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Initial recruiting efforts concentrated on
filling recruitment quotas with little regard for the recruit's
capability and soldiering skills. These recruits had to be discharged
and replaced, causing a delay in some regiments arriving at their
assigned posts. Over a period of time, since whites could get good jobs in
peacetime and even highly educated blacks usually could not, recruiters
increasingly, began to enlist blacks who were more intelligent and
capable than the average white soldier. This helped the eventual
success and acceptance of the first African-American
graduate from West Point Military Academy who was also the first
African-American officer, posted to the Tenth U.S. Cavalry, Henry O. Flipper. Colonel Allen Allensworth was the first African-American chaplain
posted to the Twenty-fourth Infantry. He is also
founder
of the first black established town just outside Bakersfield, California. In the late 1880's West Point graduates John H. Alexander and Charles Young were granted
commissions to the Ninth U.S. Cavalry. Reverend Theophilus Steward of
the 25th Infantry, was also relentless in his efforts to help his men
in the areas of education, finances, moral and coping strategies as
soldiers and as civilians.
Black soldiers who fought in the Indian Wars, fought their opponents as
they have done throughout this country's military history. They fought
to win and to give their lives if necessary, for their personal
beliefs. They wanted to gain the respect and equality they never saw as
slaves and rarely received as freedmen. So, they continued on as soldiers. They
were sadly mistaken in thinking they would gain these components of
freedom, in a country built in-part by their enslavement and which
still held deep racial and cultural prejudices.
As soon as these soldiers were relocated into their hostile
environments, they were engaged in life and death struggles. They were
under fire. Friends were killed and their oath to keep the peace, put
to the test by Indians, settlers and those outside the law. Though they
guarded railroads and telegraph lines, stagecoaches, arms shipments,
towns, homesteads, whites and Indians, they never knew when they would
be ambushed by foes or the very townspeople they were protecting! Not
infrequently, just by entering a town or saloon, shoot-outs occurred.
There was also the occasional sniper, waiting for a kill. Those that
murdered troopers were never punished for their crimes, even when there
were witnesses. The troopers always responded with a deadly intent of
their own. When investigated by the military, those troopers found
guilty were punished accordingly, but not always justly.
After arriving at their posts the
alternatives to soldiering were: desert to all white communities, where
they were regarded with hateful scorn and risk imprisonment. Death and
torture at the hands of the Indians or possible death by exposure to
the killing heat and freezing cold. Though the Buffalo
Soldiers did their duty in carrying out the government's version of law
and order on the frontier west, many influential blacks such as Senator
Blanche Kelso Bruce, continually spoke out for the Indians and against
the United States treaty making and treaty breaking policies.



The army
supported segregation. It maintained separate facilities where
possible. The Buffalo Soldiers built many forts whose facilities
at
times they couldn't use. At Fort Concho for example, there were
separate rooms for educational purposes, etc. The necessities of
military life forced white and black troops together, breaking down
long standing prejudices. Lieutenant Charles J. Crane always believed
in the superiority of the Anglo-Saxon and resented his appoint to the
Twenty-third Infantry. But in his autobiography he wrote he was happy
with the assignment.
So brave and courageous were these men that their legendary Indian
foes called them Buffalo Soldiers. Their commanding officer, Colonel
Benjamin H. Grierson of Civil War fame, said the name was given because
the Indians respected a brave and powerful adversary, which relates
directly to their much revered buffalo. Others say it was due to
the similarity of the soldier's hair to that of the hair surrounding
the buffalo's head.


The Tenth had the lowest desertion rate
in the army, though their army posts were often in the worst country in
the west. Official reports, show these soldiers were frequently
subjected to the harshest of discipline, racist officers, and poor
food, equipment and shelter White regiments were supplied with
silk-embroidered banners. The Tenth's regimental standard had
to be homemade and was tattered and worn. The government did not send
them
a regulation flag until many, many years later. In spite of these
deprivations, the morale of these soldiers remained high. Some white
commanding officers were proud to lead these men and publicly expressed
their feelings. In the end 20 black soldiers of the Ninth and Tenth
Companies won the Medal of Honor, the highest award this country gives for
the most outstanding performance under enemy fire.
There were hundreds of untold provocations toward the Indians by the settlers, the US and Mexican governments, outlaws, officials, the railroads and the list goes on and on. During the winter months, the Indian's response to these injustices decreased, giving the army and settlers some predictable relief. But placing the Indians on reservations without guns and ammunition and cutting their food rations to subsistence levels combined to force the Indians to go on raiding parties. Soon, along with starvation, came the ravages of the white man's diseases.
The name Staked Plains refers to the fact that early settlers had to drive stakes into the ground, to mark their trail. There were no distinguishing features on the plains, just miles and miles of flat, treeless land. Markers made it easier to retrace a route and for future settlers to follow. The scarcity of trees, necessitated the initial building of sod homes.
*Camp
at Medicine Bluff Creek, Camp Wichita all refer to Fort Sill. The site
was first called Camp at Medicine Bluff Creek, then it was called Camp
Wichita and finally in July of 1860, it was designated Fort Sill. The
post is still operational.


The Plains Indians first accepted the arrival of the Five Civilized Nations as the government moved them onto the plains. However, as starvation and death move upon the reservations, the Plains Indians began to resent these tribes. The Five Civilized Nations had accepted the Plains Indian's land and were receiving adequate government food supplies, while the Plains Indians were hungry. Resentment to the Five Civilized Nations also occurred due to their adoption of the white man's ways such as farming, style of dress, home building and to some degree, slavery for life, based on a person's color and blood line.
May 1866:Fort Leavenworth; During each month, for the first ten months of its organization, at least one Buffalo Soldier died due to disease ( mainly cholera) and deadly dietary deficiencies. Twenty-three soldiers were lost during the Company's last month at the fort.
Summer of 1867-January 1868: Company was stationed at Fort Arbuckle,
Indian Territory. The Tenth U.S. Cavalry Troop D was posted along the
Kansas Pacific Railroad. Additional assignments included the building
and rebuilding of Forts Arbuckle, Ft. Sill, Ft. Clark and Fort Concho. Other tasks were
stopping
cattle rusting, bootleggers and the protection of settlers, Indians and
the mail.
Background Event: The
U.S. government decides to give up the
treaty-breaking establishment of The Bozeman Trail. Instead, they choose to follow the new
route of the Union Pacific Railroad along the Platte River. The Sioux
were ordered to leave their home in the Platte Valley for a new
reservation in South Dakota. The railroads were used to break the
Indians control of large tracts of land. At various times unsuspecting
settlers bought
land from the railroads, at inflated prices, not
knowing the land was already occupied.
August 1867: Fort Arbuckle, Kansas; Indians killed seven Union Pacific Railroad workers. Company F, while trailing them, was attacked by about two hundred warriors. After two hours of fighting, two hundred more warriors joined the conflict. The fight lasted six hours more with many hostiles killed. Two Buffalo Soldiers were killed, they were Sergeant Christe and Captain Armies. Six horses were also wounded.
September 19, 1867: Sergeant Davis and Troop G of the Ninth U.S. Cavalry, 45 miles west of Fort Hayes, engaged, but was soon surrounded by Indians. Running low on ammunition, Sergeant Davis and his men broke out of their deadly position and drove the Indians off. Private Randall and two citizens are wounded. Two other settlers had been killed prior to the attack.
Background Event: Bill Cody, working for the Kansas Pacific Railroad, kills 4,000 buffalo in an eight month period. He became famous as "Buffalo Bill Cody".
October, 1867-March 1868, Medicine
Lodge Creek, Indian Territory:
Though the Treaty Of Medicine Lodge was signed by the Southern
Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Comanches, Kiowa-Apaches and the Kiowa tribes, a
few bands of Kiowa and Comanches continued to plague both the settlers
and other tribes. This period was considered relatively calm.
Background Event:Brevet Major General George Armstrong Custer,
Lieutenant Colonel,
7th U.S. Cavalry, is court-martialed.
February 1868: Cottonwood Grove, Indian Territory: Company in the field pursuing hostile Kiowa and Comanches. No contact was made. Tenth dispatched to the Eureka Valley Agency in response to raids in the area again, no contact with hostiles occurred.
Background Event: The Treaty of Bosque Redondo is signed with the leading Chiefs of the Navajo Nation including Chief Barboncito, thus ending the Navajo-Apache Wars.
March-May 1868: Company back at Fort Arbuckle, I. T. Wichita Agency is looted and burned by a Comanche war party. News of the attack was received too late, to effectively apprehend the war party.
Background Event: Lieutenant-Colonel George Armstrong Custer's first encounter with Indians results in the killing of Chief Black Kettle and his wife. Close to 100 more women, children and elders were also killed. Custer actively campaigned to stop African-Americans from getting the vote. When he was given a commission with the Buffalo Soldiers of the Ninth U.S. Cavalry, he refused to accept it. (To their good fortune). He was not the only officer to refuse a commission. Ironically, these very same Buffalo Soldiers ended up rescuing Custer and his command when he and his men were pinned down during an engagement.
June 1868: Camp Comanche, Indian Territory (Wichita Mountains);Colonel Grierson of Civil War fame, was ordered by the new commanding General of the Department of the Missouri, General Philip Sheridan, to move his headquarters to Fort Gibson and find a suitable location for a new fort within the Kiowa and Comanche reservation. After locating such a spot (Camp at Medicine Bluff Creek ), Grierson negotiated the release of six captives held by a band of Comanches near Otter Creek.

