

Buffalo Soldier
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Over
180,000 African-Americans served in the Union Army during the Civil
War. Of these, more than 33,000 died. After the war, the future
of African-Americans in the U.S. Army was in doubt. In July1866,
however, Congress passed legislation establishing two cavalry and
four infantry regiments (later consolidated to two) whose enlisted
composition was to be made up of African-Americans. The majority
of the new recruits had served in all Black units during the war.
The mounted regiments were the 9th and 10th Cavalries, soon nicknamed
Buffalo Soldiers by the Cheyenne and Comanche. Until the early 1890s
they constituted 20 percent of all cavalry forces on the American
frontier.
The
9th and 10th Cavalries' service in subduing Mexican revolutionaries,
hostile Native
Americans, outlaws, comancheros, and rustlers was as invaluable
as it was unrecognized. It was also accomplished over some of the
most rugged and inhospitable country in North America. A list of
their adversaries - Geronimo, Sitting Bull, Victorio, Lone Wolf,
Billy the Kid, and Pancho Villa - reads like a "Who's Who"
of the American West.
Lesser known, but equally
important, the Buffalo Soldiers explored and mapped vast areas of
the southwest and strung hundreds of miles of telegraph lines. They
built and repaired frontier outposts around which future towns and
cities sprang to life. Without the protection provided by the 9th
and 10th Cavalries, crews building the ever expanding railroads
were at the mercy of outlaws and hostile Indians. The Buffalo Soldiers
consistently received some of the worst assignments the Army had
to offer. They also faced fierce prejudice to both the colors of
their Union uniforms and their skin by many of the citizens of the
post-war frontier towns. Despite this, the troopers of the 9th and
10th Cavalries developed into two of the most distinguished fighting
unit
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