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Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers: Perspectives on the African American Militia and Volunteers, 1865-1917

Editat de Bruce A. Glasrud
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 feb 2021 – vârsta ani
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, African American men were seldom permitted to join the United States armed forces. There had been times in early U.S. history when black and white men fought alongside one another; it was not uncommon for integrated units to take to battle in the Revolutionary War. But by the War of 1812, the United States had come to maintain what one writer called “a whitewashed army.” Yet despite that opposition, during the early 1800s, militia units made up of free black soldiers came together to aid the official military troops in combat.

Many black Americans continued to serve in times of military need. Nearly 180,000 African Americans served in units of the U.S. Colored Troops during the Civil War, and others, from states such as Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Missouri, and Kansas, participated in state militias organized to protect local populations from threats of Confederate invasion. As such, the Civil War was a turning point in the acceptance of black soldiers for national defense. By 1900, twenty-two states and the District of Columbia had accepted black men into some form of military service, usually as state militiamen—brothers to the “buffalo soldiers” of the regular army regiments, but American military men regardless.

Little has been published about them, but Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers: Perspectives on the African American Militia and Volunteers, 1865–1919, offers insights into the varied experiences of black militia units in the post–Civil War period. The book includes eleven articles that focus either on “Black Participation in the Militia” or “Black Volunteer Units in the War with Spain.” The articles, collected and introduced by author and scholar Bruce A. Glasrud, provide an overview of the history of early black citizen-soldiers and offer criticism from prominent academics interested in that experience.

Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers discusses a previously little-known aspect of the black military experience in U.S. history, while deliberating on the discrimination these men faced both within and outside the military. Chosen on the bases of scholarship, balance, and readability, these articles provide a rare composite picture of the black military man’s life during this period. Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers offers both a valuable introductory text for students of military studies and a solid source of material for African American historians.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780826222350
ISBN-10: 0826222358
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Missouri Press
Colecția University of Missouri

Recenzii

"There is no other single work that better documents the role of black volunteers and state militia during Reconstruction and the Spanish American War."—Journal of Illinois History

Notă biografică

Bruce A. Glasrud is Professor Emeritus of History, California State University, East Bay and Retired Dean, School of Arts and Sciences, Sul Ross State University. Born and raised in Minnesota of Norwegian-American heritage, Glasrud earned his baccalaureate degree at Luther College, master’s degree at Eastern New Mexico University, and Ph.D. at Texas Tech University. An award-winning specialist on the history of African Americans in Texas, the South, and the West, he has published seventy plus articles as well as three dozen books. In addition to Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers, he has published  African Americans on the Great Plains, Buffalo Soldiers in the West, The African American West: A Century of Short Stories, Black Cowboys in the American West, and Black Americans and the Civil Rights Movement in the West. He currently resides in San Antonio, Texas.
 

Cuprins

Introduction:Black Citizen-Soldiers, 1865–1919 by Bruce A. Glasrud
 
I. Black Participation in the Militia
 
The African American Militia during Radical Reconstruction by Otis A. Singletary
 
“They Are as Proud of Their Uniform as Any Who Serve Virginia”: African American Participation in the Virginia Volunteers, 1872–1899 by Roger D. Cunningham
 
The Black Militia of the New South: Texas as a Case Study by Alwyn Barr
 
A Place in the Parade: Citizenship, Manhood and African American Men in the Illinois National Guard, 1870-1916 by Eleanor L. Hannah
 
The Last March: The Demise of the Black Militia in Alabama by Beth Taylor Muskat
 
II. Black Volunteer Units in the War with Spain
 
The Black Volunteers in the Spanish-American War by Marvin E. Fletcher
 
 North Carolina’s African American Regiment and the Spanish-American War by Willard B. Gatewood, Jr.

"No Officers, No Fight!” The Sixth Virginia Volunteers in the Spanish-American War
by Ann Field Alexander
 
Black Kansans and the Spanish-American War by Willard B. Gatewood, Jr.
 
“A Lot of Fine, Sturdy Black Warriors”: Texas’s African American “Immunes” in the Spanish-American War by Roger D. Cunningham
 
A Flag for the 10th Immunes by Russell K. Brown
 

Descriere

Brothers to the Buffalo Soldiers offers insights into the varied experiences of black militia units in the post–Civil War period and provides an overview of the history of early black citizen-soldiers. These eleven articles discuss a previously little-known aspect of the black military experience in U.S. history, while deliberating on the discrimination these men faced both within and outside the military; together they provide a rare composite picture of the black military man’s life during this period.