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BUFFALO SOLDIERS

History once erased the role of Black servicemen in the westward and overseas expansion of the United States, but in recent years stories of their heroism have been revived and their contribution to their nation’s history recognised WORDS PROF CLIVE WEBB
Men of the 10th Cavalry who were pivotal to the US Army winning the Battle of San Juan Hill in Cuba
Images: Alamy, Getty

Born only a year after a civil war that brought the emancipation of his people from slavery, Dennis Bell died a decorated military hero of his country. In June 1898 he and other Black American soldiers manned a daring mission under heavy fire to rescue fellow ser vicemen stranded at an enemy outpost. This act of heroism during the Spanish-American War led to Bell and three other rescuers receiving the Congressional Medal of Honor.

But history forgot Bell and his comrades. The Buffalo Soldiers, as they were known, who bravely fought to liberate Cuba from Spanish colonial rule became all but erased from later commemorations of the conflict. Only recently have we fully recovered the story of why Black Americans demanded the right to serve their country, how they contributed to its military success, and why the daring and determination they showed time and again on the battlefield was lost to public memory.

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History of War
Issue 129
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