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Home  »  Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen  »  Page 193

Jacob A. Riis (1849–1914). Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen. 1904.

Page 193

the famous charge up the barren slope, of the splendid bravery of the colored cavalry regiment that had been lying out with the Rough-Riders in the trenches and now came to the support of their chums with a rush, and of the victory wrested from the Spaniards when all depended upon the success of the attack, will be told in years to come at every American fireside. How much of the quick success of the campaign was really due to the Roosevelt Rough-Riders, what fates hung in the balance when their impetuous rush saved the day, when retreat had been counseled and in effect decided, we understood better as we learned the real state of the invading army on the night of June 30. Let it be enough to say that it did save the day. Others fought as valiantly, but the honor of breaking the Spanish lines belongs to the Rough-Riders, as the honor and credit of standing firmly for an immediate advance upon the enemy’s works belongs to their Colonel and his bold comrades in the council of the chiefs in that fateful night.
  It was one of the unexpected things in that campaign, that out of it should come the appreciation of the colored soldier as man and