African-American NY National Guard Troops had to fight to fight in World War I
During the World War I centennial observance, the New York National Guard and New York State Division of Military and Naval Affairs will issue press releases noting key dates which impacted New Yorkers, based on information and artifacts provided by the New York State Military Museum in Saratoga Springs.
More than 400,000 New Yorkers served in the military during World War I, more than any other state.
When the African American National Guard Soldiers of New York’s 15th Infantry Regiment arrived in France in December 1917, they expected to conduct combat training and enter the trenches of the Western Front right away.
They could not have been more wrong.
The black troops were ordered to unload supply ships at the docks for their first months in France, joining the mass of supply troops known as stevedores, working long hours in the port at St. Nazaire.
More than 380,000 African Americans served in the Army during World War I, according to the national archives. Approximately 200,000 of these were sent to Europe.
But more than half of those who deployed were assigned to labor and stevedore battalions, assigned to tasks that many Army leaders saw as most appropriate.
These troops performed essential duties for the American Expeditionary Force, building roads, bridges, and trenches in support of the front-line battles.
In St. Nazaire, the New York National Guard Soldiers learned they would work to prepare the docks and rail lines to be a major port of entry for the hundreds of thousands of forces yet to arrive in France.
The African American regiment was a quick and easy source of labor, according to author Stephen Harris in his 2003 book, Harlem’s Hell Fighters.
“First, Pershing would have a source of cheap labor,” Harris wrote. “Second, he wouldn’t have to worry about what to do with black soldiers, particularly when he might have to mix them in with white troops.”
But officers, leaders and the combat Soldiers had not signed up for labor. They were committed to fighting the Germans and winning the war.
“They had no place to put the regiment,” said infantry Capt. Hamilton Fish, according to the Harris book. “They weren’t going to put us in a white division, not in 1917, anyway; so our troops were sent in to the supply and services as laborers to lay railroad tracks. This naturally upset our men tremendously.”
The regiment’s best advocate was their commander, Col. William Hayward.
“It was time for us to try to do something towards extricating ourselves from the dirty mess of pick-swinging and wheel barrel trundling that we were in,” Hayward had said to Capt. Arthur Little, commander of the regimental band, according to Jeffrey Sammons in his 2014 book Harlem’s Rattlers and the Great War. “We had come to France as combat troops, and, apparently, we were in danger of becoming labor troops.”
Hayward argued his case in a letter to General Pershing, outlining the regiments’ mobilization and training, and followed up immediately with a personal visit to Pershing’s headquarters.
He would bring with him the regiment’s most formidable weapon in swaying opinion: the regimental band, lauded as one of the finest in the entire Expeditionary Force.
While the regiment literally laid the tracks for the arrival of the two million troops deploying to France, the regimental band toured the region, performing for French and American audiences at rest centers and hospitals. The 369th Band was unlike any other performance audiences had seen or heard before, noted Harris. The regimental band is credited with introducing jazz music to France during the war.
The military band would frequently perform a French march, followed by traditional band scores such as John Philip Sousa’s “Stars and Stripes Forever.”
“And then came the fireworks,” said Sgt. Noble Sissle, band vocalist and organizer, in the Harris account, as the 369th Band would play as if they were in a jazz club back in Harlem.
After some three months of labor constructing nearby railways to move supplies forward, the Soldiers learned that they had orders to join the French 16th Division for three weeks of combat training.
They also learned they had a new regimental number as the now-renamed 369th Infantry Regiment. Not that it mattered much to the Soldiers; they still carried their nickname from New York, the Black Rattlers, and carried their regimental flag of the 15th New York Infantry everywhere they went in France.
While the 369th Infantry would become part of the U.S. Army’s 92nd Infantry Division, it would be assigned to fight with French forces. This solved the dilemma for Pershing and the American Expeditionary Forces of what to do with the African-American troops.
The black troops would see combat, but alongside French forces, who were already accustomed to the many races and ethnicities already serving in the ranks of their colonial troops.
“The French army instructors literally welcomed their African American trainees as comrades in arms,” Sammons wrote. “To the pragmatic French army instructors, the Soldiers were Americans, black Americans, to be trained for combat within their ranks. The trainees clearly excelled at their tasks.”
After learning valuable lessons in trench warfare from their French partners, the Soldiers of the 369th finally had their chance to prove their worth as combat troops when they entered the front lines, holding their line against the last German spring offensive near Chateau-Thierry.
Their value was not lost on the French and the regiment continued to fight alongside French forces, participating in the Aisne-Marne counteroffensive in the summer of 1918 alongside the French 162st Infantry Division.
The Hellfighters from Harlem had come into their own, in spite of their difficult start.
The regiment would go on to prove itself in combat operations throughout the rest of the war, receiving the French highest honor, the Croix de Guerre, for its unit actions alongside some 171 individual decorations for heroism.