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vii FOR MANY YEARS the reputation of the Ninety-second Division, the only African American division in France in World War I, 1917–1918, has been tarnished, to say the least; in fact, the division has had no reputation except for failure. White Americans referred to its poor record. Black Americans spoke of racial prejudice as the source of the division’s ills. No one spoke well of its military achievements. Nearly a century has passed, down to the present writing, and little or nothing has changed. To military commentators the division’s history was and is an embarrassment. The purpose of the present book is to turn the division’s reputation around. In reality it did quite well militarily and would have done even better if it had possessed better white officers—all the field officers, majors and above, were white, while the company officers of infantry units (captains, lieutenants) were black. The single infantry regiment of the division that went into the Argonne in the last days of September 1918 had a white colonel who barely presided over his big unit, four thousand men; Col. Fred R. Brown wrote well and hence could explain himself clearly and seemingly sensibly, but did little to hold his regiment together and gave vague directions to his three battalion commanders. In the 368th Regiment the battalion commanders were a varied lot. Only one of them, John N. Merrill, had any executive ability, and he was an embarrassment to the American Army that prided itself on good relations, democratic relations, between officers and men, for he had spent years in the army of Persia where democratic tendencies did not exactly flourish, and even served a few months with the British Indian Army. In September 1918 his command technique was to fire pistol shots over the heads of his charges. As for the other two infantry majors of the 368th, Max A. Elser could not make up his mind during the first two nights out in no-man’s-land, bringing his p r e f a C e P R E FA C E viii battalion’s companies back to where they started or keeping them out in the dark, and decided, as one could have guessed, to bring them in (Colonel Brown, of course, had not told him what to do). Maj. Benjamin F. Norris in civil life was a New York City lawyer, a logical man who felt that if he gave a command his men would follow it—because he passed his commands to his officers. One could go on from there. Merrill kept his charges together with a masterful intent and took them into Binarville, a group of shelled basements a few kilometers above the regiment’s starting point. The other two battalions went to pieces in the effort. The collapse of most of the 368th Regiment labeled the Ninetysecond Division, this despite the fact that most of the otherAmerican white divisions did poorly in the first three attacks in the great battle of the Meuse-Argonne, which began September 26, 1918, and went on until the Armistice of November 11. Only in the last attack, beginning November 1–2, did the Americans as a whole turn their reputation around into an astonishing victory. For the African American division nothing sufficed to assist in retrieving its reputation . The division’s engineer regiment performed very well. Its artillery brigade could not have been better; so wrote its surprised and enormously pleased brigadier general, a no-nonsense engineer in civil life with an office on State Street in Boston. And in the only attack mounted by the divisions of Lt. Gen. Robert L. Bullard, with the small force he and Gen. John J. Pershing described as the Second Army, on November 10–11, the only division that did anything, took German territory, was the Ninety-second. It is a piquant story, heartwarming to see what a big group of black draftees, twenty-five thousand men, a large force, could do when given half a chance and a few real leaders such as Brig. Gen. John Sherburne of the artillery, or Maj. Warner A. Ross who commanded the Second Battalion, 365th Infantry, and in civil life was a lawyer from Lafayette, Indiana. This book is the first full-length archival-based account of the Ninety-second Division, based on the records of the National Archives in College Park, Maryland; the personal records of the U.S. Army in the Army War College...

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