American pilots in United States military history they flew with distinction during World War II Portrait of Tuskegee airman Edward M Thomas by photographer Toni Frissell March 1945 nbsp Several Tuskegee airmen at Ramitelli Italy March 1945 nbsp African American soldiers in Burma stop work briefly to read President Truman s Proclamation of Victory in Europe May 9 1945 nbsp Unarmed combat training Marine Corps Base Montford Point NARA nbsp D Day Peleliu African Americans of one of the two segregated units that supported the 7th Marines the 16th Marine Field Depot or the 17th Naval Construction Battalion Special take a break in the 115 degree heat September 15 1944 NARA 532535Army 92nd Infantry Division 366th Infantry Regiment 370th Infantry Regiment 93rd Infantry Division 369th Infantry Regiment 371st Infantry Regiment 2nd Cavalry Division 4th Cavalry Brigade 10th Cavalry Regiment 27th Cavalry Regiment 92 5th Cavalry Brigade 9th Cavalry Regiment 28th Cavalry Regiment 92 93 94 Non Divisional Units Barrage Balloon Unit 320th Barrage Balloon Battalion Anti Aircraft Artillery Unit 452nd Anti Aircraft Artillery Battalion Infantry Units 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion Cavalry Armor Units US Military Academy Cavalry Squadron 5th Reconnaissance Squadron 758th Tank Battalion 761st Tank Battalion 784th Tank Battalion Field Artillery Units 46th Field Artillery Brigade 95 184th Field Artillery Regiment Illinois National Guard 333rd Field Artillery Regiment 96 349th Field Artillery Regiment 97 350th Field Artillery Regiment 98 351st Field Artillery Regiment 99 353rd Field Artillery Regiment 100 578th Field Artillery Regiment 101 333rd Field Artillery Battalion 349th Field Artillery Battalion 350th Field Artillery Battalion 351st Field Artillery Battalion 353rd Field Artillery Battalion 578th Field Artillery Battalion 593rd Field Artillery Battalion 594th Field Artillery Battalion 595th Field Artillery Battalion 596th Field Artillery Battalion 597th Field Artillery Battalion 598th Field Artillery Battalion 599th Field Artillery Battalion 600th Field Artillery Battalion 686th Field Artillery Battalion 777th Field Artillery Battalion 795th Field Artillery Battalion 930th Field Artillery Battalion Illinois National Guard 931st Field Artillery Battalion Illinois National Guard 969th Field Artillery Battalion 971st Field Artillery Battalion 973rd Field Artillery Battalion 993rd Field Artillery Battalion 999th Field Artillery Battalion Tank Destroyer Units 614th Tank Destroyer Battalion 646th Tank Destroyer Battalion 649th Tank Destroyer Battalion 659th Tank Destroyer Battalion 669th Tank Destroyer Battalion 679th Tank Destroyer Battalion 795th Tank Destroyer Battalion 827th Tank Destroyer Battalion 828th Tank Destroyer Battalion 829th Tank Destroyer Battalion 846th Tank Destroyer BattalionArmy Air Corps 332nd Fighter Group Tuskegee Airmen 477th Bombardment GroupUnited States Marine Corps 51st Defense Battalion 52nd Defense Battalion 63 USMC Depot and Ammunition Companies were segregated 16th Marine Field Depot 7th Marine Depot Company 11th Marine Ammunition CompanyUnited States Navy USS Mason DE 529 USS PC 1264 Naval Ordinance Battalions stevedore United StatesNavy Seabees nbsp 80th Seabees color guard nbsp Seabee divers of the 34th CB at Gavutu in the Solomon Islands 8 Nov 1943 installing a marine railway nbsp 17th Special Seabees with the 7th Marines on Peleliu made national news in an official U S Navy press release 102 NARA 532537 nbsp A Seabee of the 34th CB finishing a road nbsp LTA airship Hangar built by the 80th CB at Carlsen Air Force Base on Trinidad nbsp Lt Cmdr Edward Swain Hope CEC of the Seabee officer corps was the most senior African American officer in the United States Navy during WWII 103 He was the Public Works officer at the Manana barracks installation 34th Naval Construction Battalion 80th Naval Construction Battalion 15 USN Special Construction Battalions stevedore were segregated 15th Special Naval Construction Battalion 17th Special Naval Construction Battalion 20th Special Naval Construction Battalion 21st Special Naval Construction Battalion 22nd Special Naval Construction Battalion 23rd Special Naval Construction Battalion 30th Special Naval Construction BattalionIn February 1942 CNO Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark recommended African Americans for ratings in the construction trades In April the Navy announced it would enlist African Americans in the Seabees Even so there were just two CBs that were colored units the 34th and 80th 104 Both had white Southern officers and black enlisted Both battalions experienced problems with that arrangement that led to the replacement of the officers The men of the 34th went on a hunger strike which made national news The Commander of the 80th had 19 enlisted dishonorably discharged for sedition The NAACP and Thurgood Marshall got 14 of those reversed In 1943 the Navy drew up a proposal to raise the number of colored CBs to 5 and require that all non rated men in the next 24 CBs be colored The proposal was approved but not acted on The lack of stevedores in combat zones was a huge issue for the Navy Authorization for the formation of cargo handling CBs or Special CBs happened mid September 1942 105 By wars end 41 Special CBs had been commissioned of which 15 were colored They were the first fully integrated units in the U S Navy 104 V J Day brought the decommissioning of all of them The Special CBs were forerunners of today s Navy Cargo Handling Battalions of the Navy Expeditionary Logistics Support Group United States The arrival of 15 colored Special CBs in Pearl Harbor made segregation an issue for the Navy 106 For some time the men slept in tents but the disparity of treatment was obvious even to the Navy 106 The 14th Naval District felt they deserved proper shelter with at least separate but equal barracks 106 Manana Barracks and Waiawa Gulch became the United States largest colored military installation with over 4 000 Seabee stevedores segregated there 106 It was the site of racial strife to the point that the camp was fenced in and placed under armed guard 106 The Seabees would be trucked back and forth to the docks in cattle trucks 106 Two naval supply depots were located at Waiawa Gulch Of note were the actions of the 17th Special Naval Construction Battalion and the 16th Marine Field Depot on Peleliu September 15 18 1944 On D Day the 7th Marines were in a situation where there were not enough of them to man the lines and get the wounded to safety Coming to their aid were the two companies of the 16th Marine Field Depot segregated and the 17th Special Seabee segregated That night the Japanese mounted a counter attack at 0200 hours The Field Depot Marines are recorded as again having humped ammunition to the front lines on the stretchers they brought the wounded back on and picked up rifles to become infantrymen By the time it was over nearly the entire 17th CB had volunteered alongside them The Seabee record states that besides humping ammo and helping wounded they volunteered to man the line where the wounded had been man 37mm artillery that had lost gun crews and volunteered for anything dangerous The 17th remained with the 7th Marines until the right flank had been secured D plus 3 107 108 109 110 111 112 According to the Military History Encyclopedia on the Web were it not for the Black Marine shore party personal the counterattack on the 7th Marines would not have been repulsed 113 On Peleliu the white shore party detachments from the 33rd and 73rd CBs received Presidential Unit Citations along with the primary shore party 1st Marine Pioneers 114 The Commander of the 17th Special CB segregated received the same commendatory letter as the Company Commanders of the 7th Marine Ammo Co segregated and the 11th Marine Depot Co segregated Before the battle was even over Major General Rupertus USMC wrote to each that The negro race can well be proud of the work preformed by the 11th Marine Depot Company 7th Marine Ammunition Company 17th CB The wholehearted co operation and untiring efforts which demonstrated in every respect that they appreciated the privilege of wearing a marine uniform and serving with the marines in combat Please convey to your command these sentiments and inform them that in the eyes of the entire division they have earned a Well done 115 116 The Department of the Navy made an official press release of a copy of the 17th CB s Well Done letter on November 28 1944 117 On Okinawa the 34th CB worked with the 36th CB constructing Awase Airfield once the rains allowed work to go forward The 34th also built the Joint Communications Station at Awase 118 Today the Navy maintains a Low Frequency communications station for submarines on the site created by the 34th CB African American Seabees 119 120 Medal of Honor recipients edit Main article List of African American Medal of Honor recipients On January 13 1997 President Bill Clinton in a White House ceremony awarded the nation s highest military honor the Medal of Honor to seven African American servicemen who had served in World War II 121 The only living recipient was First Lieutenant Vernon Baker The posthumous recipients were Major Charles L Thomas First Lieutenant John R Fox Staff Sergeant Ruben Rivers Staff Sergeant Edward A Carter Jr Carter also has a Military Sealift Command vessel named after him Private First Class Willy F James Jr Private George WatsonBlue discharges edit Main article Blue discharge See also African Americans and the G I Bill African American troops faced discrimination in the form of the disproportionate issuance of blue discharges The blue discharge also called a blue ticket was a form of administrative discharge created in 1916 to replace two previous discharge classifications the administrative discharge without honor and the unclassified discharge It was neither honorable nor dishonorable 122 Of the 48 603 blue discharges issued by the Army between December 1 1941 and June 30 1945 10 806 were issued to African Americans This accounts for 22 2 of all blue discharges when African Americans made up 6 5 of the Army in that time frame 123 Blue discharge recipients frequently faced difficulties obtaining employment 124 and were routinely denied the benefits of the G I Bill by the Veterans Administration VA 125 In October 1945 Black interest newspaper The Pittsburgh Courier launched a crusade against the discharge and its abuses Calling the discharge a vicious instrument that should not be perpetrated against the American Soldier the Courier rebuked the Army for allowing prejudiced officers to use it as a means of punishing Negro soldiers who do not like specifically unbearable conditions The Courier printed instructions on how to appeal a blue discharge and warned its readers not to quickly accept a blue ticket out of the service because of the negative effect it would likely have on their lives 126 The House Committee on Military Affairs held hearings in response to the press crusade issuing a report in 1946 that sharply criticized its use and the VA for discriminating against blue discharge holders 127 Congress discontinued the blue discharge in 1947 128 but the VA continued its practice of denying G I Bill benefits to blue tickets 125 Integration of the armed forces editOn July 26 1948 President Harry S Truman signed Executive Order 9981 integrating the military and mandating equality of treatment and opportunity It also made it illegal per military law to make a racist remark Desegregation of the military was not complete for several years and all black Army units persisted well into the Korean War The last all black unit was not disbanded until 1954 In 1950 Lieutenant Leon Gilbert of the still segregated 24th Infantry Regiment was court martialed and sentenced to death for refusing to obey the orders of a white officer while serving in the Korean War Gilbert maintained that the orders would have meant certain death for himself and the men in his command The case led to worldwide protests and increased attention to segregation and racism in the U S military Gilbert s sentence was commuted to twenty and later seventeen years of imprisonment he served five years and was released The integration commanded by Truman s 1948 Executive Order extended to schools and neighborhoods as well as military units Fifteen years after the Executive Order Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara issued Department of Defense Directive 5120 36 Every military commander the Directive mandates has the responsibility to oppose discriminatory practices affecting his men and their dependents and to foster equal opportunity for them not only in areas under his immediate control but also in nearby communities where they may gather in off duty hours 129 While the directive was issued in 1963 it was not until 1967 that the first non military establishment was declared off limits In 1970 the requirement that commanding officers first obtain permission from the Secretary of Defense was lifted and areas were allowed to be declared housing areas off limits to military personnel by their commanding officer 130 Since the end of military segregation and the creation of an all volunteer army the American military saw the representation of African Americans in its ranks rise dramatically 131 Korean War edit nbsp African American prisoners of war in Korea in 1950 Jesse L Brown became the U S Navy s first black aviator in October 1948 He died when his plane was shot down during the Battle of Chosin Reservoir in North Korea He was unable to parachute from his crippled F4U Corsair and crash landed successfully His injuries and damage to his aircraft prevented him from leaving the plane A white squadron mate Thomas Hudner crash landed his F4U Corsair near Brown and attempted to extricate Brown but could not and Brown died of his injuries Hudner was awarded the Medal of Honor for his efforts The U S Navy honored Jesse Brown by naming a frigate after him the USS Jesse L Brown FF 1089 132 James H Harvey born July 13 1923 became the U S Air Force s first African American jet fighter pilot to engage in combat during the Korean War 133 Two enlisted men from the 24th Infantry Regiment still a segregated unit Cornelius H Charlton and William Thompson posthumously received the Medal of Honor for actions during the war U S President Harry Truman issued the order to desegregate the armed forces on July 26 1948 134 Truman believed that passing this order would help end racial discrimination In 1950 North Korea invaded South Korea and the United States entered to war African American troops composed part of the task force On November 24 1950 300 000 Chinese troops stormed across the Yalu River and the majority black 503rd Battalion found themselves directly in the line of fire 134 The ill equipped unit lost the battle and many soldiers were killed or taken prisoner by the Chinese The conditions in these prisons were cold with not enough food The African American soldiers spent up to three years in the prisons The Chinese captors believed that African Americans were particularly vulnerable to anti American propaganda because of the discrimination they faced back home and in their units As a result the Chinese subjected African Americans to anti capitalist and anti imperial brainwashing more than their white counterparts 134 About 600 000 African Americans served in the armed forces during the war and 5 000 died in combat Many were awarded the Distinguished Service Cross Silver Star and Bronze Star 135 Vietnam War editSee also Military history of African Americans in the Vietnam War nbsp A U S soldier of 1st Battalion 503rd U S Infantry battles for Hill 882 southwest of Dak To November 1967The Vietnam War saw many great accomplishments by many African Americans including twenty who received the Medal of Honor for their actions African Americans were over represented in hazardous duty and combat roles during the conflict and suffered disproportionately higher casualty rates Civil rights leaders protested this disparity during the early years of the war prompting reforms that were implemented in 1967 68 resulting in the casualty rate dropping to slightly higher than their percentage of the total population 136 137 138 139 In 1967 President Lyndon B Johnson presented the Medal of Honor to U S Army Specialist Five Lawrence Joel for a very special kind of courage the unarmed heroism of compassion and service to others Joel was the first living African American to receive the Medal of Honor since the Mexican American War He was a medic who in 1965 saved the lives of U S troops under ambush in Vietnam and defied direct orders to stay to the ground walking through Viet Cong gunfire and tending to the troops despite being shot twice himself The Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Winston Salem North Carolina is dedicated to his honor 140 On August 21 1968 with the posthumous award of the Medal of Honor U S Marine James Anderson Jr became the first African American U S Marine recipient of the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions and sacrifice of life citation needed On December 10 1968 U S Army Captain Riley Leroy Pitts became the first African American commissioned officer to be awarded the Medal of Honor His medal was presented posthumously to his wife Eula Pitts by President Lyndon B Johnson Four out of the 23 African American Medal of Honor recipients were Army Special Forces also known as Green Berets who served in Vietnam Sergeant First Class Melvin Morris SFC Eugene Ashley Jr and SFC William Maud Bryant were members of the 5th Special Forces Group Paris Davis COL was a member of the 10th Special Forces Group Melvin Morris received the Medal of Honor 44 years after the action in which he earned the Distinguished Service Cross Sergeant Ashley s medal was posthumously awarded to his family at the White House by Vice President Spiro T Agnew on December 2 1969 Paris Davis received the Medal of Honor 58 years after the action in which he earned the Silver Star and the Purple Heart He had been twice previously nominated for the Medal of Honor but both times the paperwork relating to his nominations had disappeared Post Vietnam to present day editFurther information Gulf War War on terror and Iraq War nbsp General Colin Powell briefs President George H W Bush and his advisors on the progress of the Gulf War nbsp Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin poses for a photo alongside U S Army soldiers in Afghanistan In 1989 President George H W Bush appointed Army General Colin Powell to the position of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff making Powell the highest ranking officer in the United States military Powell was the first and is so far the only African American to hold that position The Chairman serves as the chief military adviser to the President and the Secretary of Defense During his tenure Powell oversaw the 1989 United States invasion of Panama to oust General Manuel Noriega and the 1990 to 1991 Gulf War against Iraq General Powell s four year term as Chairman ended in 1993 citation needed General William E Kip Ward was officially nominated as the first commander of the new United States Africa Command on July 10 2007 and assumed command on October 1 2007 citation needed Ronald L Green former Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps is African American citation needed On January 20 2009 Barack Obama was inaugurated as President of the United States making him ex officio the first African American Commander in Chief of the United States Armed Forces citation needed On August 6 2020 Charles Q Brown Jr became the first African American chief of a United States military service branch when he took over as Chief of Staff of the Air Force citation needed On January 22 2021 Lloyd Austin became the first African American Secretary of Defense citation needed Military history of African Americans in popular culture edit source source source source Tuskegee Airmen were featured in Wings for This Man 1945 The following is a list of notable African American military members or units in popular culture Release Date or Year Name or event Notability Reference1944 1944 The Negro Soldier a Frank Capra recruitment documentary 141 1945 1945 Wings for This Man a propaganda short about the Tuskegee Airmen was produced by the First Motion Picture Unit of the Army Air Forces The film was narrated by Ronald Reagan 142 1949 1949 Home of the Brave This film combines 3 of the top film genres of 1949 the war film the psychological drama and the problems suffered by African Americans The film is based on a 1946 play by Arthur Laurents were it originally featured the protagonist as Jewish rather than black 1951 1951 The Steel Helmet an early Samuel Fuller film about black and white soldiers fighting side by side in Korea with racial tensions tightened by a redneck sergeant and a North Korean agitator 143 1959 1959 Pork Chop Hill a film directed by Lewis Milestone starring Gregory Peck and Woody Strode It depicts the first Battle of Pork Chop Hill towards the end the Korean War 1960 1960 All the Young Men a Korean War feature film directed by Hall Bartlett and starring Alan Ladd and Sidney Poitier dealing with desegregation in the United States Marine Corps 1960 1960 Sergeant Rutledge a John Ford western film about a fictional court martial of a 1st Sgt in the 9th U S Cavalry who is acquitted when the real criminal is discovered 1965 1971 1965 1971 Hogan s Heroes In this sitcom set in a German prisoner of war POW camp during World War 2 Ivan Dixon played the role of Staff Sergeant James Kinchloe seasons 1 5 the electronics communications expert Casting an African American actor as a positively shown supporting character was a major step forward for a television show in the mid 1960 s Dixon left the show prior to the final season and was replaced by another African American actor Kenneth Washington as Sgt Richard Baker 1966 1969 1966 1969 Star Trek the original series Actress Nichelle Nichols played the role of Lieutenant Nyota Uhura Her portrayal in the series in the role of an African female officer was groundbreaking for African American actresses on American television 1972 1972 DC Comics John Stewart of the Green Lanterns was created as an African American Marine1984 1984 A Soldier s Story a 1984 drama film directed by Norman Jewison based upon Charles Fuller s Pulitzer Prize winning Off Broadway production A Soldier s Play A black officer is sent to investigate the murder of a black sergeant in Louisiana near the end of World War II 144 1989 1989 Glory film featuring the 54th Union regiment composed of African American soldiers Starring Denzel Washington and Matthew Broderick1990 1990 The Court Martial of Jackie Robinson A film about the early life of the baseball star in the army particularly his court martial for insubordination regarding segregation January 31 1992 1992 01 31 Family Matters ABC TV series In the episode entitled Brown Bombshell Estelle portrayed by actress Rosetta LeNoire is determined to share the stories of her late fighter pilot husband and World War II s Tuskegee Airmen to an uninterested Winslow clan Eventually she is invited to share her stories to Eddie s American history class 145 1992 1992 The Liberators Fighting on Two Fronts in World War II Documentary film co produced by Bill Miles and Nina Rosenblum and narrated by actors Louis Gossett Jr and Denzel Washington It tells the story of the primarily black 761st Tank Battalion United States and 183rd Combat Engineers during World War II 1993 1993 Posse The first part of the film shows Buffalo Soldiers from the US Army s 10th Cavalry Regiment during the Spanish American War in Cuba 1994 1994 Assault at West Point The Court Martial of Johnson Whittaker Shown as a flashback narrative the film retraces when in 1880 Johnson Chesnut Whittaker one of the first African American cadets at West Point is assaulted by three white cadets The academy instead court martials Whittaker in the belief that he staged his own attack supposedly to avoid a philosophy exam 1996 1996 The Tuskegee Airmen Produced and aired by HBO and starring Laurence Fishburne 146 1997 1997 G I Joe action figure series The Tuskegee Airmen are represented 147 1997 1997 Buffalo Soldiers 1997 film Set in 1880 the film tells the true story of the black cavalry corps known as the Buffalo Soldiers who patrolled and protected the Western territories after the end of the American Civil War 1999 1999 Mutiny TV made film of the 1944 Port Chicago disaster2001 The Wild Blue The Men and Boys who Flew the B 24s over Germany Book by Stephen Ambrose in which the Tuskegee Airmen are mentioned and honored 148 2001 2005 2001 2005 JAG The Commander Peter Ulysses Sturgis Turner played by Scott Lawrence is an African American Navy Officer in the JAG TV series Former submarine officer he serves now as lawyer in JAG2002 2002 JAG Port Chicago The television drama features the incident2002 2002 Antwone Fisher Biographical drama film about an African American United States Navy sailor2002 2002 Hart s War a film about a World War II prisoner of war POW based on the novel by John Katzenbach2004 2004 Silver Wings and Civil Rights The Fight to Fly this documentary was the first film to feature information regarding the Freeman Field Mutiny the struggle of 101 African American officers arrested for entering a white officers club 149 2005 Willy s Cut amp Shine a play by Michael Bradford depicting African American World War II soldiers and the troubles they encounter upon returning home to the Deep South 150 2006 2006 Flyboys film Film set during World War 1 about the Lafayette Escadrille the 124th air squadron formed by the French in 1916 It was mostly composed of volunteer American pilots before the United States entered the war One of the pilots is Eugene Skinner played by Abdul Salis This character is based on Eugene Bullard one of the first African American military pilots 2007 2007 A Distant Shore African Americans of D Day A television documentary that was produced for The History Channel by Flight 33 Productions It tells the story of African American soldiers who went ashore in France during the 1944 Invasion of Normandy D Day 2008 2008 Miracle at St Anna Italian epic war film set primarily in Italy during German occupied Europe in World War II Directed by Spike Lee the film is based on the eponymous 2003 novel by James McBride who also wrote the screenplay 151 2009 2009 Fly a play about the Tuskegee Airmen 152 2010 2010 For Love of Liberty a PBS documentary television series that portrays African American servicemen and women and their dedicated allegiance to the United States military 153 2011 2011 The Wereth Eleven This film retraces the steps of eleven African American G I s from the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion United States after their unit was overrun at the start of the Battle of the Bulge 2012 2012 Red Tails George Lucas announced he was planning a film about the Tuskegee Airmen In his release Lucas says They were the only escort fighters during the war that never lost a bomber so they were like the best 154 2020 2020 The 24th Historical war drama film surrounding the events prior during and after the Houston riot of 1917 2022 2022 The Railway Children Return Towards the end of the film an African American U S Army general discharges from military service an African American soldier on being informed that the said soldier is only 14 years old and had lied about his age when he enlisted 2022 2022 Devotion In this film based on a true story actor Jonathan Majors plays the role of Jesse Brown the first African American aviator to complete the U S Navy s flight naval program and later saw combat while fighting in the Korean War 2022 2022 Amsterdam In this film there is a scene were African American soldiers are made to wear French Army uniforms prior to the Meuse Argonne offensive 26 09 1918 11 11 1918 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp History portalAfrican American mutinies in the United States Armed Forces Afro Asian Military history of the United States United States Colored Troops List of African American Medal of Honor recipients Frederick C Branch Benjamin O Davis Martin Delany Daniel Chappie James Jr National Association for Black Veterans List of African American astronauts African American discrimination in the U S Military Racial segregation in the United States Armed Forces Hispanics in the United States Marine CorpsNotes edit Gary B Nash The African Americans Revolution in Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution 2012 edited by Edward G Gray and Jane Kamensky pp 250 70 at p 254 Ray Raphael A People s History of the American Revolution 2001 p 281 Selig Robert A The Revolution s Black Soldiers orig published summer 1997 AmericanRevolution org Retrieved April 30 2017 permanent dead link Gray Jefferson M Francis Marion Foils the British Military History Quarterly August 3 2011 a b c d Shaw Henry I Jr Donnelly Ralph W 2002 Blacks in the Marine Corps PDF Washington DC History and Museums Division Headquarters USMC Retrieved June 1 2011 Morris Steven December 1969 How Blacks Upset The Marine Corps New Breed leathernecks are tackling racist vestiges Ebony Vol 25 no 2 pp 55 58 ISSN 0012 9011 MacGregor Morris J 1981 Center of Military History U S Army ed Integration of the Armed Forces 1940 1965 Government Printing Office pp 100 102 ISBN 0 16 001925 7 U S Senate Battle of Lake Erie Senate gov Retrieved April 30 2017 Copes p 63 This is in some dispute See here Archived January 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine Battie Charles A 1932 Rhode Island African American Data Hannibal Collins Negroes of Rhode Island Rhode Island Genealogy Trails Retrieved June 12 2012 a b African American History amp the Civil War CWSS NPS gov Archived from the original on April 6 2011 Retrieved April 30 2017 Charles Ball 1837 Slavery in the United States A Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Charles Ball a Black Man Who Lived Forty Years in Maryland South Carolina and Georgia as a Slave Under Various Masters and was One Year in the Navy with Commodore Barney During the Late War New York John S Taylor p 468 Charles E Brodine Michael J Crawford and Christine F Hughes editors Ironsides The Ship the Men and the Wars of the USS Constitution Fireship Press 2007 50 Elizabeth Dowling Taylor A Slave in the White House Paul Jennings and the Madison s Palgrave McMillen New York 2012 p 49 Register of Patients at Naval Hospital Washington DC 1814 With the Names of American Wounded from the Battle of Bladensburg Transcribed with Introduction and Notes by John G Sharp Harry Jones was patient number 35 and see note 8 Accessed 22 May 2018 The text of the proclamation has been widely published and copies of the printed original are in UK National Archives WO 1 143 f31 and ADM 1 508 f579 Morriss p 98 William S Dudley editor The Naval War of 1812 A Documentary History Volume II Naval Historical Center Washington DC 1992 324 325 Alan Taylor The Internal Enemy Slavery and War In Virginia 1772 1832 WW Norton amp Company New York 2013 pp 300 305 and Appendix B Davis Michael Shawn Many of Them Are Among My Best Men The United States Navy Looks at its African American Crewmen 1755 1955 2011 Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas PHD thesis p 32 https krex k state edu dspace bitstream handle 2097 7065 MichaelDavis2011 pdf sequence 1 Sharp John G M Dr Elnathan Judson s 1823 report to the Secretary of the Navy re the successful vaccination of 161 naval seamen in the Boston area for small pox with related demographic and ethnic data http www usgwarchives net va portsmouth shipyard sharptoc judson html accessed 15 September 2021 Bainbridge to Southard 14 September 1827 Letters Received from Captains Captains Letters Volume 113 30 July 1827 6 October 1827 Letter number 51 RG 260 National Archives and Records Administration Washington D C Sharp John G M The Recruitment of African Americans in the U S Navy 1839 Naval History and Heritage Command 2019 Retrieved March 6 2019 Foos Paul 2002 A Short Offhand Killing Affair Soldiers and Social Conflict During the Mexican American War The University of North Carolina Press pp 96 98 ISBN 9780807862001 Herbert Aptheker Negro Casualties in the Civil War The Journal of Negro History Vol 32 No 1 January 1947 p 12 Bruce Levine Confederate Emancipation Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves during the Civil War 2005 William H Leckie and Shirley A Leckie The Buffalo Soldiers A Narrative of the Black Cavalry in the West University of Oklahoma Press 2012 Charles L Kenner Buffalo Soerldiers and Officers of the Ninth Cavalry 1867 1898 Black and White Together University of Oklahoma Press 2014 Frank N Schubert Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 1997 Heitland Jason The Role of the Buffalo Soldiers During the Plains Indian Wars us7thcavcof com Retrieved July 12 2011 McCard Harry Stanton Turnley Henry 1899 History of the Eighth Illinois United States Volunteers Chicago E F Harman amp Co a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Juan E San A HOMAGE TO DAVID FAGEN AFRICAN AMERICAN SOLDIER IN THE PHILIPPINE REVOLUTION www academia edu p 20 Retrieved December 15 2015 Rudy Rimando Interview with Historical Novelist William Schroder Before Iraq There Was the Philippines November 28 2004 hnn us History news Network HNN us Retrieved April 30 2017 permanent dead link Ryan David 2014 Cullinane Michael Patrick ed U S Foreign Policy and the Other Berghahn pp 114 115 ISBN 978 1782384397 Retrieved August 3 2015 William T Bowers William M Hammond George L MacGarrigle May 1997 Black Soldier White Army The 24th Infantry Regiment in Korea DIANE Publishing pp 12 ISBN 978 0 7881 3990 1 The Saga of David Fagen Archive org 27 October 2009 Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved April 30 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Scott Lawrence P Womack William M 1998 Double V The Civil Rights Struggle of the Tuskegee Airmen MSU Press ISBN 978 0 87013 953 6 Now is the Time Not to be Silent The Crisis vol 49 no 1 January 1942 p 7 Neil A Wynn The African American Experience During World War II Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers 2010 5 Kirkels Mieke and Dickon Chris 2020 Dutch Children of African American Liberators McFarland Publications p 22 ISBN 9781476641140 a b c d Lentz Smith Adriane 2009 Freedom Struggles African Americans in World War I Cambridge MA p 114 Bradshaw Private Silas June 22 1918 Private Silas Bradshaw to Lieutenant Graster Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 26 May 2021 Williams Chad Louis 2010 Torchbearers of Democracy African American Soldiers in the World War I Era Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press p 105 ISBN 978 0 8078 3394 0 Williams Chad Louis 2010 Torchbearers of Democracy African American Soldiers in the World War I Era Univ of North Carolina Press p 379 ISBN 978 0 8078 3394 0 Gilmore Gerry J February 2 2007 African Americans Continue Tradition of Distinguished Service United States Army p 109 Retrieved July 5 2019 A Davis David 2008 Not Only War is Hell World War I and African American Lynching Narratives African American Review 42 3 4 477 via JSTOR a b Mathieu Gaetan 2021 The Harlem Hellfighters African American Fighters in French Uniforms France Amerique Retrieved 23 May 2023 Scott Emmett J 1919 Scott s Official History of The American Negro in the World War p 346 Retrieved February 9 2014 a b Kirkels Mieke and Dickon Chris 2020 Dutch Children of African American Liberators McFarland Publications p 26 ISBN 9781476641140 African American World War II Medal of Honor Recipients U S Army Center of Military History February 3 2011 Archived from the original on November 10 2010 Retrieved July 18 2011 Video U S Air ForAllied Bombers Strike On Two Fronts Etc 1945 Universal Newsreel 1945 Retrieved February 21 2012 Complete History of the Colored Soldiers in the World War New York Bennett amp Churchill 1919 Sweeney W Allison 1919 History of the American Negro in the Great World War Scott Emmett J 1919 Scott s Official History of The American Negro in the World War p 316 Retrieved February 9 2014 Dalessandro Robert J Gerald Torrence 2009 Willing Patriots Men of Color in the First World War Schiffer ISBN 978 0 7643 3233 3 Lentz Smith Adriane 2009 Freedom Struggles African Americans and World War I Harvard University Press p 125 ISBN 9780674054189 Lentz Smith Adriane 2009 Freedom Struggles African Americans in World War I Cambridge Harvard University Press p 110 ISBN 9780674054189 Barbeau Arthur and Henri Florette 1974 The unknown soldiers Black American troops in World War I Temple University Press p 133 ISBN 978 0306806940 Lentz Smith Adriane 2009 Freedom Struggles African Americans and World War I Harvard University Press pp 110 131 ISBN 9780674054189 Williams Chad Louis 2010 African American Soldiers in the World War I Era Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press p 153 ISBN 978 0 8078 3394 0 Mjagkij Nina 2011 Loyalty in Time of Trial the African American Experience During World War I Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield Publisher p 99 ISBN 978 1 283 60011 8 Williams Chad Louis 2007 Vanguards of the New Negro African American Veterans and Post World 1 Racial Militancy Association for the Study of African American Life and History p 350 Williams Chad Louis 2007 Vanguards of the New Negro African American Veterans and Post World 1 Racial Militancy Association for the Study of African American Life and History pp 347 370 Kennedy David 1999 Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195144031 Aric Putnam Ethiopia is Now J A Rogers and the Rhetoric of Black Anticolonialism During the Great Depression Rhetoric amp Public Affairs Volume 10 Number 3 Fall 2007 p 419 When fascist aggression in Ethiopia sparked a movement of Black solidarity Washington Post Ruth Ben Ghiat August 3 2020 a b Gerald A Danzer J Jorge Klor De Alva Larry S Krieger 2003 The Americans Reconstruction to the 21st Century McDougal Littell a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The intertwined histories of the African American freedom struggle and Ethiopia s war against fascism Quartz Zecharias Zelalem June 14 2020 John C Robinson britannica com Britannica Retrieved April 12 2021 Rowley Hazel 2008 Richard Wright The Life and Times University of Chicago Press p 97 ISBN 978 0 226 73038 7 Abraham Lincoln Brigade Spanish Civil War History and Education James Lincoln Holt Peck ALBA VALB org Retrieved April 30 2017 Gail Lumet Buckley American Patriots The Story of Blacks in the Military from the Revolution to Desert Storm ISBN 978 0 375 50279 8 page needed O Reilly Salaria Kee 1913 1991 The Black Past Remembered and Reclaimed BlackPast org 18 January 2007 Retrieved April 30 2017 The Pittsburgh Courier December 13 1941 p 1 Wynn Neil 2010 The African American Experience During World War II Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 40 Phyllis Mae Dailey First Black Navy Nurse The National WWII Museum Blog NWW2M com March 2012 Retrieved April 30 2017 Lee Ulysses 1966 The Employment of Negro Troops U S Army Thiesen William H February 23 2017 The Long Blue Line Coast Guard Officers Jenkins and Russell Trailblazers of Ethnic Diversity in the American Sea services U S Coast Guard Retrieved September 20 2020 Port Chicago The Mutiny Trial 22 July 2019 a b c d e Black GIs in Britain The Mixed Museum Retrieved 2023 03 15 Young William H Young Nancy K eds 2010 World War II and the Postwar Years in America A Historical and Cultural Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 534 ISBN 978 0 313 35652 0 Colley David 2006 African American Platoons in WWI www historynet com African American Platoons in World War II HistoryNet October 20 2006 Retrieved July 1 2016 Micheal Clodfelter Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other Figures 1500 2000 2nd Ed 2002 p 584 ISBN 0 7864 1204 6 George Thompson Plaque for African American D Day veterans unveiled at Carew Western Telegraph June 5 2019 D Day African American soldiers remembered for war efforts BBC News June 6 2019 Black Soldiers Honored On 75th Anniversary of D Day ColorLines June 7 2019 Schindler David Westcott Mark 2020 Shocking Racial Attitudes Black G I s in Europe The Review of Economic Studies 88 489 520 doi 10 1093 restud rdaa039 Kirkels Mieke and Dickon Chris 2020 Dutch Children of African American Liberators McFarland Publications p 52 ISBN 9781476641140 The Red Ball Express Kirkels Mieke and Dickon Chris 2020 Dutch Children of African American Liberators McFarland Publications p 78 ISBN 9781476641140 a b Historic California Posts Camp Lockett Retrieved January 17 2008 The 28th Cavalry The U S Army s Last Horse Cavalry Regiment Archived from the original on December 20 2007 Retrieved April 24 2007 Defending the Border The Cavalry at Camp Lockett Retrieved January 17 2008 Unit subsequently reorganized and redesignated the 46th Field Artillery Group Unit subsequently reorganized and redesignated as the 333rd Field Artillery Group Unit subsequently reorganized and redesignated as the 349th Field Artillery Group Unit subsequently reorganized and redesignated as the 350th Field Artillery Regiment Unit subsequently reorganized and redesignated the 351st Field Artillery Group Subsequently unit reorganized and redesignated the 353rd Field Artillery Group Unit subsequently reorganized and redesignated the 578th Field Artillery Group Antill Peter 2003 Peleliu battle for Operation Stalemate II The Pacific War s Forgotten Battle September November 1944 HITTING THE BEACH 3rd paragraph Lcdr Edward S Hope U S Navy Seabee Museum Naval History and Heritage Command Port Hueneme Ca Published Feb 26 2020 1 a b Magazine Seabee Building for a Nation and Equality African American Seabees in World War II This week in Seabee History Sept 17 23 Seabee Online Magazine NAVFAC Engineering Command Wash Navy Yard DC live mil 326 2 a b c d e f Historical Content Significance Naval Aviation Supply Depot Hut 33 at Waiawa Gulch Peral City U S Dept of Interior Nat Park Service p 10 2 Ratomski John J Peleliu Shore Party Tribute to Michael A Lazaro and all other Peleliu Veterans Retrieved 18 October 2017 17th Special NCB cruisebook PDF Naval History and Heritage Command 1946 pp 29 30 Retrieved October 18 2017 Seabees of 17th Special Naval Construction Battalion wait to assist wounded of 7th Marines World War II Database Retrieved October 18 2017 African American Marines of 16th Field Depot Rest on Peleliu World War II Database Retrieved 18 October 2017 17 Special Naval Construction Battalion PDF Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 18 October 2017 Princeton University Library Marine Corps Chevron Vol 3 Number 48 December 2 1944 3 Peleliu battle for Operation Stalemate II The Pacific War s Forgotten Battle September November 1944 section Hitting the Beach 3rd paragraph Military History Encyclopedia on the Web by Peter D Antill Tristan Dugdale Pointon and Dr John Rickard 4 1st Marine Pioneers Presidential Unit Citation First Marine Division Reinforced Assault and seizure of Peleliu and Ngesebus Palau Islands Part II UNIT AWARDS Section 1 Navy Marine Corps Awards Manual Rev 1953 p 15 Naval History and Heritage Command 5 The Right to Fight African American Marines in WWII Peleliu and Iwo Jima Bernard C Naulty Marine Corps Historical Center Building 58 Washington Navy Yard Washington D C 20374 1974 PCN 190 003132 00 6 African Americans at War an Encyclopedia Volume I Jonathan D Sutherland ABC CLIO Santa Barbara Ca 2004 p 480 ISBN 1 57607 746 2 7 17th Special NCB cruisebook PDF Naval History and Heritage Command p 29 Retrieved 18 October 2017 Naval Construction Battalion cruisebook Seabee Museum Archives website 2020 01 22 p 10 8 The Sextant Building for a Nation and for Equality African American Seabees in World War II March 4 2014 Dr Frank A Blazich Jr U S Navy Seabee Museum Naval History and Heritage Command webpage 9 Breaking Down Barriers The 34th Naval Construction Battalion by the Seabee Museum Port Huemene CA Feb 7 2018 10 World War II African American Medal of Honor Recipients United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on 2010 11 10 Retrieved 2010 07 08 Jones p 2 McGuire p 146 Shilts p 164 a b Berube p 230 Berube p 241 Berube p 234 Army to abandon blue discharge Jefferson City MO Daily Capital News Associated Press May 21 1947 p 1 Department of Defense Directive 5120 36 Heather Antecol and Deborah Cobb Clark Racial and Ethnic Harassment in Local Communities October 4 2005 p 8 John Sibley Butler Affirmative Action in the Military Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol 523 Affirmative Action Revisited September 1992 p 196 USS Jesse L Brown Naval Historical Center Department of the Navy Cafe Rise Above James H Harvey III https cafriseabove org james h harvey iii a b c African Americans In Korean War Koreanwarlegacy org 2020 African Americans in the Korean War Korean War Virtual Museum Retrieved 2020 10 19 War within war The Guardian September 15 2001 Working Class War American Combat Soldiers and Vietnam American Combat Christian G Appy University of North Carolina Press p 19 Fighting on Two Fronts African Americans and the Vietnam War Westheider James E New York University Press 1997 pp 11 16 African Americans In Combat Who is Lawrence Joel Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum Winston Salem North Carolina Archived from the original on December 28 2010 Retrieved 2007 01 13 The Negro Soldier at IMDb Wings for This Man at IMDb The Steel Helmet at IMDb A Soldier s Story at IMDb TV com Family Matters Episodes Season 3 Retrieved January 1 2007 The Tuskegee Airmen at IMDb 1997 G I Joe Classic Collection MasterCollector com Archived from the original on June 17 2007 Retrieved April 30 2017 Ambrose Stephen Edward The Wild Blue The Men and Boys who Flew the B 24s over Germany Simon amp Schuster 2001 Chapter 9 p 27 Silver Wings and Civil Rights The Flight to Fly Fight2Fly com Archived from the original on March 20 2005 Retrieved April 30 2017 Bradford Michael 2006 Willy s Cut amp Shine first 15 pages PDF Second ed Broadway Play Publishing Inc ISBN 0 88145 269 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 10 11 Retrieved 2013 12 11 Miracle at St Anna Gates Anita Breathing new life into an oft told tale The New York Times October 9 2009 retrieved September 29 2012 For Love of Liberty The Story of America s Black Patriots ForLoveOfLiberty org Retrieved April 30 2017 Exclusive Lucas looks to the future FilmFocus co uk Archived from the original on April 4 2013 Retrieved April 30 2017 References editBerube Allan 1990 Coming Out Under Fire The History of Gay Men and Women in World War Two New York The Penguin Group ISBN 0 452 26598 3 Plume edition 1991 Copes Jan M Fall 1994 The Perry Family A Newport Naval Dynasty of the Early Republic Newport History Bulletin of the Newport Historical Society Newport RI Newport Historical Society 66 Part 2 227 49 77 Jones Major Bradley K January 1973 The Gravity of Administrative Discharges A Legal and Empirical Evaluation The Military Law Review 59 1 26 McGuire Phillip ed 1993 Taps for a Jim Crow Army Letters from Black Soldiers in World War II University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 0822 5 Morriss Roger 1997 Cockburn and the British Navy in Transition Admiral Sir George Cockburn 1772 1853 Columbia South Carolina University of South Carolina Press ISBN 1 57003 253 X Shilts Randy 1993 Conduct Unbecoming Gays amp Lesbians in the U S Military Vietnam to the Persian Gulf New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 09261 XFurther reading editAlt William E Alt Betty L 2002 Black Soldiers White Wars Black Warriors from Antiquity to the Present Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 97621 7 Buckley Gail 2001 American Patriots The Story of Blacks in the Military from the Revolution to Desert Storm Random House ISBN 978 0 375 76009 9 Dalessandro Robert J Gerald Torrence 2009 Willing Patriots Men of Color in the First World War Schiffer ISBN 978 0 7643 3233 3 David Jay Crane Elaine 1971 The Black Soldier William Morrow and Company Inc ISBN 978 0 688 06037 4 Delmont Matthew 2022 Half American The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad New York Viking ISBN 9781984880390 OCLC 1289239822 Dickon Chris and Kirkels Mieke 2020 Dutch Children of African American Liberators Race Military Policy and Identity in World War II and Beyond United States McFarland Incorporated Publishers Dixon Chris 2018 African Americans and the Pacific War 1941 1945 Race Nationality and the Fight for Freedom Cambridge University Press Fletcher Marvin E 1974 The Black Soldier and Officer in the United States Army 1891 1917 University of Missouri ISBN 978 0 8262 0161 4 Foner Jack D 1974 Blacks and the Military in American History Praeger Gibson Truman K Jr Steve Huntley 2005 Knocking Down Barriers My Fight for Black America Northwestern University Press ISBN 0 8101 2292 8 Hohn Maria Martin Klimke 2010 A Breath of Freedom The Civil Rights Struggle African American GIs and Germany Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10473 0 Knauer Christine 2014 Let Us Fight as Free Men Black Soldiers and Civil Rights Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press Lindenmeyer Otto 1970 Black and Brave The Black Soldier in America McGraw Hill Book Company ISBN 978 0 07 037876 6 Nell William C 1855 The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution Schubert Frank N 1997 Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 Scholarly Resources Inc ISBN 9780842025867 Scott Emmett J Scott s Official History of The American Negro in the World War Retrieved February 9 2014 Sutherland Jonatha 2004 African Americans at War An Encyclopedia Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 746 7 White Steven 2019 World War II and American Racial Politics Public Opinion the Presidency and Civil Rights Advocacy Cambridge University Press Navy specificAptheker Herbert The Negro in the Union Navy Journal of Negro History 1947 169 200 JSTOR 2714852 Bennett Michael J Union Jacks Yankee Sailors in the Civil War Yankee Sailors in the Civil War University of North Carolina Press 2005 Bureau of Naval Personnel The Negro in the Navy in World War II Washington 1947 103 pp Davis Michael Shawn Many of Them Are Among My Best Men The United States Navy Looks at Its African American Crewmen 1755 1955 PhD dissertation Kansas State University 2011 With detailed bibliography pp 216 241 Jackson Luther P Virginia Negro Soldiers and Seamen in the American Revolution Journal of Negro History 1942 247 287 JSTOR 2715325 Langley Harold D The Negro in the Navy and Merchant Service 1789 1860 1798 Journal of Negro History 1967 273 286 doi 10 2307 2716189 JSTOR 2716189 Miller Richard E 2004 The Messman Chronicles African Americans in the U S Navy 1932 1943 Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 539 X Miller Richard E The Golden Fourteen Plus Black Navy Women in World War One Minerva A Quarterly Report on Women and the Military 8 3 amp 4 1995 7 13 Nelson Dennis D The Integration of the Negro into the U S Navy 1776 1947 NY Farrar Straus 1951 Ramold Steven J Slaves Sailors Citizens African Americans in the Union Navy 2002 Reddick Lawrence D The Negro in the United States Navy During World War II Journal of Negro History 1947 201 219 Schneller Robert J Jr Blue amp Gold and Black Racial Integration of the U S Naval Academy Texas A amp M University Press 2008 Sharp John G M The Recruitment of African Americans in the U S Navy 1839 Naval History and Heritage Command 2019 https www history navy mil research library online reading room title list alphabetically r the recruitment of african americans in the us navy 1839 html Retrieved March 6 2019 Valuska David L The African American in the Union Navy 1861 1865 Garland Pub 1993 Williams Charles Hughes III We Have Kept the Negroes Goodwill and Sent Them Away Black Sailors White Dominion in the New Navy 1893 1942 PhD Dissertation Texas A amp M University 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to African American soldiers This section s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message McDaniels III Pellom African American Soldiers USA in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Sheffer Debra J Racism in the Armed Forces USA in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War African Americans in the U S Army U S Army Blacks in the U S Army Then and Now U S Army Story of America s Black Patriots U S Army Archived from the original on September 26 2010 Retrieved April 16 2019 Simpson Diana compiled by February 1999 African Americans in Military History Air University Library Maxwell Air Force Base Black History at Arlington National Cemetery Historical Information arlingtoncemetery org An unofficial website Archived from the original on 2000 08 17 Retrieved 2007 07 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Black Confederates documentary book Black Military World Black Military History African Americans in the service of their country Father Ryan High School Archived from the original on 2007 04 03 Retrieved December 23 2005 A Chronology of African American Military Service From the Colonial Era through the Antebellum Period Archived from the original on 2009 10 02 First Kansas Colored Infantry flag Civil War Kansas Museum of History The Colored Soldiers Kansas Historical Society African Americans in World War II Legacy of Patriotism and Valor 1997 is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive The Tuskegee Airmen of World War II at Pritzker Military Museum and Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military history of African Americans amp oldid 1188659291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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