Showing posts with label military history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label military history. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2026

The Forgotten Black Soldiers Who Fought for America and Were Never Given Full Credit

 Black Americans have fought in every major war in American history.


They fought in the American Revolution. They fought in the Civil War, on both sides, though overwhelmingly for the Union. They fought in the Indian Wars. They fought in the Spanish-American War. They fought in both World Wars. They fought in Korea and Vietnam.


In almost every case they fought under conditions that were more difficult than those of their white counterparts. And in almost every case the rights and recognition they were promised for that service were delayed, denied, or delivered too late to matter to the men who earned them.


The Civil War


The 54th Massachusetts Infantry was one of the first official Black regiments in the Union Army. Formed in 1863 it was commanded by white officers but made up of free Black men from across the North who volunteered to fight.


On July 18, 1863, the 54th led the assault on Fort Wagner in South Carolina. They suffered devastating casualties charging a heavily fortified Confederate position. Their conduct under fire was widely reported and helped change public opinion about whether Black soldiers could be effective fighters.


What is less discussed is what those soldiers were paid. White Union soldiers received thirteen dollars a month. Black soldiers received ten dollars a month minus three dollars for clothing, effectively seven dollars a month. The 54th Massachusetts refused to accept any pay at all for over a year in protest of the unequal treatment rather than accept wages that acknowledged they were worth less than white soldiers.


The Buffalo Soldiers


After the Civil War the US Army organized several regiments of Black soldiers for service on the western frontier. They were given that name by Native American tribes they fought, reportedly because their hair reminded warriors of the mane of a buffalo.


The Buffalo Soldiers fought in some of the most difficult terrain and conditions of the post Civil War army. They had some of the lowest desertion rates in the entire military. They received fewer resources and lower quality equipment than white regiments.


The Tuskegee Airmen


During World War Two the military was segregated. The Tuskegee Airmen were the first Black military aviators in the United States Armed Forces, trained at the Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama.


They flew more than 15,000 sorties in Europe and North Africa. They won more than 150 Distinguished Flying Crosses. Their record in combat was outstanding.


When they came home they came home to a segregated country that would not let them vote in much of the South and where they could be denied service at a restaurant or a hotel.


The right to live with full dignity in the country they had fought for was not a reward they received. It was a right they had to keep fighting for after the war was over.


These men deserve to be at the center of American military history. Not in a footnote. At the center.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

The Native American Code Talkers Helped Win World War Two and Were Told to Keep It Secret for Decades

 By 1942 the United States military had a serious problem in the Pacific.


The Japanese had proven extraordinarily skilled at intercepting and breaking American military communications codes. Almost every code the US used was being cracked. Tactical communications could not be trusted.


The solution came from an unusual source.


Philip Johnston was a civil engineer who had grown up on the Navajo reservation as the son of a missionary. He was one of a handful of non-Navajo people who spoke the language fluently. He knew that Navajo was a language of extraordinary complexity, with tonal elements and grammatical structures that had never been written down in any formal system, and was almost completely unknown outside the Navajo people.


He proposed using Navajo speakers as military communicators.


What the Code Talkers Did


The Marine Corps accepted the proposal. Navajo recruits were trained not just to communicate in their native language but to use a specialized code built on top of it. Military terms were assigned Navajo words that described them in indirect ways. Submarines became iron fish. Bombs became eggs. Fighter planes became hummingbirds. Commanding generals became war chiefs.


The code was never broken. Not once during the entire war. Japanese cryptanalysts who had broken nearly every other American code system were unable to make sense of what they were hearing.


Code talkers served across the Pacific theater transmitting orders, coordinates, and tactical information in real time during some of the most intense battles of the war. Major General Howard Connor, who served at Iwo Jima, reportedly said that without the Navajo code talkers the Marines never could have taken Iwo Jima.


What Happened Afterward


When the war ended the Navajo code talkers were ordered not to talk about what they had done. Their contribution was classified. The code was considered too valuable to reveal. The US government wanted to keep it available in case it was needed again.


The code talkers returned home and could not tell anyone what they had done. They could not explain why they had joined the Marines or what they had contributed to the war effort.


The program was not declassified until 1968. It was not until 2001 that the original 29 Navajo code talkers received the Congressional Gold Medal, America's highest civilian honor. By that time most of them were very old. Many had already died without formal recognition.


The code talkers came from a people that the United States government had spent generations trying to destroy. Their language, which the government had banned in Indian schools and tried to eliminate, turned out to be one of the most important military assets of the Second World War.


That is a story that deserves to be told much louder than it has been.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.