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CREATED:20200818T074800Z
DESCRIPTION:Discover the ongoing journey of the California Buffalo Soldiers Memorial 
 Project ~ Join the Celebration \n\nCalifornia Buffalo Soldiers, like their 
 white counterparts in U.S. Army regiments, were among the first park 
 rangers, in general, and backcountry rangers, in particular, patrolling 
 parts of the West. \n\nAfrican-American army regiments, formed just after 
 the Civil War, had been dispatched westward where these black soldiers 
 fought in the Indian Wars and were eventually given the name Buffalo 
 Soldiers by the Cheyenne and other Plains Indians who saw a resemblance 
 between their dark, curly hair and the matted cushion between the horns of 
 the buffalo.\n \nDozens of uniformed soldiers stand on a fallen sequoia 
 tree\nThe 9th Cavalry soldiers stand on the Fallen Monarch in Yosemite's 
 Mariposa Grove in 1904.\n\nCongress, in 1866, created six segregated 
 regiments which were soon consolidated into four black regiments: the 9th 
 and 10th Cavalry and the 24th and 25th Infantry. Historians have recorded 
 the service of these Buffalo Soldiers on the Western frontier, but their 
 service in some national parks has been nearly forgotten. \n\nApproximately 
 500 Buffalo Soldiers served in Yosemite National Park and nearby Sequoia 
 National Park with duties from evicting poachers and timber thieves to 
 extinguishing forest fires. Their noteworthy accomplishments were made 
 despite the added burden of racism.\n \nPosed shot of a park ranger dressed 
 as a Buffalo Soldier\nPark Ranger Shelton Johnson portrays one of the U.S. 
 Army's Buffalo Soldiers as part of his interpretation of Yosemite's 
 history.\n\nAs background, the U.S. Army served as the official 
 administrator of Yosemite and Sequoia national parks between 1891 and 1913, 
 and, in that capacity, it helped create a model for park management as we 
 know it today. \n\nThese army troops were garrisoned at the Presidio of San 
 Francisco during the winter months and served in the Sierra only during the 
 summer months. This arrangement was an unusual duty for troops and greatly 
 prized by army men with one army officer referring to the Sierra Nevada as 
 the "Cavalryman's Paradise." \n\nCommanding officers became acting military 
 superintendents for these national parks with two troops of cavalry, 
 normally, assigned to each park. Each troop would be made up of 
 approximately 60 men. The troops essentially comprised a roving 
 economy-infusing money into park and local businesses-and thus their 
 presence was generally welcomed. The presence of these soldiers as official 
 stewards of park lands brought a sense of law and order to the mountain 
 wilderness.\n\nThe hidden chapter of this U.S. Army history revolves around 
 the participation of African-American troops of the 24th Infantry and 9th 
 Cavalry, who protected both Yosemite and Sequoia national parks in 1899, 
 1903, and 1904. (The parks are located approximately 150 miles apart.) 
 \n\nMost of these men were veterans of the Spanish-American War and the 
 Philippine-American War in which they were called "Smoked Yankees." Many of 
 them enlisted in the South where opportunities for African-Americans were 
 limited to sharecropping, and other labor intensive work.\n\nEven though 
 the Buffalo Soldiers wore the uniform of the U.S. Army, their ethnicity 
 combined with the racial prejudice of the time made the performance of 
 their duties quite challenging. In the early 1900s, African-Americans were 
 routinely abused, or even killed, for the slightest perceived offense. 
 \n\nThey occupied one of the lowest rungs of the social ladder; a fact 
 which served to undercut the authority of any black man who served in any 
 position of power. Yosemite and Sequoia's Buffalo Soldiers had to be 
 simultaneously strong and diplomatic to fulfill the duties of their job but 
 to avoid giving offense.\n\nAlthough officers were mostly Euro-American, an 
 exception to this was Charles Young, the third African-American graduate of 
 the U.S. military academy at West Point. He served as the acting military 
 superintendent of Sequoia National Park in 1903. \nAlthough his tenure was 
 brief, it was groundbreaking. Young is considered by some to be the first 
 African-American superintendent of a national park. Most of the men under 
 Young's command in Sequoia, as well as the 9th Cavalry soldiers serving in 
 Yosemite, were Philippine war veterans, but service in the Sierra brought 
 about an astonishing change in geography and function for these 
 battle-weary men. \n\nTheir duties included confiscating firearms as well 
 as curbing poaching of the park's wildlife, suppressing wildfires, ending 
 illegal grazing of livestock on federal lands, and stopping thefts of 
 timber and other natural objects. They oversaw the construction of roads, 
 trails, and other infrastructure.\n\nTheir accomplishments included, but by 
 no means were limited to, the completion of the first usable road into 
 Giant Forest and the first trail to the top of Mt. Whitney (the tallest 
 peak in the contiguous United States) in Sequoia National Park in 1903; and 
 the building of an arboretum in Yosemite National Park near the south fork 
 of the Merced River in 1904. \n\nOne scholar considered the latter area to 
 contain the first marked nature trail in the national park system. Thus, an 
 integral part of that history played by the 500 Buffalo Soldiers, 
 comprising eight troops of cavalry and one company of infantry, will no 
 longer be forgotten.\n\nSoon we will know the names and locate existing 
 families where possible as we encourage a new generation to become Park 
 Rangers and honored members of our Armed Services.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/08/18/18835962.php
SUMMARY:2020 Yosemite National Park ~ CA Buffalo Soldier Celebrations
LOCATION:Yosemite Valley
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/08/18/18835962.php
DTSTART:20200926T183000Z
DTEND:20200926T223000Z
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