The
term “buffalo soldiers” dates to post-Civil War conflicts
with Indians who granted the honorific to an all-black cavalry outfit.
Buffalo soldier units served in the Spanish-American War, World
War I, and the Italian campaign of World War II, when elements of
the 92nd Division were the only black units in that war to serve
in combat. The road to Italy passed through various posts in the
segregated South and Ft. Huachuca, an isolated Arizona outpost where
the 92nd assembled for the final push. As featured in the novel
and film
Miracle at St. Anna, the 92nd distinguished themselves
on the battlefield, disproving skeptics and earning an honored chapter
in the history of World War II. Two years after the war ended, President
Truman signed an order to desegregate the U.S. Armed Forces, closing
the book on the buffalo soldiers.
Isham
G. Benton
ARMY World
War II Audio Interview |
William
C. Bryant ARMY World
War II Audio Interview, Photo |
Elvin
V. Davidson ARMY World
War II Audio Interview,
Transcript |
John
C. Foster, Jr. ARMY World
War II Memoir |
Luther
E. Hall ARMY World
War II Audio Interview, Official
Documents |
Robert
P. Madison
ARMY World
War II Audio Interview, Photo |
A.
William Perry
ARMY World
War II Video & Audio
Interviews, Photos, Clippings
|
Rothacker
C. Smith ARMY World
War II Audio Interview, Transcript,
Photos
|
Roscoe
T. Spann
ARMY
World War II
Video Interview , Transcript, Photos, Newsclipping |