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10th Cavalry Regiment (United States)

The 10th Cavalry Regiment is a unit of the United States Army. Formed as a segregated African-American unit, the 10th Cavalry was one of the original "Buffalo Soldier" regiments in the post–Civil War Regular Army. It served in combat during the Indian Wars in the western United States, the Spanish–American War in Cuba,[2] Philippine–American War and Mexican Revolution. The regiment was trained as a combat unit but later relegated to non-combat duty and served in that capacity in World War II until its deactivation in 1944.

10th Cavalry Regiment
10th Cavalry coat of arms
Active1866–1944, 1958–
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeCavalry
SizeRegiment
Nickname(s)"Buffalo Soldiers"[1]
Motto(s)Ready and Forward
Engagements
Decorations
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Benjamin H. Grierson

Guy V. Henry

Samuel Whitside

George Grunert
Insignia
Regimental distinctive insignia

The 10th Cavalry was reactivated as an integrated combat unit in 1958. Portions of the regiment have served in conflicts ranging from the Vietnam War to Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. The current structure is one squadron, the 4th Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment unit, and one separate Armored Cavalry Troop, C Troop 10th Cavalry, in active service. 4-10 CAV is assigned to the 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division at Ft Carson, Colorado. C Troop, 10 CAV is assigned as the Armored Cavalry Troop to 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division at Ft Hood, Texas

Buffalo Soldier name edit

 
head of the American buffalo

From the late 1860s on the Plain Indians called the black troopers of the US Army "buffalo soldiers". "It was the Indians who gave them the "buffalo soldiers" appellation, derived from the similarity of buffalo hair to the kinky, short black hair common to most African American males at the time.

Insignia edit

Coat of arms edit

  • Shield: Per pale, dexter: paly of thirteen Argent and Gules, a chief Azure charged with a Native American chief's war bonnet affronté above a tomahawk and stone axe in saltire heads down all Proper, sinister: per fess quarterly Gules and Argent in 1st and 4th a tower Or gated Azure 2d and 3d lion rampant Gules crowned with a ducal cornet Or; on an oval escutcheon Azure a fleur-de-lis Or; and Sable a triangle on its base charged with a sun ombre de soleil Or between three mullets of the like pierced of the field.[3]
  • Crest: On a wreath of the colors Or and Sable an American bison statant guardant Proper.[3]
  • Motto: "Ready and Forward".[3]

Regimental distinctive insignia edit

  • Description:
    • A gold color metal and enamel device 1 inch (2.54 cm) blazoned: On an heraldic wreath Or and Sable, a buffalo statant Proper.
    • On a scroll of the second fimbriated of the first the motto "READY AND FORWARD" of the like.[3]
  • Symbolism:
    • Black and gold have long been used as the regimental colors.
    • The buffalo has likewise been the emblem of the regiment for many years having its origin in the term "Buffalo soldiers" applied by the Indians to colored regiments.
    • The distinctive unit insignia is worn in pairs.[3]
  • Background:
    • The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved on 13 March 1922.
    • It was amended 6 December 1923 to change the wording in the description and the method of wear.
    • On 19 March 1951 the insignia was re-designated for the 510th Tank Battalion.
    • The distinctive unit insignia was re-designated for the 10th Cavalry on 12 May 1959.
    • The current version was re-affirmed on 22 August 1991.[3]

Symbolism edit

 
10th Regiment United States Cavalry Coat of Arms description from 1911.

The 10th Cavalry Coat of arms was first confirmed on 11 February 1911 at Fort Ethan Allen in Vermont as "General Orders No. 1" by order of Colonel Thaddeus W. Jones. The 1911 description of the Arms is different from that used today, and has no functional difference except for symbolism.[4] There was no symbolic explanations or reasons given for the basic symbols of the Regimental Arms in 1911 or when the arms were re-affirmed on 22 August 1991. The following is gathered from many heraldic and military sources.[3][5]

Above the shield is part of the distinctive unit insignia, the "Buffalo" (American Bison). On the arms it faces left, which represents the western movement of the early unit across the United States. The black and gold on which the buffalo stands are "the colour of the negro" and the "refined gold" which the regiment represents.[3][5]

The left side is for the 43 years of service (1866–1909) in the American West that were formative for the 10th Cavalry. The blue represents the sky and open plains of the west. The ceremonial war bonnet and eagle feathers honors the respect of the Native American tribes. The tomahawk and stone axe with the heads down indicate peace achieved. The vertical red and white stripes are for 13 major campaigns.[3][5]

Upper right. The Castilian Coat of Arms, without the crown, represents the Spanish–American War and indirectly the Philippine Insurrection where the 10th helped liberate Cuba (1898) and fought in the Philippines (1899–1902).[3][5]

Lower right. The black background is the African-American ancestry. Within the yellow pyramid (triangle) is a symbol of the sun and 3 stars. Under the original 1911 description[4] of the Arms this is described as "In base sable, the Katipunan device on its base, thereon the sun in its splendour, between three mullets, one and two, all or." This stresses the Katipunan, Philippine revolutionaries, who were engaged in three years of campaigns against the 10th.[5]

An inaccurate and informal interpretation of the lower right section by several veterans and groups of the 10th describe that section as follows; the sun with its rays showing the rebirth of the 10th as cavalry. The sun symbol is different from the 22nd Regimental sun symbol and here represents a renewal. The triangle comes from the Seventh Army pyramid patch which the 510th Tank battalion (Negro), then part of the 19th Armored Group and attached to the 4th Infantry Division and in support to the 22nd Infantry Regiment.[6] Again, the 1911 description and use predates this informal view.[4]

The distinctive unit insignia approved on 13 March 1922 (amended 6 December 1923) denoted its use as a paired set of devices or unit insignia with the head of the buffalo (the American bison) facing the head and neck of the individual in uniform. This is to remind the wearer that the unit totem, the "Buffalo" is forever watching them.[3][5]

Regimental Song edit

The Buffaloes[3][7]
(The Regimental Song of the Tenth Cavalry Regiment from about 1885. Sung to the tune of Stephen Foster's "Camptown Races")
 
10th Regiment United States Cavalry insignia.

We're fighting bulls of the Buffaloes,
Git a goin' – git a goin'
From Kansas' plains we'll hunt our foes;
A trottin' down the line.
Our range spreads west to Santa Fe,
Git a goin' – git a goin'.
From Dakota down the Mexican way;
A trottin' down the line.

Goin' to drill all day
Goin' to drill all night,
We got our money on the buffaloes,
Somebody bet on the fight.

 
The Buffalo Soldier Monument at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. It honors the African-American Buffalo soldiers and those who led them.

Pack up your saddle and make it light.
Git a rollin' – git a rollin'.
You are training fast for a hard fight;
A rollin' down the line.
Untie your horse and boot and gun,
Git a goin' – git a goin'.
Shake out your feet or you'll miss the fun,
A rollin' down the line.

Goin' to drill all day
Goin' to drill all night,
We got our money on the buffaloes,
Somebody bet on the fight.

It's Troops in line for the Buffaloes,
Git a movin' – git a movin'.
Then Squadron mass when the bugle blows'
A movin' into line.
Pull in your reins and sit your horse,
Git a movin' – git a movin'.
If you can't ride you'll be a corpse;
A movin' into line.

Goin' to drill all day
Goin' to drill all night,
We got our money on the buffaloes,
Somebody bet on the fight.

Early history edit

Indian Wars 1866–74 edit

 
"Wounded and lifted on Horse"- A painting by C. Taylor from the book "Ups and Downs of an Army Officer" written by George A. Armes. The painting describes when the then Captain Armes was wounded in the hip and lifted up on a horse during the Battle of the Saline River in August 1867.

The 10th U.S. Cavalry was formed at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in 1866 as an all-African-American regiment. The 10th U.S. Cavalry regiment was composed of black enlisted men and white officers, which was typical for that era. By the end of July 1867, eight companies of enlisted men had been recruited from the Departments of Missouri, Arkansas, and the Platte. Life at Leavenworth was not pleasant for the 10th Cavalry. The fort's commander, who was openly opposed to African-Americans serving in the Regular Army, made life for the new troops difficult. Colonel Benjamin Grierson sought to have his regiment transferred, and subsequently received orders moving the regiment to Fort Riley, Kansas. This began on the morning of 6 August 1867 and was completed the next day in the afternoon of 7 August.[8][9]

One of the first battles of the 10th was the Battle of the Saline River. This battle occurred 25 miles northwest of Fort Hays in Kansas near the end of August 1867. After a railroad work party was wiped out, patrols from the 38th Infantry Regiment (in 1869 reorganized into the 24th Infantry Regiment) with a 10th Cavalry troop were sent out to locate the "hostile" Cheyenne forces.[10][11]

Captain George Armes, Company F, 10th Cavalry, while following an active trail along the Saline River were surrounded by about 400 Cheyenne warriors. Armes formed a defensive "hollow square" with the cavalry mounts in the middle. Seeking better defensive ground, Armes walked his command while maintaining the defensive square. After 8 hours of combat, 2,000 rounds of defensive fire and 15 miles of movement, the Cheyenne disengaged and withdrew. Company F, without reinforcements, concluded 113 miles of movement during the 30‑hour patrol, riding the final 10 miles back to Fort Hays with only one trooper killed in action. Captain Armes, wounded in the hip early in the battle, commented later, "It is the greatest wonder in the world that my command escaped being massacred." Armes credited his officers for a "devotion to duty and coolness under fire."[10][11][12]

In 1867 and 1868, the 10th Cavalry participated in Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman's winter campaigns against the Cheyennes, Arapahos, and Comanches. Units of the 10th prevented the Cheyenne from fleeing to the northwest, thus allowing Custer and the 7th Cavalry to defeat them at the decisive battle near Fort Cobb, Indian Territory.[8][9]

 
The Rescue
A soldier offers aid to his wounded comrade after the Battle of Beecher Island. The Harper's article states that this is "Bvt. Col. Louis H. Carpenter greeting Lt. Col. G. A. Forsyth" who was twice wounded by gunfire and who had fractured his leg when his horse fell. Notice officer shoulder boards.

In September and October 1868, two notable actions happened with Troops H & I under the command of Brevet Lieutenant Colonel (Captain in the Regular Army) Louis H. Carpenter. The first was the rescue of Lieutenant Colonel G. A. Forsyth whose small party of 48 white scouts, was attacked and "corralled" by a force of about 700 Native American Indians on a sand island up the North Fork of the Republican River; this action became the Battle of Beecher Island.[13] The second was two weeks after Carpenter had returned to Fort Wallace with the survivors of Forsyth's command. Troops H and I of the 10th Cavalry sallied forth for an escort and supply to the 5th Cavalry near Beaver Creek. Near there Carpenter combined command was attacked by a force of about 500 Indians. After a running fight and defensible stand the "hostiles" retreated. Carpenter would later receive the Medal of Honor for these two actions.[13][14][15]

For the next eight years, the 10th was stationed at numerous forts throughout Kansas and Indian Territory (now Oklahoma), including Fort Gibson starting in 1872. They provided guards for workers of the Kansas and Pacific Railroad, strung miles of new telegraph lines, and to a large extent built Fort Sill. Throughout this period, they were constantly patrolling the reservations and engaging "hostiles" in an attempt to prevent Indian raids into Texas.[8][9]

Indian Wars 1875–84 edit

On 17 April 1875, regimental headquarters for the 10th Cavalry was transferred to Fort Concho, Texas. Companies actually arrived at Fort Concho in May 1873. At various times from 1873 through 1885, Fort Concho housed 9th Cavalry companies A–F, K, and M, 10th Cavalry companies A, D–G, I, L, and M, 24th Infantry companies D–G, and K, and 25th Infantry companies G and K.[16]

The 10th Regimental's mission in Texas was to protect mail and travel routes, control Indian movements, provide protection from Mexican revolutionaries and outlaws, and to gain knowledge of the area's terrain. The regiment proved highly successful in completing their mission. The 10th scouted 34,420 miles (55,390 km) of uncharted terrain, opened more than 300 miles (480 km) of new roads, and laid over 200 miles (320 km) of telegraph lines.[citation needed]

 
Western Indian Wars 1860–1890, battles, army posts, and the general location of tribes

The scouting activities took the troops through some of the harshest and most desolate terrain in the nation. These excursions allowed the preparation of excellent maps detailing scarce water holes, mountain passes, and grazing areas that would later allow for settlement of the area. These feats were accomplished while the troops had constantly to be on the alert for quick raids by the Apaches. The stay in west Texas produced tough soldiers who became accustomed to surviving in an area that offered few comforts and no luxuries for those who survived.[9]

In 1877 four soldiers of the 10th were lost under the command of Captain Nicolas Merritt Nolan. The Buffalo Soldier tragedy of 1877 also known as the "Staked Plains Horror" occurred when a combined force of Buffalo Soldier troops of the 10th and local buffalo hunters wandered for days in the dry Llano Estacado region of north-west Texas and eastern New Mexico during July of a drought year. The two groups had united forces for a retaliatory attack on regional Native American bands who had been staging raids on white settlers in the area, during what came to be called the Buffalo Hunters' War. Over the course of five days in the near-waterless Llano Estacado, they divided and four soldiers and one buffalo hunter died. Due to the telegraph, news of the ongoing event and speculation reached Eastern newspapers where it was erroneously reported that the expedition had been massacred. Later, after the remainder of the group returned from the Llano, the same papers declared them "back from the dead."[17]

The 10th Cavalry played an important role in the 1879–80 campaign (Victorio's War) against Victorio and his band of Apaches. Victorio and his followers escaped from their New Mexico reservation and wreaked havoc throughout the southwest on their way to Mexico. Col. Grierson and the 10th attempted to prevent Victorio's return to the U.S., and particularly his reaching New Mexico where he could cause additional problems with the Apaches still on the reservations. Knowing the importance of water in the harsh region, Grierson decided the best way to intercept Victorio was to take control of potential water holes along his route.[9]

The campaign called for the biggest military concentration ever assembled in the Trans-Pecos area. Six troops of the 10th Cavalry were assigned to patrol the area from the Van Horn Mountains west to the Quitman Mountains, and north to the Sierra Diablo and Delaware Mountains. Encounters with the Indians usually resulted in skirmishes; however, the 10th engaged in major confrontations at Tinaja de las Palmas (a water hole south of Sierra Blanca) and at Rattlesnake Springs (north of Van Horn). These two engagements halted Victorio and forced him to retreat to Mexico. Although Victorio and his band were not captured, the campaign conducted by the 10th prevented them from reaching New Mexico. The 10th's efforts at containment exhausted the Apaches. Soon after they crossed the border, Victorio and many of his warriors were killed by Mexican troops on 14 October 1880.[8][9]

Indian Wars 1885–98 edit

 
10th Cavalry at Diamond Creek, 15 miles West of Chloride, New Mexico, c. 1892.

In 1885, the regiment was transferred to the Department of Arizona. Once again the 10th was involved in the arduous pursuit of Apaches who left the reservations under the leadership of Geronimo, Nana, Nachez, Chihuahua and Magnus.[9]

The 10th Cavalry continued to fight Apaches after Geronimo's surrender in 1886. A detachment of 10th Cavalry would fight one of their last battles of the Apache Wars north of Globe at the Salt River during an expedition on 7 March 1890. After the battle Sergeant William McBryar, was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions during the pursuit of the Apache warriors.[9]

After twenty years of service on posts in the southwest, the regiment, now under the command of Colonel John K. Mizner, was transferred to the Department of Dakota in 1891[8] The regiment served at various posts in Montana and Dakotas until 1898.[9] During this time, a young white lieutenant, John J. Pershing (later known as "Black Jack" for his time with the unit) commanded a troop from Fort Assinniboine in north central Montana. Pershing commanded an expedition to the south and southwest that rounded up and deported a large number of Cree Indians to Canada.[8]

In summary, from 1866 to the early 1890s, the 10th Cavalry Regiment served at a variety of posts in the Southwestern United States (Apache Wars) and Great Plains regions. They participated in most of the military campaigns in these areas and earned a distinguished record. Thirteen enlisted men and six officers from the Buffalo Soldiers (four regiments including the 10th) earned the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars.[8][16]

Medal of Honor – Indian Wars edit

 
1896 version of the Medal of Honor with a golden five pointed star being clutched in the claws of an eagle. The eagle is suspended from a red and white striped ribbon

The Medal of Honor is the highest military decoration awarded by the United States. Three members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment, earned the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars.[18] They were:

Railroad labor disputes edit

In 1894, the 10th Cavalry was involved in protecting property of the Northern Pacific Railroad from striking workers.[19]

Spanish–American War edit

The regiment served during the Spanish–American War in 1898, alongside the 24th and 25th "colored" regiments (1st Division, 1st Brigade) with the 9th Cavalry.[20]

The 9th and 10th formed a core to which volunteer units were attached in the Cavalry Division (Dismounted) under Major General Joseph Wheeler and were in the 1st Brigade under Brigadier General Samuel S. Sumner. The 1st Brigade also included the 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry which was commonly known as "Roosevelt's Rough Riders".[21][22]

 
10th Cavalry in Cuba.

They fought in the Battle of Las Guasimas, the Battle of Tayacoba (where all four members of the last rescue party were awarded the Medal of Honor), the Battle of San Juan Hill and the Siege of Santiago de Cuba.[20]

Three principal battles were fought by this brigade on the approach to the principal city of Santiago de Cuba. In many ways this was the 10th most glorious time.[22]

The first of these were the Battle of Las Guasimas on 24 June 1898 where Lieutenant Conley and the 10th Cavalry saved a portion of the Rough Riders from annihilation when their lead companies were ambushed and pinned down. Harper's Weekly war correspondent Frederic Remington was present. Remington later painted the "Scream of the Shrapnel" in 1899 that represented this event.[22] The second was the Battle of El Caney in the early morning hours of 1 July where Spanish forces held the Americans at bay for almost twelve hours. Then came the Battle of San Juan Hill in the late afternoon.[22]

The battle of the San Juan Heights involved the 10th Cavalry Regiment who took part in the taking of the two main heights. One was on the so-called Kettle Hill by the Americans and other the main height on what would be called San Juan Hill.[22]

As the 10th moved into position, they were receiving fire from the San Juan Heights that was fortified by the Spanish defenders. Other units went into position on the left and the right. But still no orders to advance came. The waiting for other units to come online began to take a toll in men and morale.[22]

 
US Army victors on Kettle Hill about 3 July 1898 after the battle of "San Juan Hill(s)." Left to right is 3rd US Cavalry, 1st Volunteer Cavalry (Col. Theodore Roosevelt center) and 10th US Cavalry. A similar picture is often shown cropping out all but the 1st Vol Cav and TR.

San Juan Hill edit

A former brigade staff officer, then assigned to D Troop of the 10th Cavalry, First Lieutenant Jules Garesche Ord (son of General E.O.C. Ord),[22] arrived and initiated an unusual discussion with his commander, Brigadier General Hamilton S. Hawkins, by asking, "General, if you will order a charge, I will lead it." Hawkins made no response. Ord again asked "If you do not wish to order a charge, General, I should like to volunteer. We can't stay here, can we?" "I would not ask any man to volunteer," Hawkins stated. "If you do not forbid it, I will start it," returned Ord. Hawkins again remained silent. Ord finally asked "I only ask you not to refuse permission." Hawkins responded "I will not ask for volunteers, I will not give permission and I will not refuse it," he said. "God bless you and good luck!"[22]

With that response, Ord rushed to the front of the brigade, advising them to support the charge of the regulars. Captain John Bigelow Jr., commander of D Troop of the 10th with his second in command of Ord in the lead, moved out of the trenches and advanced up the slope. Other units seeing the "Buffalo Soldiers" advance moved forward without commands to do so. General Hawkins apparently was not opposed to the attack since once the men began he joined in directing supporting regiments. At 150 yards from the top of the hill the troops charged, cutting their way through the barbed wire. Bigelow was hit four times before falling. There he continued to encourage his men to not stop until the top.[22]

Seeing the 'spontaneous advances' of Ord and then Roosevelt, General Wheeler (having returned to the front) gave the order for Kent to advance with his whole division while he returned to the Cavalry Division. Kent sent forward Ewers' brigade to join Hawkins' men already approaching the hill. Kent's men discovered that the Spanish had placed their trenches in faulty positions and were actually covered from their fire while the attackers climbed the hill. Ord, still in the lead, was among the first to reach the crest of San Juan Hill. The Spanish fled, as Ord began directing supporting fire into the remaining Spanish when he was shot in the throat and mortally wounded. General Hawkins was wounded shortly after.[22]

 
US Army photo showing trench and block house on San Juan Hill about 4 July 1898. Soldiers are from the 10th US Cavalry Regiment.

First Sergeant Givens (Bivins?) then took command of D Troop on San Juan Hill and held his position until relieved. First Lieutenant John J. Pershing, quartermaster of the 10th, took over temporary command of D Troop. Pershing had helped lead the charge up Kettle Hill with the right flank of the 10th. He was later replaced by Lieutenant A. E. Kennington. The 10th would continue to fight during the Siege of Santiago. Santiago fell to the Americans and Conley's Buffalo Regiment on 17 July 1898.[22]

Kettle Hill edit

Kettle Hill was a smaller part of the San Juan Heights with San Juan Hill 20°01′12″N 75°47′54″W / 20.0200185°N 75.7982129°W / 20.0200185; -75.7982129 (San Juan Hill) and its main blockhouses being the highest point with a dip or draw in between the two hills on a north–south axis. The heights are located about a mile east of Santiago. Elements of Conley's 10th Cavalry ("black" regulars) took Kettle Hill on the American right with assistance from Col. Theodore Roosevelt's 1st Volunteer Cavalry (Rough Riders) and the entire 3rd Cavalry ("white" regulars). Most of the 10th supported by elements of the 24th and 25th colored infantry on the left took San Juan Hill.[citation needed]

The 10th had held the center position between the two hills and when they went forward they split toward the tops of the two hills. Lieutenant Ord started the regulars forward on the American left and Roosevelt claimed he started the charge on the right. Retreating Spanish troops withdrew toward San Juan Hill still being contested. The regulars fired toward them and supported their comrades fighting on the adjacent hill. A legend was started that the Rough Riders alone took Kettle Hill, but this is not true.[23] Sergeant George Berry (10th Cavalry) took his unit colors and that of the 3rd Cavalry to the top of Kettle Hill before the Rough Rider's flag arrived. This is supported in the writings of Pershing, who fought with Sergeant Conley and the 10th on Kettle Hill.[24] and later led the American Expeditionary Force during the First World War.[22]

Medal of Honor – Spanish–American War edit

 
1904 version of the Medal of Honor

Five members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment, earned the Medal of Honor during the Spanish–American War.[25] They were:

20th century edit

Philippine–American War edit

Following the end of the Spanish–American War, the 10th Cavalry was deployed to the Philippine Islands in what was known then as the "Philippine Insurrection", but now termed the Philippine–American War, until 1902.[26][27] Although the conflict was controversial amongst many in and out of the African American community, the regiment, alongside the 9th Cavalry and 24th and 25th Infantry, served honorably and admirably. The conflict also provided an opportunity as several senior NCOs were commissioned as officers in the Philippine Scouts, including Edward Baker.[28] But such opportunity would be short lived as the first American Governor General, then future President, William Taft barred the four segregated "colored" regiments from continuing to serve in the Philippines.[29]

Duty in the West edit

The 10th Cavalry returned from the Philippines in late 1902 and settled down in different posts in the south western United States. Patrols and garrison life was the routine for the regiment. Under war plans, the 10th was designated for service in the Pacific and support in the Philippines from 1915 through 1942.[3]

Flight of the Utes Early November 1906. Detachments of the Sixth and Tenth U.S. Cavalry, 1,000 troops in all, had caught up with the Utes on Powder River. Such a huge force was necessary, the War Department had decided, to "overawe" the Utes. To send a smaller force would have been to risk a fight. The closest soldiers, and the first ready to go were two troops of the Tenth Cavalry—Black buffalo soldiers garrisoned at Fort Robinson in northwestern Nebraska. They arrived in Gillette the last week in October. On Sunday the 21st, according to the Cheyenne Daily Leader, their officer, Capt. Carter P. Johnson, rode all night with only "an orderly and a single scout," reaching the Ute camp on Little Powder late Monday. "A pow-wow followed," the paper reported. Johnson was unable to convince them to return.


The 9th Cavalry Regiment (not the 10th) became "Park Rangers" in 1905 for Yosemite National Park and other state and federal lands. The troopers' campaign hat, sporting the "Montana Pinch" used to help shed the tropical downpours. That "Montana Pinch" gave the hat the distinctive look we recognize today as the "Smokey Bear Hat".[30]

Duty in the East edit

In 1909, for the first time in the Regiment's history, it was sent East for garrison duty in the peaceful state of Vermont. They arrived at Fort Ethan Allen on 28 July 1909. There they resided with the 3rd US Cavalry, old saddle mates from the Indian Wars, Cuba, and the Philippines.[31]

In various letters and books they described their time from 1909 to 1913 as "luxurious." They had an indoor riding hall, solid warm barracks, heated barns for their horses, friendly neighbors and plenty of "wholesome food." Educational opportunities on base and within the community were provided and many men earned higher degrees. When one compares this to building their own barracks, rough frontier living and military field rations, this was heaven on earth for the 10th.[32]

Baseball was a favorite past time among the soldiers and they quickly found willing local teams to play against. Sunday games began attracting greater crowds of locals to the dismay of the local ministers who saw their attendance drop. Ministers elected one of their own to complain to the commander of the 10th. Colonel Jones replied that the games were not mandatory, but his Army command overruled him and Sunday games with the locals were halted.[31][32]

During the harsh Vermont winters, the fairly new game of basketball was introduced, learned and played almost nightly indoors. The "Basketball Troopers" became proficient enough for tournament play and went head to head losing to the "New York All-Stars," another new African-American team.[31][32]

During this time period, only one racial incident was documented. It involved a local Vermont woman and a 10th Cavalry trooper with white officers disapproving the relationship. The soldier was placed in the guard house for a few days as an example and 'proper order' was maintained.[31][32]

This short stint in the East allowed time to formalize their regimental coat of arms in 1911, allowed them to show off their horsemanship to amazed civilians, members of Congress, statesmen from many lands and even President Wilson. "F Troop" of the 10th Cavalry Regiment was recognized as the premier demonstration unit in the entire US Army.[31]

Due to rising tension along the Mexican–American border, the 10th was sent to the South West starting in late November and finishing in December 1913. Fort Huachuca, Arizona, became their new headquarters.[31]

Mexican Expedition edit

The Punitive Expedition, officially known in the United States as the Mexican Expedition, was an abortive military operation conducted by the United States Army against the paramilitary forces of Francisco "Pancho" Villa from 1916 to 1917. The expedition was retaliation for Villa's invasion of the United States and attack on the village of Columbus, New Mexico, in Luna County during the Mexican Revolution.[33]

 
Buffalo Soldiers of the U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment who were taken prisoner during the Battle of Carrizal, Chihuahua, Mexico in 1916. This picture was taken upon their release.

More than 5,000 U.S. troops of General John J. Pershing's forces, including elements of the 7th Cavalry and the African-American U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment, entered Mexico in hot pursuit of Villa. The campaign consisted primarily of dozens of minor skirmishes with small bands of insurgents. Gen. Pershing failed to catch up to Villa.[34] On 21 June 1916, two troops of the 10th, totaling 92 troopers, attacked Mexican Federal Army troops in an engagement in the Battle of Carrizal, Chihuahua. 12 U.S. troops were killed and 23 taken prisoner; 45 Federales were casualties, including the Mexican general Gomez. The engagement nearly precipitated open war with the Mexican government (the Carranza government, during that three-cornered Mexican civil war), but both governments immediately moved to lessen tensions and open negotiations for U.S. withdrawal, preventing war. The prisoners were repatriated at El Paso, Texas, by the Carrancista government.[33][35]

World War I edit

The 10th Cavalry spent World War I in the United States. On 9 January 1918, the U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment was involved in a firefight with Yaqui Indians just west of Nogales, Arizona. E Troop intercepted a group of American Yaquis on their way to render aid to Yaquis of Sonora, who were in the midst of long running war with the Mexicans.[36]

In August 1918 the 10th Cavalry, together with the 35th Infantry Regiment, fought in a border skirmish at the Battle of Ambos Nogales in which German military advisors fought and died along with Mexican soldiers. This was the only battle during World War I where Germans engaged in land combat against United States soldiers in North America.[37][38][39]

The 35th Infantry Regiment was stationed at Nogales, Arizona, on 27 August 1918, when at about 4:10 PM, a gun battle erupted unintentionally when a Mexican civilian attempted to pass through the border, back to Mexico, without being interrogated at the U.S. Customs house. After the initial shooting, reinforcements from both sides rushed to the border. Hostilities quickly escalated and several soldiers were killed and others wounded.[37][38][39]

The U.S. 35th Infantry border post had about 15–18 men[40] and requested reinforcements from their garrison. When they arrived they requested the Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th Cavalry. The 10th, commanded by Lt. Colonel Frederick Herman, came to their aid from their camp outside town. After observing the situation for a few moments, Herman ordered an attack on the Mexican and German held hilltops overlooking the border town. Defensive trenches and machine gun placements had been seen being dug there in the previous weeks. Herman wanted Americans there before Mexican reinforcements got there.[37][38]

Under heavy fire, the U.S. 35th Regimental infantry soldiers and dismounted 10th Cavalry troops advanced across the Mexican–American border through the buildings and streets of Nogales, Sonora and up onto the nearby hilltops. This was done while other units of the 35th Regiment held the main line near the border post. About 7:45 PM, the Mexicans waved a large white flag of surrender over their customs building. Lt. Colonel Herman observed and then ordered an immediate cease fire. Snipers on both sides continued shooting for a little while after the cease fire, but were eventually silenced upon orders from their superiors.[37][38][40]

World War II edit

At the beginning of World War II the 10th Cavalry was relegated to caretaker duties at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.[41] In 1942 the regiment was moved to Camp Lockett, California, replacing the 11th Cavalry in its duties as the southern defense of the Western Defense Command, under LTG DeWitt.[42] 153 NCOs of this regiment would later be assigned to the newly organized 28th Cavalry Regiment forming its cadre,[43] and filling out the 4th Cavalry Brigade, which would remain in existence after the deactivation of the 2nd Cavalry Division, and its subsequent reactivation.[44] In the summer of 1943, the 10th and 28th Cavalry Regiments fought wildfires in the Cleveland National Forest.[45] In 1944, the entire 2nd Cavalry Division was shipped out to Oran, North Africa; where it disembarked and was deactivated on 9 March 1944. Although trained as combat soldiers, the soldiers of this regiment, and other regiments of the 2nd Cavalry Division were reorganized as combat support and combat service support units. Some would see combat as replacement soldiers of the 92nd Infantry Division.[46]

Early Cold War edit

In 1958 the Tenth Regiment was reactivated. The unit today wears the buffalo symbol.[3]

1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry was assigned to Fort Lewis, Washington, on 1 September 1963, as the eyes and ears of the 4th Infantry Division.[3]

2nd Squadron, 10th Cavalry was activated on 1 July 1957 and consolidated with the 7th Recon Company transferring, less personnel and equipment, to Korea from Germany. It was assigned to the 7th Infantry Division. It was transferred with 7th Division to Fort Ord, California, in December 1976. 2nd Squadron, 10th Cavalry (Air) served as the 7th Inf. Division's helicopter borne reconnaissance asset. It consisted of 5 Troops, Line Troops consisted of Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, and Delta and a Headquarters and Headquarters Troop (HHT) making the fifth Troop. Each Line Troop was composed of a scout Platoon (Kiowa), Lift Platoon (Huey), Attack Platoon (Cobra) as well as a Platoon of Cavalry Scouts capable of Air Mobile, Dismounted, and Mobile operations. The Squadron was reorganized in August 1985 under the 7th Infantry Division (Light) configuration. The 2nd Squadron 10th Cavalry (Air) was deactivated and reorganized as the 2nd Squadron 9th Cavalry (Air) under the authority of Department of the Army General Order 87-15. Prior to the 7th Inf Division (Light) eventual de-activation in September 1994. In 20 Dec 1989 – 31 Jan 1990 they deployed from FT Ord to Panama in order to conduct combat operations during Operation Just Cause and the ensuing humanitarian and nation building mission Operation Promote Liberty. The Air Troops were the first to deploy with their AH-1 Cobra attack helicopters and their OH-58 aerial scout helicopters. Troop A, 2-9th Cavalry followed and conducted route clearance, zone reconnaissance, and provided support to U.S. Army units in the interior of Panama. Upon the Base Closure of Fort Ord Ca 2nd Squadron 9th Cavalry (Air) was transferred to Fort Carson Co. The 2nd Squadron 9th Cav was inactivated on 18 October 2007, and reflagged as the 4th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment (4-10th Cav).[3]

Vietnam edit

 
4th Infantry Division shoulder patch
 
Men of the aerorifle platoon from Troop "D", 1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry board a UH-1D helicopter after a patrol, 20 October 1970

In the later part of 1966, the 1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry (Armored Reconnaissance), went to the Republic of South Vietnam during the Vietnam War (1966–1972) operating in the II Corps Area as part of the 4th Infantry Division. It received its first Valorous Unit Award in May 1969 for actions at LZ Oasis against a battalion sized enemy force. The 1st Squadron of the 10th, with the 4th Infantry Division, earned 12 campaign streamers and other awards in Vietnam.[3]

In April 1972, Troop H/10th Air Cavalry was formed (with assets from the disbanding Troop C, 7th Squadron-17th Cavalry Regiment) and placed under the 17th Aviation Group at Pleiku. The troop was located at Lane Army Airfield near An Son (14 km west of Qui Nhơn in Bình Định Province). H Troop aircrews conducted aerial reconnaissance, hunter/killer, and search & destroy missions using OH-6 Cayuse (Loach), AH-1 Cobra (Snake), and UH-1 Iroquois (Huey) helicopters and ground troops from the Republic of Korea's 2nd Infantry Division and the various South Vietnamese Army units. The unit disbanded shortly after the Paris Peace Accords were signed in 1973. Specialist 4 Robert Frakes, the last American combat casualty of the Vietnam War, perished in a post-crash fire after his OH-6 helicopter was lost to enemy fire on 26 January - the last day of US combat operations.

Late Cold War edit

1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry (1/10 Cav) with the 4th Infantry Division participated in Exercise Reforger in 1977, 1978, 1981, 1985, 1987, and 1991. Exercise Reforger (from return of forces to Germany) was an annual exercise conducted, during the Cold War, by NATO. The exercise was intended to ensure that NATO had the ability to quickly deploy forces to West Germany in the event of a conflict with the Warsaw Pact.[3] 2nd Squadron, 10th Cavalry (2/10) with the 7th Infantry Division participated in Exercise Reforger in 1984, 1986 and 1993.[3] 3rd Battalion, 10th Cavalry (3/10 Cav) was activated in the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood, Texas, in 1981. From 1980 to 1993, 1st and 2nd Battalions provided the armored element of the 194th Armored Brigade at Fort Knox, Kentucky, while from 1980 to 1990 D Troop served as the reconnaissance element for the brigade.

D Troop, "Black Jack" edit

 
3rd Infantry Division patch.
 
D Troop, 10th Cavalry, 3rd Infantry Division.

D Troop of the 10th Cavalry Regiment was detached and moved around before settling in with the 3rd Infantry Division, 3rd Brigade.[47]

On 25 June 1958, D Troop was reconstituted in the Regular Army and redesignated as Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 4th Reconnaissance Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment. On 1 September 1963, the unit was redesignated as Troop D, 10th Cavalry and assigned to Fort Knox, Kentucky, and on 15 April 1968 the Troop became part of the 5th Battalion, 33rd Armor Regiment of the 194th Armored Brigade.[47]

In October 1999, the 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized) began its transition to Limited Conversion Division XXI (LCD XXI). Under this force structure, mechanized brigades received organic cavalry organizations. On 16 June 2000, D Troop, 10th Cavalry Regiment was reactivated and assigned to the 3rd Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized), at Fort Benning, Georgia.[47]

In March 2003 the 3rd Brigade participated along with the rest of the 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized) in the initial operations against Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The 3rd Infantry Division returned to Georgia in late 2003. In mid-2004 it began the transformation to the US Army's new modular force structure, which saw D Troop, 10th Cavalry inactivated.[47]

21st-century edit

C Troop, 10th Cavalry was reactivated 22 September 2001 and served as the Brigade Reconnaissance Troop (BRT) as well as the brigade's quick reaction force (QRF) for 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division. All Troops maintained a large area of operations.[3] The BRT, known as the "Cowboy Troop".,[3] set the operations tempo (OPTEMPO) for battle operations in the northeastern section of Baghdad and Sadr City. C Troop was reportedly the only unit in Baghdad at the time clearing routes in light vehicles, with a reported 4,800 different forms of contact over the course of the year.[3] After returning to Fort Hood, Texas, C Troop was deactivated and re-flagged as C Troop, 1st Squadron, 7th Cavalry.

The 1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry, 2nd Brigade, 4th Division served during Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003–2004 (in which it earned its second Presidential Unit Citation) and again from 2005 to 2006. The squadron is currently serving as the Armored Reconnaissance Squadron of the 2nd Brigade, 4th Infantry Division at Fort Carson, Colorado.[3] B Troop, 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry, led by Captain Brian McCarthy and First Sergeant Brian Allen were featured in a 14-page article of Texas Monthly magazine which covered the 2005–2006 deployment to Iraq. This is one of many articles on the 10th Cavalry units.[48]

Operation Red Dawn was an American military operation conducted on 13 December 2003, in the town of ad-Dawr, Iraq, near Tikrit, where elements of the 1st Brigade of the 4th Infantry Division captured Saddam Hussein, former President of Iraq.[3] The mission was assigned to the 1st Brigade Combat Team of the 4th Infantry Division, commanded by Major General Raymond Odierno and led by Colonel James Hickey of the 4th Infantry Division, with joint operations Task Force 121 – an elite and covert joint special operations team.[49][50][51]

During Operation Iraqi Freedom, elements of the 1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Reginald Allen played an instrumental role during Operation Red Dawn, D Troop provided security for the air corridor.[49][50]

A and C Troop, 1st Squadron, 10th U.S. Cavalry also during this operation secured the inner and outer cordons of the area of operation (AO) for Operation Red Dawn.[49]

The 4th Division rotated out of Iraq in the spring of 2004, and was relieved by the 1st Infantry Division.[3]

Present edit

 
Order of Battle of the 4th Infantry Division

The 10th Cavalry Regiment presently comprises only one active squadron, which is a M3 Bradley-and M1 Abrams equipped armored Cavalry squadron within the 4th Infantry Division in Fort Carson, Colorado.[3] 4th Squadron, 10th U.S. Cavalry takes its history and lineage from D Troop, 10th Cavalry. In 2000, D Troop, 10th U.S. Cavalry, was reactivated and assigned as the brigade reconnaissance troop for 3rd Brigade Combat Team (BCT), 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Benning, Georgia. D Troop, 10th Cavalry was deployed with 3/3 ID to Iraq in 2003, and was deactivated upon redeployment in 2004. It was reactivated in October 2007 at Fort Carson, Colorado, replacing the 2nd Squadron, 9th Cavalry regiment, as the 4th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment with A, B, C, and HQ Troops as the reconnaissance squadron for 3rd Combat Brigade Team (3rd BCT) of the 4th Infantry Division. The 4th Squadron deployed to Iraq with the BCT from December 2007 to February 2009, and again in March 2010.[3] The Squadron deployed to Jordan in 2015 in support of Operation Spartan Shield. In February 2016, Delta (Dark Knights) Tank Company from 1st Battalion, 8th Infantry Regiment moved to 4th Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment to be assigned as Dakota Troop as part of the restructuring plan for the recon squadrons, now called cavalry squadrons. 4th Squadron, 10th U.S. Cavalry Regiment deployed to Europe in January 2017 as part of Operation Atlantic Resolve and served in Poland, Hungary, and Germany before redeploying to Fort Carson in November 2017. In February 2019 the squadron, along with the 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, deployed to the Middle East in support of both Operation Inherent Resolve and Operation Spartan Shield.

As of June 2019, 4th Squadron, 10th U.S. Cavalry Regiment is the only current active unit of the 10th Cavalry Regiment. It comprises three Cavalry Troops (Apache, Blackfoot, Comanche), one Tank Troop (Dakota), a Forward Support Troop (Dragoon), and a Headquarters and Headquarters Troop (Hunter). As of 29 August 2021, the Black Jack Squadron is commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Jacob Teplesky with Command Sergeant Major Derek Gilmore as his enlisted advisor.

On July 29, 2022, COWBOY Troop 10th Cav reactivated on Fort Hood, Texas with COL John Meredith, commander of 1 ABCT, passing the guidon to CPT Tyler Stankye. COWBOY Troop stood back up as part of the Army's DIVCAV pilot program in the newly designed penetration division concept. COWBOY is organized as an Armored Cavalry Troop (ACT) serving a similar role as the old brigade reconnaissance troop (BRT). The ACT will test the new MTOE and provide feedback to the army as it reorganizes for LSCO.

 
Captain Tyler Stankye receives the C Troop, 10th Cav guidon from Colonel John Meredith, marking the return of COWBOY Troop to the 1st Cavalry Division on 29 JULY 2022.

Campaign participation credit edit

Activated 1866.

In 1958 the Tenth Cavalry Regiment was reactivated.[3]

In July 2010 the 7th Squadron become the first armored reconnaissance squadron in the US Army to deploy to Afghanistan. The squadron headquarters and D TRP (FSC) were located in Camp Stone, Herat with the line troops forward deployed in the Herat Province and Badghis Province. The squadron redeployed to Fort Carson, CO in July 2011.[citation needed]

Regimental decorations edit

  * Presidential Unit Citation (Army), Streamer embroidered PLEIKU PROVINCE (1st Brigade only)
 
  * Presidential Unit Citation (Army), Streamer embroidered DAK TO DISTRICT (1st Brigade only)
 
  * Valorous Unit Award, 1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Infantry Division (1969–1972), Streamer embroidered II Corp Defense
 
  * Republic of Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palm, Streamer embroidered VIETNAM 1966–1969
 
  * Republic of Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palm, Streamer embroidered VIETNAM 1969–1970
 
  * Republic of Vietnam Civil Action Honor Medal, First Class, Streamer embroidered VIETNAM 1966–1969
 
  * Army Superior Unit Award (Selected Units) for Force XXI Test and Evaluation (1995–1996)
 
  * Presidential Unit Citation (Army), Troop D, 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2003
 
  * Valorous Unit Award, Troop H and 1st Squadron, 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2003–2004
 
  * Valorous Unit Award, Troop G, 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2003–2004
 
  * Presidential Unit Citation (Army), Streamer embroidered Operation Iraqi Freedom (2003–2004) (1st & 2nd Brigades only)
 
  * Presidential Unit Citation (Army), Streamer embroidered Operation Iraqi Freedom (2005–2006) (1st & 2nd Brigades only)
 
  * Meritorious Unit Commendation (Army), 7th Squadron 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2005–2006
 
  * Valorous Unit Award, 1st Squadron, 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2008–2009
 
  * Valorous Unit Award, 7th Squadron, 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2008–2009
 
  * Valorous Unit Award, 7th Squadron, 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered with AFGHANISTAN 2011
 
  * Valorous Unit Award, 1st Squadron, 10th US Cavalry, Streamer embroidered with SOUTHERN AND WESTERN AFGHANISTAN 2011
 

Notable members edit

Some members in this section are noted in the article above. If detailed in the article, they are summarized here. If not detailed, a brief expansion is provided.

  • Mark Matthews, who was the oldest living Buffalo Soldier, died aged 111 on 6 September 2005. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Matthews joined the 10th Cavalry Regiment when he was only 15 years old, after having been recruited at a Lexington, Kentucky, racetrack and having documents forged so that he appeared to meet the minimum age of 17.[52]
  • Summary of Medal of Honor recipients of the 10th Cavalry;
  • John Bigelow Jr., Second Lieutenant, (later Lieutenant Colonel) Bigelow served with the 9th Cavalry Regiment from 1877 to 1885. He was then assigned to the 10th Cavalry and stayed with them in Cuba (D Troop) until 1899. He then served again with the 9th from 1903 to 1904.
  • Thomas Carpenter Jr., Vietnam War
  • Benjamin Grierson, the first commander of the 10th Cavalry Regiment. Served 1866 to 1888.
  • Henry O. Flipper – the first African-American graduate of West Point in 1877.
  • Gilbert W. Lindsay (1900–1990), Los Angeles City Council member, 1963–90
  • Nicholas M. Nolan, a favorite officer of A Troop for more than a decade and who led during the Buffalo Soldier tragedy of 1877 also known as the "Staked Plains Horror."
  • Jules Garesche Ord, First Lieutenant, second in command of D Troop, who was killed in action after starting and leading the spontaneous charge of the 10th U.S. Cavalry up to the top of San Juan Hill.
  • John J. Pershing – from October 1895 until mid-1897, First Lieutenant (later General) Pershing commanded a troop of the 10th Cavalry Regiment from Fort Assinniboine in north central Montana. In 1898 in Cuba, Major Pershing served as a regimental officer who participated in the assault on Kettle Hill (part of the San Juan heights) and took over temporary command of D Troop after that battle on 1 July 1898. He was later known as "Nigger Jack" and "Black Jack" for comparing the high level of professionalism and discipline of the "Buffalo Soldiers" with other soldiers.
  • Kenneth O. Preston is a former Sergeant Major of the Army in the United States. He served in that position from January 2004 through his retirement in March 2011.
  • Augustus Walley served with the 9th Cavalry Regiment as a private and received the Medal of Honor. He later served with the 10th Cavalry as First Sergeant in Cuba and the Philippines.
  • Charles Young, Major (later Colonel) commanded the 2nd Squadron of the 10th during the 1916 Punitive Expedition into Mexico. He led a cavalry pistol charge that saved the wounded General Beltran and his men of the 13th Cavalry squadron, who had been outflanked.

In media and fiction edit

 
Sgt. John Harris of the 10th U.S. Cavalry with a Sharps rifle, c. 1868.

Buffalo Soldier is a reggae song written by Bob Marley and Noel "King Sporty" Williams.

  • "Mission," Aaron Spelling's half-hour drama of a none-too-willing all-black regiment tasked with transporting a Comanche chief through Apache territory to the peace treaty table, was the November 12, 1959 episode of Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre.[53]
  • Sergeant Rutledge (1960) deals with a "Buffalo Soldier", the sergeant of the title, who is accused of the rape and murder of a white woman. In the film the regiment was inaccurately described as the 9th, but in fact the 10th were serving in Arizona at that time. The song included—"Captain Buffalo"—refers to the little-known western legend of a black cavalry officer.[54]
  • The plot of Valdez Is Coming, the 1970 novel by Elmore Leonard and 1971 film of the same name, concerns the wrongful killing of a recently discharged 10th Cavalry soldier and the attempt to compensate his Apache wife.
  • James A. Michener's historical novel Texas has a section depicting the 10th Cavalry's activities in Texas from 1869 to 1874.
  • In John Jakes's third book of his North and South trilogy, Heaven and Hell, a fictional K-Company of the 10th Cavalry is commanded by one of the novel's protagonists, Charles Main.
  • Tom Clancy's The Sum Of All Fears, the 10th Cavalry Regiment is reformed to serve as the Army component of the American forces based in the Negev Desert defending Israel after a final settlement is reached ending the Arab–Israeli conflict. This reformed regiment continues to play prominently in Tom Clancy's Executive Orders where it is transferred to Kuwait to defend that nation from the United Islamic Republic (a fictional country formed after Iran annexed Ba'athist Iraq). Later a movie, loosely based on the book was made.[55]
  • The 1997 television movie Buffalo Soldiers, starring Danny Glover, drew attention to their role in the military history of the United States.[56]
  • Chris Bohjalian's The Buffalo Soldier, the 10th Cavalry Regiment is quoted in between chapters with George Rowe and his views on the Civil War. The author also wrote, "The Buffalo Soldier" in 2002.[57]
  • A reunion of former 10th cavalrymen at Camp Lockett was featured on the "California's Gold" television (TV) program primarily seen on public television stations.[58]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Pursuing Pancho Villa - Presidio of San Francisco (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
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  4. ^ a b c United States Army Institute of Heraldry, General Orders No. 1, dated 11 February 1911. [TIOHWebmaster@conus.army.mil The Institute of Heraldry], 9325 Gunston Rd, Room S-112, Ft. Belvoir, Virginia 22060-5579. PDF file.
  5. ^ a b c d e f . The Institute of Heraldry – Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army. 2010. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 4 November 2010.
  6. ^ "Love of Liberty". FORT ETHAN ALLEN LIVING HISTORY DAY. 2009. Retrieved 4 November 2010.
  7. ^ . United States Army. 28 February 2012. Archived from the original on 22 March 2012. Retrieved 29 February 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Schubert, Frank N. (2004). On the Trail of the Buffalo Soldier II: New and Revised Biographies of African Americans (1866–1917). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8420-5079-1.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bigelow, John Jr (c. 1890). . United States Army. Archived from the original on 3 August 2009. Retrieved 12 August 2009.
  10. ^ a b Wilhelm, Bob (Superintendent of Historic Fort Hays) (2009). "The Battle of the Saline River". Leisure and Sports Review (LASR). Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  11. ^ a b Armes, George A. (1900). Ups and Downs of an Army Officer. Washington D. C.: C. L. Taylor Publishing. p. 268. Retrieved 2 November 2010.
  12. ^ Weiser, Kathy (2009). "The Battle of the Saline River (1867)". Legends of Kansas.com. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  13. ^ a b Leckie, William H. (December 1999). The Buffalo Soldiers: A Narrative of the Negro Cavalry in the West. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-1244-2.
  14. ^ Lawton. . Buffalo Soldiers. Archived from the original on 3 August 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  15. ^ Carpenter, Louis Henry (1912). "Carpenter's Recollections: The Battle of Beecher Island". A Buffalo Soldier. Retrieved 1 August 2009. Letter written in 1912 from Carpenter to Mr. George Martin of the Kansas State Historical Society.
  16. ^ a b . Fort Concho NHL. Archived from the original on 2 August 2009. Retrieved 2 January 2009.
  17. ^ Nunn, W. C. (1940). "Eighty-Six Hours without Water on the Texas Plains". Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 43. University of North Texas, Austin, Texas: Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 2 September 2009. The Handbook of Texas online
  18. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipients Indian Wars Period". United States Army Center of Military History. from the original on 26 June 2009.
  19. ^ Schubert, Frank N. (1997). Black Valor: Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor, 1870-1898. Scholarly Resources Inc. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-8420-2586-7.
  20. ^ a b Anthony L. Powell (1998). "Black Participation in the Spanish–American War". The Spanish–American War Centennial web site. Retrieved 11 September 2009.
  21. ^ Samuel Sumner was in command of the division when the battle began as General Wheeler was ill. Wheeler returned to the front once the battle was underway.
    Longacre, Edward G. A Soldier to the Last: Major General Joseph Wheeler in Blue and Gray: 2006 p.227
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kinevan, Marcos E. (1998). Frontier Cavalryman, Lieutenant John Bigelow with the Buffalo Soldiers in Texas. Texas Western Press, The University of Texas at El Paso. ISBN 978-0-87404-243-6.
  23. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore (1898). The Rough Riders, Chapter III, Bartleby.com.
  24. ^ "Congress considers Buffalo Soldier for posthumous promotion". Los Angeles Times. 5 December 2012.
  25. ^ . United States Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 12 June 2010. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
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  27. ^ Plante, Trevor (Summer 2000). . Prologue Magazine. 32 (2). Archived from the original on 5 May 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009. These included four units of African American soldiers who served in the Ninth U.S. Cavalry, Tenth U.S. Cavalry, Twenty-fourth U.S. Infantry, and Twenty-fifth U.S. Infantry.
  28. ^ . Presideo of San Francisco. U.S. Department of Interior. 3 May 2008. Archived from the original on 1 June 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
  29. ^ McAllister Linn, Brian (1999). Guardians of Empire: The U.S. Army and the Pacific, 1902–1940. UNC Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-8078-4815-9. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
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Further reading edit

  • Mills, Charles K. "Harvest of Barren Regrets, The Army Career of Frederick William Benteen, 1834-1898." (2011) University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 978-0-8032-3684-4.
  • Tom, Willard, Buffalo Soldiers. Tor/Forge, 1997. ISBN 978-0-8125-5105-1.

External links edit

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The 10th Cavalry Regiment is a unit of the United States Army Formed as a segregated African American unit the 10th Cavalry was one of the original Buffalo Soldier regiments in the post Civil War Regular Army It served in combat during the Indian Wars in the western United States the Spanish American War in Cuba 2 Philippine American War and Mexican Revolution The regiment was trained as a combat unit but later relegated to non combat duty and served in that capacity in World War II until its deactivation in 1944 10th Cavalry Regiment10th Cavalry coat of armsActive1866 1944 1958 Country United StatesBranch United States ArmyTypeCavalrySizeRegimentNickname s Buffalo Soldiers 1 Motto s Ready and ForwardEngagementsIndian Wars Spanish American War Philippine American War Mexican Expedition World War I era combat on US Mexican border World War II Vietnam War Iraq War War in AfghanistanDecorationsPresidential Unit Citation 2 Valorous Unit Award 1st Squadron Valorous Unit Award 1st BCT Valorous Unit Award 2nd BRT Republic of Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palm 2 Republic of Vietnam Civil Action Honor Medal First Class Army Superior Unit Award selected units CommandersNotablecommandersBenjamin H Grierson Guy V HenrySamuel Whitside George GrunertInsigniaRegimental distinctive insignia The 10th Cavalry was reactivated as an integrated combat unit in 1958 Portions of the regiment have served in conflicts ranging from the Vietnam War to Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom The current structure is one squadron the 4th Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment unit and one separate Armored Cavalry Troop C Troop 10th Cavalry in active service 4 10 CAV is assigned to the 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team of the U S 4th Infantry Division at Ft Carson Colorado C Troop 10 CAV is assigned as the Armored Cavalry Troop to 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team of the U S 1st Cavalry Division at Ft Hood Texas Contents 1 Buffalo Soldier name 2 Insignia 2 1 Coat of arms 2 2 Regimental distinctive insignia 2 3 Symbolism 3 Regimental Song 4 Early history 4 1 Indian Wars 1866 74 4 2 Indian Wars 1875 84 4 3 Indian Wars 1885 98 4 4 Medal of Honor Indian Wars 4 5 Railroad labor disputes 5 Spanish American War 5 1 San Juan Hill 5 2 Kettle Hill 5 3 Medal of Honor Spanish American War 6 20th century 6 1 Philippine American War 6 2 Duty in the West 6 3 Duty in the East 6 4 Mexican Expedition 6 5 World War I 6 6 World War II 6 7 Early Cold War 6 8 Vietnam 6 9 Late Cold War 6 9 1 D Troop Black Jack 7 21st century 7 1 Present 8 Campaign participation credit 9 Regimental decorations 10 Notable members 11 In media and fiction 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksBuffalo Soldier name edit nbsp head of the American buffalo From the late 1860s on the Plain Indians called the black troopers of the US Army buffalo soldiers It was the Indians who gave them the buffalo soldiers appellation derived from the similarity of buffalo hair to the kinky short black hair common to most African American males at the time Insignia editCoat of arms edit Shield Per pale dexter paly of thirteen Argent and Gules a chief Azure charged with a Native American chief s war bonnet affronte above a tomahawk and stone axe in saltire heads down all Proper sinister per fess quarterly Gules and Argent in 1st and 4th a tower Or gated Azure 2d and 3d lion rampant Gules crowned with a ducal cornet Or on an oval escutcheon Azure a fleur de lis Or and Sable a triangle on its base charged with a sun ombre de soleil Or between three mullets of the like pierced of the field 3 Crest On a wreath of the colors Or and Sable an American bison statant guardant Proper 3 Motto Ready and Forward 3 Regimental distinctive insignia edit Description A gold color metal and enamel device 1 inch 2 54 cm blazoned On an heraldic wreath Or and Sable a buffalo statant Proper On a scroll of the second fimbriated of the first the motto READY AND FORWARD of the like 3 Symbolism Black and gold have long been used as the regimental colors The buffalo has likewise been the emblem of the regiment for many years having its origin in the term Buffalo soldiers applied by the Indians to colored regiments The distinctive unit insignia is worn in pairs 3 Background The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved on 13 March 1922 It was amended 6 December 1923 to change the wording in the description and the method of wear On 19 March 1951 the insignia was re designated for the 510th Tank Battalion The distinctive unit insignia was re designated for the 10th Cavalry on 12 May 1959 The current version was re affirmed on 22 August 1991 3 Symbolism edit nbsp 10th Regiment United States Cavalry Coat of Arms description from 1911 The 10th Cavalry Coat of arms was first confirmed on 11 February 1911 at Fort Ethan Allen in Vermont as General Orders No 1 by order of Colonel Thaddeus W Jones The 1911 description of the Arms is different from that used today and has no functional difference except for symbolism 4 There was no symbolic explanations or reasons given for the basic symbols of the Regimental Arms in 1911 or when the arms were re affirmed on 22 August 1991 The following is gathered from many heraldic and military sources 3 5 Above the shield is part of the distinctive unit insignia the Buffalo American Bison On the arms it faces left which represents the western movement of the early unit across the United States The black and gold on which the buffalo stands are the colour of the negro and the refined gold which the regiment represents 3 5 The left side is for the 43 years of service 1866 1909 in the American West that were formative for the 10th Cavalry The blue represents the sky and open plains of the west The ceremonial war bonnet and eagle feathers honors the respect of the Native American tribes The tomahawk and stone axe with the heads down indicate peace achieved The vertical red and white stripes are for 13 major campaigns 3 5 Upper right The Castilian Coat of Arms without the crown represents the Spanish American War and indirectly the Philippine Insurrection where the 10th helped liberate Cuba 1898 and fought in the Philippines 1899 1902 3 5 Lower right The black background is the African American ancestry Within the yellow pyramid triangle is a symbol of the sun and 3 stars Under the original 1911 description 4 of the Arms this is described as In base sable the Katipunan device on its base thereon the sun in its splendour between three mullets one and two all or This stresses the Katipunan Philippine revolutionaries who were engaged in three years of campaigns against the 10th 5 An inaccurate and informal interpretation of the lower right section by several veterans and groups of the 10th describe that section as follows the sun with its rays showing the rebirth of the 10th as cavalry The sun symbol is different from the 22nd Regimental sun symbol and here represents a renewal The triangle comes from the Seventh Army pyramid patch which the 510th Tank battalion Negro then part of the 19th Armored Group and attached to the 4th Infantry Division and in support to the 22nd Infantry Regiment 6 Again the 1911 description and use predates this informal view 4 The distinctive unit insignia approved on 13 March 1922 amended 6 December 1923 denoted its use as a paired set of devices or unit insignia with the head of the buffalo the American bison facing the head and neck of the individual in uniform This is to remind the wearer that the unit totem the Buffalo is forever watching them 3 5 Regimental Song editThe Buffaloes 3 7 dd dd dd dd dd dd dd The Regimental Song of the Tenth Cavalry Regiment from about 1885 Sung to the tune of Stephen Foster s Camptown Races dd nbsp 10th Regiment United States Cavalry insignia We re fighting bulls of the Buffaloes Git a goin git a goin From Kansas plains we ll hunt our foes A trottin down the line Our range spreads west to Santa Fe Git a goin git a goin From Dakota down the Mexican way A trottin down the line Goin to drill all day Goin to drill all night We got our money on the buffaloes Somebody bet on the fight nbsp The Buffalo Soldier Monument at Fort Leavenworth Kansas It honors the African American Buffalo soldiers and those who led them Pack up your saddle and make it light Git a rollin git a rollin You are training fast for a hard fight A rollin down the line Untie your horse and boot and gun Git a goin git a goin Shake out your feet or you ll miss the fun A rollin down the line Goin to drill all day Goin to drill all night We got our money on the buffaloes Somebody bet on the fight It s Troops in line for the Buffaloes Git a movin git a movin Then Squadron mass when the bugle blows A movin into line Pull in your reins and sit your horse Git a movin git a movin If you can t ride you ll be a corpse A movin into line Goin to drill all day Goin to drill all night We got our money on the buffaloes Somebody bet on the fight Early history editIndian Wars 1866 74 edit nbsp Wounded and lifted on Horse A painting by C Taylor from the book Ups and Downs of an Army Officer written by George A Armes The painting describes when the then Captain Armes was wounded in the hip and lifted up on a horse during the Battle of the Saline River in August 1867 The 10th U S Cavalry was formed at Fort Leavenworth Kansas in 1866 as an all African American regiment The 10th U S Cavalry regiment was composed of black enlisted men and white officers which was typical for that era By the end of July 1867 eight companies of enlisted men had been recruited from the Departments of Missouri Arkansas and the Platte Life at Leavenworth was not pleasant for the 10th Cavalry The fort s commander who was openly opposed to African Americans serving in the Regular Army made life for the new troops difficult Colonel Benjamin Grierson sought to have his regiment transferred and subsequently received orders moving the regiment to Fort Riley Kansas This began on the morning of 6 August 1867 and was completed the next day in the afternoon of 7 August 8 9 One of the first battles of the 10th was the Battle of the Saline River This battle occurred 25 miles northwest of Fort Hays in Kansas near the end of August 1867 After a railroad work party was wiped out patrols from the 38th Infantry Regiment in 1869 reorganized into the 24th Infantry Regiment with a 10th Cavalry troop were sent out to locate the hostile Cheyenne forces 10 11 Captain George Armes Company F 10th Cavalry while following an active trail along the Saline River were surrounded by about 400 Cheyenne warriors Armes formed a defensive hollow square with the cavalry mounts in the middle Seeking better defensive ground Armes walked his command while maintaining the defensive square After 8 hours of combat 2 000 rounds of defensive fire and 15 miles of movement the Cheyenne disengaged and withdrew Company F without reinforcements concluded 113 miles of movement during the 30 hour patrol riding the final 10 miles back to Fort Hays with only one trooper killed in action Captain Armes wounded in the hip early in the battle commented later It is the greatest wonder in the world that my command escaped being massacred Armes credited his officers for a devotion to duty and coolness under fire 10 11 12 In 1867 and 1868 the 10th Cavalry participated in Gen William Tecumseh Sherman s winter campaigns against the Cheyennes Arapahos and Comanches Units of the 10th prevented the Cheyenne from fleeing to the northwest thus allowing Custer and the 7th Cavalry to defeat them at the decisive battle near Fort Cobb Indian Territory 8 9 nbsp The Rescue A soldier offers aid to his wounded comrade after the Battle of Beecher Island The Harper s article states that this is Bvt Col Louis H Carpenter greeting Lt Col G A Forsyth who was twice wounded by gunfire and who had fractured his leg when his horse fell Notice officer shoulder boards In September and October 1868 two notable actions happened with Troops H amp I under the command of Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Captain in the Regular Army Louis H Carpenter The first was the rescue of Lieutenant Colonel G A Forsyth whose small party of 48 white scouts was attacked and corralled by a force of about 700 Native American Indians on a sand island up the North Fork of the Republican River this action became the Battle of Beecher Island 13 The second was two weeks after Carpenter had returned to Fort Wallace with the survivors of Forsyth s command Troops H and I of the 10th Cavalry sallied forth for an escort and supply to the 5th Cavalry near Beaver Creek Near there Carpenter combined command was attacked by a force of about 500 Indians After a running fight and defensible stand the hostiles retreated Carpenter would later receive the Medal of Honor for these two actions 13 14 15 For the next eight years the 10th was stationed at numerous forts throughout Kansas and Indian Territory now Oklahoma including Fort Gibson starting in 1872 They provided guards for workers of the Kansas and Pacific Railroad strung miles of new telegraph lines and to a large extent built Fort Sill Throughout this period they were constantly patrolling the reservations and engaging hostiles in an attempt to prevent Indian raids into Texas 8 9 Indian Wars 1875 84 edit On 17 April 1875 regimental headquarters for the 10th Cavalry was transferred to Fort Concho Texas Companies actually arrived at Fort Concho in May 1873 At various times from 1873 through 1885 Fort Concho housed 9th Cavalry companies A F K and M 10th Cavalry companies A D G I L and M 24th Infantry companies D G and K and 25th Infantry companies G and K 16 The 10th Regimental s mission in Texas was to protect mail and travel routes control Indian movements provide protection from Mexican revolutionaries and outlaws and to gain knowledge of the area s terrain The regiment proved highly successful in completing their mission The 10th scouted 34 420 miles 55 390 km of uncharted terrain opened more than 300 miles 480 km of new roads and laid over 200 miles 320 km of telegraph lines citation needed nbsp Western Indian Wars 1860 1890 battles army posts and the general location of tribes The scouting activities took the troops through some of the harshest and most desolate terrain in the nation These excursions allowed the preparation of excellent maps detailing scarce water holes mountain passes and grazing areas that would later allow for settlement of the area These feats were accomplished while the troops had constantly to be on the alert for quick raids by the Apaches The stay in west Texas produced tough soldiers who became accustomed to surviving in an area that offered few comforts and no luxuries for those who survived 9 In 1877 four soldiers of the 10th were lost under the command of Captain Nicolas Merritt Nolan The Buffalo Soldier tragedy of 1877 also known as the Staked Plains Horror occurred when a combined force of Buffalo Soldier troops of the 10th and local buffalo hunters wandered for days in the dry Llano Estacado region of north west Texas and eastern New Mexico during July of a drought year The two groups had united forces for a retaliatory attack on regional Native American bands who had been staging raids on white settlers in the area during what came to be called the Buffalo Hunters War Over the course of five days in the near waterless Llano Estacado they divided and four soldiers and one buffalo hunter died Due to the telegraph news of the ongoing event and speculation reached Eastern newspapers where it was erroneously reported that the expedition had been massacred Later after the remainder of the group returned from the Llano the same papers declared them back from the dead 17 The 10th Cavalry played an important role in the 1879 80 campaign Victorio s War against Victorio and his band of Apaches Victorio and his followers escaped from their New Mexico reservation and wreaked havoc throughout the southwest on their way to Mexico Col Grierson and the 10th attempted to prevent Victorio s return to the U S and particularly his reaching New Mexico where he could cause additional problems with the Apaches still on the reservations Knowing the importance of water in the harsh region Grierson decided the best way to intercept Victorio was to take control of potential water holes along his route 9 The campaign called for the biggest military concentration ever assembled in the Trans Pecos area Six troops of the 10th Cavalry were assigned to patrol the area from the Van Horn Mountains west to the Quitman Mountains and north to the Sierra Diablo and Delaware Mountains Encounters with the Indians usually resulted in skirmishes however the 10th engaged in major confrontations at Tinaja de las Palmas a water hole south of Sierra Blanca and at Rattlesnake Springs north of Van Horn These two engagements halted Victorio and forced him to retreat to Mexico Although Victorio and his band were not captured the campaign conducted by the 10th prevented them from reaching New Mexico The 10th s efforts at containment exhausted the Apaches Soon after they crossed the border Victorio and many of his warriors were killed by Mexican troops on 14 October 1880 8 9 Indian Wars 1885 98 edit nbsp 10th Cavalry at Diamond Creek 15 miles West of Chloride New Mexico c 1892 In 1885 the regiment was transferred to the Department of Arizona Once again the 10th was involved in the arduous pursuit of Apaches who left the reservations under the leadership of Geronimo Nana Nachez Chihuahua and Magnus 9 The 10th Cavalry continued to fight Apaches after Geronimo s surrender in 1886 A detachment of 10th Cavalry would fight one of their last battles of the Apache Wars north of Globe at the Salt River during an expedition on 7 March 1890 After the battle Sergeant William McBryar was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions during the pursuit of the Apache warriors 9 After twenty years of service on posts in the southwest the regiment now under the command of Colonel John K Mizner was transferred to the Department of Dakota in 1891 8 The regiment served at various posts in Montana and Dakotas until 1898 9 During this time a young white lieutenant John J Pershing later known as Black Jack for his time with the unit commanded a troop from Fort Assinniboine in north central Montana Pershing commanded an expedition to the south and southwest that rounded up and deported a large number of Cree Indians to Canada 8 In summary from 1866 to the early 1890s the 10th Cavalry Regiment served at a variety of posts in the Southwestern United States Apache Wars and Great Plains regions They participated in most of the military campaigns in these areas and earned a distinguished record Thirteen enlisted men and six officers from the Buffalo Soldiers four regiments including the 10th earned the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars 8 16 Medal of Honor Indian Wars edit nbsp 1896 version of the Medal of Honor with a golden five pointed star being clutched in the claws of an eagle The eagle is suspended from a red and white striped ribbon nbsp William McBryar nbsp Louis H Carpenter The Medal of Honor is the highest military decoration awarded by the United States Three members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment earned the Medal of Honor during the Indian Wars 18 They were Sergeant William McBryar K Troop 10th Cavalry Regiment at Salt River north of Globe Arizona from 7 March 1890 to 15 May 1890 He was later a first lieutenant in the U S Army Captain Louis H Carpenter H Troop 10th Cavalry Regiment during Indian campaigns Kansas and Colorado September October 1868 He was later a brigadier general in the U S Army First lieutenant Powhatan Henry Clarke K Troop 10th Cavalry Regiment during the pursuit of Geronimo in May 1886 Railroad labor disputes edit In 1894 the 10th Cavalry was involved in protecting property of the Northern Pacific Railroad from striking workers 19 Spanish American War editThe regiment served during the Spanish American War in 1898 alongside the 24th and 25th colored regiments 1st Division 1st Brigade with the 9th Cavalry 20 The 9th and 10th formed a core to which volunteer units were attached in the Cavalry Division Dismounted under Major General Joseph Wheeler and were in the 1st Brigade under Brigadier General Samuel S Sumner The 1st Brigade also included the 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry which was commonly known as Roosevelt s Rough Riders 21 22 nbsp 10th Cavalry in Cuba They fought in the Battle of Las Guasimas the Battle of Tayacoba where all four members of the last rescue party were awarded the Medal of Honor the Battle of San Juan Hill and the Siege of Santiago de Cuba 20 Three principal battles were fought by this brigade on the approach to the principal city of Santiago de Cuba In many ways this was the 10th most glorious time 22 The first of these were the Battle of Las Guasimas on 24 June 1898 where Lieutenant Conley and the 10th Cavalry saved a portion of the Rough Riders from annihilation when their lead companies were ambushed and pinned down Harper s Weekly war correspondent Frederic Remington was present Remington later painted the Scream of the Shrapnel in 1899 that represented this event 22 The second was the Battle of El Caney in the early morning hours of 1 July where Spanish forces held the Americans at bay for almost twelve hours Then came the Battle of San Juan Hill in the late afternoon 22 Main article Battle of San Juan Hill The battle of the San Juan Heights involved the 10th Cavalry Regiment who took part in the taking of the two main heights One was on the so called Kettle Hill by the Americans and other the main height on what would be called San Juan Hill 22 As the 10th moved into position they were receiving fire from the San Juan Heights that was fortified by the Spanish defenders Other units went into position on the left and the right But still no orders to advance came The waiting for other units to come online began to take a toll in men and morale 22 nbsp US Army victors on Kettle Hill about 3 July 1898 after the battle of San Juan Hill s Left to right is 3rd US Cavalry 1st Volunteer Cavalry Col Theodore Roosevelt center and 10th US Cavalry A similar picture is often shown cropping out all but the 1st Vol Cav and TR San Juan Hill edit A former brigade staff officer then assigned to D Troop of the 10th Cavalry First Lieutenant Jules Garesche Ord son of General E O C Ord 22 arrived and initiated an unusual discussion with his commander Brigadier General Hamilton S Hawkins by asking General if you will order a charge I will lead it Hawkins made no response Ord again asked If you do not wish to order a charge General I should like to volunteer We can t stay here can we I would not ask any man to volunteer Hawkins stated If you do not forbid it I will start it returned Ord Hawkins again remained silent Ord finally asked I only ask you not to refuse permission Hawkins responded I will not ask for volunteers I will not give permission and I will not refuse it he said God bless you and good luck 22 With that response Ord rushed to the front of the brigade advising them to support the charge of the regulars Captain John Bigelow Jr commander of D Troop of the 10th with his second in command of Ord in the lead moved out of the trenches and advanced up the slope Other units seeing the Buffalo Soldiers advance moved forward without commands to do so General Hawkins apparently was not opposed to the attack since once the men began he joined in directing supporting regiments At 150 yards from the top of the hill the troops charged cutting their way through the barbed wire Bigelow was hit four times before falling There he continued to encourage his men to not stop until the top 22 Seeing the spontaneous advances of Ord and then Roosevelt General Wheeler having returned to the front gave the order for Kent to advance with his whole division while he returned to the Cavalry Division Kent sent forward Ewers brigade to join Hawkins men already approaching the hill Kent s men discovered that the Spanish had placed their trenches in faulty positions and were actually covered from their fire while the attackers climbed the hill Ord still in the lead was among the first to reach the crest of San Juan Hill The Spanish fled as Ord began directing supporting fire into the remaining Spanish when he was shot in the throat and mortally wounded General Hawkins was wounded shortly after 22 nbsp US Army photo showing trench and block house on San Juan Hill about 4 July 1898 Soldiers are from the 10th US Cavalry Regiment First Sergeant Givens Bivins then took command of D Troop on San Juan Hill and held his position until relieved First Lieutenant John J Pershing quartermaster of the 10th took over temporary command of D Troop Pershing had helped lead the charge up Kettle Hill with the right flank of the 10th He was later replaced by Lieutenant A E Kennington The 10th would continue to fight during the Siege of Santiago Santiago fell to the Americans and Conley s Buffalo Regiment on 17 July 1898 22 Kettle Hill edit Kettle Hill was a smaller part of the San Juan Heights with San Juan Hill 20 01 12 N 75 47 54 W 20 0200185 N 75 7982129 W 20 0200185 75 7982129 San Juan Hill and its main blockhouses being the highest point with a dip or draw in between the two hills on a north south axis The heights are located about a mile east of Santiago Elements of Conley s 10th Cavalry black regulars took Kettle Hill on the American right with assistance from Col Theodore Roosevelt s 1st Volunteer Cavalry Rough Riders and the entire 3rd Cavalry white regulars Most of the 10th supported by elements of the 24th and 25th colored infantry on the left took San Juan Hill citation needed The 10th had held the center position between the two hills and when they went forward they split toward the tops of the two hills Lieutenant Ord started the regulars forward on the American left and Roosevelt claimed he started the charge on the right Retreating Spanish troops withdrew toward San Juan Hill still being contested The regulars fired toward them and supported their comrades fighting on the adjacent hill A legend was started that the Rough Riders alone took Kettle Hill but this is not true 23 Sergeant George Berry 10th Cavalry took his unit colors and that of the 3rd Cavalry to the top of Kettle Hill before the Rough Rider s flag arrived This is supported in the writings of Pershing who fought with Sergeant Conley and the 10th on Kettle Hill 24 and later led the American Expeditionary Force during the First World War 22 Medal of Honor Spanish American War edit nbsp 1904 version of the Medal of Honor nbsp Edward L Baker Jr nbsp Dennis Bell Five members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment earned the Medal of Honor during the Spanish American War 25 They were Sergeant Major Edward L Baker Jr 10th U S Cavalry Regiment at Santiago He was later a captain in the U S Army Corporal Dennis Bell Troop H 10th Cavalry Regiment during the rescue at the conclusion of the Battle of Tayacoba Private Fitz Lee Troop M 10th Cavalry Regiment during the rescue at the conclusion of the Battle of Tayacoba Private William H Thompkins Troop G 10th Cavalry Regiment during the rescue at the conclusion of the Battle of Tayacoba Corporal George H Wanton Troop M 10th Cavalry Regiment during the rescue at the conclusion of the Battle of Tayacoba He was later a master sergeant in the U S Army 20th century editPhilippine American War edit Following the end of the Spanish American War the 10th Cavalry was deployed to the Philippine Islands in what was known then as the Philippine Insurrection but now termed the Philippine American War until 1902 26 27 Although the conflict was controversial amongst many in and out of the African American community the regiment alongside the 9th Cavalry and 24th and 25th Infantry served honorably and admirably The conflict also provided an opportunity as several senior NCOs were commissioned as officers in the Philippine Scouts including Edward Baker 28 But such opportunity would be short lived as the first American Governor General then future President William Taft barred the four segregated colored regiments from continuing to serve in the Philippines 29 Duty in the West edit The 10th Cavalry returned from the Philippines in late 1902 and settled down in different posts in the south western United States Patrols and garrison life was the routine for the regiment Under war plans the 10th was designated for service in the Pacific and support in the Philippines from 1915 through 1942 3 Flight of the Utes Early November 1906 Detachments of the Sixth and Tenth U S Cavalry 1 000 troops in all had caught up with the Utes on Powder River Such a huge force was necessary the War Department had decided to overawe the Utes To send a smaller force would have been to risk a fight The closest soldiers and the first ready to go were two troops of the Tenth Cavalry Black buffalo soldiers garrisoned at Fort Robinson in northwestern Nebraska They arrived in Gillette the last week in October On Sunday the 21st according to the Cheyenne Daily Leader their officer Capt Carter P Johnson rode all night with only an orderly and a single scout reaching the Ute camp on Little Powder late Monday A pow wow followed the paper reported Johnson was unable to convince them to return The 9th Cavalry Regiment not the 10th became Park Rangers in 1905 for Yosemite National Park and other state and federal lands The troopers campaign hat sporting the Montana Pinch used to help shed the tropical downpours That Montana Pinch gave the hat the distinctive look we recognize today as the Smokey Bear Hat 30 Duty in the East edit In 1909 for the first time in the Regiment s history it was sent East for garrison duty in the peaceful state of Vermont They arrived at Fort Ethan Allen on 28 July 1909 There they resided with the 3rd US Cavalry old saddle mates from the Indian Wars Cuba and the Philippines 31 In various letters and books they described their time from 1909 to 1913 as luxurious They had an indoor riding hall solid warm barracks heated barns for their horses friendly neighbors and plenty of wholesome food Educational opportunities on base and within the community were provided and many men earned higher degrees When one compares this to building their own barracks rough frontier living and military field rations this was heaven on earth for the 10th 32 Baseball was a favorite past time among the soldiers and they quickly found willing local teams to play against Sunday games began attracting greater crowds of locals to the dismay of the local ministers who saw their attendance drop Ministers elected one of their own to complain to the commander of the 10th Colonel Jones replied that the games were not mandatory but his Army command overruled him and Sunday games with the locals were halted 31 32 During the harsh Vermont winters the fairly new game of basketball was introduced learned and played almost nightly indoors The Basketball Troopers became proficient enough for tournament play and went head to head losing to the New York All Stars another new African American team 31 32 During this time period only one racial incident was documented It involved a local Vermont woman and a 10th Cavalry trooper with white officers disapproving the relationship The soldier was placed in the guard house for a few days as an example and proper order was maintained 31 32 This short stint in the East allowed time to formalize their regimental coat of arms in 1911 allowed them to show off their horsemanship to amazed civilians members of Congress statesmen from many lands and even President Wilson F Troop of the 10th Cavalry Regiment was recognized as the premier demonstration unit in the entire US Army 31 Due to rising tension along the Mexican American border the 10th was sent to the South West starting in late November and finishing in December 1913 Fort Huachuca Arizona became their new headquarters 31 Mexican Expedition edit The Punitive Expedition officially known in the United States as the Mexican Expedition was an abortive military operation conducted by the United States Army against the paramilitary forces of Francisco Pancho Villa from 1916 to 1917 The expedition was retaliation for Villa s invasion of the United States and attack on the village of Columbus New Mexico in Luna County during the Mexican Revolution 33 nbsp Buffalo Soldiers of the U S 10th Cavalry Regiment who were taken prisoner during the Battle of Carrizal Chihuahua Mexico in 1916 This picture was taken upon their release More than 5 000 U S troops of General John J Pershing s forces including elements of the 7th Cavalry and the African American U S 10th Cavalry Regiment entered Mexico in hot pursuit of Villa The campaign consisted primarily of dozens of minor skirmishes with small bands of insurgents Gen Pershing failed to catch up to Villa 34 On 21 June 1916 two troops of the 10th totaling 92 troopers attacked Mexican Federal Army troops in an engagement in the Battle of Carrizal Chihuahua 12 U S troops were killed and 23 taken prisoner 45 Federales were casualties including the Mexican general Gomez The engagement nearly precipitated open war with the Mexican government the Carranza government during that three cornered Mexican civil war but both governments immediately moved to lessen tensions and open negotiations for U S withdrawal preventing war The prisoners were repatriated at El Paso Texas by the Carrancista government 33 35 World War I edit The 10th Cavalry spent World War I in the United States On 9 January 1918 the U S 10th Cavalry Regiment was involved in a firefight with Yaqui Indians just west of Nogales Arizona E Troop intercepted a group of American Yaquis on their way to render aid to Yaquis of Sonora who were in the midst of long running war with the Mexicans 36 In August 1918 the 10th Cavalry together with the 35th Infantry Regiment fought in a border skirmish at the Battle of Ambos Nogales in which German military advisors fought and died along with Mexican soldiers This was the only battle during World War I where Germans engaged in land combat against United States soldiers in North America 37 38 39 The 35th Infantry Regiment was stationed at Nogales Arizona on 27 August 1918 when at about 4 10 PM a gun battle erupted unintentionally when a Mexican civilian attempted to pass through the border back to Mexico without being interrogated at the U S Customs house After the initial shooting reinforcements from both sides rushed to the border Hostilities quickly escalated and several soldiers were killed and others wounded 37 38 39 The U S 35th Infantry border post had about 15 18 men 40 and requested reinforcements from their garrison When they arrived they requested the Buffalo Soldiers of the 10th Cavalry The 10th commanded by Lt Colonel Frederick Herman came to their aid from their camp outside town After observing the situation for a few moments Herman ordered an attack on the Mexican and German held hilltops overlooking the border town Defensive trenches and machine gun placements had been seen being dug there in the previous weeks Herman wanted Americans there before Mexican reinforcements got there 37 38 Under heavy fire the U S 35th Regimental infantry soldiers and dismounted 10th Cavalry troops advanced across the Mexican American border through the buildings and streets of Nogales Sonora and up onto the nearby hilltops This was done while other units of the 35th Regiment held the main line near the border post About 7 45 PM the Mexicans waved a large white flag of surrender over their customs building Lt Colonel Herman observed and then ordered an immediate cease fire Snipers on both sides continued shooting for a little while after the cease fire but were eventually silenced upon orders from their superiors 37 38 40 World War II edit At the beginning of World War II the 10th Cavalry was relegated to caretaker duties at Fort Leavenworth Kansas 41 In 1942 the regiment was moved to Camp Lockett California replacing the 11th Cavalry in its duties as the southern defense of the Western Defense Command under LTG DeWitt 42 153 NCOs of this regiment would later be assigned to the newly organized 28th Cavalry Regiment forming its cadre 43 and filling out the 4th Cavalry Brigade which would remain in existence after the deactivation of the 2nd Cavalry Division and its subsequent reactivation 44 In the summer of 1943 the 10th and 28th Cavalry Regiments fought wildfires in the Cleveland National Forest 45 In 1944 the entire 2nd Cavalry Division was shipped out to Oran North Africa where it disembarked and was deactivated on 9 March 1944 Although trained as combat soldiers the soldiers of this regiment and other regiments of the 2nd Cavalry Division were reorganized as combat support and combat service support units Some would see combat as replacement soldiers of the 92nd Infantry Division 46 Early Cold War edit In 1958 the Tenth Regiment was reactivated The unit today wears the buffalo symbol 3 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry was assigned to Fort Lewis Washington on 1 September 1963 as the eyes and ears of the 4th Infantry Division 3 2nd Squadron 10th Cavalry was activated on 1 July 1957 and consolidated with the 7th Recon Company transferring less personnel and equipment to Korea from Germany It was assigned to the 7th Infantry Division It was transferred with 7th Division to Fort Ord California in December 1976 2nd Squadron 10th Cavalry Air served as the 7th Inf Division s helicopter borne reconnaissance asset It consisted of 5 Troops Line Troops consisted of Alpha Bravo Charlie and Delta and a Headquarters and Headquarters Troop HHT making the fifth Troop Each Line Troop was composed of a scout Platoon Kiowa Lift Platoon Huey Attack Platoon Cobra as well as a Platoon of Cavalry Scouts capable of Air Mobile Dismounted and Mobile operations The Squadron was reorganized in August 1985 under the 7th Infantry Division Light configuration The 2nd Squadron 10th Cavalry Air was deactivated and reorganized as the 2nd Squadron 9th Cavalry Air under the authority of Department of the Army General Order 87 15 Prior to the 7th Inf Division Light eventual de activation in September 1994 In 20 Dec 1989 31 Jan 1990 they deployed from FT Ord to Panama in order to conduct combat operations during Operation Just Cause and the ensuing humanitarian and nation building mission Operation Promote Liberty The Air Troops were the first to deploy with their AH 1 Cobra attack helicopters and their OH 58 aerial scout helicopters Troop A 2 9th Cavalry followed and conducted route clearance zone reconnaissance and provided support to U S Army units in the interior of Panama Upon the Base Closure of Fort Ord Ca 2nd Squadron 9th Cavalry Air was transferred to Fort Carson Co The 2nd Squadron 9th Cav was inactivated on 18 October 2007 and reflagged as the 4th Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment 4 10th Cav 3 Vietnam edit nbsp 4th Infantry Division shoulder patch nbsp Men of the aerorifle platoon from Troop D 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry board a UH 1D helicopter after a patrol 20 October 1970 In the later part of 1966 the 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry Armored Reconnaissance went to the Republic of South Vietnam during the Vietnam War 1966 1972 operating in the II Corps Area as part of the 4th Infantry Division It received its first Valorous Unit Award in May 1969 for actions at LZ Oasis against a battalion sized enemy force The 1st Squadron of the 10th with the 4th Infantry Division earned 12 campaign streamers and other awards in Vietnam 3 In April 1972 Troop H 10th Air Cavalry was formed with assets from the disbanding Troop C 7th Squadron 17th Cavalry Regiment and placed under the 17th Aviation Group at Pleiku The troop was located at Lane Army Airfield near An Son 14 km west of Qui Nhơn in Binh Định Province H Troop aircrews conducted aerial reconnaissance hunter killer and search amp destroy missions using OH 6 Cayuse Loach AH 1 Cobra Snake and UH 1 Iroquois Huey helicopters and ground troops from the Republic of Korea s 2nd Infantry Division and the various South Vietnamese Army units The unit disbanded shortly after the Paris Peace Accords were signed in 1973 Specialist 4 Robert Frakes the last American combat casualty of the Vietnam War perished in a post crash fire after his OH 6 helicopter was lost to enemy fire on 26 January the last day of US combat operations Late Cold War edit 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry 1 10 Cav with the 4th Infantry Division participated in Exercise Reforger in 1977 1978 1981 1985 1987 and 1991 Exercise Reforger from return of forces to Germany was an annual exercise conducted during the Cold War by NATO The exercise was intended to ensure that NATO had the ability to quickly deploy forces to West Germany in the event of a conflict with the Warsaw Pact 3 2nd Squadron 10th Cavalry 2 10 with the 7th Infantry Division participated in Exercise Reforger in 1984 1986 and 1993 3 3rd Battalion 10th Cavalry 3 10 Cav was activated in the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood Texas in 1981 From 1980 to 1993 1st and 2nd Battalions provided the armored element of the 194th Armored Brigade at Fort Knox Kentucky while from 1980 to 1990 D Troop served as the reconnaissance element for the brigade D Troop Black Jack edit nbsp 3rd Infantry Division patch nbsp D Troop 10th Cavalry 3rd Infantry Division D Troop of the 10th Cavalry Regiment was detached and moved around before settling in with the 3rd Infantry Division 3rd Brigade 47 On 25 June 1958 D Troop was reconstituted in the Regular Army and redesignated as Headquarters and Headquarters Troop 4th Reconnaissance Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment On 1 September 1963 the unit was redesignated as Troop D 10th Cavalry and assigned to Fort Knox Kentucky and on 15 April 1968 the Troop became part of the 5th Battalion 33rd Armor Regiment of the 194th Armored Brigade 47 In October 1999 the 3rd Infantry Division Mechanized began its transition to Limited Conversion Division XXI LCD XXI Under this force structure mechanized brigades received organic cavalry organizations On 16 June 2000 D Troop 10th Cavalry Regiment was reactivated and assigned to the 3rd Brigade 3rd Infantry Division Mechanized at Fort Benning Georgia 47 In March 2003 the 3rd Brigade participated along with the rest of the 3rd Infantry Division Mechanized in the initial operations against Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom The 3rd Infantry Division returned to Georgia in late 2003 In mid 2004 it began the transformation to the US Army s new modular force structure which saw D Troop 10th Cavalry inactivated 47 21st century editC Troop 10th Cavalry was reactivated 22 September 2001 and served as the Brigade Reconnaissance Troop BRT as well as the brigade s quick reaction force QRF for 1st Brigade 1st Cavalry Division All Troops maintained a large area of operations 3 The BRT known as the Cowboy Troop 3 set the operations tempo OPTEMPO for battle operations in the northeastern section of Baghdad and Sadr City C Troop was reportedly the only unit in Baghdad at the time clearing routes in light vehicles with a reported 4 800 different forms of contact over the course of the year 3 After returning to Fort Hood Texas C Troop was deactivated and re flagged as C Troop 1st Squadron 7th Cavalry The 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry 2nd Brigade 4th Division served during Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003 2004 in which it earned its second Presidential Unit Citation and again from 2005 to 2006 The squadron is currently serving as the Armored Reconnaissance Squadron of the 2nd Brigade 4th Infantry Division at Fort Carson Colorado 3 B Troop 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry led by Captain Brian McCarthy and First Sergeant Brian Allen were featured in a 14 page article of Texas Monthly magazine which covered the 2005 2006 deployment to Iraq This is one of many articles on the 10th Cavalry units 48 Operation Red Dawn was an American military operation conducted on 13 December 2003 in the town of ad Dawr Iraq near Tikrit where elements of the 1st Brigade of the 4th Infantry Division captured Saddam Hussein former President of Iraq 3 The mission was assigned to the 1st Brigade Combat Team of the 4th Infantry Division commanded by Major General Raymond Odierno and led by Colonel James Hickey of the 4th Infantry Division with joint operations Task Force 121 an elite and covert joint special operations team 49 50 51 During Operation Iraqi Freedom elements of the 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Reginald Allen played an instrumental role during Operation Red Dawn D Troop provided security for the air corridor 49 50 A and C Troop 1st Squadron 10th U S Cavalry also during this operation secured the inner and outer cordons of the area of operation AO for Operation Red Dawn 49 The 4th Division rotated out of Iraq in the spring of 2004 and was relieved by the 1st Infantry Division 3 Present edit nbsp Order of Battle of the 4th Infantry Division The 10th Cavalry Regiment presently comprises only one active squadron which is a M3 Bradley and M1 Abrams equipped armored Cavalry squadron within the 4th Infantry Division in Fort Carson Colorado 3 4th Squadron 10th U S Cavalry takes its history and lineage from D Troop 10th Cavalry In 2000 D Troop 10th U S Cavalry was reactivated and assigned as the brigade reconnaissance troop for 3rd Brigade Combat Team BCT 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Benning Georgia D Troop 10th Cavalry was deployed with 3 3 ID to Iraq in 2003 and was deactivated upon redeployment in 2004 It was reactivated in October 2007 at Fort Carson Colorado replacing the 2nd Squadron 9th Cavalry regiment as the 4th Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment with A B C and HQ Troops as the reconnaissance squadron for 3rd Combat Brigade Team 3rd BCT of the 4th Infantry Division The 4th Squadron deployed to Iraq with the BCT from December 2007 to February 2009 and again in March 2010 3 The Squadron deployed to Jordan in 2015 in support of Operation Spartan Shield In February 2016 Delta Dark Knights Tank Company from 1st Battalion 8th Infantry Regiment moved to 4th Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment to be assigned as Dakota Troop as part of the restructuring plan for the recon squadrons now called cavalry squadrons 4th Squadron 10th U S Cavalry Regiment deployed to Europe in January 2017 as part of Operation Atlantic Resolve and served in Poland Hungary and Germany before redeploying to Fort Carson in November 2017 In February 2019 the squadron along with the 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team deployed to the Middle East in support of both Operation Inherent Resolve and Operation Spartan Shield As of June 2019 4th Squadron 10th U S Cavalry Regiment is the only current active unit of the 10th Cavalry Regiment It comprises three Cavalry Troops Apache Blackfoot Comanche one Tank Troop Dakota a Forward Support Troop Dragoon and a Headquarters and Headquarters Troop Hunter As of 29 August 2021 the Black Jack Squadron is commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Jacob Teplesky with Command Sergeant Major Derek Gilmore as his enlisted advisor On July 29 2022 COWBOY Troop 10th Cav reactivated on Fort Hood Texas with COL John Meredith commander of 1 ABCT passing the guidon to CPT Tyler Stankye COWBOY Troop stood back up as part of the Army s DIVCAV pilot program in the newly designed penetration division concept COWBOY is organized as an Armored Cavalry Troop ACT serving a similar role as the old brigade reconnaissance troop BRT The ACT will test the new MTOE and provide feedback to the army as it reorganizes for LSCO nbsp Captain Tyler Stankye receives the C Troop 10th Cav guidon from Colonel John Meredith marking the return of COWBOY Troop to the 1st Cavalry Division on 29 JULY 2022 Campaign participation credit editActivated 1866 Indian Wars 1867 Battle of the Saline River near Fort Hays Kansas 1867 1868 Winter campaigns against the Cheyennes Arapahos and Comanches 1868 Battle of Beecher Island 1868 Battle of Beaver Creek 1869 Defense of the Wichita I 1871 Texas Indian Wars 1874 Defense of the Wichita II 1879 1880 Victorio Campaign 1880 Battle of Rattlesnake Springs 1918 Battle of Bear Valley Spanish American War Battle of Las Guasimas Battle of Tayacoba Battle of El Caney Battle of San Juan Hill Siege of Santiago Philippine American War Moro Rebellion Mexican Revolution Battle of Carrizal World War I 1918 Battle of Ambos Nogales The only land battle in North America where German troops advisors with a Mexican unit were killed in action fighting Americans World War II Attached to the 4th Cavalry Brigade 2nd Cavalry Division in 1942 Deactivated in 1944 some members fought with the 92nd Infantry Division in Italy as replacements In 1958 the Tenth Cavalry Regiment was reactivated 3 Vietnam War Counteroffensive Phase II with the 4th Infantry Division Counteroffensive Phase III Tet Counteroffensive Counteroffensive Phase IV Counteroffensive Phase V Counteroffensive Phase VI Tet 69 Counteroffensive Summer Fall 1969 Winter Spring 1970 Sanctuary Counteroffensive Except 3rd Brigade Counteroffensive Phase VII Except 3rd Brigade Iraq War Liberation of Iraq 19 March 2003 to 1 May 2003 Coalition Provisional Authority 2 May 2003 to 28 June 2004 Iraqi Interim Government 29 June 2004 to 30 December 2005 Iraqi Transitional Government 31 December 2005 to 20 May 2006 Government of Iraq from 2006 20 May 2006 to present Reconstruction of Iraq Post invasion Iraq 2003 present New Iraqi Army International Compact with Iraq In July 2010 the 7th Squadron become the first armored reconnaissance squadron in the US Army to deploy to Afghanistan The squadron headquarters and D TRP FSC were located in Camp Stone Herat with the line troops forward deployed in the Herat Province and Badghis Province The squadron redeployed to Fort Carson CO in July 2011 citation needed War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Consolidation III Transition IRegimental decorations edit nbsp Presidential Unit Citation Army Streamer embroidered PLEIKU PROVINCE 1st Brigade only nbsp nbsp Presidential Unit Citation Army Streamer embroidered DAK TO DISTRICT 1st Brigade only nbsp nbsp Valorous Unit Award 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment 4th Infantry Division 1969 1972 Streamer embroidered II Corp Defense nbsp nbsp Republic of Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palm Streamer embroidered VIETNAM 1966 1969 nbsp nbsp Republic of Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palm Streamer embroidered VIETNAM 1969 1970 nbsp nbsp Republic of Vietnam Civil Action Honor Medal First Class Streamer embroidered VIETNAM 1966 1969 nbsp nbsp Army Superior Unit Award Selected Units for Force XXI Test and Evaluation 1995 1996 nbsp nbsp Presidential Unit Citation Army Troop D 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2003 nbsp nbsp Valorous Unit Award Troop H and 1st Squadron 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2003 2004 nbsp nbsp Valorous Unit Award Troop G 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2003 2004 nbsp nbsp Presidential Unit Citation Army Streamer embroidered Operation Iraqi Freedom 2003 2004 1st amp 2nd Brigades only nbsp nbsp Presidential Unit Citation Army Streamer embroidered Operation Iraqi Freedom 2005 2006 1st amp 2nd Brigades only nbsp nbsp Meritorious Unit Commendation Army 7th Squadron 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2005 2006 nbsp nbsp Valorous Unit Award 1st Squadron 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2008 2009 nbsp nbsp Valorous Unit Award 7th Squadron 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered with IRAQ 2008 2009 nbsp nbsp Valorous Unit Award 7th Squadron 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered with AFGHANISTAN 2011 nbsp nbsp Valorous Unit Award 1st Squadron 10th US Cavalry Streamer embroidered with SOUTHERN AND WESTERN AFGHANISTAN 2011 nbsp Notable members editSome members in this section are noted in the article above If detailed in the article they are summarized here If not detailed a brief expansion is provided Mark Matthews who was the oldest living Buffalo Soldier died aged 111 on 6 September 2005 He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery Matthews joined the 10th Cavalry Regiment when he was only 15 years old after having been recruited at a Lexington Kentucky racetrack and having documents forged so that he appeared to meet the minimum age of 17 52 Summary of Medal of Honor recipients of the 10th Cavalry William McBryar Louis H Carpenter Powhatan Henry Clarke Indian Wars The following four members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment received the Medal of Honor for the rescue of stranded soldiers on the beach at the conclusion of the Battle of Tayacoba Dennis Bell Fitz Lee William H Thompkins and George H Wanton Edward L Baker Jr Spanish American War John Bigelow Jr Second Lieutenant later Lieutenant Colonel Bigelow served with the 9th Cavalry Regiment from 1877 to 1885 He was then assigned to the 10th Cavalry and stayed with them in Cuba D Troop until 1899 He then served again with the 9th from 1903 to 1904 Thomas Carpenter Jr Vietnam War Benjamin Grierson the first commander of the 10th Cavalry Regiment Served 1866 to 1888 Henry O Flipper the first African American graduate of West Point in 1877 Gilbert W Lindsay 1900 1990 Los Angeles City Council member 1963 90 Nicholas M Nolan a favorite officer of A Troop for more than a decade and who led during the Buffalo Soldier tragedy of 1877 also known as the Staked Plains Horror Jules Garesche Ord First Lieutenant second in command of D Troop who was killed in action after starting and leading the spontaneous charge of the 10th U S Cavalry up to the top of San Juan Hill John J Pershing from October 1895 until mid 1897 First Lieutenant later General Pershing commanded a troop of the 10th Cavalry Regiment from Fort Assinniboine in north central Montana In 1898 in Cuba Major Pershing served as a regimental officer who participated in the assault on Kettle Hill part of the San Juan heights and took over temporary command of D Troop after that battle on 1 July 1898 He was later known as Nigger Jack and Black Jack for comparing the high level of professionalism and discipline of the Buffalo Soldiers with other soldiers Kenneth O Preston is a former Sergeant Major of the Army in the United States He served in that position from January 2004 through his retirement in March 2011 Augustus Walley served with the 9th Cavalry Regiment as a private and received the Medal of Honor He later served with the 10th Cavalry as First Sergeant in Cuba and the Philippines Charles Young Major later Colonel commanded the 2nd Squadron of the 10th during the 1916 Punitive Expedition into Mexico He led a cavalry pistol charge that saved the wounded General Beltran and his men of the 13th Cavalry squadron who had been outflanked In media and fiction edit nbsp Sgt John Harris of the 10th U S Cavalry with a Sharps rifle c 1868 Buffalo Soldier is a reggae song written by Bob Marley and Noel King Sporty Williams Mission Aaron Spelling s half hour drama of a none too willing all black regiment tasked with transporting a Comanche chief through Apache territory to the peace treaty table was the November 12 1959 episode of Dick Powell s Zane Grey Theatre 53 Sergeant Rutledge 1960 deals with a Buffalo Soldier the sergeant of the title who is accused of the rape and murder of a white woman In the film the regiment was inaccurately described as the 9th but in fact the 10th were serving in Arizona at that time The song included Captain Buffalo refers to the little known western legend of a black cavalry officer 54 The plot of Valdez Is Coming the 1970 novel by Elmore Leonard and 1971 film of the same name concerns the wrongful killing of a recently discharged 10th Cavalry soldier and the attempt to compensate his Apache wife James A Michener s historical novel Texas has a section depicting the 10th Cavalry s activities in Texas from 1869 to 1874 In John Jakes s third book of his North and South trilogy Heaven and Hell a fictional K Company of the 10th Cavalry is commanded by one of the novel s protagonists Charles Main Tom Clancy s The Sum Of All Fears the 10th Cavalry Regiment is reformed to serve as the Army component of the American forces based in the Negev Desert defending Israel after a final settlement is reached ending the Arab Israeli conflict This reformed regiment continues to play prominently in Tom Clancy s Executive Orders where it is transferred to Kuwait to defend that nation from the United Islamic Republic a fictional country formed after Iran annexed Ba athist Iraq Later a movie loosely based on the book was made 55 The 1997 television movie Buffalo Soldiers starring Danny Glover drew attention to their role in the military history of the United States 56 Chris Bohjalian s The Buffalo Soldier the 10th Cavalry Regiment is quoted in between chapters with George Rowe and his views on the Civil War The author also wrote The Buffalo Soldier in 2002 57 A reunion of former 10th cavalrymen at Camp Lockett was featured on the California s Gold television TV program primarily seen on public television stations 58 See also editList of Medal of Honor recipients List of Medal of Honor recipients for the Indian Wars Military history of African AmericansReferences edit Special Unit Designations United States Army Center of Military History 21 April 2010 Archived from the original on 12 May 2009 Retrieved 24 June 2010 Pursuing Pancho Villa Presidio of San Francisco U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved 7 May 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Official 4ID History 4th Infantry Division Homepage History United States Army 2 August 2010 Archived from the original on 29 January 2010 Retrieved 9 February 2010 a b c United States Army Institute of Heraldry General Orders No 1 dated 11 February 1911 TIOHWebmaster conus army mil The Institute of Heraldry 9325 Gunston Rd Room S 112 Ft Belvoir Virginia 22060 5579 PDF file a b c d e f 10 Cavalry Regiment The Institute of Heraldry Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army 2010 Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 Retrieved 4 November 2010 Love of Liberty FORT ETHAN ALLEN LIVING HISTORY DAY 2009 Retrieved 4 November 2010 Official 4ID History 4th Infantry Division Homepage History 1 10 Cav United States Army 28 February 2012 Archived from the original on 22 March 2012 Retrieved 29 February 2012 a b c d e f g Schubert Frank N 2004 On the Trail of the Buffalo Soldier II New and Revised Biographies of African Americans 1866 1917 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8420 5079 1 a b c d e f g h i Bigelow John Jr c 1890 The Tenth Regiment of Cavalry from The Army of the United States Historical Sketches of Staff and Line with Portraits of Generals in Chief United States Army Archived from the original on 3 August 2009 Retrieved 12 August 2009 a b Wilhelm Bob Superintendent of Historic Fort Hays 2009 The Battle of the Saline River Leisure and Sports Review LASR Retrieved 28 October 2010 a b Armes George A 1900 Ups and Downs of an Army Officer Washington D C C L Taylor Publishing p 268 Retrieved 2 November 2010 Weiser Kathy 2009 The Battle of the Saline River 1867 Legends of Kansas com Retrieved 28 October 2010 a b Leckie William H December 1999 The Buffalo Soldiers A Narrative of the Negro Cavalry in the West University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 1244 2 Lawton Buffalo Soldiers 10th Cavalry Medal of Honor Recipients Buffalo Soldiers Archived from the original on 3 August 2009 Retrieved 14 July 2009 Carpenter Louis Henry 1912 Carpenter s Recollections The Battle of Beecher Island A Buffalo Soldier Retrieved 1 August 2009 Letter written in 1912 from Carpenter to Mr George Martin of the Kansas State Historical Society a b Fort Concho National Historic Landmark Fort Concho NHL Archived from the original on 2 August 2009 Retrieved 2 January 2009 Nunn W C 1940 Eighty Six Hours without Water on the Texas Plains Southwestern Historical Quarterly 43 University of North Texas Austin Texas Texas State Historical Association Retrieved 2 September 2009 The Handbook of Texas online Medal of Honor Recipients Indian Wars Period United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on 26 June 2009 Schubert Frank N 1997 Black Valor Buffalo Soldiers and the Medal of Honor 1870 1898 Scholarly Resources Inc p 107 ISBN 978 0 8420 2586 7 a b Anthony L Powell 1998 Black Participation in the Spanish American War The Spanish American War Centennial web site Retrieved 11 September 2009 Samuel Sumner was in command of the division when the battle began as General Wheeler was ill Wheeler returned to the front once the battle was underway Longacre Edward G A Soldier to the Last Major General Joseph Wheeler in Blue and Gray 2006 p 227 a b c d e f g h i j k l Kinevan Marcos E 1998 Frontier Cavalryman Lieutenant John Bigelow with the Buffalo Soldiers in Texas Texas Western Press The University of Texas at El Paso ISBN 978 0 87404 243 6 Roosevelt Theodore 1898 The Rough Riders Chapter III Bartleby com Congress considers Buffalo Soldier for posthumous promotion Los Angeles Times 5 December 2012 Medal of Honor Recipients War With Spain United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on 12 June 2010 Retrieved 20 July 2010 Field Ron Richard Hook 2005 Buffalo Soldiers 1892 1918 Osprey Publishing p 64 ISBN 978 1 84176 898 4 Retrieved 4 June 2009 permanent dead link Plante Trevor Summer 2000 Researching Service in the U S Army During the Philippine Insurrection Prologue Magazine 32 2 Archived from the original on 5 May 2009 Retrieved 4 June 2009 These included four units of African American soldiers who served in the Ninth U S Cavalry Tenth U S Cavalry Twenty fourth U S Infantry and Twenty fifth U S Infantry The Philippine War A Conflict of Conscience for African Americans Presideo of San Francisco U S Department of Interior 3 May 2008 Archived from the original on 1 June 2009 Retrieved 4 June 2009 McAllister Linn Brian 1999 Guardians of Empire The U S Army and the Pacific 1902 1940 UNC Press p 60 ISBN 978 0 8078 4815 9 Retrieved 4 June 2009 Leckie William H 1967 The Buffalo Soldiers A Narrative of the Negro Cavalry in the West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 1244 2 LCCN 67 15571 a b c d e f The Buffalo Soldiers at Fort Ethan Allen Historic Fort Ethan Allen 2010 Archived from the original on 11 February 2007 Retrieved 3 November 2010 a b c d Early life at the Fort Men on duty Historic Fort Ethan Allen 2010 Archived from the original on 9 February 2007 Retrieved 3 November 2010 a b Named Campaigns Mexican Expedition Mexican Punitive Expedition Stout Joseph A 1999 Border Conflict Villistas Carrancistas and the Punitive Expedition 1915 1920 TCU Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 87565 200 9 Harlem s Hell Fighters Stephen L Harris pp34 10th Cavalry Squadron History U S Army Archived from the original on 29 January 2010 Retrieved 9 February 2010 a b c d Finely James P 1996 Buffalo Soldiers at Huachuca The Battle of Ambo Nogales Fort Huachuca AZ Huachuca Museum Society p Vol 2 part 6 ISBN 978 1 112 14467 7 Retrieved 18 January 2010 Note Library of Congress Number 93 206790 a b c d Wharfield Harold B 1965 Tenth Cavalry and Border Fights El Cajon CA self published pp 85 97 a b Clendenen Clarence 1969 Blood on the Border the United States Army and the Mexican irregulars New York Macmillan ISBN 978 0 02 526110 5 a b The 35th Infantry Regiment at Nogales Arizona 35th Infantry Regiment Association cacti35th org 1999 Archived from the original on 14 September 2009 Retrieved 18 January 2010 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry Regiment GlobalSecurity org Archived from the original on 16 October 2008 Retrieved 6 October 2008 Camp Lockett Mitchell Convalescent Hospital Historic California Posts California State Military Department 12 October 2008 Archived from the original on 16 April 2009 Retrieved 17 May 2009 In 1942 the 10th Cavalry Regiment the famed Buffalo Soldiers moved into Camp Lockett to replace the 11th Cavalry Regiment which had been converted into an armored unit The 28th Cavalry The U S Army s Last Horse Cavalry Regiment History Fort Sill Chapter Archived from the original on 25 April 2009 Retrieved 31 May 2009 2d Cavalry Division Center of Military History United States Army 3 October 2003 Archived from the original on 10 March 2009 Retrieved 31 May 2009 Lee Ulysses 1966 Conversions And Commitments The Employment of Negro Troops United States Army in World War II Washington D C Center of Military History United States Army p 494 LCCN 66060003 Archived from the original on 27 July 2021 Retrieved 5 February 2013 Hargrove Hondon B 1985 Buffalo Soldiers in Italy Black Americans in World War II Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 89950 116 1 a b c d GlobalSecurity org 2000 2009 D Troop 10th Cavalry Regiment BlackJack GlobalSecurity org Retrieved 8 February 2010 Draper Robert January 2008 I Think We Got Blown Up for Nothing Emmis Publishing LP dba Texas Monthly Retrieved 4 July 2010 a b c Freeman Colin 16 December 2013 From lavish palaces to a hole in the ground The Scotsman Archived from the original on 16 October 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2011 a b Saddam Hussein Captured in spider hole with 750 000 Archived 4 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine Lifeway Biblical Solution for Life Saddam caught like a rat in a hole CNN 14 December 2003 Retrieved 16 July 2008 Shaughnessy Larry 19 September 2005 Oldest Buffalo Soldier to be Buried at Arlington CNN Archived from the original on 27 March 2007 Retrieved 24 April 2007 Morse Jim November 8 1959 Sammy s Miffed About Clan Gossip The Pittsburgh Press Sec 4 p 9 Retrieved March 26 2024 John Ford director 1960 Sergeant Rutledge movie Internet Movie database imdb com Retrieved 9 February 2010 Tom Clancy 2002 Sum of All Fears Berkley ISBN 978 0 425 18422 6 Gregor Jordan director 2001 Buffalo Soldiers movie Internet Movie database imdb com Retrieved 9 February 2010 Bohjalian Chris 2003 The Buffalo Soldier Vintage ISBN 978 0 375 72546 3 California s Gold No 302 A CLOSER LOOK California s Gold Huell Howser Productions Archived from the original on 30 April 2009 Retrieved 27 April 2009 Further reading editMills Charles K Harvest of Barren Regrets The Army Career of Frederick William Benteen 1834 1898 2011 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 3684 4 Tom Willard Buffalo Soldiers Tor Forge 1997 ISBN 978 0 8125 5105 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 10th Cavalry Regiment United States Delayed after action report of D Troop Archived 6 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine by Bigelow on 18 December 1898 After action report of D Troop Archived 6 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine by A E Kennington 10th Cavalry Divided by Brigade U S 4th Infantry Division 1st Squadron 10th Cavalry part of 2nd Brigade U S 4th Infantry Division Delta Troop 10th Cavalry part of 3rd Brigade U S 3rd Infantry Division 7th Squadron 10th Cavalry part of 1st Brigade U S 4th Infantry Division 8th Squadron 10th Cavalry part of 4th Brigade U S 4th Infantry Division Engagements by the Buffalo Soldiers and Seminole Negro Indian Scouts The short film Negro Cavalry Regiment Camp Locket California c 1941 c 1945 is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 10th Cavalry Regiment United States amp oldid 1221589633, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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