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How Did Williams Recruit African American Soldiers

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African Americans served honorably in every military conflict from the Revolutionary to the Civil War, but usually as volunteers and not as US Army regulars. After the Civil War, Congress authorized the reorganization of the US Army. This included six segregated regiments of “colored troops” to be led by white officers.
In 1866, the Army began to recruit for four infantry and two cavalry regiments. The recruitment process was slow. The Army preferred healthy men with mechanical and literacy skills and military experience. At first, Army officers recruited mainly among men who had been enslaved before the war. While few met these qualifications because of the limitations imposed by slavery, officers found these former slaves to be …show more content…

Among them were men who had earned the Medal of Honor and others who achieved “firsts” for African American men. In 1890, the Army and Navy Journal announced that the rifle team for the Department of Dakota included officers and enlisted men from both white and black regiments, including Pvt. John Gordon of Company B, 25th Infantry. Gordon emerged from the competition as the best marksman in the Department of Dakota. He was the first African American soldier to do so.
Sgt Moses Williams was born into slavery in 1845. In 1866, he enlisted in the 9th Cavalry and served in Texas and New Mexico, where he was distinguished in battle. During a fight with Apaches in 1881, he drew fire while his troops rescued three comrades. For his actions he received the Medal of Honor in 1896. He was appointed ordnance sergeant in 1886, the first African American to do so. The position required four years service as a noncommissioned officer and top physical condition. Williams reenlisted in the 10th Cavalry in 1891 at Fort Buford and when the post closed in 1895 he was reassigned to West Battery (what is now Oregon) in charge of 22 large canons and

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