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NPS
employees portrays a Buffalo Soldiers during a
living history presentation. NPS Photo |
The Buffalo Soldiers: A Fight for
Freedom
Written by Park Ranger Dave Bieri
While the story of the Buffalo Soldiers
is one of the most fascinating chapters in the history of
the Guadalupe Mountains, it is also the most tragic. Immediately
following the Civil War, the Guadalupe Mountains witnessed
a clash of cultures as recently freed African Americans serving
in the U.S. Army engaged the Mescalero Apaches in an effort
to bring about settlement of the West. It was a fight for
freedom on both sides. The African American soldiers known
as the "Buffalo Soldiers" were fighting to obtain a freedom
they had never known, while the Apaches were fighting to hold
on to a freedom they had always had.
African Americans fought and died with Washington's
troops in the American Revolution, and again to repel British
invasion in the war of 1812. During the Civil War nearly 180,000
African Americans served in the Union Army, with over 33,000
giving their lives for the Union and their freedom.
On July 28, 1866, after the conclusion of
the Civil War, Congress provided legislation for African Americans
to serve in the regular peacetime military. Six segregated
units were created, two cavalry (the Ninth and Tenth), and
four infantry (the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth,
and Forty-first). The infantry regiments were later consolidated
into two units, the Twenty-forth and Twenty-fifth. These black
regiments were all commanded by white officers, who often
resented their duty.
Although the war against slavery was over,
African Americans were far from free. Post Civil War America
offered few opportunities and little acceptance. The military
provided $13 a month and a chance at building a new life in
the aftermath of the war. Many young African American men
enlisted in the U.S. Army searching for freedom and an opportunity
to make a decent living. What they found was more discrimination
and persecution. Ironically, these men were put into service
helping the Army to oppress a race of people who had always
known freedom.
African American regiments in the U.S. Army
consistently received some of the worst duties the Army had
to offer. For over two decades the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry
campaigned on the Great Plains, along the Rio Grande, in New
Mexico, West Texas, Arizona, Colorado, and the Dakotas. The
Plains Indians described these dark-skinned, curly-haired
warriors as the "Buffalo Soldiers," also referring to the
fierce fighting spirit of the buffalo. The black soldiers
accepted this title as a badge of honor, even incorporating
it into the regimental crest of the Tenth Cavalry.
The Buffalo Soldiers endured unimaginable
hardships from the overwhelming heat of the desert to the
subfreezing temperatures of winter on the plains. Disease
resulting from unsanitary conditions and inadequate provisions
claimed the lives of many black soldiers. They fought fierce
Indian tribes, Mexican revolutionaries, cattle thieves, and
outlaws while constantly receiving inferior horses, supplies,
and equipment. They endured long, arduous expeditions over
some of the roughest terrain in the country, searching for
water sources, and mapping unknown terrain. The only obstacles
the Buffalo Soldiers could not overcome were those of prejudice
and discrimination.
While black soldiers were fighting Native
Americans in the West, African American men, women, and children
were still being lynched, segregated, and persecuted in the
East. In the West, the Buffalo Soldiers were often viewed
with hostility, even by the people of the frontier settlements
that their regiments were protecting. This hostility often
erupted in violence. Efforts at protecting settlements in
hostile territory often went unrewarded and unappreciated.
In the late 1860's, the Guadalupe Mountains
were one of the last strongholds of the Mescalero Apache who
had been fighting for nearly three centuries to preserve their
lands and their way of life, first from the Spanish, later
from the Mexicans, and now from the U.S. Army. The Army, in
order to promote "peaceful" settlement of the West, was engaged
in subduing Native Americans and placing them on reservations
within lands over which they once roamed freely. Lack of food
and provisions often caused them to flee the reservations
and once again take up raiding for food and equipment.
To the Buffalo Soldiers, the Apache proved
to be a formidable enemy. Lieutenant Colonel George Crook
of the 23rd Infantry stated: "The character of these Indians
is such as might be expected under such surroundings. The
constant struggle with adverse conditions, with hunger, with
exposure to extremes of heat and cold, and to danger of every
kind kills in infancy the weak and sickly children; only the
strong, perfectly developed child survives. Consequently the
adult Apache is an embodiment of physical endurance - lean,
well proportioned, medium sized, with sinews like steel, insensible
to hunger, fatigue, or physical pains."
Several skirmishes between the Buffalo Soldiers
and the Mescalero Apaches took place in what is now Guadalupe
Mountains National Park. The exact locations of the skirmishes
are still debated by historians. Archeological surveys have
told us that both the Buffalo Soldiers and the Mescaleros
frequently camped around Pine Springs and nearby Choza Springs.
In 1869, Colonel Edward Hatch ordered three separate expeditions
from Fort Davis against the Mescalero Apaches in the Guadalupes.
Expeditions to the Guadalupe Mountains were long and arduous.
The terrain was extremely rugged and water and food were in
short supply. Many patrols through the Guadalupes were in
fact just mapping expeditions to locate water sources. Later,
in the late 1870's Fort Davis established a sub post at Pine
Springs.
In 1879, a Warm Springs Apache named Victorio
fled the reservation in southeastern New Mexico with a number
of his followers. Numerous bloody conflicts with settlers
on both sides of the U.S.-Mexican border ensued. On August
6, 1880, the last skirmish between the Buffalo Soldiers and
Victorio's warriors occurred at Rattlesnake Springs, located
about 40 miles south of the Guadalupe Mountains. The Tenth
Cavalry, under the command of Colonel Benjamin H. Grierson,
traveled 65 miles in about 21 hours to beat Victorio to this
critical water source. Victorio and approximately 60 warriors
were ambushed as they attempted to gain water from the spring.
Ultimately Victorio escaped into Mexico, where he was later
killed by Mexican troops. Not long after Victorio's death
the last free Apaches surrendered, and the Indian Wars in
West Texas came to an end.
While enduring unimaginable hardships and
racial prejudice, the Buffalo Soldiers proved to be competent
soldiers and invaluable to the U.S. Army. These African-American
regiments spent over 25 years engaged in fighting Native Americans,
mapping unexplored lands, and opening the West for settlement.
Unfortunately, the Buffalo Soldiers received little recognition
for their service on the frontier. While over 400 veterans
of the Indian Wars received Congressional Medals of Honor,
only eighteen African American enlisted men received the award
despite being on the forefront of the fighting throughout
the quarter century long conflict.
Black regiments later served in the Spanish-American
War, World War I, World War II, and the Korean War. In the
mid-1950s the Army desegregated the last all black units.
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