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DESCRIPTION:Everyone is invited to discover our “California Grown” legacy of Mrs. 
 Ada Mills Young and Colonel Charles Young all along our 2020 California 
 Buffalo Soldiers Trail beginning at the SF Presidio.\n\nCharles Young was 
 born into slavery in a two-room log cabin in Mays Lick, Ky., on March 12, 
 1864. His father Gabriel later fled to freedom and in 1865 enlisted as a 
 private in the 5th Regiment, U.S. Colored Heavy Artillery. His father’s 
 enhanced status as a “Grand Army man” impressed Charles as he grew up 
 in Ripley, Ohio. The son was sent to an all-black elementary school, but he 
 was able to attend Ripley’s integrated high school and graduated at the 
 top of his class in 1881. Two years later, at the urging of his father, he 
 took the West Point entrance examination. Twenty-year-old Young scored 
 well, received the required nomination from Ohio’s 12th District 
 Congressman Alphonso Hart and reported to the U.S. Military Academy in June 
 1884. He was the ninth black American admitted to West Point; he would be 
 the third to graduate with a commission as a second lieutenant.\n\nYoung 
 had a miserable time at West Point. Charles Rhodes, a white cadet in 
 Young’s class, remembered him as “a rather awkward, overgrown lad, 
 large-boned and robust in physique, and of a nervous, impulsive 
 temperament.” Rhodes recalled that Young’s “life was lonesome” at 
 West Point––hardly a surprise, as most white cadets refused to 
 associate with blacks and subjected them to racial slurs, cruel slights and 
 hostile treatment beyond the normal hazing.\n\nYoung considered quitting 
 West Point after his first year, but his father convinced him to 
 stay—though it took Young five years to complete the curriculum. He had 
 difficulty with engineering but excelled in languages, gaining a working 
 knowledge of Latin, Greek, French, Spanish and German. His decision to 
 persevere was a source of pride for him, and he accepted that “duty, 
 honor, country” must be the foundation of his life as an officer. But 
 Young later advised a young black man interested in attending West Point 
 that he could expect “a dog’s life there.”\nYoung graduated last in 
 his 49-member class in 1889, and from 1894 until 1936 he was the lone black 
 West Point graduate in the Army.\nAssigned to the predominantly black 9th 
 U.S. Cavalry (aka “buffalo soldiers”), Young served in Nebraska and 
 Utah in the early 1890s before reporting to Wilberforce University, near 
 Dayton, Ohio, as professor of military science and tactics. While at 
 Wilberforce, Young befriended W.E.B. Du Bois, a classics professor who 
 would become one of the leading black American intellectuals of the early 
 20th century. After leaving Wilberforce, Du Bois and Young continued to 
 correspond, and Du Bois considered Young one of the “talented 
 tenth”—those individuals whom Du Bois and other prominent black 
 intellectuals believed would lead the struggle for racial justice in 
 America.\nYoung’s patience, discipline and hard work paid off when the 
 United States declared war on Spain in April 1898. On May 13 of that year 
 Ohio Governor Asa S. Bushnell appointed 1st Lt. Young a brevet major in 
 command of the 9th Battalion Ohio Volunteers, an all-black unit. While the 
 major and his men remained stateside, Young gained valuable command 
 experience.\n\nAt war’s end Young returned briefly to Wilberforce 
 University before rejoining the 9th Cavalry at Fort Duchesne, Utah. While 
 in command of I Troop, 1st Lt. Young (he had reverted to his permanent 
 rank) learned that one of his men, Sgt. Maj. Benjamin O. Davis, wanted to 
 apply for a commission. Young tutored Davis for the competitive examination 
 and wrote a glowing letter of recommendation. In early 1901 Davis passed 
 the test and was commissioned a second lieutenant. He never forgot 
 Young’s help, particularly after becoming the first black American to 
 reach the rank of general.\n\nIn February 1901 Young was promoted to 
 captain in the Regular Army—another first for a black man. Two months 
 later Young and I Troop sailed for the Philippines with the rest of the 9th 
 Cavalry. Stationed on Samar, Young and his men fought the Filipino 
 insurrectos in the jungles of the island’s rugged interior. During one 
 operation Young was leading a scouting party when it came under attack. 
 “Captain Young had fired his revolver so fast,” a corporal later 
 recalled, “that the sight was blown off.” Young then took another 
 officer’s pistol and kept firing at the enemy until reinforcements 
 arrived. Such instances of combat leadership earned Young the moniker 
 “Follow Me” from his men, who vowed they would give their lives for 
 him. The 9th Cavalry returned stateside in late 1902.\nIn May 1903, 
 39-year-old Captain Young, three other officers and 93 enlisted soldiers 
 left the Presidio of San Francisco for Sequoia and General Grant national 
 parks in north-central California. In the years before the 1916 creation of 
 the National Park Service, the Army ran America’s national parks. The War 
 Department detailed junior officers to the Department of the Interior to 
 serve as acting superintendents during the summer. These assignments were 
 always short-lived; the officers never served for more than two consecutive 
 seasons. Consequently, little was expected.\n\nBut Young threw himself into 
 his new job. He took charge of the payroll accounts and directed the 
 activities of the park rangers. He stopped the illegal grazing of sheep in 
 the park’s meadows. Young had his men dig firebreaks and place fences 
 around the giant sequoias to protect them from root damage. The men also 
 began work on a major project: completing a road to the Giant Forest, the 
 park’s major attraction. Civilian crews had completed two-thirds of the 
 road during the past few seasons. Young and his troopers finished it in two 
 months and added another two miles to the road, going on to complete an 
 unfinished road to the town of Visalia, seven miles farther 
 west\n.\nSecretary of the Interior Ethan A. Hitchcock was enormously 
 impressed with Young’s work. Visalia town leaders also heralded Young’s 
 “energy and enthusiasm” and gave him a unanimous vote of thanks. The 
 National Park Service remains proud of Young, devoting a number of website 
 pages to him and his achievements as the first black superintendent of a 
 national park. At the completion of his assignment in the park, Young 
 returned to San Francisco. There he married Ada Mills, the daughter of a 
 prosperous mulatto family from Oakland. His new bride accompanied Young on 
 his next tour of duty, as military attaché to Haiti and the Dominican 
 Republic.\n\nYoung and his wife arrived in Port-au-Prince in late May 1904. 
 He threw himself into his new assignment and over the next two years made 
 exploratory horseback trips throughout Hispaniola. He wrote topographical 
 reports and drew maps, compiled a French-English-Creole dictionary and 
 wrote a 273-page monograph on Haiti’s government, law and culture. He 
 analyzed the military preparedness of both island nations and reported on 
 their fortifications. When Young left Port-au-Prince in April 1907, William 
 P. Powell, the American minister in Haiti, wrote to Secretary of State 
 Elihu Root that Young should be commended for his “careful and 
 painstaking work.” In 1907 and 1908 Young served in Washington, D.C., in 
 the War Department’s military intelligence section, where he spent much 
 of the year relating his experiences in Haiti to both senior Army leaders 
 and State Department officials.\n\nYoung then redeployed to the Philippines 
 on a one-year assignment as commander of 3rd Squadron, 9th Cavalry. His 
 wife, Ada, and their 2-year old son came along. Their presence was a source 
 of joy to Young, as he was the lone black American officer in the 
 Philippines and still faced prejudice in a white man’s Army. Unlike his 
 first tour in the Philippines, during which he had seen considerable 
 combat, his second tour was routine and uneventful, aside from the birth of 
 a daughter.\n\nReturning to the United States in May 1909, Young reported 
 to Fort D.A. Russell, Wyo., then the largest cavalry post in the United 
 States, where he took command of 2nd Squadron, 9th Cavalry. Two years later 
 he again made history when the War Department selected him to be the first 
 military attaché to the Republic of Liberia.\n\nArriving in Monrovia with 
 Ada in May 1912, Young began reorganizing the nascent Liberian Frontier 
 Force and constabulary. Soon promoted to major, he saw combat in December 
 1912 when hostile tribesmen ambushed the Liberian troops he was 
 accompanying. Over the next few days Young and the Liberian unit fought 
 from town to town, and Young suffered a gunshot wound to his arm––the 
 only time in his career he was wounded in action.\n\nIn early 1913 Young 
 contracted malarial blackwater fever and became so debilitated he could 
 scarcely walk. Returning to the United States for treatment, he nearly died 
 on the voyage home. He spent months recovering at home in Ohio, then 
 returned to Liberia to complete his assignment, which he did in November 
 1915.\n\nBack on U.S. soil Young discovered he had achieved renown in the 
 black community. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored 
 People awarded him the Spingarn Medal in 1916, an annual award for 
 outstanding achievement by a black American. (General Colin Powell is the 
 only other career soldier to have earned the medal, in 1991.) In March 1916 
 Major Young took command of 2nd Squadron, 10th Cavalry, at Fort Huachuca, 
 Ariz.—just in time to participate in the Army’s Punitive Expedition 
 into Mexico. Mexican guerrilla leader Pancho Villa and his men had raided 
 the Army’s garrison at Columbus, N.M., killing or wounding more than 
 two-dozen soldiers and civilians, and Young and his troopers joined Brig. 
 Gen. John J. “Black Jack” Pershing’s campaign in search of 
 Villa.\n\nYoung and his men ran into a large contingent of Villa’s troops 
 at a ranch in Mexico on March 31, 1916. Determined to rout the guerrillas 
 from their defensive position behind stone walls, Young led his mounted 
 troopers in a whooping, shouting charge that so unnerved the defenders that 
 they broke and ran. Two weeks later Young and the 10th Cavalry rescued 
 embattled troopers from the 13th Cavalry who had been cornered by Mexican 
 government troops and were fighting for their lives. The Mexicans had 
 already killed or wounded a number of Americans, and their commander, Major 
 Frank Tompkins, was reportedly so thrilled to see the reinforcements, he 
 cried out, “By God, Young, I could kiss every one of you!” Quipped 
 Young, who was riding at the head of the troops, “Hello, Tompkins! You 
 can start in on me right now.”\nIn early 1917 it was clear to many 
 observers that America’s entry into World War I was imminent, and Young 
 believed he was ready for war in France. So did Pershing; he sent a list to 
 the War Department of those officers whose performance in the Punitive 
 Expedition made them deserving of brigade command. Lt. Col. Young (he had 
 been promoted in June 1916) was on that list. When the United States 
 declared war on the Central Powers in April 1917, many in the black 
 community expected that the 53-year-old Young would play an important role, 
 reach flag rank and make history as America’s first black general.\n\nIt 
 was not to be. While stationed at Fort Huachuca in May 1917, Young had 
 passed the examination for promotion to colonel, but his medical 
 examination found high blood pressure and albuminuria, suggesting kidney 
 damage. Two medical boards recommended that his physical condition be 
 waived and that he be promoted and kept on active duty, but the chief 
 medical officer disagreed. Despite many letters written on his behalf, an 
 intensive lobbying effort by the NAACP and his own pleas to the War 
 Department, Young was forced to retire as a colonel in July 1917.\n\nWhile 
 Young was the first black American to reach that rank, the promotion was 
 meaningless to him, as his military career seemed over. The medical 
 examination was correct— Young’s kidneys were severely damaged—but 
 the color of his skin may have also factored into his forced retirement: A 
 white officer who had served under Young in Mexico had complained to his 
 senator in Mississippi about being forced to serve under a “colored 
 commander,” terming it both “distasteful” and “practically 
 impossible.” The senator wrote to President Woodrow Wilson—a staunch 
 Southerner—who asked Secretary of War Newton Baker to look into the 
 problem. Baker, learning of Young’s questionable health, reportedly 
 suggested a medical retirement. Had Young been a white officer, there is 
 every reason to believe he would have been declared fit for duty. But the 
 Wilson administration, which strongly favored a segregated Army, apparently 
 found it expedient to let Young’s condition solve a complaint by white 
 racists.\n\nYoung’s old friend Du Bois, joined by the NAACP, continued to 
 lobby for Young’s return to active duty, as did his former commanding 
 officer in the 10th Cavalry, to no avail. While thousands of black 
 Americans eventually served in the Army in Europe in World War I—mostly 
 in the ranks––Young was not one of them. It must have come as a great 
 surprise to the colonel when, just five days before the end of the war, he 
 was recalled to active duty and placed in command of all-black stevedore 
 regiments at Camp Grant, Ill. But his late recall and war’s end precluded 
 any promotion. Young soon again returned to civilian life, but in 1919 he 
 was recalled to duty, again as military attaché to Liberia. He sailed for 
 England in January 1920, accompanied by his wife and two children. Young 
 continued on to Liberia, while his wife, son and daughter went to France to 
 live during his assignment.\n\nYoung’s duties in Liberia—advising that 
 nation’s military and supporting U.S. State Department efforts—mirrored 
 those of his earlier tenure. But the War Department also tasked him with 
 intelligence gathering in other parts of Africa, and in November 1921 he 
 traveled to Nigeria, where kidney disease finally caught up with him. He 
 died in Lagos of acute nephritis on Jan. 8, 1922, and was buried in 
 Liberia. After appeals from his widow, Mrs. Ada Mills Young, the Army 
 returned Young’s body to the United States, where on June 1, 1923, he was 
 buried with full honors at Arlington National Cemetery.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/11/05/18827891.php
SUMMARY:SF Presidio 2019 Veterans Day Honoring Colonel Charles Young and the Buffalo Soldiers
LOCATION:SF Presidio Visitors Center\nBuffalo Soldiers Tour  
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/11/05/18827891.php
DTSTART:20191111T190000Z
DTEND:20191111T210000Z
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