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Niagara Movement |
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Organization of black intellectuals ---
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QUOTE
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"You can't separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom. "
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"Malcolm X"
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Buffalo Soliders Fort Vancover Washingtion
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Frontier Army Museum, Ft. Leavenworth, KS
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After a career of more than 30 years, Sgt. Edward Gibson retired from service at
vancouver Barracks in 1900.
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Buffalo Soldiers
at Vancouver Barracks, 1899-1900
In April 1899, soldiers
from Company B of the Twenty-fourth U.S. Infantry Regiment arrived at Vancouver
Barracks. This marked the first time in the history of the post that a unit from
one of the Army’s four African American regiments, known as Buffalo Soldiers, comprised
the post’s regular garrison of troops.
For the next thirteen months
these soldiers encountered the regular assignments of garrison duty; drilling, practicing
marching and marksmanship, improving the post’s infrastructure, performing maintenance
and clerical work, and attending the post school.
In addition to garrison
duty, these soldiers also participated in formal ceremonial activities – such as
concerts, parades, funerals, and escorts. For example, they led Vancouver’s annual
Memorial Day Parade in 1899.
When Medal of Honor recipient Moses Williams, himself a former Buffalo Soldier who
had served with the Ninth U.S. Cavalry Regiment, died shortly after retiring to
Vancouver in 1899, a detachment of soldiers from Company B helped lay him to rest
in the post cemetery with full military honors.
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All of the soldiers’ duty
was not relegated to the post. Shortly after their arrival, violence erupted in
the Couer d’Alene mining area of Idaho, resulting in the dynamiting of a mill owned
by the Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mining Company. Federal troops were dispatched.
Some of the closest troops
were stationed at Vancouver Barracks, and in May of 1899, a contingent of soldiers
from Company B traveled to the area.
Helping impose martial law
and guarding prisoners and rail lines, the soldiers of Company B played an important
role in one of the major labor-capital conflicts of the twentieth century.
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National Archives, Military Service Records
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Sgt. Mack Stanfield, the ranking non-commissioned officer for Company B at Vancouver
Barracks, reenlisted in 1897 with this document at Fort Douglas, Utah.
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Despite their duty, the
soldiers also enjoyed occasional leisure time, including dances, parties, and baseball
games.
Their company baseball team,
called the Hard Hitters and Brownies in the press, played several games in 1899
and 1900 in the area, including games against the Vancouver High School squad.
Approximately 103 soldiers
comprised Company B. By the spring of 1900, the company’s ranking noncommissioned
officer was Sgt. Mack Stanfield.
A thirty-nine-year-old native
of Franklin, Tennessee, the first sergeant had been married for fifteen years.
His wife, thirty-five-year-old Sallie, lived with him at the subsequent post (Spokane’s
Fort George Wright), one of the only wives to do so.
After service in several
other western posts, Sgt. Stanfield and his wife later retired to Portland, Oregon,
and they remained there for the rest of their lives.
Stanfield was an exception,
for few of the soldiers were married. According to an article in the Portland New
Age, the area’s African American newspaper, at least one soldier was married
in nearby Portland while stationed at the post.
Miss Lizzie Wright, of Fort
Leavenworth, Kan., and Corporal F[rank] Roberts, U.S.A., of Vancouver barracks,
were united in the holy bonds of matrimony on December 14, at the residence of Mrs.
Sergant [sic] Willing. The wedding was a very brilliant affair, all being in full
military dress. Corporal [William] Rollins was best man and Mrs. Sergeant Willing
bridesmaid. Quite a number of friends from Portland attended.
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Although there is no record
of lynching or direct violence toward blacks in Vancouver while Company B was at
Vancouver Barracks, the soldiers may have been the subject of racially based acrimony.
In announcing the company’s
departure, the Portland New Age concluded:
Their stay there gave the
citizens of Vancouver an opportunity to see more Afro-Americans than many of them
had ever seen, and whilst on the whole, they were well received, we have heard of
one or two instances where low-bred people took an opportunity to exhibit the prejudice
existing in their groveling nature.
One of these instances might
have been the one described by Pvt. James G. Cole in a stirring letter to the Portland
Oregonian newspaper on September 26, 1899:
There has been hitherto,
among the officers of the Army, a certain prejudice against serving in colored regiments,
but yesterday, as I passed two of the Thirty-fifth volunteer officers, I heard one
of them remark, ‘Do you know, I should not want anything better than to have a company
in a negro regiment? I am from North Carolina, and have always had the usual feeling
about commanding negro troops.’ I looked back at them and would have spoken, but
their rank being so superior to mine, my tongue cleaved.
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Cole continued by voicing
a leading plea echoed by African American newspapers at the time — the desire
for black units to be led by black officers, not white. “If this is done,” he argued,
“it will mark a distinct step in advance of any taken hitherto. It will recognize,
partially, at least, the manhood of the colored troops, and break down the bar of
separation now existing.”
Company B’s duty at Vancouver
Barracks ended on May 17, 1900, when the soldiers left for Spokane’s Fort Wright.
Within months, on October 16, they were transferred to the Presidio of San Francisco.
Thirteen days later, they arrived for duty in the Philippine Islands, where they
spent almost the next two years at war.
The compelling story of
the soldiers of Company B is significant in several ways. Their activities while
posted here, such as responding to the mining crisis in Wardner, Idaho, were nationally
significant. Their experience helps us better understand our community and its role
in the history of African Americans in the American West.
Their story also fills a
gap in the scholarship on Buffalo Soldiers in the West, and places Vancouver Barracks
firmly within the scope of Buffalo Soldier scholarship, where the Barracks is noticeably
absent or where it has been confused with Vancouver, British Columbia.
In addition, their story
fosters a connection to place at Fort Vancouver NHS and the Reserve, especially
for African Americans.
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