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Third African American Graduate of West Point
A thick thread runs through the fabric of all black men who have
served in the U.S. Military. It is a thread of determination in the face
of outrageous odds and an understanding that actions taken in the present
would echo for future generations. One man who passed on this understanding
with compelling motivation was Charles Young.
Young was the third black man to graduate from West Point. He was
an educated, intelligent leader who always found time for family and an
eclectic group of friends who could easily have made a list of Who's Who
of Black America around the turn of the century.
Born in 1864, in Kentucky, the son of former slaves, his father was
a Civil War Veteran. Charlie grew up across the river in Ohio. His maternal
grandmother reinforced the daily lessons taught in public school, becoming
his tutor. He graduated from high school, then attended Wilberforce University.
After graduation, the University hired Young to teach undergraduate studies.
In 1884 he took a test for placement in the West Point Academy. His
score was second best in Ohio and earned him an appointment. The Academy
was a true test for the 20 year old. Classmates jeered him with the nickname,
"load of coal." There were racial slurs from fellow cadets as well as those
of higher rank.
Young had academic problems as well. Mathematics proved to be difficult
for him and he was dismissed after his first year. The easy course would
have been to give up, then and there, and take an easier way out of his
dilemma. But that was not what Charles Young was all about. For the first
of many times in his life, when faced with a challenge he would not surrender.
He sharpened his math skills, took a test and was readmitted the following
fall.
After another three years of hard work he earned the rank of Second
Lieutenant and became only the third black graduate of the Army's Academy.
He remembered the racist attitudes and intimidation and made them a positive
motivation in how he treated all the soldiers in his command.
His first assignment was with the 9th Cavalry in Nebraska and Utah.
Within months of his arrival on the plains, war broke out with Spain. The
Second Lieutenant was reassigned to training duty at Camp Algers, Virginia.
It was here in the south that Young would once again meet the ignorance
of racism in the Army. A rebellious white soldier refused to salute the
black officer. The soldier's commanding officer found out and confronted
him in front of Young who was ordered to remove his uniform coat and place
it on a chair. The soldier was then ordered to salute the coat. Young was
ordered to put his coat back on and the soldier commanded to continue to
salute it.
Young was then awarded a commission as a Major in the Ninth Ohio
Volunteer Infantry but was not assigned to combat in Cuba.
After the war with Spain, Young was once again assigned West to Fort
Duchesne in Utah. There he settled a dispute between Native Americans and
sheep herders.
It was in Utah that Young met a young Sergeant Major named Benjamin
O. Davis. Young was impressed with the young mans ability and encouraged
him to attend Officers Training School. Davis later became the first black
General in the U.S. Army. This was the first of many young men Young would
directly encourage. He once told a friend who was getting ready to join
the Tenth Cavalry, "Get a good life insurance policy, with your family
as beneficiary. Bring your Bible and yourself." His vast experience in
educating, training and motivating troops left a very lasting impression
on the Officer Corps of the Army. Young worked his men and horses hard.
It was a common joke in military circles that, "Young's men and horses
could not help but look healthy and lean, because they were never still
long enough to put on weight."
Just after the turn of the century, Young was assigned to command
in the Philippines. His mission was to hunt revolutionaries who lived in
the dense jungle. He proved his ability to command in combat conditions
in a politically unsettled environment. There were skills he would need
for his next post as Military Attache to Haiti.
Haiti was in political turmoil at the time. The U.S. wanted stability
on the island and needed information. Young was ordered to secretly map
the country and provide intelligence information about the various political
groups struggling for power. With his life in almost constant danger, Young's
mission ended in disaster. A clerk he hired stole his maps and information
and sold them to the Haitians. Embarrassed, Young returned to the United
States.
At home, Young was a devoted family man with a wife, Ada, and two
children; son, Charles Jr. and daughter Marie. He also mastered several
languages, played and composed music for piano, violin and guitar. His
friends were some of the most educated and gifted black men of the day.
They included W.E.B. Du Bois, who started the N.A.A.C.P., scientist Booker
T. Washington, and poet/ song lyricist, Paul Lawrence Dunbar.
Young served along the U.S. Mexican border during the Mexican Revolution.
He commanded the Tenth Cavalry as part of General "Black Jack" Pershing's
punitive expedition into Mexico in 1916. It was a 300 mile long, hard campaign
in search of Pancho Villa. Villa tried and failed to take control of the
government in Mexico City. Not happy with the U. S. decision to support
then Mexican President Venustiano Carranza, Villa tried to provoke a war
between the U. S. and Mexico. In January of 1916 Villa, and his men, pulled
16 Americans off a train near El Paso and shot them. When the U. S. was
slow to respond, Villa's gang attacked Columbus, New Mexico. Nineteen Americans
were killed and the town burned to the ground.
The real task for American troops was to contain the almost daily
battles between Mexican Federal Troops and Revolutionary forces along the
Arizona border. It was dangerous duty because American troops were under
strict orders that limited their ability to defend themselves with their
rifles. Often the fighting spilled over into the U.S.
As war broke out in Europe, most black officers and troops found
themselves on the border with Mexico. Almost immediately there was an uproar
in the black media calling for the promotion of Young to Brigadier General.
Even then former President Teddy Roosevelt, in a speech days before his
death, said that he knew of one black man very capable of command and that
was Charles Young. The War Department was heavily pressured from white
officers and Southern Congressmen to stop Young's promotion. At the time
about 75% of the Army Officer Corps was made up of southern white men.
At the same time Young was part of a group lobbying the Army to create
an Officers Training Camp for black soldiers. The Army had opened 14 training
camps
around the country but none were integrated.
It was also at this time that Lt. Colonel Charles Young was due for
a physical. Doctors said his blood pressure was high and recommended his
retirement. And that's what the Army did.
The 54 year old soldier would not just fade away, however. He told
his wife, "Every full-blooded American who loves his country and his people
naturally would have some high blood pressure." In June of 1918 he saddled
up his horse at his home in southwestern Ohio, and started a 16 day, 500
mile ride to Washington D.C. Along the way he received encouragement and
the ever present racial slur, but he pressed on.
In Washington he met with the Secretary of War (now called Secretary
of Defense) who promised to look into his request for immediate reinstatement
and command of a combat unit in Europe. It took many months. Young was
reinstated and promoted to full Colonel, but he was assigned to duty at
Camp Grant, Illinois. By the time this reassignment came through the war
was winding down.
The Colonel was stationed overseas the following year. He returned
to Liberia as Military Attache. His lifelong friend W.E.B. Du Bois, wrote,
"If Charles Young's blood pressure was too high to go to France, why was
it not too high for him to be sent to even more arduous duty in the swamps
of West Africa?" It was a good question, but one Young gave little thought
to. He reported for duty and served until December of 1921. He was in Nigeria
and was admitted to the hospital after an attack of nephritis. Young had
long suffered from a chronic inflammation of the kidneys, called Bright's
disease. On January 8, 1922 Charlie Young died. He was buried in Nigeria.
Some 18 months later his body was exhumed and he was finally laid to rest
in Arlington National Cemetery across the river from Washington D.C. Over
100,000 people lined the route of his funeral procession. His long ride
was truly over.
He had served his country, his family and friends and served as a
role model for future generations of soldiers and men. A lessor individual
might have given up along the way, but Charles Young was not a quitter.
His legacy is of determination and success in the face of bigotry and racism.
He rose through the attitudes of his time to become a successful officer,
father and husband. |