Buffalo Soldier Monument“Negroes had little, at the turn of the century, to help sustain our faith in ourselves except the pride that we took in the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry, the Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth infantry … They were our Ralph Bunche, Marian Anderson, Joe Louis and Jackie Robinson.”
–Prof. Rayford Logan, Howard University, Washington, D.C. It remains a mystery why the Indians called the Black cavalrymen Buffalo Soldiers. Some say it was because the men were rugged as buffalo; others say it was because the Indians saw a resemblance between the soldiers’ hair and the buffalo’s shaggy coat. Also, many of the soldiers wore long buffalo robe coats. The name was primarily applied to the cavalry but sometimes included the Black infantry. The infantry, Black and White, were also called “Walk-a Heaps.” More than 180,000 Blacks served in the Union Army and of these more than 33,000 died. After the war, the future of Blacks in the Army was not certain. In 1866 Congress passed legislation establishing two cavalry and four infantry regiments (later consolidated to two) to be made up of Blacks. The majority of the recruits had served in all-Black units during the war. The mounted regiments were the 9th and 10th cavalries and the infantry regiments were the 24th and 25th infantry units. Until the early 1890s, these regiments comprised 20% of all cavalry forces on the American frontier. Their adversaries included Geronimo, Sitting Bull, Victorio, Lone Wolf, Billy the Kid and Pancho Villa. The Buffalo Soldiers explored and mapped vast areas of the Southwest and strung hundreds of miles of telegraph lines. They built and repaired frontier outposts and protected railroad workers. The soldiers also built roads, discouraged illegal traders who sold guns and alcohol to Indians, policed cattle rustlers and formed escorts for stagecoaches carrying military payroll or other valuables. The Buffalo Soldiers also fought beside Theodore Roosevelt at San Juan Hill and helped to save the 7th Cavalry in the aftermath of Wounded Knee, South Dakota. The Black regiments received some of the worst assignments the Army had to offer and faced prejudice regarding both the color of their uniform and their skin. Despite the many obstacles they faced, the 9th and 10th cavalries developed into two of the most distinguished fighting units in the Army. During the early years, the Buffalo Soldiers served mainly in Kansas, Texas, and New Mexico. In 1885 several companies from the 9th cavalry were sent to Indian Territory to remove the Boomers: White homesteaders trying to stake illegal claims on Indian lands. In 1892 four companies of the 24th infantry were transferred from Fort Bayard, New Mexico and Fort Huachuca in Arizona, and in 1896 two companies of the 24th infantry were sent to the Nogales area to fight Yaqui Indians in the final stages of the Indian wars. Black soldiers patrolled the Mexican border from temporary camps. The Newell Cantonment at Naco was created in response to Pancho Villa’s raid on Columbus, New Mexico in 1916. Over 1,000 followers of Pancho Villa rode into Columbus, starting fires and killing nineteen Americans. An agreement between President Woodrow Wilson and Mexican President Venustiano Carranza permitted both nations to pursue bandits across the border. The mission ordered by Wilson was executed by General John J. Pershing who had the nickname “Black Jack” for leading Black regiments early in his career. Among the troops sent across the border were the 24th and 25th infantry and the 10th cavalry. One of the leaders in Pershing’s mission was Charles Young. Born in Kentucky in 1864, Young continued a military tradition started by his father who had served in the Colored Artillery during the Civil War. Young graduated from West Point and served in the military intelligence unit. In Mexico he led the 2nd squadron against Pancho Villa’s rebels at Agua Caliente. Young became a colonel in 1916 and commanded Fort Huachuca, Arizona in 1916-1917. He was the first African American to achieve the rank of Colonel. Daily life on the Western Frontier was harsh for the Black soldiers but it was similar to conditions faced by their White counterparts in many ways. Barracks were poorly ventilated and had vermin. Bathing facilities were local creeks. Diseases such as dysentery, diarrhea, bronchitis and tuberculosis were common. Rations were beef or bacon, potatoes, beans, fresh vegetables from the post garden and occasionally fruit or jam. The work week was seven days, with the exception of July 4 and Christmas. The monthly pay for a private was $13.00. Many Blacks studied after hours in schools usually run by chaplains assigned to the Black units. Studying had been forbidden during slavery so most Black soldiers were illiterate. Only a small percentage of the Black men could bring their wives to the frontier posts. The small villages around the forts were usually a collection of saloons and gambling parlors. Racial prejudice by both local citizens and law officers was widespread. When disputes arose among the Black soldiers and the locals, officials and juries often sided against the soldiers. The Buffalo Soldiers served in the Indian Wars and distinguished themselves in spite of being issued old horses, insufficient ammunition and faulty equipment. They were rarely guilty of drunkenness in a time and place where alcoholism was common. Their rate of desertion and court martial was much lower than that of White soldiers. From 1880-1886 the 24th infantry held the record for the lowest desertion rate in the entire United States Army. In 1888 the 24th and 25th Infantry were tied for the honor. The Buffalo Soldiers organized excellent bands that encouraged good relations with the civilian populations. They offered concerts, played for parades and funerals, and provided dance music for church benefits. Lt. Henry O. Flipper served in the 10th cavalry and was the first Black to receive a commission and graduate from West Point. Discrimination in West Point against Blacks was pervasive in the last quarter of the 19th century when Flipper attended. After graduating he was assigned in 1877 to the 10th Cavalry. In the spring of 1881, Colonel William R. Shafter became commander of the post in Fort Davis, Texas, where Lt. Flipper was assigned the duties of Acting Assistant Quartermaster and Acting Commissary of Subsistence. Colonel Shafter relieved Flipper of his Quartermaster duties. It was then that Lt. Flipper discovered commissary funds missing from his trunk. Afraid of the ill-tempered Colonel Shafter, Flipper acted to conceal the loss until the money was found. Lt. Flipper was charged with embezzlement and conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman. The court found him guilty of misconduct and ordered his dismissal. Following his dishonorable discharge from service, Lt. Flipper spent 37 years as a civil and mining engineer in the state and in Mexico and became the first Black to gain recognition in the engineering profession. From 1893-1901 he worked for the Department of Justice as a special agent for the Court of Private Land Claims. Lt. Flipper maintained his innocence of the misconduct charge and sought to have a bill clearing his name passed in Congress. He died in 1940 at age 84 with his dishonorable discharge still in place. Professor Cortez Williams states that Flipper’s discharge was later changed to an honorable one as a result of the research of University of New Mexico student Donald Walker in the late 1960’s. In 1976 the United States Army reviewed Lt. Flipper’s case and posthumously awarded him an honorable discharged dated June 30, 1882. He was pardoned of all charges by President Bill Clinton in 1999. An article in The Perspective magazine states that the Buffalo Soldiers served as an inspiration to those who came after them in the Air Force and Navy including the Tuskegee Airmen and the Golden Thirteen. In 1941 the Air Force began a program in Alabama to train Black servicemen as military pilots or “Tuskegee Airmen,” as they came to be known. The Tuskegee Institute, the school founded by Booker T. Washington, conducted the flight training. The Tuskegee Airmen trained to be fighter pilots flew in the 99th Fighter squadron in combat duty in North Africa and the 332nd Fighter Group that flew combat missions in Italy. In February 1944, the Navy commissioned its first African American officers, a major step forward in promoting the status of Blacks in the Navy. Twelve commissioned officers and a warrant officer who received his rank at the same time came to be known as the “Golden Thirteen.” The Buffalo Soldiers Society of New Mexico today informs adults and youth about the history of those who came before them. The Society consists of 25 members from various walks of life. From retired members of all branches of the military to a retired Boy Scout leader, today’s Buffalo Soldiers share the same dedication to the uniform as the original Buffalo Soldiers did. The New Mexico unit performs at schools, colleges, historical societies, parades, and government events. These Buffalo Soldiers are not re-enactors but educators. They describe themselves as a traveling museum as they have from 50 to 70 authentic artifacts with them whenever they give a presentation. The organization has received an endowment from the New Mexico Humanities Council to teach the history of the Buffalo Soldiers. |
1. Bell Tower
2. Visitor / Event Center 3. Courtyard 4. Colonial War Kiosk 5. Territorial War Kiosk 6. World War I Kiosk 7. Buffalo Soldier Monument 8. Pearl Harbor Survivors Monument 9. World War II Kiosk & Monument 10. 8th Air Force Monument 11. Merchant Marines Monument 12. U.S. Submarine Veterans Monument 13. Welcome Home Memorial 14. U.S. Navy Veterans Monument 15. Korean War Monument & Kiosk 16. Vietnam War Monument & Kiosk 17. Expeditionary Missions Kiosk 18. Gulf War Kiosk 19. War On Terror Kiosk 20. The Call 21. The Preparation 22. The Battle 23. The Homecoming 24. The Conversation 25. The Word From Home 26. The Fallen Friend 27. Parade Ground 28. Amphitheater 29. Paratrooper Monument 30. Combat Infantry Badge Monument 31. Boulevard Of Flags & Blue Star Memorial 32. American Ex-Prisoner Of War Monument 33. Medal Of Honor Plaza 34. Purple Heart Monument 35. Holes In Our Hearts 36. American Veterans For Equal Rights 37. Tuskegee Airmen Monument 38. Gold Star Mothers Monument 39. Navajo Code Talkers Monument 40. Combined Action Program Monument Cathay Williams(September 1844 – 1892) was an American soldier. She is the first African American female to enlist, and the only documented to serve in the United States Army posing as a man under the pseudonym, William Cathay.
BIOGRAPHY Early Years Williams was born in Independence, Missouri to a free man of color, and a woman in bondage making her legal status also that of a slave. During her adolescence, Williams worked as a house servant on the Johnson plantation on the outskirts of Jefferson City, Missouri. In 1861 Union forces occupied Jefferson City in the early stages of the American Civil War. At that time, captured slaves were officially designated by the Union as “contraband,” and many were forced to serve in military support roles such as cooks, laundresses, or nurses. At age seventeen, Williams was impressed into serving of 8th Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment, commanded by Colonel William Plummer Benton. Civil War For the next few years, Williams travelled with the 8th Indiana, accompanying the soldiers on their marches through Arkansas, Louisiana, and Georgia. She was present at the Battle of Pea Ridge and the Red River Campaign. At one time she was transferred to Little Rock, where she would have seen uniformed African-American men serving as soldiers, which may have inspired her own interest in military service. Later, Williams was transferred to Washington, D.C., where she served with General Philip Sheridan’s command. When the war ended, Williams was working at Jefferson Barracks. Despite the prohibition against women serving in the military, Williams enlisted in the United States Regular Army on 15 November 1866 at St. Louis, Missouri for a three year engagement, passing herself off as a man. Only two others are known to have been privy to the deception, her cousin and a friend, both of whom were fellow soldiers in her regiment. Shortly after her enlistment, Williams contracted smallpox, was hospitalized and rejoined her unit, which by then was posted in New Mexico. Possibly due to the effects of smallpox, the New Mexico heat, or the cumulative effects of years of marching, her body began to show signs of strain. She was frequently hospitalized. The post surgeon finally discovered she was a woman and informed the post commander. She was discharged from the Army by her commanding officer, Captain Charles E. Clarke on October 14, 1868. Personal Life Williams went to work as a cook at Fort Union, New Mexico, and later moved to Pueblo, Colorado. Williams married, but it ended disastrously when her husband stole her money and a team of horses. Williams had him arrested. She next moved to Trinidad, Colorado, where she made her living as a seamstress. She may also have owned a boarding house. It was at this time that Williams’ story first became public. A reporter from St. Louis heard rumors of a female African-American who had served in the army, and came to interview her. Her life and military service narrative was published in The St. Louis Daily Times on 2 January 1876. In late 1889 or early 1890, Williams entered a local hospital where she remained for some time, and in June 1891, applied for a disability pension based on her military service. The nature of her illness and disability are unknown. There was precedent for granting a pension to female soldiers. Deborah Sampson in 1816, and Mary Hayes McCauley (better known as Molly Pitcher) had been granted pensions for disguising themselves as men to serve in the American Revolutionary War. Sampson’s cause had been championed by none other than Paul Revere. However, Williams had no influential friends to help her. In September 1891, a doctor employed by the Pension Bureau examined Williams. Despite the fact that she suffered from neuralgia and diabetes, had had all her toes amputated, and could only walk with a crutch, the doctor decided she did not qualify for disability payments. Her application was rejected. The exact date of Williams’ death is unknown, but it is assumed she died shortly after being denied a pension, probably sometime in 1892. Her simple grave marker would have been made of wood and deteriorated long ago. Thus her final resting place is now unknown. |