fbpx
Wikipedia

Racial segregation in the United States Armed Forces

Racial segregation in the United States Armed Forces includes the separation of white and non-white American troops, bans on people of color serving in the military, and restrictions of people of color to supporting roles in the military. Since the American Revolutionary War, each branch of the Armed Forces has implemented different policies surrounding racial segregation. Though Executive Order 9981 officially ended segregation in the Armed Forces in 1948, some forms of racial segregation continued until after the Korean War.[1]

American Revolutionary War and the Continental Army

 
Peter Salem shooting Major Pitcairn at Bunker Hill

During the American Revolutionary War, there were varying opinions surrounding the enlistment of black soldiers in the Continental Army. Though some black soldiers had already served in colonial militias in the French and Indian War, many whites believed that arming black soldiers posed a threat to white authority. Despite the famous death of Crispus Attucks in the Boston Massacre in 1770, and black soldiers earning recognition in the Battle of Bunker Hill and the Battles of Lexington and Concord, whites also maintained that black people were too savage and incompetent to properly serve.[2] Because of fears of an armed slave insurrection, one of George Washington's first acts as Commander in Chief was to sign an order forbidding the recruitment of any black person, as well as any unmarried, unsettled person who had not been born in the colonies.[2]

This order was short lived. Due to a shortage in manpower, as well as the militaristically advantageous allowances made for black soldiers by British enemies, Washington relented and allowed black soldiers to serve in the Continental Army. Freedom was pledged in exchange for the enlistment of enslaved peoples, though this promise was only sometimes fulfilled by masters. Enslaved black soldiers in the 1st Rhode Island Regiment, the first entirely nonwhite military unit, were freed at the end of the war. In other units, black soldiers served side by side with whites. One historian commented that the military during this time was more integrated than it would be in later years leading up to the Korean War.

 
Marine Commandant William Ward Burrows enforced a policy against enlisting "Blacks and Mulattoes".[3]

United States Army

After the creation of the Federal Militia Acts of 1792, the Army excluded black men, and, with very few exceptions, the prohibition remained in effect until the second year of the Civil War.[4]

War of 1812

Approximately 1,000,000 black people lived in the United States at the outset of the War of 1812.[5] However, it wasn't until America faced pivotal threats from British veterans returning from conquering Napoleon, that black people were recruited to the American side.[5] In 1814, 2,000 free Black soldiers were trained in New York, and received the same compensation as their white counterparts. Due to exclusion however, the majority of black soldiers either served in the U.S. Navy or defected to the British Royal Navy to gain their freedom.[6][failed verification]

American Civil War

The history of African Americans in the Civil War involves 186,097 (7,122 officers, 178,975 enlisted) African American men, forming 163 units, who served in the Union Army.[7] African Americans also served in the Union Navy, with both free African Americans and fugitives from slavery joining the fight.

On the Confederate side, black soldiers, both free and enslaved, were used for labor. The issue of whether to arm them and under what terms became a major source of debate among Southerners. At the start of the war, a Louisiana Confederate militia unit composed of free black soldiers from the extensive New Orleans Creoles of color was raised, but the Confederacy refused their service. On March 13, 1865, the Confederate Congress enacted a statute to allow the enlistment of African Americans, but few were recruited.

Asian and Pacific Islander troops also served with African Americans in the United States Colored Troops, and a few served with white troops.[8]

Native Americans, such as General Stand Watie's Confederate Cherokee Battalion, fought in their own tribal regiments or battalions on both sides of the Civil War.

Buffalo Soldiers

The Buffalo Soldiers were established by Congress in 1866 as the first peacetime all-black regiments in the regular U.S. Army.[9] They were tasked with guarding settlements on the western frontier; this involved fighting the native people and bandits that frequented and occupied the area. The Buffalo soldiers were paid $13 a month, and maintained some of the lowest desertion rates in the Army.[10]

Spanish–American War

During the Spanish–American War (1898), the Illinois 8th Infantry National Guard was federalized, and made history when its all-African-American officer corps led the unit in the combat zone.[11]

Philippine Scouts

In February 1901, Congress passed a law allowing the Commander-in-chief to recruit members of the Filipino community into Army service.[12] Fifty two companies, all from the same regions of the country, were enlisted to push past enemy lines. The Philippine Scouts were known as highly proficient soldiers with low desertion rates; their regiment lasted until the end of World War II, in which they were compelled to surrender to Japanese troops due to a dearth of resources and numbers.[12]

World War I

 
African-American troops of the 505th Engineers

African Americans

 
WWI draft card. Lower left corner to be removed by men of African background to help keep military segregated

The American military was entirely segregated for African Americans during World War I. Despite expressed opposition to military training for black Americans by white supremacist politicians such as Sen. James K. Vardaman (D-MS) and Sen. Benjamin Tillman (D-SC), Congress passed the Selective Service Act in May 1917.[13][14] This mandated draft registry included all male citizens over the age of 21. A total of 290,527 black Americans were ultimately registered for the draft. The rate at which black soldiers were drafted—especially by southern draft boards—was much higher than that of white soldiers.[13] Though black people made up only 10 percent of the United States population at the time, black soldiers made up roughly 13 percent of those drafted.[13] Draft board officials were instructed to tear off the lower left corner of the Selective Service forms filled out by black registrants to mark these for segregated units.[15]

At the start of World War I, there were four regiments composed entirely of black soldiers.[13] Two combat units of African-Americans were established: the 92nd and 93rd Infantry Divisions.[16] The August 1917 Houston Riot of armed African-American soldiers, spurred by racist behavior by Houston police officers, additionally shaped the War Department's decision-making, and the great majority of black soldiers were assigned jobs like the building of roads, unloading of shipping, and other forms of common labor.[17]

Including volunteers, 350,000 African-Americans served in the American Expeditionary Force on the western front, with one combat unit, the 369th Infantry "Hell Fighters from Harlem" being awarded the Croix de Guerre by the French allies for their bravery and competence in combat.[18] The 370th Infantry was given the name "The Black Devils" by the Germans and following their pre-war organization in Illinois, were the only American unit to have black officers.[19]

Asian Americans

Asian Americans fought in integrated units during World War I, and non-citizens were offered citizenship after the war as a result of their service.[20]

World War II

During World War II, the United States Army established several new segregated units, and maintained several historic segregated units.[21]

African Americans

 
A military policeman on a motorcycle in front of the "colored" MP entrance, Columbus, Georgia, in 1942.

When the U.S. entered World War II, the U.S. Army was racially segregated. Despite the service of African American soldiers in every previous American conflict, exclusion and discrimination from the American War Department made it difficult for black soldiers to serve. In 1939, only 3,640 black soldiers were enlisted under white leadership.[22] Led by Rayford W. Logan, head of the Committee for the Participation of Negroes in National Defense, the push for greater black participation and nondiscrimination in the military was reflected in the Selective Service Act of 1940.[22] Members of the NAACP also met with Roosevelt to outline demands for the betterment of black soldiers' conditions in the military.[22]

Because of this resistance to the Army's treatment of its black soldiers, military leadership began to attempt to address the issue beginning in 1943, but segregation in the armed forces remained official policy until 1948.[23][24] Roosevelt's racial quotas limited the black military population to nine percent—a proportion that the Army never even reached.[22] Furthermore, vast majority of black soldiers were never sent overseas, due to exclusionary requests and discriminatory treatment from foreign governments.[22]

The Army Nurse Corps was established in 1901. With the exception of 18 female African-American nurses who had served in World War I, it remained white until 1941, when pressure from the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses, and Eleanor Roosevelt, caused the Army to admit black nurses. A quota of 48 nurses was set, and the women were segregated from white nurses and white soldiers for much of the war. Over time, more black nurses enlisted. They were assigned to care for black soldiers, and served in the China-Burma-India theater, Australia, New Guinea, Liberia, England and the Philippines.[25]

Japanese Americans

 
Oakland, California. Part of family unit of Japanese ancestry leave Wartime Civil Control Administer . . . - NARA - 537706
 
Tuskegee Squadron 001

After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, men of Japanese birth and descent were classified as enemy aliens and excluded from the United States draft. In addition, on the U.S. mainland, the federal government forced most ethnic Japanese Americans to relocate from Pacific coastal areas to internment camps located inland of the Pacific and controlled by armed guards. It was not until 1944 that a fighting unit of Japanese American Nisei (American-born) men were recruited and trained for military service. Japanese Americans were allowed to join only the Army, not the Navy, Marines or Air Corps.[26] The 442nd Infantry Regiment, consisting primarily of Japanese Americans, fought in Europe.

Japanese Americans already in training at the start of the war had been removed from active duty shortly after Pearl Harbor, and the Army stopped accepting new Nisei recruits in early 1942.[27] However, Japanese American leaders like Mike Masaoka and War Department officials like John J. McCloy soon began to push the Roosevelt administration to allow Nisei to serve in combat. A military board was convened in June 1942 to address the issue, but their final report opposed forming a Nisei unit, citing "the universal distrust in which they [Japanese Americans] are held."[28] Despite resistance from military and War Relocation Authority leaders, the President eventually sided with the War Department, and on February 1, 1943, Roosevelt announced the creation of a segregated battalion composed of Nisei soldiers and commanded by white officers.

Chinese Americans

Unlike the Japanese Americans, 75% of Chinese American soldiers served in non-segregated units.[29] An estimated 13,000 Chinese-Americans served in World War II, with two units consisting of only Chinese-Americans, the 407th Air Service Squadron, and the 987th Signal Company, based in the China Burma India Theater.[30]

1950s desegregation

In 1948, President Truman instated Executive Order 9981, which initiated a political effort toward desegregating the armed forces and other branches of the military.[31] The Army was especially resistant to the order, and only cooperated when a shortage of troops in the Korean War required that black soldiers serve alongside their white counterparts.[31] Though military units were officially desegregated after the Korean War in 1954, racial tensions continued to give rise to segregation and in fighting amongst various units, especially during the Vietnam War.[31] The militaristic inefficiencies caused by this internal conflict incentivized military leaders to seek to establish more harmonious racial relationships in the Army. One scholar argued that, in being forced to actively root out institutional racial tensions, "the military radically revised the moral contract governing relations between it and its members."[31]

Vietnam War

During the Vietnam War, black soldiers faced two fights: one against discrimination both within the army and civilian life, and the other on the battlefield.[32] Throughout the Vietnam War, African American soldiers were more likely to be drafted, maintained higher casualty rates, and went for the most part unsung and underrepresented in popular culture.[32] However, despite some discrimination controversies, the Vietnam War was considered to be the first American war in which the U.S. military was fully integrated and at one point saw African Americans consist of 23% of the war's battlefield combat troops, while consisting of only 16.3% of the draft population.[33] This growth in battlefield combat during the Vietnam War was considered to be a turnaround from the attitude in previous wars that black men were not fit for combat.[34]

United States Air Force

When the United States Army Air Service, the precursor to the Air Force, was formed in 1918, only white soldiers were allowed.[35]

During World War II, the Army Air Service needed more people, and recruited black men to train as pilots in the Tuskegee Airmen program. Black men and women also served in administrative and support roles.[35] With the exception of Japanese-Americans, Asian-American men and women were recruited into integrated units of the Army Air Service during World War II.[36]

Tuskegee Airmen

The Tuskegee Airmen were the first African American military aviators in the United States armed forces. During World War II, African Americans in southern states remained subject to the Jim Crow laws.[N 1] The American military was racially segregated, as was much of the federal government. Though they faced fierce opposition from many members of Congress, The War Department, and the general public, the Tuskegee Airmen began their training in October 1940.[38] The Tuskegee Airmen were subjected to racial discrimination, both within and outside the army. Despite these adversities, they trained and flew with distinction. All black military pilots who trained in the United States trained at Tuskegee.

It wasn't until April 1 of 1943, that the Tuskegee airmen, also known as the 99th Fighter Squadron, began preparing for departure overseas.[38] Though their white counterparts had been sent overseas after comparably less training (some as little as five weeks), African American pilots had been given extensive instruction on radio communication, radar, combat, night flying, forced marches, and much more.[38]

Although the 477th Bombardment Group "worked up" on North American B-25 Mitchell bombers, they never served in combat. The Tuskegee 332nd Fighter Group was the only operational unit, first sent overseas as part of Operation Torch, then seeing action in Sicily and Italy. They were deployed as bomber escorts in Europe, where they were very successful.[39]

United States Navy

 
Robert McCray and Louis Hardwick, two sailors in the U.S. Navy lost at sea, 1917-18
 
"Enlisted men serving on Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides... placing 6-inch shells in magazines at the Naval Ammunition" - NARA - 520631
 
Phyllis Mae Dailey is sworn in as the first black nurse in the Navy.

War of 1812

At the beginning of the war, official U.S. policy forbade the recruitment of black sailors. However, a shortage of manpower forced the Navy to accept any able-bodied man. Modern estimates place the number of black sailors serving in the War of 1812 at 15-20% of naval manpower.[40] On some privateers, non-military ships which harassed enemy merchant ships, more than half of the crew was black. Life in the cramped quarters of the ships created a more egalitarian camaraderie, as well as mutual respect based on performance. However, many enslaved American blacks defected to the British Royal Navy after the British promised them freedom and allowed them to serve on their ships.[6] In a letter to Commodore Perry, who had complained about being given black crew members, Commodore Isaac Chauncey wrote that he had fifty black sailors on his ship, called them "excellent seamen" and said, "I have yet to learn that the color of skin, or the cut and trimmings of the coat, can affect a man's qualifications and usefulness."[41] Just before the Battle of Bladensburg Commodore Joshua Barney, on being asked by President James Madison "...if his negroes would not run on the approach of the British?" replied: “No Sir…they don't know how to run; they will die by their guns first."[42] The Commodore was correct, the men did not run, one such man was young sailor Harry Jones a free black. Jones was wounded in the final action at the Battle of Bladensburg when Commodore Barney's Naval and Marine contingent were overrun. He remained a patient at the Naval Hospital Washington DC for nearly two months.[43] African Americans like Charles Ball and Harry Jones, despite prejudice and segregation, played a significant role in the Battle of Bladensburg and contributed to the American war effort in general. Michael Shiner, a black man who worked in the Washington DC Navy yard in the early to mid 19th century, chronicled the War of 1812, as well as the racial tension of the era, in his diary.[44]

1839: number of black sailors reduced

From the end of the War of 1812 until the Civil War, modern scholars have had little reliable data regarding the number of black men in the naval service. The fortuitous discovery of a remarkable letter from Commodore Lewis Warrington, dated 17 September 1839, gives a better picture of the recruitment of African Americans during this period. Commodore Warrington was a vocal critic of black recruitment, writing "I deem it proper to represent to you what is a considered a great inconvenience if not an evil; and that is the number of negroes which are entered at various places for the general Service" [45] Nonetheless Warrington to make his case that too many blacks were already in the naval service forwarded to the Secretary of the Navy a memorandum enumerating the number of black seamen recruited over a one-year period at five naval recruiting stations. This document provides data for naval recruiting stations at New York City, Philadelphia Pa., Baltimore Md., Boston Ma., and Norfolk Va. In total for that year, 1016 men were entered for naval service, “of which 122 were Black” or 12% of the total.[46][47] On 13 September 1839, acting Secretary of the Navy, Isaac Chauncey issued a circular declaring that in view of complaints, the number of blacks in the naval service would henceforth be no more than 5 percent of the total number entered under any circumstances and no slave was to be entered under any circumstances.[48]

American Civil War

Unlike the U.S. Army, the U.S. Navy was integrated during the Civil War. During the 1840s, federal regulations limited black sailors to 5 percent of the enlisted force, but during the Civil War black participation grew to 20 per cent of the Union navy's total enlisted force, nearly double the percentage that served in the Army. Almost eighteen thousand men of African descent, and eleven women, served in the U.S. Navy during the Civil War. The ranking and status of black crew members depended on whether they had come on board as free or formerly enslaved, with the latter classified as "Boys" and given lower pay and rating.[4]

World War I

On Navy ships, black sailors frequently worked as mess attendants, firemen, or coal passers, who hauled massive quantities of coal to fuel the ships. They were also promoted to petty officers. Navy ships continued to be integrated.[41][49]

Interwar period

"The Navy's racial segregation policies limited African Americans' participation in World War I and, after the war, barred black enlistments altogether from 1919 to 1932. The only black sailors in uniform during that period were the ones aboard in 1919 who were allowed to stay to retire."

In 1932, blacks were allowed to serve on U.S. Navy ships as stewards and mess attendants.[50]

World War II

African Americans

In June 1940, the U.S. Navy had 4,007 African American personnel, representing 2.3 percent of its total strength of nearly 170,000. All of these African Americans were enlisted men, and with the exception of six regular-rated seamen, all were steward's mates. They were characterized by the black press as "seagoing bellhops." Within a month after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the number of African Americans in the Navy had increased to 5,026; however, they were still restricted to working as steward's mates.[51] One exception was the black navy bandmaster Alton Augustus Adams, who was recalled to active duty after Pearl Harbor along with eight other black musicians and sent to Guantanamo Bay, creating the Navy's first racially integrated ensemble.[52]

The destroyer-escort USS Mason was the only Navy vessel in World War II with an entirely black crew who were not cooks or waiters. In 1995, 11 surviving crew members were all given belated recognition and letters of commendation from Navy Secretary John Dalton for having braved harsh weather and quickly welding the cracks in their ship so they could continue escorting support ships to England.[53]

The Navy did not allow women of color until January 25, 1945. The first African-American woman sworn into the Navy was Phyllis Mae Dailey, a nurse and Columbia University student from New York. She was the first of only four African American women to serve in the Navy during World War II.[54]

Publicity surrounding the Port Chicago disaster on July 17, 1944 and the ensuing mutiny convictions of 50 black sailors spotlighted racism in the Navy and was a major impetus for Circular Order 48-46,[55] published on February 27, 1946, which desegregated the Navy.

African American Seabees

 
Construction divers from the 34th CB at Gavutu, Solomon Islands, Nov. 8, 1943 installing a marine railway.
 
80th Naval Construction Battalion color guard. The 80th CB was the second of two African American battalions in the Naval Construction Force known as the Seabees
 
"17th Special" Seabees with the 7th Marines on Peleliu made national news in an official U.S. Navy press release.[56] NARA-532537

In February 1942 CNO Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark recommended African Americans for ratings in the construction trades. In April the Navy announced it would enlist African Americans in the first segregated construction battalions (or "CBs").[57] There were only two regular CBs (better known as "Seabees") that were entirely segregated units: the 34th[58] and 80th[59] NCBs. Both units enlisted white Southern officers and black sailors. Both battalions experienced problems with this arrangement which led to the replacement of the officers.

The Navy had a huge need for cargo handlers.[60] The lack of stevedores for unloading ships in combat zones was creating a problem. On 18 September 1942 authorization was granted for the formation of a different type of CB denoted by the tag "Special" for cargo handling.[60] The Navy created 17 Special and two regular CBs, all of which had white officers.[57] Over 14,000 African American military personnel were enlisted in these units over the course of World War II.[57] By the end of the war, 41 Special Construction Battalions were commissioned, 15 of which remained segregated. The Special CBs later became the first fully integrated units in the U.S. Navy.[61] The war's end brought the decommissioning of every one of these units.

The Seabees carried out important infrastructural work overseas on behalf of the Navy.[57] This included the construction of roads, housing, storage units, airfields, and bridges.[57] They also fought alongside Army troops. Of particular note were the actions of the 17th Special at Peleliu 15–18 September 1944. On D-day, the 7th Marines found themselves outnumbered and unable to get their wounded to safety. 2 segregated companies of the 16 Marine Field Depot and 17th Special Seabee came to their aid. The Japanese mounted a counter-attack at 0200 hours on D-day night. By the time it was over nearly the entire 17th had volunteered to hump ammunition to the front lines on the stretchers they had used to save the wounded. They also volunteered to supplement the lack of troops to man the lines. The 17th remained with the 7th Marines until the right flank had been secured.[62][63][64][65][66][67] Half of the 200 African American Seabees which aided in this battle became casualties during the first week of combat.[57] According to the Military History Encyclopedia on the Web, were it not for the "Black Marine shore party personnel" the counterattack on the 7th Marines would not have been repulsed.[68]

Asian Americans

Prior to World War II, the U.S. Navy had recruited Chinese Americans but they had been restricted to serve only as stewards;[71] This continued until May 1942, when restrictions ceased and they were allowed to serve in other ratings.[71] The Korean-American Susan Ahn Cuddy was the first Asian-American woman to join the Navy in 1942 and the first female to operate flexible-mount or turret-mounted machine guns on an aircraft in the Navy.[72] The Navy refused to accept Japanese-American recruits throughout World War II.[73]

United States Marine Corps

 
Howard P. Perry, the first African-American US Marine Corps recruit to arrive at Montford Point training camp. He enlisted in July 1942.

In 1776 and 1777, a dozen African American Marines served in the American Revolutionary War, but from 1798 to 1942, the USMC followed a racially discriminatory policy of denying African Americans the opportunity to serve as Marines. For 144 years, the Marines recruited primarily European Americans and Hispanic Americans, along with a few Asian Americans.

The USMC opened its doors to African Americans in June 1942, with the acceptance of African Americans as recruits in segregated all-black units. Other races were accepted somewhat more easily, joining white Marine units. For the next few decades, the incorporation of black troops was not widely accepted within the Corps, nor was desegregation smoothly or quickly achieved.

Spurred by executive orders in 1941 and 1948, the integration of non-white USMC personnel proceeded in stages from segregated battalions in 1942, to unified training in 1949, and finally full integration in 1960.[74]

By 2006, approximately 20% of the USMC was Black American and 15–18% Hispanic;[75] slightly more than the 30 to 31% of the U.S. ratio of minorities in the general population.[76]

Background

The first African American to fight in a Marine role was John Martin, also known as Keto, the slave of a Delaware man, recruited in April 1776 without his owner's permission by Captain of the Marines Miles Pennington of the Continental brig USS Reprisal. Martin served with the Marine platoon on the Reprisal for a year and a half, involved in hard ship-to-ship fighting, but was lost with the rest of his unit when the brig sank in October 1777.[3]

At least 12 other black men served with various American Marine units in 1776–1777; more may have been in service but not identified as blacks in the records. However, in 1798 when the Marine Corps was officially re-instituted, Secretary of War James McHenry specified in its rules: "No Negro, Mulatto or Indian to be enlisted".[3] Marine Commandant William Ward Burrows instructed his recruiters regarding USMC racial policy, "You can make use of Blacks and Mulattoes while you recruit, but you cannot enlist them."[3] This policy was designed to set a higher standard of unit cohesion for Marines so that they would remain loyal, maintain shipboard discipline and help put down mutinies, as it was believed a multiracial crew would cause disputes and thus lower unit cohesion.[3]

The Marine Corps, being a combat arm of the Navy, did not recruit any black soldiers: instead, the USMC was serviced by US Navy supply personnel including black laborers. Unlike the United States Army which had separate regiments that a soldier could remain in for his entire military career, Marines were individually transferred to various ship's detachments and naval bases. After World War I, the number of blacks in both the Navy and the Army was reduced to about 1.5% of the total number of active servicemen, a proportion much lower than the number of blacks in the general population.[35]

 
Alfred Masters is the first African-American to enlist in the US Marine Corps since the Revolutionary War and after Executive Order 8802. Masters enlisted June 1, 1942, arrived at Montford Point Nov 17, 1942, and rose to the rank of Technical Sergeant.[12]

Franklin Roosevelt administration

 
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt prohibited racial discrimination in the military.[35]

During the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the growing political power of African Americans was increasingly felt in Washington, DC. Civil rights groups such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the National Urban League, and the National Negro Congress called for greater equality between the races. In 1938, the Committee on Participation of Negroes in the National Defense Program was formed by the Pittsburgh Courier, a newspaper with a large black readership. Further calls to increase the proportion of blacks in the military were published in 1939.[35][77]

After wars broke out in the late 1930s in Africa, China and Europe, black community leaders determined to use the black workforce's loyalty as leverage to gain greater racial equality at home. In June 1940, the NAACP's magazine, The Crisis, published a declaration that the fighting around the world was certainly bad, "but the hysterical cries of the preachers of democracy for Europe leave us cold. We want democracy in Alabama, Arkansas, in Mississippi and Michigan, in the District of Columbia, in the Senate of the United States."[35] During the 1940 presidential election, both parties courted the black vote. Incumbent President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was re-elected, partly because substantial numbers of black voters crossed previous party lines and voted for the Democratic Party candidate.

In April 1941, the U.S. Navy convened its General Board to discuss expansion of the USMC. Major General Thomas Holcomb, Commandant of the Marines, who lived in Delaware and Washington, DC in his early years and attended private schools, said that African Americans had no right to serve as Marines. He said, "If it were a question of having a Marine Corps of 5,000 whites or 250,000 Negroes, I would rather have the whites."[77]

In 1941, civil rights activists Bayard Rustin, A. Philip Randolph, and A. J. Muste pushed Roosevelt to order fair employment for blacks in the federal government. Many rural southern African-Americans who had arrived in urban Northern and Western states in search of defense industry jobs during the second phase of the Great Migration were faced with constant discrimination in housing, on the job market, and in their recreational activities.

After the activists threatened to march on Washington D.C. in July 1941, Roosevelt - faced with a public relations disaster for his presidency and wanting to unite all Americans in striving towards defeating fascism - issued Executive Order 8802 on June 25, 1941, which ordered the elimination of racial discrimination from federal departments, agencies, the military, and private defense contractors, after which the planned march was cancelled.

Directed by Roosevelt and U.S. Navy Secretary Frank Knox to accept black recruits, Holcomb proposed a separate battalion of African Americans, a seacoast defense battalion armed with anti-aircraft and anti-shipping artillery. To make this battalion self-supporting, Holcomb determined that it would contain a rifle company, special weapons platoons, and a light tank platoon—all manned by black Marines.[77]

World War II

In early 1942, Philip Johnston, a U.S. Army veteran of World War I, suggested to the USMC that they follow the example of the Army and recruit native speakers of the Navajo language to pass important tactical messages by radio, to serve as code talkers on the battlefield. On May 5, 1942, the first group of 29 Navajo recruits was accepted at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego.[78] From 1942 to 1945, some 375 to 420 Navajo trained as code talkers, part of about 540 Marines who were native Navajo speakers during World War II. All of these soldiers served in desegregated units alongside Marines of various races.[79] A total of 874 Native Americans of various tribes served in the USMC in World War II.[26]

The USMC did not form battalions of Asian Americans. Rather, it integrated Asian American recruits with European American soldiers.[citation needed] The first Chinese American USMC officer, Wilbur Carl Sze, was commissioned as a second lieutenant in December 1943.[80][81] In contemporary times, proportionately fewer Asian Americans join the U.S. military than appear in the U.S. general population.[82]

 
Marines at Montford Point show their dress uniforms.

On June 1, 1942, the initial group of black USMC recruits was admitted, but they were not immediately trained because separate, segregated facilities had not yet been completed. The first Black enlisted Marine was Alfred Masters from Oklahoma City who enlisted June 1, 1942 at 12:01 midnight. Black volunteers began their basic training in August at Montford Point in North Carolina, a satellite base to Marine Barracks, New River, later called Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune. The first black recruit to arrive in camp was Howard P. Perry on August 26, followed that day by 12 others.[83] Perry enlisted in July. These and subsequent recruits were organized into the 51st Defense Battalion,[84] a static artillery unit intended to hold land against attack.

By October 29, only 647 of a planned 1,200 recruits had passed entrance examinations: to avoid forming segregated training units to teach typing, truck driving and other specialist skills necessary to run the battalion, Holcomb required more than half of the recruits to demonstrate proficiency in these skills prior to acceptance.[77] This requirement was dropped in view of the delay it caused in bringing the battalion up to strength. Recruits were taught specialist skills by white USMC instructors brought into Montford Point, or they were sent to nearby Army classes.[77]

The black recruits were not allowed in Camp Lejeune unless accompanied by a white Marine, and their service papers were stamped "Colored".[85] Although the U.S. was by this time fully engaged in war, the recruits were assigned to inactive duty in the Marine Corps Reserve. Their units were segregated, as all the enlisted servicemen were black, with white officers and drill instructors. The commander of the black Marines at Montford Point was Samuel A. Woods Jr who worked to enforce segregation, protecting his troops from being detained by local authorities while they were visiting town.[86] By early 1943, the white drill instructors were leaving for war and were being replaced by black sergeants and corporals.[85]

 
Members of the 3d Ammunition Company, part of the 2nd Marine Division, relax with a captured bicycle after the Battle of Saipan

After accepting more black recruits, the USMC formed the 52nd Defense Battalion. Both the 51st and 52nd shipped out to fight in the Pacific War, but as defense units holding land far behind the front lines they did not see much action.[87] In total, 19,168 African Americans joined the Marines, about 4% of the USMC's strength; some 75% of them performed their duties overseas. About 8,000 black USMC stevedores and ammunition handlers served under enemy fire during offensive operations in the Pacific. Following the June 1944 Battle of Saipan, USMC General Alexander Vandegrift said of the steadfast performance of the all-black 3d Marine Ammunition Company: "The Negro Marines are no longer on trial. They are Marines, period."[74]

 
D-day Peleliu, African Americans of one of the two segregated units that supported the 7th Marines - the 16th Marine Field Depot or the 17th Naval Construction Battalion Special take a break in the 115 degree heat., 09-15-1944 - NARA - 532535

A testament to this came at Peleliu 15–18 September 1944. On D-day the 7th Marines were in a situation where they did not have enough men to man the lines and get the wounded to safety. Coming to their aid were the 2 companies of the 16 Marine Field Depot(segregated) and the 17th Special Seabee(segregated). That night the Japanese mounted a counter-attack at 0200 hours. The Field Depot Marines are recorded as again having humped ammunition, to the front lines on the stretchers they brought the wounded back on and picked up rifles to become infantrymen. By the time it was over nearly the entire 17th CB had volunteered alongside them. According to the Military History Encyclopedia on the Web, were it not for the "Black Marine shore party personnel" the counterattack on the 7th Marines would not have been repulsed.[68]

  • On Peleliu, shore party detachments from the 33rd and 73rd CBs received Presidential Unit Citations along with the primary shore party, 1st Marine Pioneers.[88] The three Commanders of the 7th Marine Ammo Co., the 11th Marine Depot Co. and the 17th Special CB all received the same commendatory letter. Before the battle was even over, Major General Rupertus USMC wrote to each that: "THE NEGRO RACE CAN WELL BE PROUD OF THE WORK PREFORMED [by the 11th Marine Depot Company/ 7th Marine Ammunition Company/ 17th CB]. THE WHOLEHEARTED CO-OPERATION AND UNTIRING EFFORTS WHICH DEMONSTRATED IN EVERY RESPECT THAT THEY APPRECIATED THE PRIVILEGE OF WEARING A MARINE UNIFORM AND SERVING WITH THE MARINES IN COMBAT. PLEASE CONVEY TO YOUR COMMAND THESE SENTIMENTS AND INFORM THEM THAT IN THE EYES OF THE ENTIRE DIVISION THEY HAVE EARNED A "WELL DONE"."[89][90] The U.S.Navy made an official press release November 28, 1944 of the 17th CB's copy of the "Well Done" letter from the Marine Corps.[91]

1946 to 1960

 
U.S. soldiers in the Korean War

After World War II, the USMC reduced in size; the number of African-American Marines dropped to 2,000 men, which was one-tenth of wartime levels.[74] In 1947, the Marine Corps forced African-American men to choose between leaving the service or becoming a steward (a food service position).[74] A few non-white Marines advanced in grade, such as Kurt Chew-Een Lee, a Chinese-American soldier who was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1946. Lee earned the Navy Cross under fire in Korea in September 1950, serving in the 1st Battalion 7th Marines; at the time this was a primarily Euro-American unit.[92]

On July 26, 1948, President Harry S. Truman issued Executive Order 9981 establishing equality of treatment and opportunity in the U.S. military regardless of race. He appointed the President's Committee on Equality of Treatment and Opportunity in the Armed Services, two of whose five members were African American. In January 1949, the Fahy Committee (nicknamed after its chairman) met to hear concerns by armed forces' leaders about the new executive order, and both the Army and the Marine Corps leadership defended their practices of segregation. The Navy and the newly formed United States Air Force announced their intentions to follow the order. The USMC said that it had only one black officer among 8,200 white ones.[93]

In late 1949, all-black USMC units persisted, but the Marines had black and white recruits beginning to train together. The few black USMC officers were assigned exclusively to black units; they were not asked to lead white Marines into combat. In 1952, after two years of the Korean War, the Marines cautiously integrated blacks into combat units.[74] In the late 1950s, black Marines were not rewarded with preferred or high-visibility assignments, such as embassy guard duty and guard duty in the nation's capital.[74] By 1960, full integration of the races had been completed by the USMC, but racial tensions flared up through the next decade, a period of civil rights activism in the larger society.[74]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ US state and local laws enacted between 1876 and 1965 that mandated de jure racial segregation in all public activities were collectively known as the "Jim Crow laws"; the name derivation from a contemporary pejorative for African Americans.[37]

External links

  • "The Army and Diversity", U.S. Army Center of Military History

Further reading

  • Chris Dixon. 2018. African Americans and the Pacific War, 1941–1945: Race, Nationality, and the Fight for Freedom. Cambridge University Press.
  • Steven White. 2019. World War II and American Racial Politics: Public Opinion, the Presidency, and Civil Rights Advocacy. Cambridge University Press.

References

  1. ^ Ingimundarson, Valur (October 1, 2004). "Immunizing against the American Other: Racism, Nationalism, and Gender in U.S.-Icelandic Military Relations during the Cold War". Journal of Cold War Studies. 6 (4): 65–88. doi:10.1162/1520397042350892. ISSN 1520-3972. S2CID 57559468.
  2. ^ a b Hartgrove, W. B. (April 1, 1916). "The Negro Soldier in the American Revolution". The Journal of Negro History. 1 (2): 110–131. doi:10.2307/3035634. ISSN 0022-2992. JSTOR 3035634. S2CID 149621545.
  3. ^ a b c d e Shaw, Henry I., Jr.; Donnelly, Ralph W. (2002). "Blacks in the Marine Corps" (PDF). Washington, DC: History and Museums Division, Headquarters USMC. Retrieved June 1, 2011.
  4. ^ a b "blackinblue". www.navyandmarine.org. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  5. ^ a b Greene, Lorenzo J. (1951). "The Negro in the War of 1812 and the Civil War". Negro History Bulletin. 14 (6): 133–138. ISSN 0028-2529. JSTOR 44212449.
  6. ^ a b . PBS. Archived from the original on April 9, 2019. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  7. ^ Herbert Aptheker, "Negro Casualties in the Civil War", The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 32, No. 1. (Jan., 1947), pp. 12.
  8. ^ Gary Y. Okihiro, American History Unbound: Asians and Pacific Islanders, Univ. of California Press, Aug 25, 2015, p.88
  9. ^ Chap. CCXCIX. 14 Stat. 332 from "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U. S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 - 1875". Library of Congress, Law Library of Congress. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  10. ^ "Buffalo Soldiers" (PDF). National Park Service.
  11. ^ Braafladt, Kevin (January 28, 2021). "The story of the only regiment commanded entirely by black officers during World War I". Military Times. Retrieved April 23, 2021.
  12. ^ a b "The Philippine Scouts". On Point. 6 (1): 6. 2000. ISSN 2577-1337. JSTOR 44608183.
  13. ^ a b c d Bryan, Jami L. (2002). "Fighting for Respect: African Americans in World War I". On Point. 8 (4): 11–14. ISSN 2577-1337. JSTOR 44610299.
  14. ^ Mennell, James (1999). ""African-Americans and the Selective Service Act of 1917."". The Journal of Negro History. 84 (1999) (3): 275–87. doi:10.2307/2649006. JSTOR 2649006. S2CID 150150712. Retrieved July 8, 2022.
  15. ^ Chad L. Williams, Torchbearers of Democracy: African American Soldiers in the World War I Era. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2010; pg. 53.
  16. ^ Williams, Torchbearers of Democracy, pg. 2.
  17. ^ Williams, Torchbearers of Democracy, pg. 54.
  18. ^ Nelson, Peter (2009). A More Unbending Battle: The Harlem Hellfighter's Struggle for Freedom in WWI and Equality at Home. Basic Books. pp. 204–205. ISBN 978-0-7867-4467-1.
  19. ^ African Americans in the Military during World War I. August 6, 2020.
  20. ^ "The Army and Diversity - U.S. Army Center of Military History". history.army.mil. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  21. ^ McNaughton, James C. (2006). Nisei Linguists: Japanese Americans in the Military Intelligence Service During World War II. Washington, D.C.: Department of the Army. p. 87. ISBN 0-16-072957-2. Retrieved May 26, 2011. The War Department already had several long-serving segregated units for African Americans, Puerto Ricans, and Filipinos and established several more during 1942. The Office of War information saw propaganda value in having combat units of different nationalities. Thus during 1942 the War Department organized the 1st Filipino infantry in California and battalion-size units of Norwegians, Austrians, and Greeks.
  22. ^ a b c d e Kersten, Andrew E. (2002). "African Americans and World War II". OAH Magazine of History. 16 (3): 13–17. doi:10.1093/maghis/16.3.13. ISSN 0882-228X. JSTOR 25163520.
  23. ^ Gates, Henry Louis; Root, Jr | Originally posted on The (January 14, 2013). "Segregation in the Armed Forces During World War II - African American History Blog". PBS. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  24. ^ Osur, Alan M (January 16, 1977). "Blacks in the Army Air Forces during World War II: The Problem of Race Relations" (PDF). Defense Technical Information Center. US Department of Defense. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  25. ^ reporter, Ted Gregory, Tribune staff. "Forgotten war nurses keep their story alive". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  26. ^ a b "The Contradictions of World War II". The National Center for the Preservation of Democracy. Retrieved June 1, 2011.
  27. ^ Niiya, Brian. "Milton Eisenhower". Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved November 11, 2014.
  28. ^ Duus, Masayo. Unlikely Liberators: The Men of the 100th and the 442nd (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1987), p 56.
  29. ^ Williams, Rudi (June 3, 2005). . American Forces Press Service. U.S. Department of Defense. Archived from the original on June 15, 2007.
  30. ^ Guthrie, Julian (October 2, 2009). "WWII all-Chinese American unit reminisces". SFGate. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  31. ^ a b c d Burk, James; Espinoza, Evelyn (2012). "Race Relations Within the US Military". Annual Review of Sociology. 38: 401–422. doi:10.1146/annurev-soc-071811-145501. ISSN 0360-0572. JSTOR 23254602.
  32. ^ a b WOODMAN, BRIAN J. (2001). "Represented in the Margins: Images of African American Soldiers in Vietnam War Combat Films". Journal of Film and Video. 53 (2/3): 38–60. ISSN 0742-4671. JSTOR 20688356.
  33. ^ Chow, Andrew R.; Bates, Josiah (June 12, 2020). "As Da 5 Bloods Hits Netflix, Black Vietnam Veterans Recall the Real Injustices They Faced During and After the War". Time. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
  34. ^ "African-Americans In Combat". PBS. Retrieved November 29, 2021.
  35. ^ a b c d e f MacGregor, Morris J., Jr. (1985). "Introduction". I: Integration of the Armed Forces, 1940–1965. Defense Studies. Washington, DC: US Army, Center of Military History.
  36. ^ James C. McNaughton (August 3, 2009). . Center of Military History. United States Army. Archived from the original on April 8, 2010. Retrieved October 2, 2009.
  37. ^ Woodward and McFeely 2001, p. 6.
  38. ^ a b c E., Francis, Charles (2008). The Tuskegee airmen : the men who changed a nation. Branden Books. ISBN 978-0-8283-2189-1. OCLC 228632597.
  39. ^ Homan and Reilly (2001), pp. 81–83, 116.
  40. ^ Charles E. Brodine, Michael J. Crawford and Christine F. Hughes, editors, Ironsides! The Ship, the Men and the Wars of the USS Constitution (Fireship Press, 2007), 50.
  41. ^ a b "Negro in the Navy by Miller". public1.nhhcaws.local. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  42. ^ Elizabeth Dowling Taylor A Slave in the White House: Paul Jennings and the Madison’s Palgrave (McMillen: New York 2012), p.49.
  43. ^ Register of Patients at Naval Hospital Washington DC 1814 With the Names of American Wounded from the Battle of Bladensburg Transcribed with Introduction and Notes by John G. Sharp https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/r/register-patients-naval-hospital-washington-dc-1814.html Accessed 22 May 2018
  44. ^ The Diary of Michael Shiner Relating to the History of the Washington Navy Yard 1813-1869 editor John G. Sharp (2007 and 2015) accessed 23 August 2018 https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/d/diary-of-michael-shiner.html
  45. ^ Warrington to Paulding, 9 September 1839, NARA M125, “Captains Letters” 1 Sept 1839 -30 Sept 1839, letter number 38
  46. ^ John G. Sharp The Recruitment of African Americans in the U.S. Navy 1839 Naval History and Heritage Command 2019 accessed 30 September 2019 https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/r/the-recruitment-of-african-americans-in-the-us-navy-1839.html
  47. ^ Warrington to Paulding, 19 September 1839, NARA M125, “Captains Letters” 1 Sept 1839 -30 Sept 1839, letter number 58, 1-3
  48. ^ NARA RG45 Acting Secretary of the Navy Isaac Chauncey Circular, September 13, 1839, Circulars and General Orders, I ,35
  49. ^ "The Steel Navy - Steel Navy". www.steelnavy.org. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  50. ^ "Defense.gov News Article: African Americans in the Navy". archive.defense.gov. Retrieved January 26, 2019.
  51. ^ MacGregor, Jr., Morris J. (1985). INTEGRATION OF THE ARMED FORCES 1940-1965. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, United States Army.
  52. ^ Adams, Alton Augustus (2008). THE MEMOIRS OF ALTON AUGUSTUS ADAMS, FIRST BLACK BANDMASTER OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520251311.
  53. ^ "Black Crew of World War II Navy Ship Recognized for Heroism", New York Times, Published: February 19, 1995, Retrieved October 5, 2016
  54. ^ Roussel, Meg. "Phyllis Mae Dailey: First Black Navy Nurse - The National WWII Museum Blog." The National WWII Museum Blog. 2012. Accessed August 02, 2016. http://www.nww2m.com/2012/03/phyllis-mae-dailey-first-black-navy-nurse/.
  55. ^ MacGregor, Morris J. (1981). Integration of the Armed Forces, 1940-1965. Government Printing Office. p. 168. ISBN 9780160019258. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
  56. ^ Antill, Peter (2003), Peleliu, battle for (Operation Stalemate II) – The Pacific War's Forgotten Battle, September–November 1944, "HITTING THE BEACH 3rd paragraph" [1]
  57. ^ a b c d e f M., Bielakowski, Alexander (March 20, 2012). African American troops in World War II. ISBN 978-1-78096-543-7. OCLC 1274595361.
  58. ^ Thirty Fourth Naval Construction Battalion, Cmdr Lester M. Marx, Schwabacher Frey Company, San Francisco, CA, 1946 [2]
  59. ^ 80th Naval Construction Battalion, Bickford Engraving And Electrotype Co. 20 Matheewson Street, Providence, RI, 1946 [3]
  60. ^ a b This week in Seabee History, Sept 17–23, Seabee online Magazine, Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Washington Navy Yard, DC [4]
  61. ^ Seabeemagazine online 2014/03/06
  62. ^ Ratomski, John J. "Peleliu Shore Party". Tribute to Michael A. Lazaro and all other Peleliu Veterans. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  63. ^ "17th Special NCB cruisebook" (PDF). Naval History and Heritage Command. p. 29. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  64. ^ "Seabees of 17th Special Naval Construction Battalion wait to assist wounded of 7th Marines". World War II Database. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  65. ^ "African-American Marines of 16th Field Depot Rest on Peleliu". World War II Database. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  66. ^ "17 Special Naval Construction Battalion" (PDF). Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  67. ^ Princeton University Library, Marine Corps Chevron, Vol 3 Number 48, 2 December 1944 [5]
  68. ^ a b Peleliu, battle for (Operation Stalemate II) – The Pacific War's Forgotten Battle, September–November 1944, (section: Hitting the Beach, 3rd paragraph), Military History Encyclopedia on the Web, by: Peter D Antill, Tristan Dugdale-Pointon, and Dr John Rickard, [6]
  69. ^ The Sextant, Building for a Nation and for Equality: African American Seabees in World War II – March 4, 2014, Dr. Frank A. Blazich Jr., U.S. Navy Seabee Museum, Naval History and Heritage Command webpage [7]
  70. ^ Breaking Down Barriers: The 34th Naval Construction Battalion, by the Seabee Museum, Port Huemene, CA. Feb 7 2018 [8]
  71. ^ a b Wong, Kevin Scott (2005). Americans first: Chinese Americans and the Second World War. Harvard University Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-674-01671-2. Retrieved October 2, 2009.
  72. ^ "Celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islanders in Naval History". The Sextant. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  73. ^ . Archived from the original on January 8, 2013. Retrieved January 7, 2013.
  74. ^ a b c d e f g Morris, Steven (December 1969). "How Blacks Upset The Marine Corps: 'New Breed' leathernecks are tackling racist vestiges". Ebony. Johnson Publishing Company. 25 (2): 55–58. ISSN 0012-9011.
  75. ^ Philpott, Tom (October 25, 2007). . The Philadelphia Veterans Multi Service and Educational Center. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
  76. ^ Sifuentes, Edward (July 30, 2007). "Marines concerned over minority enlistment". North County Times. Retrieved May 31, 2011.[permanent dead link]
  77. ^ a b c d e MacGregor, Morris J. (1981). Center of Military History, U.S. Army (ed.). Integration of the Armed Forces, 1940–1965. Government Printing Office. pp. 100–102. ISBN 0-16-001925-7.
  78. ^ "Navajo Code Talkers: World War II Fact Sheet". U.S. Naval Historical Center. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
  79. ^ Molnar, Alexander, Jr. (August 1997). "Navajo Code Talkers: World War II History & Facts". California Indian Education. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
  80. ^ Defense Equal Opportunity Management Institute. . Chinese Historical and Cultural Project. Archived from the original on January 30, 2009. Retrieved June 1, 2011.
  81. ^ "apa-usmc02". Asian Pacific American Heritage Month 2002. Department of Defense. 2002. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
  82. ^ Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (OUSD). (PDF). Center for Naval Analyses (CNA). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 7, 2011. Retrieved June 1, 2011.
  83. ^ DeClouet, Fred (2000). First Black Marines: Vanguard of a Legacy. AuthorHouse. pp. 5–6. ISBN 1-58820-120-1.
  84. ^ Moses, Meloney R. (January 30, 2009). . Marine Corps Base Quantico. Archived from the original on July 25, 2011. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
  85. ^ a b "Marine Corps Integrates!". African American Registry. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
  86. ^ Nalty, Bernard C. "The Right to Fight: African-American Marines in World War II". Marines in World War II Commemorative Series. National Park Service. Archived from the original on August 5, 2012. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
  87. ^ Sutherland, Jonathan (2004). African Americans at War: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 477. ISBN 1-57607-746-2.
  88. ^ 1st Marine Pioneers, PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION, First Marine Division, Reinforced, Assault and seizure of Peleliu and Ngesebus, Palau Islands, Part II. UNIT AWARDS, Section 1, Navy-Marine Corps Awards Manual(Rev 1953) p.15 Naval History and Heritage Command, [9]
  89. ^ The Right to Fight:African American Marines in WWII, Peleliu and Iwo Jima, Bernard C. Naulty, Marine Corps Historical Center, Building 58, Washington Navy Yard, Washington D.C. 20374, 1974, PCN 190-003132-00 [10]
  90. ^ African Americans at War: an Encyclopedia, Volume I, Jonathan D. Sutherland, ABC, CLIO, Santa Barbara, Ca, 2004, p. 480, ISBN 1-57607-746-2[11]
  91. ^ "17th Special NCB cruisebook" (PDF). Naval History and Heritage Command. p. 29. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  92. ^ "Asian-Americans in the United States Military during the Korean War". Factsheet. Atlantic City, New Jersey: New Jersey Korean War Memorial. Retrieved June 1, 2011.
  93. ^ "Desegregation of the Armed Forces: Chronology". Harry S. Truman Library. Retrieved June 1, 2011.

racial, segregation, united, states, armed, forces, includes, separation, white, white, american, troops, bans, people, color, serving, military, restrictions, people, color, supporting, roles, military, since, american, revolutionary, each, branch, armed, for. Racial segregation in the United States Armed Forces includes the separation of white and non white American troops bans on people of color serving in the military and restrictions of people of color to supporting roles in the military Since the American Revolutionary War each branch of the Armed Forces has implemented different policies surrounding racial segregation Though Executive Order 9981 officially ended segregation in the Armed Forces in 1948 some forms of racial segregation continued until after the Korean War 1 Contents 1 American Revolutionary War and the Continental Army 2 United States Army 2 1 War of 1812 2 2 American Civil War 2 3 Buffalo Soldiers 2 4 Spanish American War 2 5 Philippine Scouts 2 6 World War I 2 6 1 African Americans 2 6 2 Asian Americans 2 7 World War II 2 7 1 African Americans 2 7 2 Japanese Americans 2 7 3 Chinese Americans 2 8 1950s desegregation 2 9 Vietnam War 3 United States Air Force 3 1 Tuskegee Airmen 4 United States Navy 4 1 War of 1812 4 2 1839 number of black sailors reduced 4 3 American Civil War 4 4 World War I 4 5 Interwar period 4 6 World War II 4 6 1 African Americans 4 6 2 Asian Americans 5 United States Marine Corps 5 1 Background 5 2 Franklin Roosevelt administration 5 3 World War II 5 4 1946 to 1960 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External links 9 Further reading 10 ReferencesAmerican Revolutionary War and the Continental Army EditFurther information African Americans in the Revolutionary War Peter Salem shooting Major Pitcairn at Bunker Hill During the American Revolutionary War there were varying opinions surrounding the enlistment of black soldiers in the Continental Army Though some black soldiers had already served in colonial militias in the French and Indian War many whites believed that arming black soldiers posed a threat to white authority Despite the famous death of Crispus Attucks in the Boston Massacre in 1770 and black soldiers earning recognition in the Battle of Bunker Hill and the Battles of Lexington and Concord whites also maintained that black people were too savage and incompetent to properly serve 2 Because of fears of an armed slave insurrection one of George Washington s first acts as Commander in Chief was to sign an order forbidding the recruitment of any black person as well as any unmarried unsettled person who had not been born in the colonies 2 This order was short lived Due to a shortage in manpower as well as the militaristically advantageous allowances made for black soldiers by British enemies Washington relented and allowed black soldiers to serve in the Continental Army Freedom was pledged in exchange for the enlistment of enslaved peoples though this promise was only sometimes fulfilled by masters Enslaved black soldiers in the 1st Rhode Island Regiment the first entirely nonwhite military unit were freed at the end of the war In other units black soldiers served side by side with whites One historian commented that the military during this time was more integrated than it would be in later years leading up to the Korean War Marine Commandant William Ward Burrows enforced a policy against enlisting Blacks and Mulattoes 3 United States Army EditAfter the creation of the Federal Militia Acts of 1792 the Army excluded black men and with very few exceptions the prohibition remained in effect until the second year of the Civil War 4 War of 1812 Edit Approximately 1 000 000 black people lived in the United States at the outset of the War of 1812 5 However it wasn t until America faced pivotal threats from British veterans returning from conquering Napoleon that black people were recruited to the American side 5 In 1814 2 000 free Black soldiers were trained in New York and received the same compensation as their white counterparts Due to exclusion however the majority of black soldiers either served in the U S Navy or defected to the British Royal Navy to gain their freedom 6 failed verification American Civil War Edit Main article Military history of African Americans in the American Civil War The history of African Americans in the Civil War involves 186 097 7 122 officers 178 975 enlisted African American men forming 163 units who served in the Union Army 7 African Americans also served in the Union Navy with both free African Americans and fugitives from slavery joining the fight On the Confederate side black soldiers both free and enslaved were used for labor The issue of whether to arm them and under what terms became a major source of debate among Southerners At the start of the war a Louisiana Confederate militia unit composed of free black soldiers from the extensive New Orleans Creoles of color was raised but the Confederacy refused their service On March 13 1865 the Confederate Congress enacted a statute to allow the enlistment of African Americans but few were recruited Asian and Pacific Islander troops also served with African Americans in the United States Colored Troops and a few served with white troops 8 Native Americans such as General Stand Watie s Confederate Cherokee Battalion fought in their own tribal regiments or battalions on both sides of the Civil War Company I of the 36th Colored Regiment Buffalo Soldiers Edit The Buffalo Soldiers were established by Congress in 1866 as the first peacetime all black regiments in the regular U S Army 9 They were tasked with guarding settlements on the western frontier this involved fighting the native people and bandits that frequented and occupied the area The Buffalo soldiers were paid 13 a month and maintained some of the lowest desertion rates in the Army 10 Spanish American War Edit During the Spanish American War 1898 the Illinois 8th Infantry National Guard was federalized and made history when its all African American officer corps led the unit in the combat zone 11 Philippine Scouts Edit In February 1901 Congress passed a law allowing the Commander in chief to recruit members of the Filipino community into Army service 12 Fifty two companies all from the same regions of the country were enlisted to push past enemy lines The Philippine Scouts were known as highly proficient soldiers with low desertion rates their regiment lasted until the end of World War II in which they were compelled to surrender to Japanese troops due to a dearth of resources and numbers 12 World War I Edit African American troops of the 505th Engineers African Americans Edit WWI draft card Lower left corner to be removed by men of African background to help keep military segregated The American military was entirely segregated for African Americans during World War I Despite expressed opposition to military training for black Americans by white supremacist politicians such as Sen James K Vardaman D MS and Sen Benjamin Tillman D SC Congress passed the Selective Service Act in May 1917 13 14 This mandated draft registry included all male citizens over the age of 21 A total of 290 527 black Americans were ultimately registered for the draft The rate at which black soldiers were drafted especially by southern draft boards was much higher than that of white soldiers 13 Though black people made up only 10 percent of the United States population at the time black soldiers made up roughly 13 percent of those drafted 13 Draft board officials were instructed to tear off the lower left corner of the Selective Service forms filled out by black registrants to mark these for segregated units 15 At the start of World War I there were four regiments composed entirely of black soldiers 13 Two combat units of African Americans were established the 92nd and 93rd Infantry Divisions 16 The August 1917 Houston Riot of armed African American soldiers spurred by racist behavior by Houston police officers additionally shaped the War Department s decision making and the great majority of black soldiers were assigned jobs like the building of roads unloading of shipping and other forms of common labor 17 Including volunteers 350 000 African Americans served in the American Expeditionary Force on the western front with one combat unit the 369th Infantry Hell Fighters from Harlem being awarded the Croix de Guerre by the French allies for their bravery and competence in combat 18 The 370th Infantry was given the name The Black Devils by the Germans and following their pre war organization in Illinois were the only American unit to have black officers 19 Asian Americans Edit Asian Americans fought in integrated units during World War I and non citizens were offered citizenship after the war as a result of their service 20 World War II Edit During World War II the United States Army established several new segregated units and maintained several historic segregated units 21 African Americans Edit A military policeman on a motorcycle in front of the colored MP entrance Columbus Georgia in 1942 When the U S entered World War II the U S Army was racially segregated Despite the service of African American soldiers in every previous American conflict exclusion and discrimination from the American War Department made it difficult for black soldiers to serve In 1939 only 3 640 black soldiers were enlisted under white leadership 22 Led by Rayford W Logan head of the Committee for the Participation of Negroes in National Defense the push for greater black participation and nondiscrimination in the military was reflected in the Selective Service Act of 1940 22 Members of the NAACP also met with Roosevelt to outline demands for the betterment of black soldiers conditions in the military 22 Because of this resistance to the Army s treatment of its black soldiers military leadership began to attempt to address the issue beginning in 1943 but segregation in the armed forces remained official policy until 1948 23 24 Roosevelt s racial quotas limited the black military population to nine percent a proportion that the Army never even reached 22 Furthermore vast majority of black soldiers were never sent overseas due to exclusionary requests and discriminatory treatment from foreign governments 22 The Army Nurse Corps was established in 1901 With the exception of 18 female African American nurses who had served in World War I it remained white until 1941 when pressure from the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses and Eleanor Roosevelt caused the Army to admit black nurses A quota of 48 nurses was set and the women were segregated from white nurses and white soldiers for much of the war Over time more black nurses enlisted They were assigned to care for black soldiers and served in the China Burma India theater Australia New Guinea Liberia England and the Philippines 25 Japanese Americans Edit Oakland California Part of family unit of Japanese ancestry leave Wartime Civil Control Administer NARA 537706 Tuskegee Squadron 001 After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor men of Japanese birth and descent were classified as enemy aliens and excluded from the United States draft In addition on the U S mainland the federal government forced most ethnic Japanese Americans to relocate from Pacific coastal areas to internment camps located inland of the Pacific and controlled by armed guards It was not until 1944 that a fighting unit of Japanese American Nisei American born men were recruited and trained for military service Japanese Americans were allowed to join only the Army not the Navy Marines or Air Corps 26 The 442nd Infantry Regiment consisting primarily of Japanese Americans fought in Europe Japanese Americans already in training at the start of the war had been removed from active duty shortly after Pearl Harbor and the Army stopped accepting new Nisei recruits in early 1942 27 However Japanese American leaders like Mike Masaoka and War Department officials like John J McCloy soon began to push the Roosevelt administration to allow Nisei to serve in combat A military board was convened in June 1942 to address the issue but their final report opposed forming a Nisei unit citing the universal distrust in which they Japanese Americans are held 28 Despite resistance from military and War Relocation Authority leaders the President eventually sided with the War Department and on February 1 1943 Roosevelt announced the creation of a segregated battalion composed of Nisei soldiers and commanded by white officers Chinese Americans Edit Unlike the Japanese Americans 75 of Chinese American soldiers served in non segregated units 29 An estimated 13 000 Chinese Americans served in World War II with two units consisting of only Chinese Americans the 407th Air Service Squadron and the 987th Signal Company based in the China Burma India Theater 30 1950s desegregation Edit In 1948 President Truman instated Executive Order 9981 which initiated a political effort toward desegregating the armed forces and other branches of the military 31 The Army was especially resistant to the order and only cooperated when a shortage of troops in the Korean War required that black soldiers serve alongside their white counterparts 31 Though military units were officially desegregated after the Korean War in 1954 racial tensions continued to give rise to segregation and in fighting amongst various units especially during the Vietnam War 31 The militaristic inefficiencies caused by this internal conflict incentivized military leaders to seek to establish more harmonious racial relationships in the Army One scholar argued that in being forced to actively root out institutional racial tensions the military radically revised the moral contract governing relations between it and its members 31 Vietnam War Edit During the Vietnam War black soldiers faced two fights one against discrimination both within the army and civilian life and the other on the battlefield 32 Throughout the Vietnam War African American soldiers were more likely to be drafted maintained higher casualty rates and went for the most part unsung and underrepresented in popular culture 32 However despite some discrimination controversies the Vietnam War was considered to be the first American war in which the U S military was fully integrated and at one point saw African Americans consist of 23 of the war s battlefield combat troops while consisting of only 16 3 of the draft population 33 This growth in battlefield combat during the Vietnam War was considered to be a turnaround from the attitude in previous wars that black men were not fit for combat 34 United States Air Force EditWhen the United States Army Air Service the precursor to the Air Force was formed in 1918 only white soldiers were allowed 35 During World War II the Army Air Service needed more people and recruited black men to train as pilots in the Tuskegee Airmen program Black men and women also served in administrative and support roles 35 With the exception of Japanese Americans Asian American men and women were recruited into integrated units of the Army Air Service during World War II 36 Tuskegee Airmen Edit Main article Tuskegee Airmen The Tuskegee Airmen were the first African American military aviators in the United States armed forces During World War II African Americans in southern states remained subject to the Jim Crow laws N 1 The American military was racially segregated as was much of the federal government Though they faced fierce opposition from many members of Congress The War Department and the general public the Tuskegee Airmen began their training in October 1940 38 The Tuskegee Airmen were subjected to racial discrimination both within and outside the army Despite these adversities they trained and flew with distinction All black military pilots who trained in the United States trained at Tuskegee It wasn t until April 1 of 1943 that the Tuskegee airmen also known as the 99th Fighter Squadron began preparing for departure overseas 38 Though their white counterparts had been sent overseas after comparably less training some as little as five weeks African American pilots had been given extensive instruction on radio communication radar combat night flying forced marches and much more 38 Although the 477th Bombardment Group worked up on North American B 25 Mitchell bombers they never served in combat The Tuskegee 332nd Fighter Group was the only operational unit first sent overseas as part of Operation Torch then seeing action in Sicily and Italy They were deployed as bomber escorts in Europe where they were very successful 39 United States Navy Edit Robert McCray and Louis Hardwick two sailors in the U S Navy lost at sea 1917 18 Enlisted men serving on Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides placing 6 inch shells in magazines at the Naval Ammunition NARA 520631 Phyllis Mae Dailey is sworn in as the first black nurse in the Navy War of 1812 Edit At the beginning of the war official U S policy forbade the recruitment of black sailors However a shortage of manpower forced the Navy to accept any able bodied man Modern estimates place the number of black sailors serving in the War of 1812 at 15 20 of naval manpower 40 On some privateers non military ships which harassed enemy merchant ships more than half of the crew was black Life in the cramped quarters of the ships created a more egalitarian camaraderie as well as mutual respect based on performance However many enslaved American blacks defected to the British Royal Navy after the British promised them freedom and allowed them to serve on their ships 6 In a letter to Commodore Perry who had complained about being given black crew members Commodore Isaac Chauncey wrote that he had fifty black sailors on his ship called them excellent seamen and said I have yet to learn that the color of skin or the cut and trimmings of the coat can affect a man s qualifications and usefulness 41 Just before the Battle of Bladensburg Commodore Joshua Barney on being asked by President James Madison if his negroes would not run on the approach of the British replied No Sir they don t know how to run they will die by their guns first 42 The Commodore was correct the men did not run one such man was young sailor Harry Jones a free black Jones was wounded in the final action at the Battle of Bladensburg when Commodore Barney s Naval and Marine contingent were overrun He remained a patient at the Naval Hospital Washington DC for nearly two months 43 African Americans like Charles Ball and Harry Jones despite prejudice and segregation played a significant role in the Battle of Bladensburg and contributed to the American war effort in general Michael Shiner a black man who worked in the Washington DC Navy yard in the early to mid 19th century chronicled the War of 1812 as well as the racial tension of the era in his diary 44 1839 number of black sailors reduced Edit From the end of the War of 1812 until the Civil War modern scholars have had little reliable data regarding the number of black men in the naval service The fortuitous discovery of a remarkable letter from Commodore Lewis Warrington dated 17 September 1839 gives a better picture of the recruitment of African Americans during this period Commodore Warrington was a vocal critic of black recruitment writing I deem it proper to represent to you what is a considered a great inconvenience if not an evil and that is the number of negroes which are entered at various places for the general Service 45 Nonetheless Warrington to make his case that too many blacks were already in the naval service forwarded to the Secretary of the Navy a memorandum enumerating the number of black seamen recruited over a one year period at five naval recruiting stations This document provides data for naval recruiting stations at New York City Philadelphia Pa Baltimore Md Boston Ma and Norfolk Va In total for that year 1016 men were entered for naval service of which 122 were Black or 12 of the total 46 47 On 13 September 1839 acting Secretary of the Navy Isaac Chauncey issued a circular declaring that in view of complaints the number of blacks in the naval service would henceforth be no more than 5 percent of the total number entered under any circumstances and no slave was to be entered under any circumstances 48 American Civil War Edit Unlike the U S Army the U S Navy was integrated during the Civil War During the 1840s federal regulations limited black sailors to 5 percent of the enlisted force but during the Civil War black participation grew to 20 per cent of the Union navy s total enlisted force nearly double the percentage that served in the Army Almost eighteen thousand men of African descent and eleven women served in the U S Navy during the Civil War The ranking and status of black crew members depended on whether they had come on board as free or formerly enslaved with the latter classified as Boys and given lower pay and rating 4 World War I Edit On Navy ships black sailors frequently worked as mess attendants firemen or coal passers who hauled massive quantities of coal to fuel the ships They were also promoted to petty officers Navy ships continued to be integrated 41 49 Interwar period Edit The Navy s racial segregation policies limited African Americans participation in World War I and after the war barred black enlistments altogether from 1919 to 1932 The only black sailors in uniform during that period were the ones aboard in 1919 who were allowed to stay to retire In 1932 blacks were allowed to serve on U S Navy ships as stewards and mess attendants 50 World War II Edit African Americans Edit In June 1940 the U S Navy had 4 007 African American personnel representing 2 3 percent of its total strength of nearly 170 000 All of these African Americans were enlisted men and with the exception of six regular rated seamen all were steward s mates They were characterized by the black press as seagoing bellhops Within a month after the attack on Pearl Harbor the number of African Americans in the Navy had increased to 5 026 however they were still restricted to working as steward s mates 51 One exception was the black navy bandmaster Alton Augustus Adams who was recalled to active duty after Pearl Harbor along with eight other black musicians and sent to Guantanamo Bay creating the Navy s first racially integrated ensemble 52 The destroyer escort USS Mason was the only Navy vessel in World War II with an entirely black crew who were not cooks or waiters In 1995 11 surviving crew members were all given belated recognition and letters of commendation from Navy Secretary John Dalton for having braved harsh weather and quickly welding the cracks in their ship so they could continue escorting support ships to England 53 The Navy did not allow women of color until January 25 1945 The first African American woman sworn into the Navy was Phyllis Mae Dailey a nurse and Columbia University student from New York She was the first of only four African American women to serve in the Navy during World War II 54 Publicity surrounding the Port Chicago disaster on July 17 1944 and the ensuing mutiny convictions of 50 black sailors spotlighted racism in the Navy and was a major impetus for Circular Order 48 46 55 published on February 27 1946 which desegregated the Navy African American Seabees Construction divers from the 34th CB at Gavutu Solomon Islands Nov 8 1943 installing a marine railway 80th Naval Construction Battalion color guard The 80th CB was the second of two African American battalions in the Naval Construction Force known as the Seabees 17th Special Seabees with the 7th Marines on Peleliu made national news in an official U S Navy press release 56 NARA 532537 In February 1942 CNO Admiral Harold Rainsford Stark recommended African Americans for ratings in the construction trades In April the Navy announced it would enlist African Americans in the first segregated construction battalions or CBs 57 There were only two regular CBs better known as Seabees that were entirely segregated units the 34th 58 and 80th 59 NCBs Both units enlisted white Southern officers and black sailors Both battalions experienced problems with this arrangement which led to the replacement of the officers The Navy had a huge need for cargo handlers 60 The lack of stevedores for unloading ships in combat zones was creating a problem On 18 September 1942 authorization was granted for the formation of a different type of CB denoted by the tag Special for cargo handling 60 The Navy created 17 Special and two regular CBs all of which had white officers 57 Over 14 000 African American military personnel were enlisted in these units over the course of World War II 57 By the end of the war 41 Special Construction Battalions were commissioned 15 of which remained segregated The Special CBs later became the first fully integrated units in the U S Navy 61 The war s end brought the decommissioning of every one of these units The Seabees carried out important infrastructural work overseas on behalf of the Navy 57 This included the construction of roads housing storage units airfields and bridges 57 They also fought alongside Army troops Of particular note were the actions of the 17th Special at Peleliu 15 18 September 1944 On D day the 7th Marines found themselves outnumbered and unable to get their wounded to safety 2 segregated companies of the 16 Marine Field Depot and 17th Special Seabee came to their aid The Japanese mounted a counter attack at 0200 hours on D day night By the time it was over nearly the entire 17th had volunteered to hump ammunition to the front lines on the stretchers they had used to save the wounded They also volunteered to supplement the lack of troops to man the lines The 17th remained with the 7th Marines until the right flank had been secured 62 63 64 65 66 67 Half of the 200 African American Seabees which aided in this battle became casualties during the first week of combat 57 According to the Military History Encyclopedia on the Web were it not for the Black Marine shore party personnel the counterattack on the 7th Marines would not have been repulsed 68 African American Seabees 69 70 Asian Americans Edit Prior to World War II the U S Navy had recruited Chinese Americans but they had been restricted to serve only as stewards 71 This continued until May 1942 when restrictions ceased and they were allowed to serve in other ratings 71 The Korean American Susan Ahn Cuddy was the first Asian American woman to join the Navy in 1942 and the first female to operate flexible mount or turret mounted machine guns on an aircraft in the Navy 72 The Navy refused to accept Japanese American recruits throughout World War II 73 United States Marine Corps EditMain article Desegregation in the United States Marine Corps Howard P Perry the first African American US Marine Corps recruit to arrive at Montford Point training camp He enlisted in July 1942 In 1776 and 1777 a dozen African American Marines served in the American Revolutionary War but from 1798 to 1942 the USMC followed a racially discriminatory policy of denying African Americans the opportunity to serve as Marines For 144 years the Marines recruited primarily European Americans and Hispanic Americans along with a few Asian Americans The USMC opened its doors to African Americans in June 1942 with the acceptance of African Americans as recruits in segregated all black units Other races were accepted somewhat more easily joining white Marine units For the next few decades the incorporation of black troops was not widely accepted within the Corps nor was desegregation smoothly or quickly achieved Spurred by executive orders in 1941 and 1948 the integration of non white USMC personnel proceeded in stages from segregated battalions in 1942 to unified training in 1949 and finally full integration in 1960 74 By 2006 approximately 20 of the USMC was Black American and 15 18 Hispanic 75 slightly more than the 30 to 31 of the U S ratio of minorities in the general population 76 Background Edit The first African American to fight in a Marine role was John Martin also known as Keto the slave of a Delaware man recruited in April 1776 without his owner s permission by Captain of the Marines Miles Pennington of the Continental brig USS Reprisal Martin served with the Marine platoon on the Reprisal for a year and a half involved in hard ship to ship fighting but was lost with the rest of his unit when the brig sank in October 1777 3 At least 12 other black men served with various American Marine units in 1776 1777 more may have been in service but not identified as blacks in the records However in 1798 when the Marine Corps was officially re instituted Secretary of War James McHenry specified in its rules No Negro Mulatto or Indian to be enlisted 3 Marine Commandant William Ward Burrows instructed his recruiters regarding USMC racial policy You can make use of Blacks and Mulattoes while you recruit but you cannot enlist them 3 This policy was designed to set a higher standard of unit cohesion for Marines so that they would remain loyal maintain shipboard discipline and help put down mutinies as it was believed a multiracial crew would cause disputes and thus lower unit cohesion 3 The Marine Corps being a combat arm of the Navy did not recruit any black soldiers instead the USMC was serviced by US Navy supply personnel including black laborers Unlike the United States Army which had separate regiments that a soldier could remain in for his entire military career Marines were individually transferred to various ship s detachments and naval bases After World War I the number of blacks in both the Navy and the Army was reduced to about 1 5 of the total number of active servicemen a proportion much lower than the number of blacks in the general population 35 Alfred Masters is the first African American to enlist in the US Marine Corps since the Revolutionary War and after Executive Order 8802 Masters enlisted June 1 1942 arrived at Montford Point Nov 17 1942 and rose to the rank of Technical Sergeant 12 Franklin Roosevelt administration Edit President Franklin Delano Roosevelt prohibited racial discrimination in the military 35 During the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt the growing political power of African Americans was increasingly felt in Washington DC Civil rights groups such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP the National Urban League and the National Negro Congress called for greater equality between the races In 1938 the Committee on Participation of Negroes in the National Defense Program was formed by the Pittsburgh Courier a newspaper with a large black readership Further calls to increase the proportion of blacks in the military were published in 1939 35 77 After wars broke out in the late 1930s in Africa China and Europe black community leaders determined to use the black workforce s loyalty as leverage to gain greater racial equality at home In June 1940 the NAACP s magazine The Crisis published a declaration that the fighting around the world was certainly bad but the hysterical cries of the preachers of democracy for Europe leave us cold We want democracy in Alabama Arkansas in Mississippi and Michigan in the District of Columbia in the Senate of the United States 35 During the 1940 presidential election both parties courted the black vote Incumbent President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was re elected partly because substantial numbers of black voters crossed previous party lines and voted for the Democratic Party candidate In April 1941 the U S Navy convened its General Board to discuss expansion of the USMC Major General Thomas Holcomb Commandant of the Marines who lived in Delaware and Washington DC in his early years and attended private schools said that African Americans had no right to serve as Marines He said If it were a question of having a Marine Corps of 5 000 whites or 250 000 Negroes I would rather have the whites 77 In 1941 civil rights activists Bayard Rustin A Philip Randolph and A J Muste pushed Roosevelt to order fair employment for blacks in the federal government Many rural southern African Americans who had arrived in urban Northern and Western states in search of defense industry jobs during the second phase of the Great Migration were faced with constant discrimination in housing on the job market and in their recreational activities After the activists threatened to march on Washington D C in July 1941 Roosevelt faced with a public relations disaster for his presidency and wanting to unite all Americans in striving towards defeating fascism issued Executive Order 8802 on June 25 1941 which ordered the elimination of racial discrimination from federal departments agencies the military and private defense contractors after which the planned march was cancelled Directed by Roosevelt and U S Navy Secretary Frank Knox to accept black recruits Holcomb proposed a separate battalion of African Americans a seacoast defense battalion armed with anti aircraft and anti shipping artillery To make this battalion self supporting Holcomb determined that it would contain a rifle company special weapons platoons and a light tank platoon all manned by black Marines 77 World War II Edit In early 1942 Philip Johnston a U S Army veteran of World War I suggested to the USMC that they follow the example of the Army and recruit native speakers of the Navajo language to pass important tactical messages by radio to serve as code talkers on the battlefield On May 5 1942 the first group of 29 Navajo recruits was accepted at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego 78 From 1942 to 1945 some 375 to 420 Navajo trained as code talkers part of about 540 Marines who were native Navajo speakers during World War II All of these soldiers served in desegregated units alongside Marines of various races 79 A total of 874 Native Americans of various tribes served in the USMC in World War II 26 The USMC did not form battalions of Asian Americans Rather it integrated Asian American recruits with European American soldiers citation needed The first Chinese American USMC officer Wilbur Carl Sze was commissioned as a second lieutenant in December 1943 80 81 In contemporary times proportionately fewer Asian Americans join the U S military than appear in the U S general population 82 Marines at Montford Point show their dress uniforms On June 1 1942 the initial group of black USMC recruits was admitted but they were not immediately trained because separate segregated facilities had not yet been completed The first Black enlisted Marine was Alfred Masters from Oklahoma City who enlisted June 1 1942 at 12 01 midnight Black volunteers began their basic training in August at Montford Point in North Carolina a satellite base to Marine Barracks New River later called Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune The first black recruit to arrive in camp was Howard P Perry on August 26 followed that day by 12 others 83 Perry enlisted in July These and subsequent recruits were organized into the 51st Defense Battalion 84 a static artillery unit intended to hold land against attack By October 29 only 647 of a planned 1 200 recruits had passed entrance examinations to avoid forming segregated training units to teach typing truck driving and other specialist skills necessary to run the battalion Holcomb required more than half of the recruits to demonstrate proficiency in these skills prior to acceptance 77 This requirement was dropped in view of the delay it caused in bringing the battalion up to strength Recruits were taught specialist skills by white USMC instructors brought into Montford Point or they were sent to nearby Army classes 77 The black recruits were not allowed in Camp Lejeune unless accompanied by a white Marine and their service papers were stamped Colored 85 Although the U S was by this time fully engaged in war the recruits were assigned to inactive duty in the Marine Corps Reserve Their units were segregated as all the enlisted servicemen were black with white officers and drill instructors The commander of the black Marines at Montford Point was Samuel A Woods Jr who worked to enforce segregation protecting his troops from being detained by local authorities while they were visiting town 86 By early 1943 the white drill instructors were leaving for war and were being replaced by black sergeants and corporals 85 Members of the 3d Ammunition Company part of the 2nd Marine Division relax with a captured bicycle after the Battle of Saipan After accepting more black recruits the USMC formed the 52nd Defense Battalion Both the 51st and 52nd shipped out to fight in the Pacific War but as defense units holding land far behind the front lines they did not see much action 87 In total 19 168 African Americans joined the Marines about 4 of the USMC s strength some 75 of them performed their duties overseas About 8 000 black USMC stevedores and ammunition handlers served under enemy fire during offensive operations in the Pacific Following the June 1944 Battle of Saipan USMC General Alexander Vandegrift said of the steadfast performance of the all black 3d Marine Ammunition Company The Negro Marines are no longer on trial They are Marines period 74 D day Peleliu African Americans of one of the two segregated units that supported the 7th Marines the 16th Marine Field Depot or the 17th Naval Construction Battalion Special take a break in the 115 degree heat 09 15 1944 NARA 532535 A testament to this came at Peleliu 15 18 September 1944 On D day the 7th Marines were in a situation where they did not have enough men to man the lines and get the wounded to safety Coming to their aid were the 2 companies of the 16 Marine Field Depot segregated and the 17th Special Seabee segregated That night the Japanese mounted a counter attack at 0200 hours The Field Depot Marines are recorded as again having humped ammunition to the front lines on the stretchers they brought the wounded back on and picked up rifles to become infantrymen By the time it was over nearly the entire 17th CB had volunteered alongside them According to the Military History Encyclopedia on the Web were it not for the Black Marine shore party personnel the counterattack on the 7th Marines would not have been repulsed 68 On Peleliu shore party detachments from the 33rd and 73rd CBs received Presidential Unit Citations along with the primary shore party 1st Marine Pioneers 88 The three Commanders of the 7th Marine Ammo Co the 11th Marine Depot Co and the 17th Special CB all received the same commendatory letter Before the battle was even over Major General Rupertus USMC wrote to each that THE NEGRO RACE CAN WELL BE PROUD OF THE WORK PREFORMED by the 11th Marine Depot Company 7th Marine Ammunition Company 17th CB THE WHOLEHEARTED CO OPERATION AND UNTIRING EFFORTS WHICH DEMONSTRATED IN EVERY RESPECT THAT THEY APPRECIATED THE PRIVILEGE OF WEARING A MARINE UNIFORM AND SERVING WITH THE MARINES IN COMBAT PLEASE CONVEY TO YOUR COMMAND THESE SENTIMENTS AND INFORM THEM THAT IN THE EYES OF THE ENTIRE DIVISION THEY HAVE EARNED A WELL DONE 89 90 The U S Navy made an official press release November 28 1944 of the 17th CB s copy of the Well Done letter from the Marine Corps 91 1946 to 1960 Edit U S soldiers in the Korean War After World War II the USMC reduced in size the number of African American Marines dropped to 2 000 men which was one tenth of wartime levels 74 In 1947 the Marine Corps forced African American men to choose between leaving the service or becoming a steward a food service position 74 A few non white Marines advanced in grade such as Kurt Chew Een Lee a Chinese American soldier who was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1946 Lee earned the Navy Cross under fire in Korea in September 1950 serving in the 1st Battalion 7th Marines at the time this was a primarily Euro American unit 92 On July 26 1948 President Harry S Truman issued Executive Order 9981 establishing equality of treatment and opportunity in the U S military regardless of race He appointed the President s Committee on Equality of Treatment and Opportunity in the Armed Services two of whose five members were African American In January 1949 the Fahy Committee nicknamed after its chairman met to hear concerns by armed forces leaders about the new executive order and both the Army and the Marine Corps leadership defended their practices of segregation The Navy and the newly formed United States Air Force announced their intentions to follow the order The USMC said that it had only one black officer among 8 200 white ones 93 In late 1949 all black USMC units persisted but the Marines had black and white recruits beginning to train together The few black USMC officers were assigned exclusively to black units they were not asked to lead white Marines into combat In 1952 after two years of the Korean War the Marines cautiously integrated blacks into combat units 74 In the late 1950s black Marines were not rewarded with preferred or high visibility assignments such as embassy guard duty and guard duty in the nation s capital 74 By 1960 full integration of the races had been completed by the USMC but racial tensions flared up through the next decade a period of civil rights activism in the larger society 74 See also EditEthnic minorities in the US armed forces during World War II Hispanic Americans in World War II Military history of African Americans Military history of Asian Americans Racism against African Americans in the U S militaryNotes Edit US state and local laws enacted between 1876 and 1965 that mandated de jure racial segregation in all public activities were collectively known as the Jim Crow laws the name derivation from a contemporary pejorative for African Americans 37 External links Edit The Army and Diversity U S Army Center of Military HistoryFurther reading EditChris Dixon 2018 African Americans and the Pacific War 1941 1945 Race Nationality and the Fight for Freedom Cambridge University Press Steven White 2019 World War II and American Racial Politics Public Opinion the Presidency and Civil Rights Advocacy Cambridge University Press References Edit Ingimundarson Valur October 1 2004 Immunizing against the American Other Racism Nationalism and Gender in U S Icelandic Military Relations during the Cold War Journal of Cold War Studies 6 4 65 88 doi 10 1162 1520397042350892 ISSN 1520 3972 S2CID 57559468 a b Hartgrove W B April 1 1916 The Negro Soldier in the American Revolution The Journal of Negro History 1 2 110 131 doi 10 2307 3035634 ISSN 0022 2992 JSTOR 3035634 S2CID 149621545 a b c d e Shaw Henry I Jr Donnelly Ralph W 2002 Blacks in the Marine Corps PDF Washington DC History and Museums Division Headquarters USMC Retrieved June 1 2011 a b blackinblue www navyandmarine org Retrieved April 16 2019 a b Greene Lorenzo J 1951 The Negro in the War of 1812 and the Civil War Negro History Bulletin 14 6 133 138 ISSN 0028 2529 JSTOR 44212449 a b Black Sailors and Soldiers in the War of 1812 War of 1812 PBS Archived from the original on April 9 2019 Retrieved April 16 2019 Herbert Aptheker Negro Casualties in the Civil War The Journal of Negro History Vol 32 No 1 Jan 1947 pp 12 Gary Y Okihiro American History Unbound Asians and Pacific Islanders Univ of California Press Aug 25 2015 p 88 Chap CCXCIX 14 Stat 332 from A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 Library of Congress Law Library of Congress Retrieved March 26 2012 Buffalo Soldiers PDF National Park Service Braafladt Kevin January 28 2021 The story of the only regiment commanded entirely by black officers during World War I Military Times Retrieved April 23 2021 a b The Philippine Scouts On Point 6 1 6 2000 ISSN 2577 1337 JSTOR 44608183 a b c d Bryan Jami L 2002 Fighting for Respect African Americans in World War I On Point 8 4 11 14 ISSN 2577 1337 JSTOR 44610299 Mennell James 1999 African Americans and the Selective Service Act of 1917 The Journal of Negro History 84 1999 3 275 87 doi 10 2307 2649006 JSTOR 2649006 S2CID 150150712 Retrieved July 8 2022 Chad L Williams Torchbearers of Democracy African American Soldiers in the World War I Era Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press 2010 pg 53 Williams Torchbearers of Democracy pg 2 Williams Torchbearers of Democracy pg 54 Nelson Peter 2009 A More Unbending Battle The Harlem Hellfighter s Struggle for Freedom in WWI and Equality at Home Basic Books pp 204 205 ISBN 978 0 7867 4467 1 African Americans in the Military during World War I August 6 2020 The Army and Diversity U S Army Center of Military History history army mil Retrieved April 16 2019 McNaughton James C 2006 Nisei Linguists Japanese Americans in the Military Intelligence Service During World War II Washington D C Department of the Army p 87 ISBN 0 16 072957 2 Retrieved May 26 2011 The War Department already had several long serving segregated units for African Americans Puerto Ricans and Filipinos and established several more during 1942 The Office of War information saw propaganda value in having combat units of different nationalities Thus during 1942 the War Department organized the 1st Filipino infantry in California and battalion size units of Norwegians Austrians and Greeks a b c d e Kersten Andrew E 2002 African Americans and World War II OAH Magazine of History 16 3 13 17 doi 10 1093 maghis 16 3 13 ISSN 0882 228X JSTOR 25163520 Gates Henry Louis Root Jr Originally posted on The January 14 2013 Segregation in the Armed Forces During World War II African American History Blog PBS Retrieved April 16 2019 Osur Alan M January 16 1977 Blacks in the Army Air Forces during World War II The Problem of Race Relations PDF Defense Technical Information Center US Department of Defense Retrieved June 4 2022 reporter Ted Gregory Tribune staff Forgotten war nurses keep their story alive chicagotribune com Retrieved April 16 2019 a b The Contradictions of World War II The National Center for the Preservation of Democracy Retrieved June 1 2011 Niiya Brian Milton Eisenhower Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved November 11 2014 Duus Masayo Unlikely Liberators The Men of the 100th and the 442nd Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 1987 p 56 Williams Rudi June 3 2005 DoD s Personnel Chief Gives Asian Pacific American History Lesson American Forces Press Service U S Department of Defense Archived from the original on June 15 2007 Guthrie Julian October 2 2009 WWII all Chinese American unit reminisces SFGate Retrieved April 16 2019 a b c d Burk James Espinoza Evelyn 2012 Race Relations Within the US Military Annual Review of Sociology 38 401 422 doi 10 1146 annurev soc 071811 145501 ISSN 0360 0572 JSTOR 23254602 a b WOODMAN BRIAN J 2001 Represented in the Margins Images of African American Soldiers in Vietnam War Combat Films Journal of Film and Video 53 2 3 38 60 ISSN 0742 4671 JSTOR 20688356 Chow Andrew R Bates Josiah June 12 2020 As Da 5 Bloods Hits Netflix Black Vietnam Veterans Recall the Real Injustices They Faced During and After the War Time Retrieved November 28 2021 African Americans In Combat PBS Retrieved November 29 2021 a b c d e f MacGregor Morris J Jr 1985 Introduction I Integration of the Armed Forces 1940 1965 Defense Studies Washington DC US Army Center of Military History James C McNaughton August 3 2009 Chinese Americans in World War II Center of Military History United States Army Archived from the original on April 8 2010 Retrieved October 2 2009 Woodward and McFeely 2001 p 6 a b c E Francis Charles 2008 The Tuskegee airmen the men who changed a nation Branden Books ISBN 978 0 8283 2189 1 OCLC 228632597 Homan and Reilly 2001 pp 81 83 116 Charles E Brodine Michael J Crawford and Christine F Hughes editors Ironsides The Ship the Men and the Wars of the USS Constitution Fireship Press 2007 50 a b Negro in the Navy by Miller public1 nhhcaws local Retrieved April 16 2019 Elizabeth Dowling Taylor A Slave in the White House Paul Jennings and the Madison s Palgrave McMillen New York 2012 p 49 Register of Patients at Naval Hospital Washington DC 1814 With the Names of American Wounded from the Battle of Bladensburg Transcribed with Introduction and Notes by John G Sharp https www history navy mil research library online reading room title list alphabetically r register patients naval hospital washington dc 1814 html Accessed 22 May 2018 The Diary of Michael Shiner Relating to the History of the Washington Navy Yard 1813 1869 editor John G Sharp 2007 and 2015 accessed 23 August 2018 https www history navy mil research library online reading room title list alphabetically d diary of michael shiner html Warrington to Paulding 9 September 1839 NARA M125 Captains Letters 1 Sept 1839 30 Sept 1839 letter number 38 John G Sharp The Recruitment of African Americans in the U S Navy 1839 Naval History and Heritage Command 2019 accessed 30 September 2019 https www history navy mil research library online reading room title list alphabetically r the recruitment of african americans in the us navy 1839 html Warrington to Paulding 19 September 1839 NARA M125 Captains Letters 1 Sept 1839 30 Sept 1839 letter number 58 1 3 NARA RG45 Acting Secretary of the Navy Isaac Chauncey Circular September 13 1839 Circulars and General Orders I 35 The Steel Navy Steel Navy www steelnavy org Retrieved April 16 2019 Defense gov News Article African Americans in the Navy archive defense gov Retrieved January 26 2019 MacGregor Jr Morris J 1985 INTEGRATION OF THE ARMED FORCES 1940 1965 Washington D C Center of Military History United States Army Adams Alton Augustus 2008 THE MEMOIRS OF ALTON AUGUSTUS ADAMS FIRST BLACK BANDMASTER OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520251311 Black Crew of World War II Navy Ship Recognized for Heroism New York Times Published February 19 1995 Retrieved October 5 2016 Roussel Meg Phyllis Mae Dailey First Black Navy Nurse The National WWII Museum Blog The National WWII Museum Blog 2012 Accessed August 02 2016 http www nww2m com 2012 03 phyllis mae dailey first black navy nurse MacGregor Morris J 1981 Integration of the Armed Forces 1940 1965 Government Printing Office p 168 ISBN 9780160019258 Retrieved November 12 2018 Antill Peter 2003 Peleliu battle for Operation Stalemate II The Pacific War s Forgotten Battle September November 1944 HITTING THE BEACH 3rd paragraph 1 a b c d e f M Bielakowski Alexander March 20 2012 African American troops in World War II ISBN 978 1 78096 543 7 OCLC 1274595361 Thirty Fourth Naval Construction Battalion Cmdr Lester M Marx Schwabacher Frey Company San Francisco CA 1946 2 80th Naval Construction Battalion Bickford Engraving And Electrotype Co 20 Matheewson Street Providence RI 1946 3 a b This week in Seabee History Sept 17 23 Seabee online Magazine Naval Facilities Engineering Command Washington Navy Yard DC 4 Seabeemagazine online 2014 03 06 Ratomski John J Peleliu Shore Party Tribute to Michael A Lazaro and all other Peleliu Veterans Retrieved October 18 2017 17th Special NCB cruisebook PDF Naval History and Heritage Command p 29 Retrieved October 18 2017 Seabees of 17th Special Naval Construction Battalion wait to assist wounded of 7th Marines World War II Database Retrieved October 18 2017 African American Marines of 16th Field Depot Rest on Peleliu World War II Database Retrieved October 18 2017 17 Special Naval Construction Battalion PDF Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved October 18 2017 Princeton University Library Marine Corps Chevron Vol 3 Number 48 2 December 1944 5 a b Peleliu battle for Operation Stalemate II The Pacific War s Forgotten Battle September November 1944 section Hitting the Beach 3rd paragraph Military History Encyclopedia on the Web by Peter D Antill Tristan Dugdale Pointon and Dr John Rickard 6 The Sextant Building for a Nation and for Equality African American Seabees in World War II March 4 2014 Dr Frank A Blazich Jr U S Navy Seabee Museum Naval History and Heritage Command webpage 7 Breaking Down Barriers The 34th Naval Construction Battalion by the Seabee Museum Port Huemene CA Feb 7 2018 8 a b Wong Kevin Scott 2005 Americans first Chinese Americans and the Second World War Harvard University Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 674 01671 2 Retrieved October 2 2009 Celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islanders in Naval History The Sextant Retrieved April 16 2019 Women in Military Service for America Memorial Archived from the original on January 8 2013 Retrieved January 7 2013 a b c d e f g Morris Steven December 1969 How Blacks Upset The Marine Corps New Breed leathernecks are tackling racist vestiges Ebony Johnson Publishing Company 25 2 55 58 ISSN 0012 9011 Philpott Tom October 25 2007 Marines Begin to Reverse Sharp Drop in Black Recruits The Philadelphia Veterans Multi Service and Educational Center Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved May 31 2011 Sifuentes Edward July 30 2007 Marines concerned over minority enlistment North County Times Retrieved May 31 2011 permanent dead link a b c d e MacGregor Morris J 1981 Center of Military History U S Army ed Integration of the Armed Forces 1940 1965 Government Printing Office pp 100 102 ISBN 0 16 001925 7 Navajo Code Talkers World War II Fact Sheet U S Naval Historical Center Retrieved May 31 2011 Molnar Alexander Jr August 1997 Navajo Code Talkers World War II History amp Facts California Indian Education Retrieved May 31 2011 Defense Equal Opportunity Management Institute Asian Pacific American Military Timeline Chinese Historical and Cultural Project Archived from the original on January 30 2009 Retrieved June 1 2011 apa usmc02 Asian Pacific American Heritage Month 2002 Department of Defense 2002 Retrieved May 31 2011 Office of the Under Secretary of Defense OUSD Population Representation in the Military Services Fiscal Year 2008 Report Summary PDF Center for Naval Analyses CNA Archived from the original PDF on August 7 2011 Retrieved June 1 2011 DeClouet Fred 2000 First Black Marines Vanguard of a Legacy AuthorHouse pp 5 6 ISBN 1 58820 120 1 Moses Meloney R January 30 2009 Montford Point Marines pioneered Corps history Marine Corps Base Quantico Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved May 31 2011 a b Marine Corps Integrates African American Registry Retrieved May 31 2011 Nalty Bernard C The Right to Fight African American Marines in World War II Marines in World War II Commemorative Series National Park Service Archived from the original on August 5 2012 Retrieved May 31 2011 Sutherland Jonathan 2004 African Americans at War An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 477 ISBN 1 57607 746 2 1st Marine Pioneers PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION First Marine Division Reinforced Assault and seizure of Peleliu and Ngesebus Palau Islands Part II UNIT AWARDS Section 1 Navy Marine Corps Awards Manual Rev 1953 p 15 Naval History and Heritage Command 9 The Right to Fight African American Marines in WWII Peleliu and Iwo Jima Bernard C Naulty Marine Corps Historical Center Building 58 Washington Navy Yard Washington D C 20374 1974 PCN 190 003132 00 10 African Americans at War an Encyclopedia Volume I Jonathan D Sutherland ABC CLIO Santa Barbara Ca 2004 p 480 ISBN 1 57607 746 2 11 17th Special NCB cruisebook PDF Naval History and Heritage Command p 29 Retrieved October 18 2017 Asian Americans in the United States Military during the Korean War Factsheet Atlantic City New Jersey New Jersey Korean War Memorial Retrieved June 1 2011 Desegregation of the Armed Forces Chronology Harry S Truman Library Retrieved June 1 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Racial segregation in the United States Armed Forces amp oldid 1129404174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.