COLONEL THEODORE B. ROOSEVELT, NOW GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK, WHO LED THE
ROUGH RIDERS, TELLS OF THE BRAVERY OF NEGRO SOLDIERS.
When Colonel Theodore Roosevelt returned
from the command of the famous Rough Riders, he delivered
a farewell address to his men, in which he made the
following kind reference to the gallant Negro soldiers:
“Now, I want to say just a word
more to some of the men I see standing around not
of your number. I refer to the colored regiments,
who occupied the right and left flanks of us at Guasimas,
the Ninth and Tenth cavalry regiments. The Spaniards
called them ‘Smoked Yankees,’ but we found
them to be an excellent breed of Yankees. I am
sure that I speak the sentiments of officers and men
in the assemblage when I say that between you and
the other cavalry regiments there exists a tie which
we trust will never be broken.” Colored
American.
The foregoing compliments to the Negro
soldiers by Colonel Roosevelt started up an avalanche
of additional praise for them, out of which the fact
came, that but for the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry (colored)
coming up at Las Guasimas, destroying the Spanish block
house and driving the Spaniards off, when Roosevelt
and his men had been caught in a trap, with a barbed-wire
fence on one side and a precipice on the other, not
only the brave Capron and Fish, but the whole of his
command would have been annihilated by the Spanish
sharp-shooters, who were firing with smokeless powder
under cover, and picking off the Rough Riders one
by one, who could not see the Spaniards. To break
the force of this unfavorable comment on the Rough
Riders, it is claimed that Colonel Roosevelt made
the following criticism of the colored soldiers in
general and of a few of them in particular, in an article
written by him for the April Scribner; and a letter
replying to the Colonel’s strictures, follows
by Sergeant Holliday, who was an “eye-witness”
to the incident:
Colonel Roosevelt’s criticism
was, in substance, that colored soldiers were of no
avail without white officers; that when the white
commissioned officers are killed or disabled, colored
non-commissioned officers could not be depended upon
to keep up a charge already begun; that about a score
of colored infantrymen, who had drifted into his command,
weakened on the hill at San Juan under the galling
Spanish fire, and started to the rear, stating that
they intended finding their regiments, or to assist
the wounded; whereupon he drew his revolver and ordered
them to return to ranks and there remain, and that
he would shoot the first man who didn’t obey
him; and that after that he had no further trouble.
Colonel Roosevelt is sufficiently
answered in the following letter of Sergeant Holliday,
and the point especially made by many eye-witnesses
(white) who were engaged in that fight is, as related
in Chapter V, of this book, that the Negro troops
made the charges both at San Juan and El Caney after
nearly all their officers had been killed or wounded.
Upon what facts, therefore, does Colonel Roosevelt
base his conclusions that Negro soldiers will not
fight without commissioned officers, when the only
real test of this question happened around Santiago
and showed just the contrary of what he states?
We prefer to take the results at El Caney and San
Juan as against Colonel Roosevelt’s imagination.
COLONEL ROOSEVELT’S ERROR.
TRUE STORY OF THE INCIDENT HE MAGNIFIED
TO OUR HURT THE WHITE OFFICERS’ HUMBUG
SKINNED OF ITS HIDE BY SERGEANT HOLLIDAY UNWRITTEN
HISTORY.
To the Editor of the New York Age:
Having read in The Age of April
13 an editorial entitled “Our Troops in Cuba,”
which brings to my notice for the first time a statement
made by Colonel Roosevelt, which, though in some parts
true, if read by those who do not know the exact facts
and circumstances surrounding the case, will certainly
give rise to the wrong impression of colored men as
soldiers, and hurt them for many a day to come, and
as I was an eye-witness to the most important incidents
mentioned in that statement, I deem it a duty I owe,
not only to the fathers, mothers, sisters and brothers
of those soldiers, and to the soldiers themselves,
but to their posterity and the race in general, to
be always ready to make an unprejudiced refutation
of such charges, and to do all in my power to place
the colored soldier where he properly belongs among
the bravest and most trustworthy of this land.
In the beginning, I wish to say that
from what I saw of Colonel Roosevelt in Cuba, and
the impression his frank countenance made upon me,
I cannot believe that he made that statement maliciously.
I believe the Colonel thought he spoke the exact truth.
But did he know, that of the four officers connected
with two certain troops of the Tenth Cavalry one was
killed and three were so seriously wounded as to cause
them to be carried from the field, and the command
of these two troops fell to the first sergeants, who
led them triumphantly to the front? Does he know
that both at Las Guasima and San Juan Hill the greater
part of troop B, of the Tenth Cavalry, was separated
from its commanding officer by accidents of battle
and was led to the front by its first sergeant?
When we reached the enemy’s
works on San Juan Hill our organizations were very
badly mixed, few company commanders having their whole
companies or none of some body else’s company.
As it was, Capt. Watson, my troop commander,
reached the crest of the hill with about eight or
ten men of his troop, all the rest having been accidentally
separated from him by the thick underbrush during the
advance, and being at that time, as was subsequently
shown to be the firing line under some one else pushing
to the front. We kept up the forward movement,
and finally halted on the heights overlooking Santiago,
where Colonel Roosevelt, with a very thin line had
preceded us, and was holding the hill. Here Captain
Watson told us to remain while he went to another
part of the line to look for the rest of his troop.
He did not come to that part of the field again.
The Colonel made a slight error when
he said his mixed command contained some colored infantry.
All the colored troops in that command were cavalry
men. His command consisted mostly of Rough Riders,
with an aggregate of about one troop of the Tenth Cavalry,
a few of the Ninth and a few of the First Regular
Cavalry, with a half dozen officers. Every few
minutes brought men from the rear, everybody seeming
to be anxious to get to the firing line. For a
while we kept up a desultory fire, but as we could
not locate the enemy (he all the time keeping up a
hot fire on our position), we became disgusted, and
lay down and kept silent. Private Marshall was
here seriously wounded while standing in plain view
of the enemy, trying to point them out to his comrades.
There were frequent calls for men
to carry the wounded to the rear, to go for ammunition,
and as night came on, to go for rations and entrenching
tools. A few colored soldiers volunteered, as
did some from the Rough Riders. It then happened
that two men of the Tenth were ordered to the rear
by Lieutenant Fleming, Tenth Cavalry, who was then
present with part of his troop, for the purpose of
bringing either rations or entrenching tools, and
Colonel Roosevelt seeing so many men going to the
rear, shouted to them to come back, jumped up and drew
his revolver, and told the men of the Tenth that he
would shoot the first man who attempted to shirk duty
by going to the rear, that he had orders to hold that
line and he would do so if he had to shoot every man
there to do it. His own men immediately informed
him that “you won’t have to shoot those
men, Colonel. We know those boys.”
He was also assured by Lieutenant Fleming, of the
Tenth, that he would have no trouble keeping them
there, and some of our men shouted, in which I joined,
that “we will stay with you, Colonel.”
Everyone who saw the incident knew the Colonel was
mistaken about our men trying to shirk duty, but well
knew that he could not admit of any heavy detail from
his command, so no one thought ill of the matter.
Inasmuch as the Colonel came to the line of the Tenth
the next day and told the men of his threat to shoot
some of their members and, as he expressed it, he
had seen his mistake and found them to be far different
men from what he supposed. I thought he was sufficiently
conscious of his error not to make a so ungrateful
statement about us at a time when the Nation is about
to forget our past service.
Had the Colonel desired to note the
fact, he would have seen that when orders came the
next day to relieve the detachment of the Tenth from
that part of the field, he commanded just as many colored
men at that time as he commanded at any other time
during the twenty-four hours we were under his command,
although colored as well as white soldiers were going
and coming all day, and they knew perfectly well where
the Tenth Cavalry was posted, and that it was on a
line about four hundred yards further from the enemy
than Colonel Roosevelt’s line. Still when
they obtained permission to go to the rear, they almost
invariably came back to the same position. Two
men of my troop were wounded while at the rear for
water and taken to the hospital and, of course, could
not come back.
Our men always made it a rule to join
the nearest command when separated from our own, and
those who had been so unfortunate as to lose their
way altogether were, both colored and white, straggling
up from the time the line was established until far
into the night, showing their determination to reach
the front.
In explaining the desire of our men
in going back to look for their comrades, it should
be stated that, from the contour of the ground, the
Rough Riders were so much in advance of the Tenth Cavalry
that, to reach the latter regiment from the former,
one had really to go straight to the rear and then
turn sharply to the right; and further, it is a well
known fact, that in this country most persons of color
feel out of place when they are by force compelled
to mingle with white persons, especially strangers,
and although we knew we were doing our duty, and would
be treated well as long as we stood to the front and
fought, unfortunately some of our men (and these were
all recruits with less than six months’ service)
felt so much out of place that when the firing lulled,
often showed their desire to be with their commands.
None of our older men did this. We knew perfectly
well that we could give as much assistance there as
anywhere else, and that it was our duty to remain
until relieved. And we did. White soldiers
do not, as a rule, share this feeling with colored
soldiers. The fact that a white man knows how
well he can make a place for himself among colored
people need not be discussed here.
I remember an incident of a recruit
of my troop, with less than two months’ service,
who had come up to our position during the evening
of the 1st, having been separated from the troop during
the attack on San Juan Hill. The next morning,
before the firing began, having seen an officer of
the Tenth, who had been sent to Colonel Roosevelt with
a message, returning to the regiment, he signified
his intention of going back with him, saying he could
thus find the regiment. I remonstrated with him
without avail and was only able to keep him from going
by informing him of the Colonel’s threat of the
day before. There was no desire on the part of
this soldier to shirk duty. He simply didn’t
know that he should not leave any part of the firing
line without orders. Later, while lying in reserve
behind the firing line, I had to use as much persuasion
to keep him from firing over the heads of his enemies
as I had to keep him with us. He remained with
us until he was shot in the shoulder and had to be
sent to the rear.
I could give many other incidents
of our men’s devotion to duty, of their determination
to stay until the death, but what’s the use?
Colonel Roosevelt has said they shirked, and the reading
public will take the Colonel at his word and go on
thinking they shirked. His statement was uncalled
for and uncharitable, and considering the moral and
physical effect the advance of the Tenth Cavalry had
in weakening the forces opposed to the Colonel’s
regiment, both at La Guasima and San Juan Hill, altogether
ungrateful, and has done us an immeasurable lot of
harm.
And further, as to lack of qualifications
for command, I will say that when our soldiers, who
can and will write history, sever their connections
with the Regular Army, and thus release themselves
from their voluntary status of military lockjaw, and
tell what they saw, those who now preach that the
Negro is not fit to exercise command over troops,
and will go no further than he is led by white officers,
will see in print held up for public gaze, much to
their chagrin, tales of those Cuban battles that have
never been told outside the tent and barrack room,
tales that it will not be agreeable for some of them
to hear. The public will then learn that not every
troop or company of colored soldiers who took part
in the assaults on San Juan Hill or El Caney was led
or urged forward by its white officer.
It is unfortunate that we had no colored
officers in that campaign, and this thing of white
officers for colored troops is exasperating, and I
join with The Age in saying our motto for the
future must be: “No officers, no soldiers.”
PRESLEY HOLLIDAY,
Sergeant Troop B, Tenth Cavalry.
Fort Ringgold, Texas, April 22, 1899.
JACOB A. RIIS in The Outlook
gives the following interesting reading concerning
the colored troopers in an article entitled “Roosevelt
and His Men”:
“It was one of the unexpected
things in this campaign that seems destined to set
so many things right that out of it should come the
appreciation of the colored soldier as man and brother
by those even who so lately fought to keep him a chattel.
It fell to the lot of General ‘Joe’ Wheeler,
the old Confederate warrior, to command the two regiments
of colored troops, the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry, and
no one will bear readier testimony than he to the
splendid record they made. Of their patience
under the manifold hardships of roughing it in the
tropics, their helpfulness in the camp and their prowess
in battle, their uncomplaining suffering when lying
wounded and helpless. Stories enough are told
to win for them fairly the real brotherhood with their
white-skinned fellows which they crave. The most
touching of the many I heard was that of a Negro trooper,
who, struck by a bullet that cut an artery in his
neck, was lying helpless, in danger of bleeding to
death, when a Rough Rider came to his assistance.
There was only one thing to be done to
stop the bleeding till a surgeon came. A tourniquet
could not be applied where the wound was. The
Rough Rider put his thumb on the artery and held it
there while he waited. The fighting drifted away
over the hill. He followed his comrades with
longing eyes till the last was lost to sight.
His place was there, but if he abandoned the wounded
cavalryman it was to let him die. He dropped
his gun and stayed. Not until the battle was won
did the surgeon come that way, but the trooper’s
life was saved. He told of it in the hospital
with tears in his voice: ’He done that to
me, he did; stayed by me an hour and a half, and me
only a nigger.’”
GENERAL NELSON A. MILES PAYS A TRIBUTE
TO THE NEGRO SOLDIERS.
Major-General Nelson A. Miles, Commander-in-Chief
of the army of the United States spoke at the Peace
Jubilee at Chicago, October 11th, and said:
“While the chivalry of the South
and the yeomanry of the North vied with their devotion
to the cause of their country and in their pride in
its flag which floated over all, it’s a glorious
fact that patriotism was not confined to any one section
or race for the sacrifice, bravery and fortitude.
The white race was accompanied by the gallantry of
the black as they swept over entrenched lines and
later volunteered to succor the sick, nurse the dying
and bury the dead in the hospitals and the Cuban camps.”
“This was grandly spoken, and
we feel gratified at this recognition of the valor
of one of the best races of people the world has ever
seen.”
“We are coming, boys; it’s
a little slow and tiresome, but we are coming.” Colored
American.
At a social reunion of the Medal of
Honor Legion held a few evenings since to welcome
home two of their members, General Nelson A. Miles,
commanding the army of the United States, and Colonel
M. Emmett Urell, of the First District Columbia Volunteers,
in the course of his remarks, General Miles paid the
finest possible tribute to the splendid heroism and
soldierly qualities evidenced by the men of the 9th
and 10th Cavalry, and 24th and 25th United States Infantry
in the late Santiago campaign, which he epitomized
as “without a parallel in the history of the
world.”
At the close of his remarks, Major
C.A. Fleetwood, the only representative of the
race present, in behalf of the race extended their
heartfelt and warmest thanks for such a magnificent
tribute from such a magnificent soldier and man. Colored
American.
CLEVELAND MOFFITT, IN LESLIE’S
WEEKLY, DESCRIBES THE HEROISM OF A “BLACK COLOR
BEARER.”
“Having praised our war leaders
sufficiently, in some cases more than sufficiently
(witness Hobson), let us give honor to some of the
humbler ones, who fought obscurely, but did fine things
nevertheless.”
“There was Sergeant Berry, for
instance, of the Tenth Cavalry, who might have boasted
his meed of kisses, too, had he been a white man.
At any rate, he rescued the colors of a white regiment
from unseemly trampling and bore them safely through
the bullets to the top of San Juan hill. Now,
every one knows that the standard of a troop is guarded
like a man’s own soul, or should be, and how
it came that this Third Cavalry banner was lying on
the ground that day is something that may never be
rightly known. Some white man had left it there,
many white men had let it stay there, but Berry, a
black man, saw it fluttering in shame and paused in
his running long enough to catch it up and lift it
high overhead beside his own banner for
he was a color-bearer of the Tenth.”
“Then, with two flags flying
above him, and two heavy staves to bear, this powerful
negro (he is literally a giant in strength and stature)
charged the heights, while white men and black men
cheered him as they pressed behind. Who shall
say what temporary demoralization there may have been
in this troop of the Third at that critical moment,
or what fresh courage may have been fired in them
by that black man’s act! They say Berry
yelled like a demon as he rushed against the Spaniards,
and I, for one, am willing to believe that his battle-cry
brought fighting energy to his own side as well as
terror to the enemy.”
“After the fight one of the
officers of the Third Cavalry sought Berry out and
asked him to give back the trophy fairly won by him,
and his to keep, according to the usages of war.
And the big Negro handed back the banner with a smile
and light word. He had saved the colors and rallied
the troop, but it didn’t matter much. They
could have the flag if they wanted it.”
“There are some hundreds of
little things like this that we might as well bear
in mind, we white men, the next time we start out to
decry the Negro!”
PRESIDENT MCKINLEY RECOGNIZES THE
WORTH OF NEGRO SOLDIERS BY PROMOTION.
PROMOTIONS FOR COLORED SOLDIERS.
Washington, July 30. Six
colored non-commissioned officers who rendered particularly
gallant service in the actions around Santiago on
July 1st and 2d have been appointed second lieutenants
in the two colored immune regiments recently organized
under special act of Congress. These men are
Sergeants William Washington, Troop F, and John C.
Proctor, Troop I, of the 9th Cavalry, and Sergeants
William McBryar, Company H; Wyatt Hoffman, Company
G; Macon Russell, Company H, and Andrew J. Smith,
Company B, of the 25th Infantry, commanded by Colonel
Daggett. Jacob C. Smith, Sergeant Pendergrass,
Lieutenant Ray, Sergeant Horace W. Bivins, Lieutenant
E.L. Baker, Lieutenant J.H. Hill, Lieutenant
Buck. N.Y. World.
These promotions were made into the
volunteer regiments, which were mustered out after
the war, thus leaving the men promoted in the same
rank they were before promotion if they chose to re-enlist
in the regular army. They got no permanent advancement
by this act of the President, but the future may develop
better things for them.
COMPETENT TO BE OFFICERS THE
VERDICT OF GENERAL THOMAS J. MORGAN, AFTER A STUDY
OF THE NEGRO’S QUALITY AS A SOLDIER.
COLOR LINE IN THE ARMY DIFFICULTY
IN MAKING AFRO-AMERICAN COMMISSIONED OFFICERS HEROISM
ON THE FIELD SURE TO REAP REWARD MORGAN
PREFERS NEGRO TROOP TO THE WHITES.
General Thomas J. Morgan belongs to
that class of Caucasian observers who are able to
think clearly upon the Negro problem in all of its
phases, and who have not only the breadth of intelligence
to form just and generous opinions, but who possess
that rarer quality, the courage to give them out openly
to the country. General Morgan contributes the
following article to the New York Independent,
analyzing the motives which underlie the color line
in the army.
He has had wide experience in military
affairs, and his close contact with Negro soldiers
during the civil war entitles him to speak with authority.
General Morgan says:
“The question of the color line
has assumed an acute stage, and has called forth a
good deal of feeling. The various Negro papers
in the country are very generally insisting that if
the Negro soldiers are to be enlisted, Negro officers
should be appointed to command them. One zealous
paper is clamoring for the appointment, immediately,
by the President, of a Negro Major-General. The
readers of The Independent know very well that
during the civil war there were enlisted in the United
States army 200,000 Negro soldiers under white officers,
the highest position assigned to a black man being
that of first sergeant, or of regimental sergeant-major.
The Negroes were allowed to wear chevrons, but
not shoulder straps or epaulets. Although four
Negro regiments have been incorporated in the regular
army, and have rendered exceptionally effective service
on the plains and elsewhere for a whole generation,
there are to-day no Negro officers in the service.
A number of young men have been appointed as cadets
at West Point, but the life has not been by any means
an easy one. The only caste or class with caste
distinctions that exists in the republic is found
in the army; army officers are, par excellence, the
aristocrats; nowhere is class feeling so much cultivated
as among them; nowhere is it so difficult to break
down the established lines. Singularly enough,
though entrance to West Point is made very broad, and
a large number of those who go there to be educated
at the expense of the Government have no social position
to begin with, and no claims to special merit, and
yet, after having been educated at the public expense,
and appointed to life positions, they seem to cherish
the feeling that they are a select few, entitled to
special consideration, and that they are called upon
to guard their class against any insidious invasions.
Of course there are honorable exceptions. There
are many who have been educated at West Point who are
broad in their sympathies, democratic in their ideas,
and responsive to every appeal of philanthropy and
humanity; but the spirit of West Point has been opposed
to the admission of Negroes into the ranks of commissioned
officers, and the opposition to the commissioning of
black men emanating from the army will go very far
toward the defeat of any project of that kind.”
“To make the question of the
admission of Negroes into the higher ranks of commissioned
officers more difficult is the fact that the organization
of Negro troops under the call of the President for
volunteers to carry on the war with Spain, has been
left chiefly to the Governors of states. Very
naturally the strong public sentiment against the
Negro, which obtains almost universally in the South,
has thus far prevented the recognition of his right
to be treated precisely as the white man is treated.
It would be, indeed, almost revolutionary for any
Southern Governor to commission a Negro as a colonel
of a regiment, or even a captain of a company. (Since
this was written two Negro colonels have been appointed in
the Third North Carolina and Eighth Illinois.) Even
where there are exceptions to this rule, they are
notable exceptions. Everywhere through the South
Negro volunteers are made to feel that they are not
upon the same plane as white volunteers.”
“In a recent conversation with
the Adjutant General of the army, I was assured by
him that in the organization of the ten regiments of
immunes which Congress has authorized, the President
had decided that five of them should be composed of
Negroes, and that while the field and staff officers
and captains are to be white, the lieutenants may
be Negroes. If this is done it will mark a distinct
step in advance of any taken hitherto. It will
recognize partially, at least, the manhood of the
Negro, and break down that unnatural bar of separation
now existing. If a Negro is a lieutenant, he
will command his company in the absence of the captain.
He can wear epaulets, and be entitled to all the rights
and privileges ‘of an officer and a gentleman;’
he is no longer doomed to inferiority. In case
of battle, where bullets have no respect of persons,
and do not draw the line at color, it may easily happen
that a regiment or battalion will do its best work
in the face of the enemy under the command of a Negro
chief. Thus far the Government has been swift
to recognize heroism and efficiency, whether performed
by Commodore Dewey at Manila or Lieutenant Hobson at
Santiago, and it can hardly be otherwise than that
it will be ready to recognize exceptional prowess
and skill when performed by a Negro officer.”
“All, perhaps, which the Negroes
themselves, or their friends, have a right to ask
in their behalf is, that they shall have a chance to
show the stuff they are made of. The immortal
Lincoln gave them this chance when he admitted them
to wear the blue and carry a musket; and right manfully
did they justify his confidence. There was not
better fighting done during the civil war than was
done by some of the Negro troops. With my experience,
in command of 5,000 Negro soldiers, I would, on the
whole, prefer, I think, the command of a corps of Negro
troops to that of a corps of white troops. With
the magnificent record of their fighting qualities
on many a hard-contested field, it is not unreasonable
to ask that a still further opportunity shall be extended
to them in commissioning them as officers, as well
as enlisting them as soldiers.”
“Naturally and necessarily the
question of fitness for official responsibility is
the prime test and ought to be applied, and if Negroes
cannot be found of sufficient intelligence or preparation
for the duties incumbent on army officers, nobody
should object to the places being given to qualified
white men. But so long as we draw no race line
of distinction as against Germans or Irishmen, and
institute no test of religion, politics or culture,
we ought not to erect an artificial barrier of color.
If the Negroes are competent they should be commissioned.
If they are incompetent they should not be trusted
with the grave responsibilities attached to official
position. I believe they are competent.”