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              <text>Why Negroes Should Oppose the War by J.R. Johnson &#13;
&#13;
Printed in the United States of America&#13;
Published by Pioneer Publishers&#13;
116 University Place&#13;
New York, N.Y.&#13;
For the Socialist Workers Party and the Young People’s Socialist League (Fourth International)&#13;
&#13;
Negroes and the War&#13;
In Europe the war is raging. Like Woodrow Wilson, Roosevelt says that he will try to keep America out, but we know that he has been making every preparation to drag America in.&#13;
This is the situation that faces the American people and the great masses all over the world. The Negroes, here as elsewhere, know that great decisions are being made which will affect their whole future. What are they to do? What does this war mean to Negroes? What must they think about it?&#13;
Negroes, brothers and sisters, comrades and friends, it is no use merely whispering to one another that it is a white man’s war. The stand you take today will help to decide the fate of the world and your own fate for many years to come. Roosevelt’s war propaganda has been screaming at you and the other workers and farmers of America for the last two years. Now, as the hour comes nearer – your parsons, your Elk leaders, your Republican and Democratic Negro bosses, the university professors, are all going to turn on their loud speakers, wave their flags, and beat their big drums, to bewilder you and drive you into support of this war. But in your hearts, you, the masses of the Negro people, feel that this war is not your war. You feel that once more you, your relatives and your friends all over the world, in America, in Africa and the West Indies, are going to be used and then flung aside. You are right, but only half-right. For this time you will not only be used, but by the support of this war you will be tying a thousand times tighter, the chains which now bind you as the pack-horse, the servant and the slave of capitalist civilization.&#13;
&#13;
Why They Don’t Appeal to the Negro&#13;
In America, in Africa, in the West Indies, over 150 millions of Negroes bear on their bent backs and sweating limbs, a burden greater than that of any people anywhere in the world. If this war is a great war for freedom and a better life, the Negroes should have been addressed before anybody else. They need a better life and freedom more than any other people. But just note how careful everybody has been not to address the Negroes directly on the war question. In all the preparation for the great slaughter, in all the propaganda that pours over us like a flood, there has been a great conspiracy of silence in regard to what part the Negro most play.&#13;
Republican Party, Democratic Party, Socialist Party, all carefully avoid making direct references to the Negroes and the war. They will talk and write about Negroes and relief, about Negroes and the WPA, about Negroes and the New Deal, about why the Negroes used to vote for the Republican Party and why they now vote for the Democratic Party. The Republican Party appoints a commission to find ways and means to win back the Negro vote. The Communist Party points out why Negroes must hate Japan and Hitler, why the Negroes must vote for the New Deal, why the Negroes must be anti-fascist, why the Negroes must oppose those who attack Jews. But about Negroes and the war, what Negroes must do when the drums begin to beat and the bugles begin to blow, not a direct word all these months. The war-mongers have been trying to smuggle Negroes into war as a section of the American people. They have not dared openly to explain to you why you, as Negroes should take part in the war. They do not dare to start the discussion. They know their arguments would stick in their throats. Today, and still more tomorrow, they will seek to sweep you into the war under cover of the general slogan: Our democracy is in danger. One Party however, the Socialist Workers Party, has no tricks to play on the Negroes or anybody else on this life or death question of imperialist war. Clearly, simply, and without possibility of being misunderstood, we say that this present war, like the last one, is a war that is fought by the muscles and blood and lives of the poor for the pockets and bellies of the rich. The poor have nothing to gain and everything to lose by supporting Roosevelt in a war that will be fought exclusively for the benefit of the rich. And above all, the Negroes, the poorest and most oppressed people in every country where they live, would be the greatest fools to allow themselves to be deceived this time, as they were the last time. We are confident that the great majority of the Negroes who consider this question with the seriousness that it deserves, will come inevitably to the conclusion that they must fight against the war to the bitter end.&#13;
That is our position. The Socialist Workers Party has nothing to hide from the Negro. It says to him, as it says to the poor everywhere – whites, Negroes in Africa, Indians in India, “Brothers and sisters of whatever color, this war is not our war. We will not support it. We, the workers, the poor farmers in every country, white, black, and brown, are not going to kill one another at the command of Chamberlain, or Hitler – at the orders of Roosevelt or of the Japanese Mikado. We shall fight for a fraternal unity between all the poor in every country against all the rich. That is the war we shall fight. Down with the imperialist war!”&#13;
Roosevelt Ready for War&#13;
Before Hitler marched into Poland, a great many people kept hoping against hope that a war would not take place after all. That is merely behaving like the ostrich and pretending that something isn’t there, because with our heads dug into the ground, we cannot see it. Now, today, they keep hoping that America will not go in. They trust Roosevelt when he says he will try to keep America out. These people are blind to the signs of the times. Every move that Roosevelt makes is towards dragging America in.&#13;
Take the question of armaments. During the last five years, every great country doubled and trebled its armaments. Guns and more guns, battleships, submarines and airplanes; soldiers and more soldiers. Whereas in 1932,&#13;
&#13;
Great Britain spent 426 millions of dollars on armaments, in 1938 she spent 1065 millions. Hitler made Germany into one large armament industry. Both armed for the war they knew was coming. But the United States did the same. In 1932 Roosevelt asked Congress for 667 millions of dollars, but in 1938 he asked for and got 1065 millions, nearly twice as much; and in 1939 he got two billions. Why? He and Congress, like the other war-mongers in Europe, know that today no country can attack America. But Roosevelt and the American capitalists are not going to keep out when the other imperialist countries are fighting to divide Asia and Africa and the markets in Latin-America. They have to be there to share in the division. So that when we turn a deaf ear to all Roosevelt’s spectacular appeals for peace, and pay attention, not to what he is saying but to what he is doing, we can see that like the rest he is hiding his actions for war behind a mass of words for peace. Remember that Wilson played the same trick in 1917.&#13;
Negroes Wanted for Cannon-Fodder&#13;
Roosevelt is preparing to go in. The dirty bloody work is going to be done, and as usual whenever dirty work has to be done, the Negroes are going to be called upon to do the dirtiest part of it. Whenever blood is to be shed, the rulers of this country see to it that the Negroes shed theirs. That is a privilege and an honor of which they never deprive the Negro. They take away his vote, give him the worst jobs, shove him into the dirtiest slums, kick him out of restaurants, lynch him. But when they want people to die for “democracy,” to dig trenches in France, to build roads, to clean latrines, while enemy bombers rain their bombs then they are sure to come looking for Negroes. There the rulers of this country are perfectly willing to see that Negroes have their full rights.&#13;
But 1939 is not 1914. Today hundreds of thousands of Negroes are saying to themselves:&#13;
“Why should I shed my blood for Roosevelt’s America, for Cotton Ed Smith and Senator Bilbo, for the whole Jim Crow, Negro-hating South, for the low-paid, dirty jobs for which Negroes have to fight, for the few dollars of relief and the insults, discrimination, police brutality and perpetual poverty to which Negroes are condemned even in the more liberal North?”&#13;
When the ordinary working Negro asks this question, what can the war-mongers say to him? Nothing. Nothing but lies and empty promises of better treatment in the future. &#13;
Let us take, one by one, the arguments put forward by the war-mongers. A Republican like Landon, a Democrat like Roosevelt or Hull tells everybody (including the Negro of course) that the war now being fought in Europe is a war against aggression, a war for “democracy,” for the “preservation of human liberties,” and the like. They say this because, although they are talking about peace, they are really preparing the minds of the workers for war.&#13;
The average Negro lives the life of an outcast in the North. He has little enough “democracy” there. But go today to Memphis, Houston, Dallas, New Orleans, Jacksonville, Birmingham, Mobile, all the South, where some nine or ten million Negroes life, and tell those Negroes to fight for “democracy.” Such is the “democracy” of the South that in many towns the Negroes wouldn’t be able to sit in the same room with the whites to hear why they should die for “democracy.” There are thousands of hotels in the South where if a Negro dared to show his nose at the front entrance, three janitors would fall on him and throw him out into the gutter, after which the police would beat him up and take him to jail. In many cities, if he went near the polling booth he would risk being beaten up and perhaps shot. He must come out of the rear entrance of a bus in Southern cities, or any white cop nearby might riddle him with bullets.&#13;
Roosevelt’s Party Rules in the South&#13;
And it is the Democratic Party, Franklin Roosevelt’s party which controls the state governments in the South. Argue with these Democrats about the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, which “guarantee” the political&#13;
&#13;
rights of the Negroes. If you insist you will get fourteen or fifteen bullets. That is the only kind of amendment the Southern Democrats have allowed the Negroes for many years. So that the vast majority of Negroes in the South will tell Roosevelt and Hull, “What is this democracy I am to fight for? Where is it? Since when are Cotton Ed Smith and Senator Bilbo and the Democratic Part of Franklin Roosevelt my good friends? Why must I die for them? I am not afraid to fight. Negroes have been some of the greatest fighters in history. But the democracy that I want to fight for, Hitler is not depriving me of. I know the people who have kept me away from it for seventy-five years by rifles and revolvers, by state law and lynch law! You, Franklin Roosevelt, Cordell Hull and Jack Garner, tell us why we must go and shed our blood for something that we have never had.”&#13;
“We Americans must fight against aggression,” say Franklin Roosevelt and Cordell Hull, seeking to drive American workers, white and black, into war. No wonder all of these politicians are so scared of raising the question of war directly to the Negroes. Every word they say turns to ashes in their mouths. Let us agree that Negroes must fight against aggression. But who are the aggressors against the Negroes? Hitler? Nonsense. The Southerners of the Democratic Party are the greatest aggressors against the Negroes in American history, and the North is not far behind them. “Oh! but we mean aggression in foreign countries, aggression by Mussolini, Hitler and Japan,” say Roosevelt and Hull. The Negro will immediately reply, “And why if you so hate aggression, didn’t you help Ethiopia?”&#13;
What these Democrats Did to Ethiopia&#13;
Ethiopia was the last piece of Africa left free. Mussolini decided that he wanted it. The League of Nations had sworn to defend it. Every Negro with a spark of pride knows what happened, and remembers it with justified bitterness. Not only did they not protect Ethiopia as they had sworn to do, but instead they prevented arms from going to her while they bargained with Mussolini. They stabbed Ethiopia in the back – Britain, France, America, these great “democracies.” (And Stalin, who claims to be a friend of Negroes, sold oil to Italy all through the Italian campaign.) Now Roosevelt comes running, to tell all good Americans (Negroes included of course) that they must fight against aggression.&#13;
And who is going to do the fighting against this aggression? The workers as always. Roosevelt, Hull and Landon are getting ready to push the workers of America into the war. These are the very men who actively collaborated with Mussolini in destroying the last independent African state.&#13;
Why Should Negroes Trust These Rulers?&#13;
Or again a Negro will ask; “Why should I trust you? You who have betrayed the last African State. Am I to go fighting for Poland and to settle a quarrel between Britain and Germany? Have I nothing else to fight for? I am not such a fool as not to know that international affairs are important. If Africans in Africa are fighting for freedom as Ethiopians fought, and are still fighting, I’ll do all I can to help. The Indians are an oppressed people, and when they fight to drive Britain out, I am with them. Negroes went to fight in Spain against Franco. That was a good thing for people to do who for centuries have suffered from oppression. But all imperialists are oppressors. When Czechoslovakia was cut up into pieces, it was fascist Germany, Hungary, and this same Poland that divided it. Then Germany and Poland began fighting over one bone. Britain and France knew that this was only the beginning of a struggle for world wide power. So they came in at once. But tell me, Franklin Roosevelt, and Cordell Hull, why must I, a Negro, follow you into that?”&#13;
The Biggest lie of All&#13;
Then will come the last argument. “It is not a question of Germany and Poland and Danzig. But freedom, civilization and liberty are in danger against fascist aggression,&#13;
&#13;
and the people of Britain, France, America, Belgium must ally themselves to fight against aggression.” Now of all the big lies that are being told to push the people into war, this one about the war for civilization is the biggest.&#13;
There are today over 150 million Negroes in the world. There are fifteen million in America. They are the lowest paid, most humiliated, most despised people in the country, and in the South where four-fifths of them live they are treated like the Jews in Germany. We know how this great “democracy” terrorizes Negroes in the South and how it discriminates against them in the North.&#13;
When Roosevelt and other so-called lovers of “democracy” protested to Hitler against his treatment of the Jews, Hitler laughed scornfully and replied, “Look at how you treat the Negroes. I learned how to persecute Jews by studying the manner in which you Americans persecute Negroes.” Roosevelt has no answer to that. Yet he will call upon Negroes to go to war against Hitler.&#13;
The “Democratic” Rule in Africa&#13;
War in defense of “democracy” and civilization? Lies. When we look at Africa we see how shameless is the lie that Belgium, France and America will fight any war for liberty and civilization. For it is in Africa that Negroes have for years suffered and still suffer today the vilest fascist tortures. And at the hands of whom? Not Hitler and German imperialism. Germany hasn’t an inch of land in Africa. That is one of the things this war is about, the partition of Africa. Hitler wants some of Africa, but up to now at any rate he has none. Japan has not an inch in Africa and today is much too busy trying to steal half of China. Mussolini controls a small number of Africans. Who is it, then, that has taken Africa from the Africans? Who else but Great Britain with sixty million African slaves, and France with another forty millions, and “democratic” little Belgium, little in Europe, but with a large piece of Africa and twelve million Negroes under her control. These “democracies” are the thieves. And how do they treat the Africans?&#13;
All of us know how Negroes suffer in America. But you will have to go to Africa to see how brutally the “democracies” treat Negroes. In South Africa, a Negro cannot even buy a stamp in the same place where a white man buys one. There is a special window for him even in the post office. He lives in a part of town that is assigned to him, and he cannot leave there after nine o’clock without a pass signed by a white man. Any white man, any dirty drunkard of an Englishman or a Boer, can sign a pass for a sober, self-respecting, hard-working Negro. But any Negro who is caught out of the Negro district after nine o’clock without his pass will be locked up by the first policeman who stops him. There are not ten colored doctors in the Union of South Africa where over seven million Negroes live, and the imperialists have been there for 400 years. That is the culture and civilization they give to the Africans in South Africa.&#13;
In Kenya more than five people cannot meet without police permission. One day six of them went home after church for a cup of tea. In comes a policeman. “One, two, three, four, five, six. This is sedition. You are under arrest.” They were taken to jail and the next day fined. Every working African in Kenya is fingerprinted and must carry the print around with him wherever he goes. Caught without it, he is sent to jail. Wages in Rhodesia and Kenya are sometimes four, sometimes ten cents a day. A Negro is no more than a dog to these people. And this is under the rule of the great “democratic” countries, Britain, France and Belgium. He is a dirty traitor who tells Negroes that they must go to war for the “democracies” for the benefit of civilization. Aren’t Negroes part of civilization?&#13;
How did the “democratic” imperialist nations get hold of Africa? They got it as Hitler got Austria and Czechoslovakia. Hitler lied, made promises and broke them, bribed and sent armies to massacre all who resisted. In exactly the same way, these great “democracies” robbed the Africans of country after country and hold them in chains. And now Roosevelt and his friends are preparing the workers to fight and shed their blood for the great “democracies.”&#13;
&#13;
What will Negroes get? Win back their country? Live as free men? Not at all. They must help Britain and France fight against Hitler and Goering about Danzig and the Polish corridor and who should dominate the Chinese and Latin American markets, and who should dominate Africa.&#13;
Remember What they Did in 1914&#13;
These imperialist bandits encouraged workers to fight in the last war with the same talk about democracy, freedom and civilization. But after defeating Germany, Britain, France and Belgium simply took over the German colonies and continued to treat the Negroes as before. Now they are fighting another war. If the fascists win they will take the colonies back. If the “democracies” win they will keep them. But whether “democracies” win, or fascists win, the Africans remain slaves in their own country.&#13;
Now Republicans like Dewey and Democrats like Roosevelt, men like John L. Lewis and William Green, all the war-mongers for “democracy,” have never told Negroes anything about the situation of Negroes in Africa. Lewis encouraged Negroes to join the CIO and Negroes were right to join. But when Lewis tells Negroes to fight for democracy, as he most certainly will, they simply have to ask him the same questions that they will ask Franklin Roosevelt, and Lewis will be able to make no better reply.&#13;
But James Ford and Browder and the Communist Party are a special group. For many years they posed as the friends of the Negro people, ready to lead them out of their bondage. These people support everything Stalin does so that they are called Stalinists, i.e., Stalin’s agents, but in those days they fought hard for Negroes. Listen, for in- for instance, to James Ford, the Negro Stalinist, in an article, “The Negro and the Struggle against Imperialism”:&#13;
“The native population has (in South Africa) no electoral rights (with the exception of the Cape Province), the power of the state has been monopolized by the white bourgeoisie which has at its disposal the white armed forces. The white bourgeoisie, chiefly the Boers, defeated by the arms of British imperialism, at the close of the last century, had for a long time carried on a dispute with British capital. But as much as the process of capitalist development goes on in the country, the interests of the South African bourgeoisie are becoming more and more blended with the interests of British financial and industrial capital, and the white South African bourgeoisie is becoming more and more inclined to compromise with British imperialism, forming together with the latter a united front of whites for the exploitation of the native population.”&#13;
Situation Has Changed for the Worse&#13;
That is what Ford wrote in The Communist (January 1930, p. 27). Has the situation changed? Yes it has. The votes that a few Negroes in the Cape had (referred to by Ford) have been taken away from them. So they are worse off than they were before.&#13;
We could print scores of such passages from the writings of the Stalinists. Only three years ago, Ben Davis, Jr. had the following to say about Negroes in America.&#13;
“The octopus of national oppression reaches out to hound the Negroes wherever they are. September saw a recrudescence of the Ku Klux Klan in Peekskill, New York, with the promises to ride again against Negroes, Catholics and Jews. In Allentown, PA., where James W. Ford was scheduled to make a campaign speech last August, the Klu Klux Klan issued leaflets stating that the town would ‘ooze with nigger blood’ if Ford spoke. “Thus this Negro Stalinist was different from Roosevelt. He did not hide the plight of the Negroes in the South.&#13;
Discrimination in Harlem&#13;
And he knew about the situation in Harlem. “These reactionary practices against the Negro have been accompanied with the most relentless attacks against the already low standard of living of the Negro masses. In Harlem, the largest Negro urban center in the world, job discrimination is rife and unemployment has been estimated by the New York World-Telegram, capitalist daily newspaper, as up-&#13;
&#13;
wards of eighty percent. Similar situations, more or less acute, throughout the country, reaffirm the axiom that reactionary open-shoppers place their heaviest burdens upon the Negro wage earners.”&#13;
Nevertheless for years the Stalinists told Negroes and everybody else that they must defend this “democracy.”&#13;
And Ford, Davis, Patterson and other Negro Stalinists, when they said “defend” meant Negroes to go and fight for this “democracy.” The Communist Party said that all workers (including Negroes) should support Roosevelt and Roosevelt was preparing to drag America in.&#13;
It should now be clear to every Negro that the Communist Party is today as great a deceiver of the Negro people as the Republican and Democratic Parties. There was a time when the Communists and Soviet Russia were the greatest leaders of the poor and oppressed in every country including the Negroes. They used to call upon all the workers and peasants to fight against imperialists and capitalists everywhere, above all in a war. But these days are over and they have been over for many years.&#13;
Stalin sold oil to Italy all during the martyrdom of Ethiopia. That is proof enough for any Negro. For five years Stalin and the American Stalinists encouraged Negroes and all workers to fight for the British and French “democracies” against Hitler and Mussolini. And after encouraging workers to support the “democracies,” Stalin joined Hitler. In a few days the Stalinists changed. If America joined in it would join the “democracies.” This meant Hitler and hi new friend, Stalin would have the powerful country of America against them. So the Stalinists now tell Negroes to help keep America out of war. Tomorrow, however, if Stalin changes they will change again. They use the worker as a convenience for Stalin, and to deceive millions of the workers in this way, is the greatest crime of which any working-class leader or party can be guilty. Why do they do it?&#13;
Revolutionists No Longer Rule Russia&#13;
They do it because revolutionists like Lenin and Trotsky no longer rule Russia. Stalin and millions of officials, engineers, trade-union bureaucrats and others, now have the country in their grip. They live easy lives with great power and privileges. They oppress the Russian people, they murder all the old revolutionists like Zinoviev and Kamenev in frame-up trials, they have tried several times and are still trying to murder Trotsky, the last of the great revolutionists. They do not want revolution anywhere. Bureaucrats never do. They want to prevent the revolution, for revolutions will not only overthrow Hitler, Chamberlain and Roosevelt, but will give the Russian workers a chance to overthrow Stalin.&#13;
Therefore Stalin and his army of bureaucrats give money to the Communist parties in the various counties, and these parties no longer lead militant struggles as in the old days, but try to fool the workers, white and black, and make them do whatever suits Stalin for the moment. Their policy for five years was to make workers support the “democracies” in a war for civilization. And this, every Negro knows from his own experience, was a damnable treachery and betrayal. Any one, parson or president, black or white, who encourages Negroes to shed their blood for this so-called “democracy” is a damnable traitor and betrayer.&#13;
What Happened to Negroes in 1917&#13;
Some people, however, Negro leaders included, state that there is a possibility of Negroes gaining their rights and participating freely in American life, if they show that they are willing to die for “democracy.” Let us test this by the last war. They said then that the war was being fought for “democracy,” was being fought to make the world a better place than it had been before. Also, and this is what is important, many Negro leaders told the Negroes to support the war whole-heartedly. By showing themselves good citizens, they would win the sympathy of the whites and gain all the things of which they had been deprived. This is what was said. But how did the rulers of their country actually treat the Negro soldiers?&#13;
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First of all, they took many more Negroes than they should have taken. Out of every hundred persons in the population, ten were Negroes so that, roughly, out of every hundred soldiers, ten should have been Negroes. More than that, the Negroes are the worst paid, live in the worst houses, in the worst localities, get the worst food and the poorest medical attendance. Thus, taking the Negro population as a whole, the number of persons fit for military service should have been proportionately less than the number of whites. This through no fault of the Negroes, but because of the lives and conditions to which they are condemned. So that instead of ten out of every hundred of the solders being Negroes, we could reasonably expect that there should have been about seven or eight. But instead of some number like seven or eight per hundred there were more than ten. So that this American “democracy” seized the opportunity to kill off as many Negroes as possible as a means of helping “democracy” solve the Negro problem.&#13;
Soldiers – But Jim-Crowed&#13;
The war was a war for “democracy,” but the Negroes were segregated. There was not a single regiment consisting of white and Negro soldiers mixed. American “democracy” did not want to have even American colored officers, and it took a hard fight to have a few hundred. When they did agree, they trained Negroes as officers in a special Negro camp. And these men were informed by the State Department that when they visited the South, they should not wear their uniforms. “Democracy” was sending the Negro to fight for “democracy,” but could not bear the sight of him in the officer’s uniform of “democracy.”&#13;
The old lynch spirit continued. The Negroes were beaten up near the camps, they were stoned and jeered as they marched along the streets. When they were on leave and attempted to enter cafes and restaurants frequented by white people, they were driven out in many places.&#13;
When they went to France, the discrimination continued. American “democracy” forced most of the black soldiers to be common laborers. Of the 200,000 Negroes who went to France, some 160,000 were used as servants and in labor battalions. Even when fighting for “democracy,” the Negro was kept in his place. Negroes were made to build roads, wash clothes, cook food, clean up camps and trenches and clean latrines, though they had enlisted as soldiers of the line.&#13;
Far from practicing any sort of “democracy” to Negroes, the American commanders did their best to make the French maltreat the Negroes. The French people are not as prejudiced as one would expect from their treatment of natives in Africa, and great numbers of French people in France do not make any differentiation at all between Negroes and whites. But when the American officers saw this and the friendly way in which Negro soldiers were being welcomed both by French men and women, they issued a military order, Order No. 40, instructing Negroes not even to speak to French women. For this offense against “democracy,” many Negroes were arrested, though the French people, men and women, had made no complaint.&#13;
The American officers, in this war for “democracy,” wrote a special document to the French commanding staff, telling them that Negroes were a low and degenerate race, that they could not be trusted in the company of white people, that although some Negroes were officers, the French officers should have nothing to do with them, except in matters relating strictly to fighting. The French, said this American order, should not eat with Negroes, nor even shake hands, and above all, they wanted the French to use their influence to keep the white women who worked in or near the camp from forming any associations with Negroes.&#13;
This was the way in which the American ruling class fought side by side with Negroes in the great war for “democracy.”&#13;
Negro Bravery – And the Reward&#13;
The Negroes, believing that by fighting bravely and showing that they were men as good as any other, they would gain freedom from their oppression, performed feats of distinguished bravery. Of all the American soldiers in&#13;
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France a Negro was the first to win the Croix de Guerre (War Cross), and one Negro regiment, the 8th Illinois, received more decorations than any other regiment in France. Another American Negro regiment stayed a longer spell in the trenches than any other regiment in the Allied forces. No one after that could say that Negroes were inferior. They had stood the stern test of modern war and came out with a great record.&#13;
What happened to the Negroes, after this fine showing, should be branded on the forehead of any so-called Negro leader who tries to thrust them again into war. For as soon as the war was over, there was such a desperate series of race riots in America as had not been seen for many years. In Washington, in Chicago, white mobs inspired and encouraged by American employers and American capitalist police, shot down Negroes, many of whom had lost relations in the great war for “democracy.” The Southern whites were so anxious to put the Negro back in his place that they lynched Negroes who dared to wear the uniform of a private. The great war for “democracy” and the bravery and the sacrifices for “democracy” of the Negro people ended with thousands of them having to fight desperately, not for “democracy,” but for their lives in “democratic” America.&#13;
Now let Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt and Cordell Hull and LaGuardia and some so-called Negro leaders, stand up and tell Negroes that the present war is another war for democracy and that they must go again to fight in it.&#13;
If Negroes supported the war, Franklin Roosevelt, Jack Garner, Cotton Ed Smith, Senator Bilbo and all that bunch in the Democratic Party would be able to sit back and say, “We give them the nastiest jobs, we pay them the lowest wages, millions of them are unemployed. Even in Washington here, the Federal capital, we kick them out of restaurants and theatres. We lynch them whenever we think that they should be reminded of where they belong. We treated them like dogs in the last war. We lynched them after they came back. And now, when we want them to do some more dirty work for us, we just snap our fingers and whistle, and look at them! They come running to do anything we want them to do! We have only to make a few promises and they are ready to be fooled again. Truly these Negroes are the most ignorant, backward and slave-like people in the world, and deserving of no more consideration than the scraps we throw to them.”&#13;
But no, large masses of Negroes have no wish to support this war. Their memories of the last war and the great deception and fraud which were practiced on them are too vivid in their minds.&#13;
So bitter was their disappointment after the last war, that millions of Negroes supported Marcus Garvey. They were ready to follow even the fantastic, impossible scheme of going back to Africa rather than to continue to live in the American “democracy” for which so many thousands of them had suffered and died.&#13;
What is the Negro to Do?&#13;
What then is the Negro to do?&#13;
Before we can act we must know the forces with us and the forces against us. Many Negroes in America feel that they should be ready to shed their blood and take any steps to break the chains which bind them. Yet they feel also that their numbers are too few. They think that they would be overwhelmed by the number of the whites, their power, their authority, and their control of the means of destruction.&#13;
That, however, is a short-sighted view. Today we are dealing with an international war, and the problem is an international one.&#13;
Let us look at the last war. That also was an international war. It was fought in Europe, in Asia, and in Africa. The British armed the black man in Africa. The French armed nearly half a million Negro soldiers to fight for them. These fought not only in Africa, but in Europe. There was a regiment of West Indian Negroes. Now today, the millions of Negroes all over the world are more politically conscious, more bitter against oppression and humiliation than they were in 1914. They have not only had the&#13;
&#13;
experience of the last war. They have suffered from the effects of the crisis. They have seen the rape of Ethiopia, and they know that in Africa, for instance, whether they are ruled by Italian Fascists or British “democracy,” their situation is the same. Their lands are stolen, their wages are often ten cents a day. They are driven away to live in segregated areas, where at night they are kept jailed as if they had committed a crime by being born with a black skin. They are thinking the same things that the Negroes in America are thinking, only more fiercely because they have more cause. Many of them, particularly in the French and Italian colonies, have arms in their hands which they have learned how to use. Now that the war has begun, many more of them will be armed and trained in order to go and fight for their masters. But despite all the shouting about “democracy” by imperialists, the great millions in Africa only need leadership to use their guns, not for British or French “democracy,” but for their own independence, for a free Africa, liberated from all sorts of imperialist domination, liberated not only from Fascist Italy and Germany, but also from those “Democratic” bandits, Britain, France, and Belgium. They outnumber by many millions the whites who keep them in subjection today. And these whites, in the course of a war, will have to arm more and more of these despised and oppressed blacks. The Africans are only waiting for the opportunity and for that powerful organization which will give them a policy and leadership. In a war fought on an international scale, the Negroes in America will have the Negroes in Africa as their allies, American Negro soldiers who may be forced by conscription to go to France to fight, will be certain to meet hundreds of thousands of African soldiers there.&#13;
An Alliance of the Millions&#13;
Contact and plans can be made for the struggle on an international scale. But there are many other allies as well. For two hundred and fifty years, the British have been squeezing the lives out of the masses of people in India. There are well over three hundred and fifty million people in India today, and the large majority of them are just awaiting their chance to get arms in their hands, drive the British imperialists into the sea, and make their country their own again. The same in Burma, in Ceylon, and everywhere. So that from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific, you have over five hundred million people, oppressed colonials, who are thinking in terms of freedom from the domination of imperialism. Imagine the enormous power which these colonials can exert for their own emancipation in the tremendous crisis which has been loosed upon all peoples in the world.&#13;
All this seems very commonplace and obvious.&#13;
Why is it, then, that today so few people are saying it in public speeches and writing it? Why is it that a pamphlet of this kind is published only by the Socialist Workers Party? The reason is very important and is fundamental to an understanding of the political situation not only as it is today, but as it will be tomorrow.&#13;
Poor as the majority of Negroes are, and despised and humiliated as all of them are, in every community, particularly in America, there is a small number of Negroes who have better jobs than the others, who have managed to climb onto a little ledge, a little higher than the rest of their fellow-Negroes. There are, in America, for instance, some doctors, a few people who do well in business and on the stage, teachers – numbers kings, etc. They are thrown out of the restaurants, excluded from the theatres, Jim-Crowed and discriminated against as all Negroes are. They will complain, and pass resolutions, and sometimes will carry a case to the courts. But because they get something between fifty and eighty dollars a week, they are prepared to do anything that the American ruling class really wants them to do. They are Negroes. But in reality, they are much closer to the American ruling class than they are to the great millions of their own people. It is the same thing in every other community, even in the South. The large majority of Negroes live in dirt, in poverty, are subjected to all sorts of humiliation, but a few are allowed&#13;
&#13;
special privileges, a few dollars more per week, etc. Whenever something serious turns up, these may make a protest and demand a little more for themselves, but they are always prepared to do what the American ruling class wants the American Negroes to do. It is so in America, it is so in Africa, it is so in the West Indies, and you have a similar situation in India, Burma, Ceylon.&#13;
Uncle Tom Negroes&#13;
Now these traitors are the people who have the best chances, who have the opportunity to get sometimes quite a good education. They run newspapers and magazines. They get subscriptions from rich white men. They are able to borrow from white banks. These lick-spittles, Uncle Tom Negroes, constantly speak in the name of the Negro people or in the name of Africans, when in reality, they are only saying what the imperialists want them to say. If they didn’t, they would be thrown out of their jobs, and lose their little privileges and benefits. And so, for the sake of the crumbs and bones that they get from the big table, they are quite prepared to sacrifice the interests of the majority of Negroes. They are the most dangerous people. It is they who deceive the Negroes every time. They, despite their black skin, are no more than agents of the white imperialists. They are not saying much now, but when the time comes, they are going to shout for “democracy” as loudly as the American ruling class. Some of them are going to get jobs in the government service. A few of them are going to be given positions a little higher than the ones they have at present. Some of them will be allowed to train as officers. This one here will be made a major, the other one there will be made a colonel. These appointments and others will fill the pages of the imperialist press and the Negro press. Meetings will be held at which these Negro traitors will speak and agitate and do their best to bluff the Negro people to take part in a war and be deceived and maltreated just as they were in the last war for “democracy.” The bait that they will dangle will be promises of a better world. They will say that after the war, things will be different. We know better than that. So that the first preliminary step for action is to be ready to condemn and drive out of the Negro ranks those traitors who sell their birthright for a mess of pottage. Such people, in America, in Africa, or in India, are treacherous enemies. Whoever tries to drag Negroes into a war for “democracy” is a traitor and a Judas. They will come preaching about unity. But the workers and farmers want no unity with them. What we must struggle for is the unity of the masses.&#13;
Nevertheless, if ever we are agreed on the necessity of uniting the Negro masses against the war, many American Negroes will say: “I agree with the Socialist Workers Party that the 15,000,000 Negroes in America have as their natural allies of the 150 million Negroes in the world and the millions of Indians, Burmese, Ceylonese, etc. If we all join together, that would be an immense force acting on a world scale. It is true also that the imperialists are so hard pressed for men and forces that they are arming and training these millions of colonials. But nevertheless we remain only 15,000,000 out of a population of some 130 million people. The Africans in Africa, the Indians, in India will be concerned with their own struggles. We wish them well. But how can we here struggle against the vast numbers and the great power that are opposed to us?&#13;
It is a very good question, and the answer to it brings us to the very heart of the matter. We shall have to examine this very carefully. Whenever a problem like that faces us we should examine it in all its aspects, then examine similar situations in foreign countries, look back into our own history, see where the circumstances are alike and where they differ, and then attempt a conclusion.&#13;
Lessons from History&#13;
The best example that we can start with is what happened in America some 75 years ago, when the Negroes gained their freedom. If all American whites had agreed upon the fact that the Negroes should continue to be slaves, then the 4,000,000 Negroes of that time and their descendants would have continued to be slaves until they died, for they&#13;
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would never have been able to free themselves against the enormous odds that were arrayed against them. But all the whites were not united. There was a great division between the whites themselves, between the merchants, the industrialists, and the bankers of the North on the one hand, and the slave-owners of the South on the other.&#13;
It was this terrific quarrel that led to the Civil War. At first Lincoln never intended to free the Negroes. Yet all men who fight a battle and wish to win it seek their allies where they can find them. So he enrolled the Negroes in the Northern army, and finally declared their emancipation from slavery. That is one of the great lessons of the Civil War – the division among the whites, and the necessity for Lincoln to seek assistance from Negroes.&#13;
Class Stands Against Class&#13;
Let us now look at what is happening in Europe at the present day and during the last twenty-five years. Everyone knows that a very bitter civil war has just taken place in Spain. The Spanish workers and peasants were on one side. The Spanish capitalists, the bankers, the great landlords, and their followers were on the other side. It is true that some Moors from Africa took part on the side of Franco. But that has nothing to do with the fundamentals of the question. What we must note is that in Spain, where few Negroes live, the workers and the peasants on the one hand, all the poor, fought very fiercely against the rich owners of the country. Unfortunately the workers and peasants lost. Yet we see that in a country where all the population is of the same color the various classes can fight desperately to decide which class shall be master.&#13;
Let us take another example. The whole world has heard of how brutally the German fascists treat the German workers. The fascists murder the workers’ leaders, throw them into concentration camps, beat up the workers in the streets, cut their wages down, and treat them in the most savage manner. But no Negroes live in Germany. This is a matter between whites and whites. The white capitalist class is in mortal conflict with the white workers. Jews have nothing to do with this at all. If there was not a single Jew in Germany, the leaders of the German workers would still be in concentration camps, and the working-class movement stamped upon.&#13;
The same thing has happened in Italy, where the workers and poor peasants have had their leaders murdered and their organizations destroyed by Mussolini and his fascists. Let us take one final example: Russia in 1917. There the workers and peasants fought the same civil war against the nobles, the landlords, and the capitalists. Only in this case, the Russian workers and peasants won. The land was divided among the peasants. The workers took over the factories and the workers’ government was established.&#13;
Here then it is clear that during the last few years, not to mention other great examples in history, there have been developing terrific clashes in country after country where the population is all of one color. The struggle of the classes goes on, always, whatever the color of the people. So that many a white worker in Europe and America is saying to himself, “I am starving. In any case if I have a job, my friend next door has none. These capitalists will crush me by fascism as soon as I begin to fight for my rights. Why should I support their war for “democracy”? My war is against the capitalists in my country.” In other words some whites are saying the same about the war as the Negroes. Here is real help for Negroes.&#13;
The Situation in America&#13;
Now let us look closely at America in the light of what we have just discussed. We saw that in America 75 years ago the division between sections of the white population in America resulted in one side calling the Negroes to join and assist them in their struggle. Through this means the Negroes gained their emancipation. Although at the present time it may seem that all the whites, or at least most of them, are against the Negroes, oppress them, and discriminate against them, yet we can take it as certain that the same struggle which we have seen working itself out in the various countries of Europe is taking place in America to-&#13;
&#13;
day. Sooner or later the workers and farmers of America, who are now fighting against the landlords and capitalists in unions, on the WPA, in struggles for better relief, will ultimately be driven to the same civil war that we have seen take place in country after country during the last 25 years. A Negro therefore who is looking at the political situation, not as it appears on the surface, but is seeing into the realities of the struggle between the classes, can have confidence in the future. He will realize that all white America is not solid. There is a tremendous division, a great split opening up. We can already see the signs of it very clearly. And as this struggle approaches and then actually flares out into the inevitable civil war, Negroes can be certain that many white workers and farmers who today are prejudiced will seek Negro assistance in the same way that Lincoln did when he fought the South. Negroes in the last Civil War made one great step forward, and so, in this coming civil war, the workers’ war, Negroes have a great chance to complete their long journey to full freedom.&#13;
How to Fight Against War&#13;
We know now that the millions of colonials in every country, those in Africa, in India, and all the other oppressed people, the majority of people now living are allies. And, most important, we have seen that many white workers in all parts of the world, although they do not suffer from the special discriminations imposed upon the Negro, yet see no reason why they must shed their blood for capitalism, whether it is “democratic” or fascist. They believe that the war the workers and farmers must fight is the war of all the oppressed against all the oppressors, the war to put an end to the capitalist system with its continual wars, its crises, and its fascist dictatorships.&#13;
The question now is how can the American Negroes best carry on the fight against being driven into the war. It is capitalism that drives us into war. So that the way to fight against war is to fight against capitailsm. Who is it that will lead this country into war? None other than Franklin Roosevelt. True, he says that he will do his best to keep America out of war. But Woodrow Wilson was elected in 1916 on the slogan that he kept America out of war. And the next year he was leading America into war in the name of “democracy.” Roosevelt has made every preparation and is just waiting his chance to drag America in. How to stop him? There is only one way. By distrusting every word he says and opposing him in every move that he makes now.&#13;
No lifting of Embargo&#13;
When he and Congress cut down relief, it is no use listening to the Workers Alliance when it says that Roosevelt has cut relief less than the reactionary Congress and therefore Roosevelt must be supported. Not at all. Fight against both. If you support Roosevelt you strengthen his hand for his war policy. Not that although Congress and Roosevelt will disagree about relief, they always agree about the amount that should be spent on armaments. On that, they have no disagreement. They may quarrel about when exactly America should go into the war. But as to the preparations for going in, on that they are both agreed.&#13;
Roosevelt proposes that you cannot strike against the government. Negroes who are working on government projects will strike for their rights and struggle against this fascist decision. The stronger the opposition of the workers on all fronts, the more the capitalists are impeded in their drive to war. Roosevelt proposes to lift the embargo. What he is doing is trying to link up America more closely with Britain and France. As far as we can, we oppose this move to bring us closer towards the war.&#13;
All War Funds for Unemployed&#13;
Roosevelt proposes so many billions for armaments. We protest against it. We want no billions or millions for armaments. Not one red cent. In return we demand that all war funds be given to the unemployed. The unemployed want money to live. They do not want to support Congress in voting money to kill people. We show our protest by meetings, demonstrations, and joining with all those who carry&#13;
&#13;
on the same anti-war activities. That is the way to oppose Roosevelt’s plan to drag America into war.&#13;
But the struggle can be carried on in a more immediate and effective manner. In the factory, in the mine, on the farms, wherever workers struggle for better wages and better conditions, when the danger of war approaches, that is the time to press for your demands with the greatest intensity. Taking them as a whole, all the capitalists will support one another in the war. It is they who stand to gain by it. So that all the workers, by pressing hard on them, and by fighting against them by strikes, can not only win privileges for themselves, but can so threaten the capitalists, that these, fighting their war against the workers at home are so much the more prevented from fighting against other capitalists abroad.&#13;
Let the People Vote Against the War&#13;
Representative Ludlow has his Ludlow amendment which says that the people should have a referendum vote before war is declared. This by itself will never stop war. Only the struggle against capitalism will stop war. But we support the Ludlow bill. It will help. The Socialist Workers Party says: Let the people vote against the war. The Negroes should support this.&#13;
Solidarity of White and Black&#13;
But the workers themselves discriminate against their brother Negroes. Must the Negroes cease their struggles against discriminations in unions and other workers’ organisations? Not at all. The Negroes and their friends among the white workers must point out to all that the Ngeroes must have their full rights as workers and as citizens. The Negroes will make no concessions here. In this gigantic task of the workers there must be full solidarity in the fight against war and this means a great struggle for equality among all members of the working class movement and all who are fighting against the capitalist war.&#13;
Many Ways to Fight War&#13;
But suppose we enter the war. What do we do then? WE CARRY ON THE STRUGGLE AS RELENTLESSLY AS BEFORE. For capitalism here in America will still be the chief enemy. Naturally we shall not be able to fight in the same open manner as in peace. We shall not be able, for instance, to hold an anti-war meeting. But suppose in a factory some militant workers propose a strike against wage-cuts or oppressive conditions.&#13;
There will be traitors who will join the government and capitalists in saying: “Now that there is a war we must sacrifice for victory.” But all true fighters against the war will refuse to accept this treacherous advice and will fight as bitterly for the rights of the workers during the war as before it. That is the way to fight against war.&#13;
There are many other ways which we cannot discuss in detail here. For instance, the Negroes can form small groups who will discuss the anti-war struggle, distribute leaflets against the war among themselves and their fellow-workers and friends, and cooperate with all others who are doing the same important work. Some cowards will say that this is against the law. Of course it is against the law. But it is the capitalists who make the law. And he is a great fool who obeys the capitalist law when he realizes the necessity of fighting against capitalism.&#13;
The result of all this will be, that when the great bulk of the people, black and white, begin to feel the strain of the war and begin to revolt against it. They will have leaders of knowledge and experience. They will have organizations ready to lead the great masses in their assault against the chief enemy, the enemy who is at home.&#13;
Workers Stopped the Last War&#13;
The workers and farmers, white and black, must never forget one important fact. The statesmen and the politicians who did not stop the last war. It was the workers of Russia who brought Russia out, by the great revolution of October, 1917. And in November, 1918, it was the workers of Germany who chased the Kaiser and his government out of the country and brought the war to an end. That is what we have to aim at. Fighting against the capitalists to pre-&#13;
&#13;
vent their going into war, and if we fail to stop them, carrying on the fight to bring the war to a close as quickly as possible. And not only bring it to a close, but sweep away capitalism altogether if we get the chance, and so prevent this mass slaughter which is inseparable from the cursed capitalist system.&#13;
If America is dragged into the war, during the early days the struggle against war will be difficult. It will seem hopeless. But in Germany, in December 1914, only one man, Karl Liebknecht, raised his voice against the war. Four years after, the great masses in Germany were following the advice of Liebknecht and bringing the war to a close by dealing with the enemy at home. At the beginning those who oppose may be few, but the masses will come to us in time as they came to Liebknecht. The mistake that the German workers made in 1918 was to change one capitalist government for another capitalist government, instead of sweeping away capitalism and establishing a real workers’ government. If the capitalists patch up a peace, we know they will soon start another war. We continue the struggle against capitalism.&#13;
For the Fourth International&#13;
In all this difficult work, the Negroes of America must take the lead. They have the most to win. Similar work is going on in every country at the present time, though naturally the capitalist press does not publish it. The Socialist Workers Party has brother parties in England, in France, in Poland, in India, in Africa, in China, all over the world, who are carrying on this work. We recognize that this is an international struggle and, therefore, our organization is international in scope.&#13;
Lenin and Trotsky formed the Third International to assist the workers, particularly in crises of this kind.&#13;
But today Stalin has the Third International working only to serve him in the bargains that he makes with imperialist governments like Hitler. One day the Stalinists say to fight for “democracy.” That is because Stalin wanted an alliance with Britain. When Stalin joins with Hitler, the Stalinists begin to say that the war is not a war for “democracy” any longer, that it is a war between imperialist countries. That may sound all right but if Stalin changes tomorrow, they will change again. They are not leaders of the working class but agents of Stalin. They are particularly dangerous because they use revolutionary words and have a lot of money. They must be avoided like poison.&#13;
It is because of the treachery of the Third International that genuinely revolutionary workers everywhere have formed the Fourth International. Negroes who see the situation clearly should join this party. The workers can never succeed without a powerful and clear-thinking revolutionary party. But if a Negro does not feel that he wants to join a revolutionary party today, that does not prevent him from forming or joining an organization of Negroes to fight against war. Such Negro organizations will work side by side with all other groups who are fighting against the war in the only way this can be done, by fighting against capitalism.&#13;
Some people think that there will be jobs and good pay for Negroes as in the last war. They are wrong. Roosevelt has plans prepared, not to raise wages but to cut them during the war. The capitalists will get all the benefits this time. And after the war will come a depression to which this one will be ajoke. No, there is no salvation that way.&#13;
Real Enemy Is at Home&#13;
Negro men and women in every country, in America, in the West Indies, in Africa, the Fourth International summons you to fight for your own liberation, for full social, political and economic rights in America, for the independence of Africa and the formation of Negro states in that continent. Do not join with one group of capitalists against another. Fight against both.&#13;
Everywhere, workers who do not see this today will see it tomorrow. The united workers and farmers of the world will oppose this bloody imperialist war to the bitter end. We will seek to build the new society, in which all men, irrespective of color or race, will be able to work in security and peace, and with full enjoyment of the good things of life.&#13;
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                <text>All images in this collection either are protected by copyright or are the property of the Robert W. Woodruff Library of the Atlanta University Center, Inc., and/or the copyright holder as appropriate. To order a reproduction or to inquire about permission to publish, please contact archives@auctr.edu with specific object file name.</text>
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                    <text>Magazine article, "Negroes at War" with image of African American soldiers in a military tank with the caption, "Tank manned by three Negro Noncoms and technician-gunner maneuvers under sunny Louisiana skies. They belong to 758th (GHQ) Tank Battalion."</text>
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                    <text>A group of African American color guard members walk through the snow holding rifles and flags. Image caption: A CRACK NEGRO REGIMENT, commanded by Negro officers, is Harlem's 369th whose color guard is shown at winter quarters in upstate New York. In World War I the 369th was part of General Henri Gouraud's Fourth French Army. It was 191 days under fire, never gave a foot of ground, never lost a prisoner, was the first Allied regiment to reach the Rhine.</text>
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                    <text>Magazine article images: (top) cavalry soldiers riding horses over a hill, image caption: Negro cavalry troop raises a cloud of dust as it rides down a hill near Fort Riley. Negro cavalry has been a part of regular army since Civil War; (bottom left) image of African American blacksmith fitting a horseshoe on a horse, image caption:  A troop blacksmith shoes a 10th Cavalry mount. Negro soldiers get along with horses, who draw no color line; (bottom center) African American soldier on horseback surrounded by dogs, another soldier on horseback stays in the background, image caption: Sgt. Will Black of the 10th Cavalry dons a green coat on Sunday afternoons and acts as whipper in cavalry school hunt; (bottom right) a man and woman are seated in front of a staircase petting  a dog while two children stand on the staircase behind them, smiling for the camera, image caption: NEGRO NONCOMS with families, like Master Sgt. Pentecost Daniel of 9th Cavalry, have own homes at Fort Riley.</text>
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                    <text>Magazine article images: (top left) image caption: Four Nashville boys with "Avenge Pearl Harbor" armbands joined up when Navy dropped anti-Negro ban. Previously Negroes could only serve as mess attendants; (top right) image caption: Trench-digging class of 388th Engineers at Camp Claiborne, La. raises shovels for counting. Army has put many Negroes in engineer units, teaches them to build railroads, barracks, bridges; (bottom right) image caption: Sgt. Leslie Lewis of 758th Tank Battalion at Claiborne shows how he would go into action with tommy gun if intercepted by enemy. He also has a revolver. He carries messages to tank commanders; (bottom left) image caption: First Negro Marine recruit in Nashville, George Thompson, dogcatcher, is sworn in. Said George: "Those Japs are just like the mongrels I been picking up."</text>
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                    <text>Image captions: (top left) USO at Alexandria, La. has two clubhouses - one for white, one for Negro troops. They are alike in every detail. This one has a dance floor, game room, bar where townspeople serve drinks and food; (top right) Cavalry boots thump the floor hard at Friday night dance in Fort Riley USO clubhouse. There is about one girl to every ten soldiers, creating a real rationing problem; (bottom left) Sunday morning services for cavalry regiments at Fort Riley are featured by earnest praying and singing. Many of these boys are sharecroppers' sons. Here the choir sings, Lord, I am Troubled; (bottom right) Sgt. Joseph Caliban, trumpeter of the 367th Infantry Band, has gained 160 lb. on Army food in 16 years, now weighs 325. Here he sings Ants in Your Pants to officers.</text>
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                    <text>Image captions: (top left) Aircraft worker Mel Nickerson shows work to Col. Robert Ginsburgh at Lockheed-Vega plant, Burbank, Calif. Lockheed was first big aircraft firm to hire many Negroes; (top right) North American Aviation's J.H. Kindelberger chats with two of his 600-odd Negro employes. Kindelberger once said he would hire Negroes only as janitors, has since changed his mind; (bottom left) Plate bender at Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, Va. must have a high degree of skill. Navy yards have upped Negro workers over 100% in last year, now employ 16,000; (bottom right) Tallyman Moses Baker weighs boxes of finished shells at Winchester Repeating Arms plant. He once served 5 years in the Navy, tried to re-enlist a day after Pearl Harbor. He earns $42 a week.</text>
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                    <text>Image caption: A Negro-owned and operated war factory is Pacific Parachute Co. in San Diego, which makes parachutes for Army and Navy flares. Owner is Eddie Anderson, "Rochester" of Jack Benny's program (center right). Manager is Skipper Smith (left) who has made 254 parachute jumps. Workers are white, Mexican and Negro girls, working side by side.</text>
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                    <text>Image caption: Seventy-five first-aid classes are held in Harlem schools, churches, apartment houses, stores and theaters. Department-store clerks and movie ushers have been taught how to take care of air-raid victims. Some Harlem doctors and nurses have been giving first-aid courses seven nights a week since Pearl Harbor. Here a class practices artificial respiration.</text>
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                    <text>Image captions: (top left) Eye "victim" is bandaged by Harlem first aider; (right) Police captain Walter Harding of the 28th New York City precinct directs civilian defense work in lower west side Harlem. Here he gives orders to 500 air-raid wardens. At this meeting wardens set up make-believe disaster organization on a theater platform (below) and practiced what they would do if a Nazi plane landed on a Harlem street.; (bottom left) Harlem member of American Women's Voluntary Services, Mrs. S.H. Craig, starts a sweater for city health service.</text>
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                    <text>Image captions: (top) Social center and defense post as well as this zone headquarters for Harlem air-raid wardens. Male wardens gather here to play cards, read papers, listen to radio. Lady wardens cook snacks on a small stove, keep the floor clean.; (bottom) In sober-faced pairs, dawn patrol sets forth on its Harlem rounds. Sometimes leader is a barber, sometimes a city tax inspector or an unemployed waiter. Regular members include laborers, housemaids, postal clerks. Women members make their own uniforms from old khaki pants, embroidered with C.D.C. (Civilian Defense Corps) in red, white and blue.</text>
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                    <text>Image caption: sunrise finds Harlem dawn patrol dousing a roof-top incendiary</text>
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              <text>Negroes at War&#13;
All they want now is a fair chance to fight&#13;
The picture above of an all-Negro crew in a fast new 13-ton U.S. Army tank will probably be a surprise to many U.S. citizens. But this summer it could be duplicated hundreds of times at training camps throughout the country. By next spring it could be duplicated several thousand times. The U.S. Army is getting rid of its old prejudices against the Negro and is putting him where he will do the most good – in the front ranks of its fighting men. At Camp Claiborne, La., where this picture was taken, the white colonel commanding a Negro outfit told LIFE Photographer K. Chester: “I’m a cotton-patch Southerner myself, and I don’t call these boys niggers. I call them American soldiers and damned good ones!”&#13;
This is bad news for the propagandists of Germany and Japan, who have long nursed a delusion that the 13,000,000 U.S. Negroes were ripe for rebellion and would surely refuse to fight. It is perfectly true that U.S. Negroes have never had a square deal from the U.S. white majority, but they know their lot could be far worse under the racial fanatics of the Axis. Now, when their country needs them, they are glad to work and fight and die alongside their white fellow-citizens. That is the spirit which will some day wipe every trace of racial bigotry off the map of America.&#13;
&#13;
Negro troops have a fighting tradition&#13;
Negro soldiers have fought under all the great generals, in all the great wars and in most of the famous battles of U.S. history. And they have fought well. A Negro, Crispus Attucks, was the first American to fall under British fire in the Boston Massacre of 1770. Negroes fought beside the Minute Men at Bunker Hill and the Continentals at Red Bank, N.J., where George Washington himself singled them out for praise. When Andrew Jackson stopped the British invaders at New Orleans in 1815, a battalion of “free men of color” formed part of his front line. In the Civil War, 161 regiments of Negro troops turned the tide for the North; without their help, said president Lincoln, “neither the present nor any coming administration can save the Union.” In the State of Mississippi alone more Negro soldiers enlisted to fight for the Union than white men did for the Confederacy.&#13;
Negro cavalrymen like those above chased Indians in the West and rescued the Rough Riders at San Juan Hill. In World War I, more than 200,000 Negro troops went to France. One of them, Private Henry Johnson, an ex-red cap from Albany, got into a battle with 24 Germans in a no-man’s-land outpost. He killed four of them with bullets, rifle butt and bolo knife, probably killed a fifth with grenades, wounded and drove off all the others. The French called this “The Battle of Henry Johnson.”&#13;
This proud record has already been extended in World War II. At Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, a Negro messman, Dorie Miller, dashed to the bridge of his ship, helped carry his mortally wounded captain to a place of greater safety and manned a machine gun until ordered below. He has just been awarded a Navy Cross. In the Philippines the first man of the armored forces to fall in action was Private Robert Brooks, son of a Negro sharecropper of Sadieville, Ky. Today the main parade ground at Fort Knox, headquarters for the U.S. armored forces, is named Brooks Field in his honor.&#13;
&#13;
They thrive on Army work, food and fun&#13;
For the average Negro volunteer or draftee, Army life is no hardship. He is used to hard physical work, which is nine-tenths of a soldier’s routine. He wants to learn about machinery and motors, and the Army gives him a chance. He likes the feel of a weapon in his hands, and thoroughly enjoys bayonet practice. The food is better than he generally gets at home. The base pay of an Army private ($21 a month, soon to be raised to $46 or more) does not look too meager. His living quarters, food, pay, furloughs, opportunities for recreation are equal to that received by white soldiers. There has been a decided increase in the number of Negroes attending officer-candidate schools. Except in the Air Corps, they are being trained in the same classes with whites.&#13;
Disturbances growing out of race relations in the Army have been few and widely scattered. One such disturbance at Alexandria, La., in January 1942, started when a Negro soldier resisted arrest by a white policeman. A crowd gathered and civilian policemen and one military policeman indulged in indiscriminate and unnecessary shooting. Twenty-nine Negro soldiers were injured, one of them critically. (Rumors that four or more were killed were denied by the Army.)&#13;
The sensational Negro press has done its best to magnify affairs such as this into “race riots,” but there is every indication that cooperation and friendly feeling between the races is today higher than ever in the Army.&#13;
On June 1, 1942, a long-standing wrong against American Negroes was removed when the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps began taking colored recruits for combat duty (see photos above &amp; below).&#13;
&#13;
Harlem buzzes with civilian defense tasks&#13;
Probably there is no place in the nation where civil defense is now a more burning topic than in Harlem, largest Negro community in the world. There are 300,000 Negroes in Harlem and at least a quarter of them are doing some kind of war work. About 15,000 are enrolled as air-raid wardens. Countless Harlem women are learning first aid, knitting sweaters, serving in canteens, studying internal combustion engines. Even the angels of Father Divine are being fingerprinted by Harlem branches of the American Women’s Voluntary Services. Soon after Pearl Harbor some Harlem streetwalkers began enrolling as air-raid wardens and wearing white badges on their arms but the police stopped that.&#13;
The Citizens of Harlem have real cause for their concern. They live in one of the most overcrowded city areas in the world. There is one Harlem block which has between 3,200 and 3,300 residents. When and if enemy bombs fall in Harlem, the slaughter will be terrific. And volunteers like those pictured on these pages will have to bear the first brunt of such a calamity.&#13;
&#13;
Dawn patrol is Harlem’s own war idea&#13;
Every day at 4 a.m. a procession like the one below winds through the streets of Harlem. This is the “dawn patrol” of Air Raid Protection Zone 2, 28th police precinct, New York City. Wardens of Zone 2 are not satisfied to stand the usual watches in eight-hour shifts. They get together in groups of 30 or 40 before dawn each day and drill until the sun comes up. Around 6 they all have breakfast in their headquarters (left) and the ones who have jobs go off to work. The others go home and sleep.&#13;
These early morning hours are full of excitement for members of the dawn patrol. First they select an “objective” – a roped-off street or a roof top. Then they sound an imaginary air-raid alarm. Then the imaginary “bombs” begin to fall – on churches, schools and big apartment houses. Casualties are reported, rescues made, fires put out, “broken” water mains repaired – all in vivid make-believe. At the end of a busy hour or two the patrol drafts a written report. Usually these reports are straight factual accounts of work done, but one day last winter an enthusiastic dawn patroller wrote: “The weather was fair and cold to the ladies’ hands and legs, but all was in good spirits as we marched on to the Zone 2 headquarters.”&#13;
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                    <text>Front cover of program with American flag illustration; Text: Army&#13;
Navy&#13;
Marine&#13;
Coast Guard Merchant Marine&#13;
Tribute to Negro Servicemen&#13;
Renaissance Ballroom Sunday June 27, 1943</text>
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                    <text>“MEN OF COLOR TO ARMS” – Frederick Douglass</text>
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                    <text>Was the cry of a famous Negro Leader&#13;
Of another day, when the people of this &#13;
Country fought for freedom and progress&#13;
So that all men might be free.&#13;
Today we raise this same cry because&#13;
We realize that the fate of the Negro&#13;
People is irrevocably linked with the &#13;
Fight of all men to maintain their freedom.&#13;
Reaction is at work to divide&#13;
Negro and White, Jew and Gentile, Catholic and Protestant&#13;
Reaction is at work to stop the forward&#13;
Progress of Civilization.&#13;
Our task today is to forge an unbreakable&#13;
Unity of all Patriotic Forces to&#13;
Defeat and to Remove from the face&#13;
Of the earth the menace of Fascism&#13;
..Call..&#13;
On every battle front, and on the high seas, Negro youth are engaged in the People’s Fight for Freedom. They fight against Hitler and the Axis; they fight together with soldiers of all the United Nations-The United States, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and China-for a world in which the realization of the Atlantic Charter and the Four Freedoms becomes a reality for all peoples.&#13;
THE DEEDS OF NEGRO SERVICEMEN AND WOMEN ARE A TRIBUTE TO THE PATRIOTISM OF YOUNG NEGRO AMERICANS EVERYWHERE IN WHOSE MINDS AND HEARTS ONE THOUGHT DOMINATES-THE FIGHT FOR VICTORY AGAINST HITLERISM IN ALL OF ITS FORMS.&#13;
But Negro youth are still discriminated against in our armed forces.&#13;
Negro solders are still refused transportation on public conveyances in the South.&#13;
Negro women are still barred from the WAVES and SPARS.&#13;
Negro nurses and doctors are still not utilized when their services are so urgently needed.&#13;
Negro officers are still not trained to any degree that they are needed and are not fully utilized for combat duty. THESE PRACTICES ARE UN-AMERICAN AND PLAY INTO THE HANDS OF HITLER, HIROHITO AND MUSSOLINI.&#13;
VICTORY DEMANDS THE COMPLETE UTILIZATION OF THE TALENTS, ENERGIES AND SERVICES OF NEGRO YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN, VICTORY DEMANDS THE TOTAL USE OF ALL OUR MILITARY STRENGTH AGAINST THE HEART OF THE AXIS, NOW!&#13;
JIM CROW IN THE ARMY MUST GO! It can go in the spirit of the mixed ship’s crew of gunners, etc., of the Liberty Ship, the Booker T. Washington, headed by the skipper, Capt. Hugh Mulzac. It can and must go, because America needs as a military necessity, the full utilization of the powerful striking arm of Negro Americans.&#13;
In recognition of the contributions of NEGRO SERVICEMEN IN OUR COUNTRY’S WAR AGAINST FASCISM – AND IN RECOGNITION OF OUR RESPONSIBILITY TO REMOVE THE REMAINING BARRIERS TO OUR COUNTRY’S MORALE AND EFFICIENCY....&#13;
WE CALL UPON ALL COMMUNITY GROUPS, CHURCHES, TRADE UNIONS AND INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS TO JOIN US IN PAYING TRIBUTE TO OUR NEGRO SERVICEMEN....&#13;
TRIBUTE TO NEGRO SERVICEMEN COMMITTEE</text>
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                    <text>NATIONAL COUNCIL OF NEGRO YOUTH&#13;
Honorary Chairman .................... Dorothy Height&#13;
Chairman .......................... Winifred Norman&#13;
Vice Chairmen ........................ Roberta Garnett &#13;
Sherman Smith&#13;
Secretary ................. Carnella Jamison&#13;
Treasurer ..................... Bobbye Madden&#13;
Administrative Secretary ................ Ruth Jett&#13;
NEW YORK STATE CONFERENCE OF NEGRO YOUTH&#13;
Chairman .................... Charles L. Kellar, Brooklyn&#13;
Vice Chairmen ....................... Warren Brown, Buffalo&#13;
Alease Ebo, Utica&#13;
Ruth Jett, New York&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ......... Winifred Jessamy, Brooklyn&#13;
Field Secretary .............. Clarice Givens, Buffalo&#13;
Treasurer .................. Emory Cain, Brooklyn&#13;
Administrative Secretary ............... Elsie Jackson, New York&#13;
COMMITTEE FOR TRIBUTE TO NEGRO SERVICEMEN&#13;
Chairmen ............................ Victoria H. Best&#13;
Secretary ....................... Lydia Moss&#13;
Treasurer ................... Bobye Madden&#13;
JOURNAL COMMITTEE&#13;
MARCUS CAINS – WALTER BRAXTON&#13;
&#13;
THE NEGRO LABOR VICTORY COMMITTEE&#13;
JOINS WITH&#13;
The National Council of Negro Youth&#13;
and&#13;
The N.Y. State Conference of Negro Youth&#13;
IN PAYING&#13;
Tribute to Negro Servicemen&#13;
and to&#13;
REAFFIRM OUR PLEDGE&#13;
TO ERASE ALL BARRIERS WHICH&#13;
HINDER THE FULLEST WAR EFFORT&#13;
We Will Carry Out The Program Of&#13;
THE NEGRO FREEDOM RALLY</text>
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                    <text>A SPECIAL TRIBUTE – To the Negro Members of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade who died on the battlefields of Spain in the fight against Fascism.&#13;
The Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade&#13;
100 Fifth Avenue New York City&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
SAVON CLOTHES&#13;
243 WEST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY&#13;
Best Wishes&#13;
Carlton Avenue Branch YMCA &#13;
405 Carlton Avenue&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Herbert T. Miller&#13;
Executive Secretary&#13;
Greeting from&#13;
THE “Y” THINKERS&#13;
&#13;
For Reservations AU 3-8111&#13;
Elks Rendezvou&#13;
Harlems Finest Worlds Most Modern Beautiful &#13;
CABARET&#13;
Featuring 3 Fast Stepping&#13;
Hilarious Floor Shows Nitely&#13;
That is Making Harlem History&#13;
Cor. 133rd ST. and LENOX AVE.&#13;
Never a Cover Charge&#13;
J.J. BARONE, Pres&#13;
JOHN T. VIDAL&#13;
Fine Furs&#13;
231 West 29th Street&#13;
Greetings from NEW DANCE GROUP&#13;
17 West 24th Street&#13;
New York City&#13;
CH 2-9291&#13;
Compliments of THE WITOKA CLUB&#13;
Where Each Affair is a Souvenir Thru the Years&#13;
TWO TWENTY-TWO WEST 145TH ST.&#13;
The Better Ballroom of Harlem</text>
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                    <text>..Program..&#13;
1. Invocation&#13;
2. Introduction ...................... VICTORIA BEST&#13;
3. Monologue .......................... FRED CARTER&#13;
4. Speakers ............................. DR. CHANNING TOBIAS&#13;
ASSEMBLYMAN HULAN JACK&#13;
REV A. CLAYTON POWELL 	MR. LIU LIANG MO&#13;
Guest Artists&#13;
DUKE ELLINGTON	FATS WALLER	KENNETH SPENCER&#13;
ROSETTA LA NOIR	JOSH WHITE	ELSIE KENNEDY&#13;
MARION BURTON	CANADA LEE	WARDELL SAUNDERS&#13;
ROBERT DORSEY	ALMA FORREST	FRED CARTER&#13;
AMERICAN PEOPLES’ CHORUS&#13;
COAST GUARD QUARTETTE&#13;
Skits by LANGSTON HUGHES&#13;
Directed by POWELL LINDSAY&#13;
&#13;
HENRI CHRISTOPHE&#13;
School of Languages&#13;
200 West 135th Street&#13;
New York&#13;
Edgecombe 4-5120&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
WIEGAND PHARMACY&#13;
1661 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Edgecombe 4-5120&#13;
Greetings&#13;
Crystal Inn, Inc.&#13;
1697-1701 AMSTERDAM AVE.&#13;
Cor. 144th St. New York&#13;
Harry H. Morris, Pres.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
DOOLEY WILSON&#13;
“As Time Goes By”&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
MARVIN CASSELLE&#13;
Wines and Liquors&#13;
213 West 125th Street&#13;
New York City&#13;
Let’s Get Acquainted&#13;
RENAISSANCE THEATRE&#13;
2349 Seventh Avenue&#13;
New York City&#13;
The Management&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
JIMMIE’S&#13;
Hairdressing Salon</text>
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                    <text>Greetings from&#13;
YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE, U.S.A.&#13;
NEW YORK STATE YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE&#13;
to the&#13;
TRIBUTE TO NEGRO SERVICEMEN&#13;
Help defeat Nazism – Fascism by ending Jim-Crow in the armed forces&#13;
Greetings from&#13;
Hostess Supervisory Committee&#13;
Harlem Defense&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
INEZ “Pat” PATTERSON&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
SUGAR HILL RESTAURANT&#13;
1732 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Bet. 145th and 146th Sts.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Kenneth MacPHERSON&#13;
The Brooklyn National Association for the Advancement of Colored People&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
ETA CHAPTER&#13;
Alpha Phi Alpha&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
SUBBEAL&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
The Air-Conditioned&#13;
WASHINGTON THEATER&#13;
Amsterdamn Ave. and 149th St.&#13;
New York City&#13;
Always a Good Show&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
ROLFE DANIELS&#13;
Funeral Home&#13;
720 St. Nicholas Avenue&#13;
Fusco and Naclarvio, Props.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. &#13;
PARNELL DRAYTON&#13;
HOSTESS COMMITTEE&#13;
Ashland Place&#13;
Y.W.C.A.&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y&#13;
HENRY DOERR&#13;
Choice Meats and Seafood&#13;
1660 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Bet. 142nd and 143rd Sts.&#13;
ED 4-7073&#13;
Covan’s Renny Bar &amp; Grill&#13;
Wine and Dine&#13;
2353 Seventh Avenue&#13;
New York City&#13;
Geo. Farrel, Mgr.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Arberg Stationary &amp; Card Shop&#13;
1773 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
At 148th St. New York&#13;
Greetings &#13;
See TAYLOR&#13;
For the Best Coffee &amp; Sandwiches&#13;
701 St. Nicholas Avenue&#13;
Best Wishes&#13;
GENSUP STATIONARY CO.&#13;
41 East 14th Street&#13;
New York City&#13;
Gramercy 7-7211-2&#13;
Compliments of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
FRANK MONTERO</text>
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                    <text>Compliments of&#13;
MR. RUFUS N. WILKINSON&#13;
National Employers Union&#13;
1518 Fulton Street&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
PR 3-8401&#13;
L.S. GONZALEZ CO.&#13;
Jewelers and Watchmakers&#13;
429 Lenox Avenue&#13;
Bet. 131st and 132nd St.&#13;
New York City&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Mildred and Ruth Gottdank&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
GUS PHILLIPS&#13;
Pawn Broker&#13;
1748 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Bet 146th and 147th Sts. N.Y.&#13;
Greetings&#13;
K. WONG CHOW LOW&#13;
Chinese Restaurant&#13;
2341 Seventh Avenue&#13;
Cor. 137th St. New York&#13;
Heightstown Wine &amp; Liquore Store&#13;
1731 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
AU 3-3020&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
L. McDONALD CHANEY, M.D.&#13;
AU 3-3266&#13;
Arthur’s Bar &amp; Grill&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Fine Foods, Wines, Liquors&#13;
2481 EIGHTH AVE.&#13;
Corner 133rd Street&#13;
FRANK BOOTH, Mgr.&#13;
Jimmie Daniels, Inc.&#13;
Food, Wine, Liquors&#13;
114 WEST 116TH STREET&#13;
Norvell Johnson, Mgr.&#13;
Enjoy Both of these Fine Places&#13;
AU 3-3266&#13;
LOWENSTEIN’S PHARMACY&#13;
2299 Seventh Avenue&#13;
Cor. 135th St. New York&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
Pvt. and Mrs.&#13;
HENRY R. JACKSON&#13;
Judge and Mrs.&#13;
MURRAY HEARN&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
WILLIAM BOCKER&#13;
Luncheonette&#13;
2308 Seventh Avenue&#13;
ABOLISH THE POLL TAX&#13;
WRITE YOUR SENATORS TODAY&#13;
BUY WAR BONDS&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
BRUGEMANS&#13;
Confectioners&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
DONALD K. TAYLOR&#13;
Pharmacist&#13;
373 Lewis Avenue&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Greetings&#13;
THOMAS R. BOWAN&#13;
425 Lewis Avenue&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
WILLIAM T. OWENS&#13;
Greetings from&#13;
Joint Board Fur Dressers and Dyers Union&#13;
Local 48, 61, 80, 85, and 88&#13;
INTERNATIONAL FUR AND LEATHER WORKERS UNION&#13;
OF U.S. AND CANADA, C.I.O.</text>
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                    <text>..SPONSORS..&#13;
CLIFFORD ALEXANDER&#13;
BERYLE BANFIELD&#13;
MARCUS CAINES&#13;
CHARLES A. COLLINS&#13;
HENRY K. CRAFT&#13;
THELMA DALE&#13;
HON. HUBERT DELANEY&#13;
DR. HAROLD EDGEHILL&#13;
DUKE ELLINGTON&#13;
MRS. DOROTHY K. FUNN&#13;
JOHN GOODMAN&#13;
MRS. EDMONIA GRANT&#13;
LILLIAN HELLMAN&#13;
VEVERA JOHNSON&#13;
CARRIE JOHNSON&#13;
CLAUDIA JONES&#13;
KENNETH MacPHERSON&#13;
HON. VITO MARCANTONIO&#13;
MRS. ALTONEL MATTHEWS&#13;
DR. LAWRENCE W. MOTTLEY&#13;
INEZ PATTERSON&#13;
CYRIL PHILIP&#13;
REGINALD PIERREPOINTE&#13;
DR. CYRIL OLLIVIERE&#13;
ATTORNEY HOPE R. STEVENS&#13;
EDWARD E. STRONG&#13;
M. MORAN WESTON&#13;
..BOOSTERS..&#13;
ANGELA ABRUZZO&#13;
MILTON ALLENSON&#13;
MARGUERITE BENNETT&#13;
LILLIAN BERLINER&#13;
LLOYD BEST&#13;
BEATRICE BERMAN&#13;
MARY L. BRIDGES&#13;
JOSEPH CAREY&#13;
MR. and MRS. ISAAC CASTER&#13;
ALVIN J. CHAPEAU&#13;
EMMA COOK&#13;
JAMES G. CUMMINGS&#13;
ALICE M. DRISCOLL&#13;
LEON J. DUFOUR&#13;
RAY DONNELLY&#13;
MARIE A. EDWARDS&#13;
RUTH FARBER&#13;
BERNARD M. FARLEY&#13;
JOSEPH FORD&#13;
ROSE FOY&#13;
LILLIAN GOLDBERG&#13;
CHARLOTTE HANSON&#13;
CATHERINE M. HICKEY&#13;
JAMES R. HILAND&#13;
MRS. SUSIE B. HOLMES&#13;
WILLIAM HURST, JR.&#13;
ATTORNEY HARRISON JACKSON&#13;
MIRIAM JACOBSON&#13;
EDWARD H. KASE&#13;
MAY C. KEHOE&#13;
JOSEPH A.D. PEREZ&#13;
MR. and MRS. BRUCE QUANDER&#13;
WILLIAM H. ROARK&#13;
IRVING RONIN&#13;
PAULINE R. SEIDLER&#13;
LORETTA A. THOMPSON&#13;
DR. ROBERT S. WHITE&#13;
LILLIAN ZIPPER</text>
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                    <text>..AUTOGRAPHS..&#13;
&#13;
We salute our valiant Negro Soldiers. We pledge to help the fight on the battlefield by fighting for the fullest kind of Democracy on the Home Front.&#13;
&#13;
F. McCONNEY, President	WILLIAM PEASE, Vice-President&#13;
JOHN GOODMAN, Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Front Service Employees Union&#13;
Local 144, A.F. of L.&#13;
165 WEST 46th STREET NEW YORK CITY</text>
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              <text>Army&#13;
Navy&#13;
Marine&#13;
Coast Guard Merchant Marine&#13;
Tribute to Negro Servicemen&#13;
Renaissance Ballroom Sunday June 27, 1943&#13;
“MEN OF COLOR TO ARMS” – Frederick Douglass&#13;
Was the cry of a famous Negro Leader&#13;
Of another day, when the people of this &#13;
Country fought for freedom and progress&#13;
So that all men might be free.&#13;
Today we raise this same cry because&#13;
We realize that the fate of the Negro&#13;
People is irrevocably linked with the &#13;
Fight of all men to maintain their freedom.&#13;
Reaction is at work to divide&#13;
Negro and White, Jew and Gentile, Catholic and Protestant&#13;
Reaction is at work to stop the forward&#13;
Progress of Civilization.&#13;
Our task today is to forge an unbreakable&#13;
Unity of all Patriotic Forces to&#13;
Defeat and to Remove from the face&#13;
Of the earth the menace of Fascism&#13;
..Call..&#13;
On every battle front, and on the high seas, Negro youth are engaged in the People’s Fight for Freedom. They fight against Hitler and the Axis; they fight together with soldiers of all the United Nations-The United States, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and China-for a world in which the realization of the Atlantic Charter and the Four Freedoms becomes a reality for all peoples.&#13;
THE DEEDS OF NEGRO SERVICEMEN AND WOMEN ARE A TRIBUTE TO THE PATRIOTISM OF YOUNG NEGRO AMERICANS EVERYWHERE IN WHOSE MINDS AND HEARTS ONE THOUGHT DOMINATES-THE FIGHT FOR VICTORY AGAINST HITLERISM IN ALL OF ITS FORMS.&#13;
But Negro youth are still discriminated against in our armed forces.&#13;
Negro solders are still refused transportation on public conveyances in the South.&#13;
Negro women are still barred from the WAVES and SPARS.&#13;
Negro nurses and doctors are still not utilized when their services are so urgently needed.&#13;
Negro officers are still not trained to any degree that they are needed and are not fully utilized for combat duty. THESE PRACTICES ARE UN-AMERICAN AND PLAY INTO THE HANDS OF HITLER, HIROHITO AND MUSSOLINI.&#13;
VICTORY DEMANDS THE COMPLETE UTILIZATION OF THE TALENTS, ENERGIES AND SERVICES OF NEGRO YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN, VICTORY DEMANDS THE TOTAL USE OF ALL OUR MILITARY STRENGTH AGAINST THE HEART OF THE AXIS, NOW!&#13;
JIM CROW IN THE ARMY MUST GO! It can go in the spirit of the mixed ship’s crew of gunners, etc., of the Liberty Ship, the Booker T. Washington, headed by the skipper, Capt. Hugh Mulzac. It can and must go, because America needs as a military necessity, the full utilization of the powerful striking arm of Negro Americans.&#13;
In recognition of the contributions of NEGRO SERVICEMEN IN OUR COUNTRY’S WAR AGAINST FASCISM – AND IN RECOGNITION OF OUR RESPONSIBILITY TO REMOVE THE REMAINING BARRIERS TO OUR COUNTRY’S MORALE AND EFFICIENCY....&#13;
WE CALL UPON ALL COMMUNITY GROUPS, CHURCHES, TRADE UNIONS AND INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS TO JOIN US IN PAYING TRIBUTE TO OUR NEGRO SERVICEMEN....&#13;
TRIBUTE TO NEGRO SERVICEMEN COMMITTEE&#13;
NATIONAL COUNCIL OF NEGRO YOUTH&#13;
Honorary Chairman .................... Dorothy Height&#13;
Chairman .......................... Winifred Norman&#13;
Vice Chairmen ........................ Roberta Garnett &#13;
Sherman Smith&#13;
Secretary ................. Carnella Jamison&#13;
Treasurer ..................... Bobbye Madden&#13;
Administrative Secretary ................ Ruth Jett&#13;
NEW YORK STATE CONFERENCE OF NEGRO YOUTH&#13;
Chairman .................... Charles L. Kellar, Brooklyn&#13;
Vice Chairmen ....................... Warren Brown, Buffalo&#13;
Alease Ebo, Utica&#13;
Ruth Jett, New York&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ......... Winifred Jessamy, Brooklyn&#13;
Field Secretary .............. Clarice Givens, Buffalo&#13;
Treasurer .................. Emory Cain, Brooklyn&#13;
Administrative Secretary ............... Elsie Jackson, New York&#13;
COMMITTEE FOR TRIBUTE TO NEGRO SERVICEMEN&#13;
Chairmen ............................ Victoria H. Best&#13;
Secretary ....................... Lydia Moss&#13;
Treasurer ................... Bobye Madden&#13;
JOURNAL COMMITTEE&#13;
MARCUS CAINS – WALTER BRAXTON&#13;
&#13;
THE NEGRO LABOR VICTORY COMMITTEE&#13;
JOINS WITH&#13;
The National Council of Negro Youth&#13;
and&#13;
The N.Y. State Conference of Negro Youth&#13;
IN PAYING&#13;
Tribute to Negro Servicemen&#13;
and to&#13;
REAFFIRM OUR PLEDGE&#13;
TO ERASE ALL BARRIERS WHICH&#13;
HINDER THE FULLEST WAR EFFORT&#13;
We Will Carry Out The Program Of&#13;
THE NEGRO FREEDOM RALLY&#13;
A SPECIAL TRIBUTE – To the Negro Members of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade who died on the battlefields of Spain in the fight against Fascism.&#13;
The Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade&#13;
100 Fifth Avenue New York City&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
SAVON CLOTHES&#13;
243 WEST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY&#13;
Best Wishes&#13;
Carlton Avenue Branch YMCA &#13;
405 Carlton Avenue&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Herbert T. Miller&#13;
Executive Secretary&#13;
Greeting from&#13;
THE “Y” THINKERS&#13;
&#13;
For Reservations AU 3-8111&#13;
Elks Rendezvou&#13;
Harlems Finest Worlds Most Modern Beautiful &#13;
CABARET&#13;
Featuring 3 Fast Stepping&#13;
Hilarious Floor Shows Nitely&#13;
That is Making Harlem History&#13;
Cor. 133rd ST. and LENOX AVE.&#13;
Never a Cover Charge&#13;
J.J. BARONE, Pres&#13;
JOHN T. VIDAL&#13;
Fine Furs&#13;
231 West 29th Street&#13;
Greetings from NEW DANCE GROUP&#13;
17 West 24th Street&#13;
New York City&#13;
CH 2-9291&#13;
Compliments of THE WITOKA CLUB&#13;
Where Each Affair is a Souvenir Thru the Years&#13;
TWO TWENTY-TWO WEST 145TH ST.&#13;
The Better Ballroom of Harlem..Program..&#13;
1. Invocation&#13;
2. Introduction ...................... VICTORIA BEST&#13;
3. Monologue .......................... FRED CARTER&#13;
4. Speakers ............................. DR. CHANNING TOBIAS&#13;
ASSEMBLYMAN HULAN JACK&#13;
REV A. CLAYTON POWELL 	MR. LIU LIANG MO&#13;
Guest Artists&#13;
DUKE ELLINGTON	FATS WALLER	KENNETH SPENCER&#13;
ROSETTA LA NOIR	JOSH WHITE	ELSIE KENNEDY&#13;
MARION BURTON	CANADA LEE	WARDELL SAUNDERS&#13;
ROBERT DORSEY	ALMA FORREST	FRED CARTER&#13;
AMERICAN PEOPLES’ CHORUS&#13;
COAST GUARD QUARTETTE&#13;
Skits by LANGSTON HUGHES&#13;
Directed by POWELL LINDSAY&#13;
&#13;
HENRI CHRISTOPHE&#13;
School of Languages&#13;
200 West 135th Street&#13;
New York&#13;
Edgecombe 4-5120&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
WIEGAND PHARMACY&#13;
1661 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Edgecombe 4-5120&#13;
Greetings&#13;
Crystal Inn, Inc.&#13;
1697-1701 AMSTERDAM AVE.&#13;
Cor. 144th St. New York&#13;
Harry H. Morris, Pres.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
DOOLEY WILSON&#13;
“As Time Goes By”&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
MARVIN CASSELLE&#13;
Wines and Liquors&#13;
213 West 125th Street&#13;
New York City&#13;
Let’s Get Acquainted&#13;
RENAISSANCE THEATRE&#13;
2349 Seventh Avenue&#13;
New York City&#13;
The Management&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
JIMMIE’S&#13;
Hairdressing Salon&#13;
Greetings from&#13;
YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE, U.S.A.&#13;
NEW YORK STATE YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE&#13;
to the&#13;
TRIBUTE TO NEGRO SERVICEMEN&#13;
Help defeat Nazism – Fascism by ending Jim-Crow in the armed forces&#13;
Greetings from&#13;
Hostess Supervisory Committee&#13;
Harlem Defense&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
INEZ “Pat” PATTERSON&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
SUGAR HILL RESTAURANT&#13;
1732 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Bet. 145th and 146th Sts.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Kenneth MacPHERSON&#13;
The Brooklyn National Association for the Advancement of Colored People&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
ETA CHAPTER&#13;
Alpha Phi Alpha&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
SUBBEAL&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
The Air-Conditioned&#13;
WASHINGTON THEATER&#13;
Amsterdamn Ave. and 149th St.&#13;
New York City&#13;
Always a Good Show&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
ROLFE DANIELS&#13;
Funeral Home&#13;
720 St. Nicholas Avenue&#13;
Fusco and Naclarvio, Props.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. &#13;
PARNELL DRAYTON&#13;
HOSTESS COMMITTEE&#13;
Ashland Place&#13;
Y.W.C.A.&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y&#13;
HENRY DOERR&#13;
Choice Meats and Seafood&#13;
1660 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Bet. 142nd and 143rd Sts.&#13;
ED 4-7073&#13;
Covan’s Renny Bar &amp; Grill&#13;
Wine and Dine&#13;
2353 Seventh Avenue&#13;
New York City&#13;
Geo. Farrel, Mgr.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Arberg Stationary &amp; Card Shop&#13;
1773 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
At 148th St. New York&#13;
Greetings &#13;
See TAYLOR&#13;
For the Best Coffee &amp; Sandwiches&#13;
701 St. Nicholas Avenue&#13;
Best Wishes&#13;
GENSUP STATIONARY CO.&#13;
41 East 14th Street&#13;
New York City&#13;
Gramercy 7-7211-2&#13;
Compliments of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
FRANK MONTERO&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
MR. RUFUS N. WILKINSON&#13;
National Employers Union&#13;
1518 Fulton Street&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
PR 3-8401&#13;
L.S. GONZALEZ CO.&#13;
Jewelers and Watchmakers&#13;
429 Lenox Avenue&#13;
Bet. 131st and 132nd St.&#13;
New York City&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
Mildred and Ruth Gottdank&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
GUS PHILLIPS&#13;
Pawn Broker&#13;
1748 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
Bet 146th and 147th Sts. N.Y.&#13;
Greetings&#13;
K. WONG CHOW LOW&#13;
Chinese Restaurant&#13;
2341 Seventh Avenue&#13;
Cor. 137th St. New York&#13;
Heightstown Wine &amp; Liquore Store&#13;
1731 Amsterdam Avenue&#13;
AU 3-3020&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
L. McDONALD CHANEY, M.D.&#13;
AU 3-3266&#13;
Arthur’s Bar &amp; Grill&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Fine Foods, Wines, Liquors&#13;
2481 EIGHTH AVE.&#13;
Corner 133rd Street&#13;
FRANK BOOTH, Mgr.&#13;
Jimmie Daniels, Inc.&#13;
Food, Wine, Liquors&#13;
114 WEST 116TH STREET&#13;
Norvell Johnson, Mgr.&#13;
Enjoy Both of these Fine Places&#13;
AU 3-3266&#13;
LOWENSTEIN’S PHARMACY&#13;
2299 Seventh Avenue&#13;
Cor. 135th St. New York&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
Pvt. and Mrs.&#13;
HENRY R. JACKSON&#13;
Judge and Mrs.&#13;
MURRAY HEARN&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
WILLIAM BOCKER&#13;
Luncheonette&#13;
2308 Seventh Avenue&#13;
ABOLISH THE POLL TAX&#13;
WRITE YOUR SENATORS TODAY&#13;
BUY WAR BONDS&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
BRUGEMANS&#13;
Confectioners&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
DONALD K. TAYLOR&#13;
Pharmacist&#13;
373 Lewis Avenue&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Greetings&#13;
THOMAS R. BOWAN&#13;
425 Lewis Avenue&#13;
Brooklyn, N.Y.&#13;
Compliments of &#13;
WILLIAM T. OWENS&#13;
Greetings from&#13;
Joint Board Fur Dressers and Dyers Union&#13;
Local 48, 61, 80, 85, and 88&#13;
INTERNATIONAL FUR AND LEATHER WORKERS UNION&#13;
OF U.S. AND CANADA, C.I.O.&#13;
..SPONSORS..&#13;
CLIFFORD ALEXANDER&#13;
BERYLE BANFIELD&#13;
MARCUS CAINES&#13;
CHARLES A. COLLINS&#13;
HENRY K. CRAFT&#13;
THELMA DALE&#13;
HON. HUBERT DELANEY&#13;
DR. HAROLD EDGEHILL&#13;
DUKE ELLINGTON&#13;
MRS. DOROTHY K. FUNN&#13;
JOHN GOODMAN&#13;
MRS. EDMONIA GRANT&#13;
LILLIAN HELLMAN&#13;
VEVERA JOHNSON&#13;
CARRIE JOHNSON&#13;
CLAUDIA JONES&#13;
KENNETH MacPHERSON&#13;
HON. VITO MARCANTONIO&#13;
MRS. ALTONEL MATTHEWS&#13;
DR. LAWRENCE W. MOTTLEY&#13;
INEZ PATTERSON&#13;
CYRIL PHILIP&#13;
REGINALD PIERREPOINTE&#13;
DR. CYRIL OLLIVIERE&#13;
ATTORNEY HOPE R. STEVENS&#13;
EDWARD E. STRONG&#13;
M. MORAN WESTON&#13;
..BOOSTERS..&#13;
ANGELA ABRUZZO&#13;
MILTON ALLENSON&#13;
MARGUERITE BENNETT&#13;
LILLIAN BERLINER&#13;
LLOYD BEST&#13;
BEATRICE BERMAN&#13;
MARY L. BRIDGES&#13;
JOSEPH CAREY&#13;
MR. and MRS. ISAAC CASTER&#13;
ALVIN J. CHAPEAU&#13;
EMMA COOK&#13;
JAMES G. CUMMINGS&#13;
ALICE M. DRISCOLL&#13;
LEON J. DUFOUR&#13;
RAY DONNELLY&#13;
MARIE A. EDWARDS&#13;
RUTH FARBER&#13;
BERNARD M. FARLEY&#13;
JOSEPH FORD&#13;
ROSE FOY&#13;
LILLIAN GOLDBERG&#13;
CHARLOTTE HANSON&#13;
CATHERINE M. HICKEY&#13;
JAMES R. HILAND&#13;
MRS. SUSIE B. HOLMES&#13;
WILLIAM HURST, JR.&#13;
ATTORNEY HARRISON JACKSON&#13;
MIRIAM JACOBSON&#13;
EDWARD H. KASE&#13;
MAY C. KEHOE&#13;
JOSEPH A.D. PEREZ&#13;
MR. and MRS. BRUCE QUANDER&#13;
WILLIAM H. ROARK&#13;
IRVING RONIN&#13;
PAULINE R. SEIDLER&#13;
LORETTA A. THOMPSON&#13;
DR. ROBERT S. WHITE&#13;
LILLIAN ZIPPER&#13;
..AUTOGRAPHS..&#13;
&#13;
We salute our valiant Negro Soldiers. We pledge to help the fight on the battlefield by fighting for the fullest kind of Democracy on the Home Front.&#13;
&#13;
F. McCONNEY, President	WILLIAM PEASE, Vice-President&#13;
JOHN GOODMAN, Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Front Service Employees Union&#13;
Local 144, A.F. of L.&#13;
165 WEST 46th STREET NEW YORK CITY</text>
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                    <text>Front of holiday card with 761st Battalion logo (black panther head facing left over the phrase "come out fighting) in upper left corner and illustration of Santa Clause holding a sign saying "Merry Merry Christmas" in lower right corner. Text of card says "Lest we forget; Holiday greetings"</text>
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                    <text>“Lest We Forget”&#13;
They gave their lives that others might live...that is true of our comrades of the 761st Tank Battalion who, a mere five years ago, were giving their lives on foreign soil. Now, five years later, some of our comrades are again making the great sacrifice in Korea. We salute them during the anniversary of snow-filled Christmas battle at Sarre-Union in France, and a New Year rendezvous with death in “The Bulge” in Belgium. Lest we forget...that we are not alone in our sacrifices and that it takes ALL of us to make a winning team...we dedicate this story of two men who were NOT up front. We dedicate it to our former comrades of the 761st and their fellows, now “somewhere in Korea”: Maj. Richard Williams, M/Sgt. Louis M. Daniels, T/Sgt. William Griffin, Sgt. Austin C. Jackson and others again bringing glory to the name of the 761st...and Captain Leonard P. Taylor, our Battalion Adjutant, who died of leukemia in Savannah, Ga. this month...one whom we all knew and loved.&#13;
Trezzvant W. Anderson,&#13;
President, 761st Tank Battalion Ass’n.&#13;
19 Mercer Street,&#13;
Pittsburgh 19, Pa.&#13;
THIRD RE-UNION, DETROIT, MICH., AUG. 24, 25, 26, 1951&#13;
TEISENDORF, Germany (Oct. 31, 1945) – The snows are capping the tops of the beautiful Bavarian Alps, here in the heart of the Tyrol, where the veteran 761st Tank Battalion is doing occupation, and a thrilling scene lays before my eyes. The sun is shining and it is beautiful here, but my heart is not remotely concerned with that.&#13;
Out of the welter of historical data that surrounds the deeds of the Negro soldiers in Europe in World War II, there are just two incidents which focus themselves into my mental perspective today, and I cannot resist the impulse to write about it, so that the world may know of two incidents, concerning two Negro soldiers (and gentlemen) who were part of the forces in the European Theatre of Operations. Both are dead!&#13;
On the field of battle, out in “No Man’s Land,” many men gave their lives and many Negroes fell to the bullets of the enemy.  Many heroes were made by the valiant work of combat troops who took all the enemy could offer, and then some, and they got Silver Stars, Bronze Stars, D.S.C.’s. But there was no greater contribution made during this war, in its scope than the contributions made by these two Negro soldiers who died, without the accolade of the crowds, with no formal ceremonies to mark their passing, only simple graves on a foreign soil.&#13;
But each one of them was a great man in his own field, and the American Negroes should know about these two men, each of whom made his contribution in his own way, and that contribution was of a far more valuable benefit to the soldiers around them, than any individual performance which either of them could have displayed on the battlefield.&#13;
The first of the two men is the late Pvt. JOHN S. KINLOCH of 4075 South Central Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif., former Managing Editor of The CALIFORNIA EAGLE and nephew of Mrs. Carlotta Bass, the publisher of that newspaper.&#13;
JOHN was my friend and comrade, a fellow-craftsman, who was the most excellent in his capacity as a newspaperman, and was so acclaimed by all those who came into contact with him during his journalistic work in the European Theatre of Operations, where he served as an Army Correspondent at the Normandy Base Section Headquarters, at Cherbourg, France. But JOHN did not die at his copy desk, with reams of copy before him, awaiting the skilled touch of clever fingers, and the agile adjustment which his</text>
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                    <text>energetic newspaper mind could make on a news story, to give it that stirring color, so well liked by the U.S. reading public.&#13;
JOHN was killed in action on a battlefield in Germany, as a rifleman in that crack Negro Platoon of Company G, of the 39th Infantry Regiment of the Ninth Infantry Division, which won the prize as the best drilling platoon in that entire division! He was far from his beloved typewriter when the bullets of an enemy machine gun cut him down, as he fired his M-1 against the hated Nazis! There is a great story behind his death, and how he came to be there, and that story forms the basis of my contention that JOHN’S contribution to the war was one of the most outstanding examples of self-sacrifices ever displayed by mortal man, in that he made his supreme sacrifice because he was loyal to his ideals of his duty to his Race, and his country!&#13;
JOHN KINLOCH KNEW, even as did I myself, that the role of the Negro soldier in this war was going to be given scant and casual attention and treatment by those charged with the responsibility of disseminating to the public the activities in the news of the American Negro soldier. WHY JOHN KINLOCH knew this is another story, and the part which HE played in overcoming the obstacles which prevented fuller light being shed on the part being played by the Negro soldier as an integral part of the American Army in Europe resulted in his being killed on the field of battle, NOT AS A NEWSPAPERMAN (WHICH HE REALLY WAS), but as an infantryman, firing the M-1 rifle, which any other soldier could have fired, for it was a simple matter of getting the proper sight-picture over the peep—sight on the end of the barrel, and then squeezing the trigger.&#13;
The Army could have put any other Negro soldier from any port battalion, quartermaster unit, engineer outfit, or service company on that job. But the Army would have had a heluva time putting another soldier at JOHN KINLOCH’S desk to knock out the brilliant news stories which featured his service at the Public Relations Office of the Normany Base Section Headquarters!&#13;
But JOHN KINLOCH and I had a conference back in Paris in November, 1944, when it was evident that we Army correspondents were not going to get into ground force area without great difficulty, (thanks to Lieut.-Gen. John C.H. Lee) and we decided to do something about it.&#13;
If those responsible for the proper dissemination of news about our boys would not make arrangements satisfactory to provide this: WE OURSELVES WOULD TRANSFER TO THE HARDEST FIGHTING FRONT-LINE UNITES WITH NEGRO FIGHTERS, AND THEN WE WOULD BE SURE THAT, AT LEAST, THE SINGLE OUTFIT THAT WE WERE WITH WOULD BE PROPERLY COVERED FROM A NEWS STANDPOINT! I, Anderson, chose the 761st Tank Battalion because it was doing the roughest fighting of any Negro unit on the Western Front; JOHN KINLOCH chose the infantry and we finally got transferred into them! JOHN lost his life on the field of battle, fighting for his country. I was more fortunate, as I am still alive.&#13;
But, before JOHN cashed in his chips, he got out of his big story...the first stories of the work of the famous Negro platoon of “Company G, 39th Regiment, Ninth Infantry Division,” and got their pictures into YANK, the Army magazine! And, then, fulfilling his T/O job as a rifleman, he went forth to the field of battle, and did his duty there, giving his life in the performance of that duty!&#13;
Perhaps no marble statue will adorn the resting place of JOHN KINLOCH’S body, but he rates one. For he was one of the very few Negro correspondents...civilian or military...who was willing to go “all the way” in the carrying out of the ideals that inspired him to his great sacrifice. A brilliant young man, and a great soldier. Someday ALL of the story behind JOHN KINLOCH’S being in the infantry may be told. And then the Negro Race will be proud of this young man, this young Army Correspondent, who gave his life on the battlefield WHERE THE NEWS WAS, and not from the elegant recesses of a swank hotel many miles behind the front lines, describing front-line action from some communique based upon the report of men like himself!&#13;
***&#13;
The second man made his contribution in a far different, but no less effective, manner. He was Sgt. NELSON BRYAN of West 149th Street, New York City, who was formerly hot-trumpet man with Lucky Millinder’s great orchestra, before he entered the armed services. NELSON was killed in an auto accident in September, 1945, in Germany, while a member of the 847th Engineer Aviation Battalion.</text>
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                    <text>The story about BRYAN? Well, last year, 1944, back in England, I wrote and produced two shows for the 923rd Aviation Engineer Regiment to which BRYAN’S battalion belonged. In these two shows I had two orchestras. One of them was BRYAN’S now-famous “RIO RITA” Orchestra, and we had such performers as Jimmy Daniels, owner of “Jimmy Daniels, Inc.” New York Café Society nite club, like Ike Baker, former member of “The Three Blue Jackets,” and other top flighters. On one occasion our show raised more than 25,000 pounds (about $100,000) for an English “Salute the Soldier Week” Fund.&#13;
Well, we came to the Continent. Here, I consolidated the best features of the two shows into one grand fast-moving hot deluxe show, and we hit the boards for the First Tactical Air Force, then commanded by Maj. Gen. RALPH ROYCE, and also put on shows for the Headquarters of Gen. JACOB DEVERS’ Sixth Army Group. It was BRYAN who paced the band, and was the star performer in his thrilling rendition of Hoagy Carmichael’s immortal “Stardust,” and “I’m Confessin’ That I love You,” as the piece de resistance. That show was known as “The Harlem Express,” and we had men from Millinder, Harlan Leonard, Lester Young, Les Hite, and other great bands, and it was an A-1 show in all respects.&#13;
We hit the Sixth Army Group area during the bitter month of January, just after the Germans had shoved the Seventh Army back along its front in the Vosges Mountains of Alsace-Lorraine. We hit the hospitals, and broadcasted from Dijon. We played before thousands, and Nelson Bryan’s great contribution was the heart-throbbing happiness which settled into the souls of the thousands of sick and wounded soldiers of the Seventh Army, as his tender tones, and the mellow notes of his golden trumpet, carried them back home into their own firesides, and the warm comfortable night clubs which spelled for them AMERICA itself!.&#13;
And their wounds were less painful; their sickness was less misery to them, and their hearts were lighter and gayer, because this dusky huge American artist had come to them, bringing them the warm spirit of their own native land, htere amid the ice and snow that was Alsac-Lorraine in January. Cripples on crutches seemed less like cripples; men with bodies racked with pain seemed more cheerful, and they even attempted to do a sort of “jitterbug” as the great orchestra, guided by NELSON BRYAN, transported them back home to AMERICA.&#13;
That was HIS contribution, not in one place alone, but in many places, and wherever we went, the acclaim of the vast crowds was sweet music to our ears, and we got a thrill out of it, because we knew that we were doing “something for the boys.” And then we didn’t mind the long rides in that cold six-by-six truck in the show, with no fire, and the poor accommodations for sleep and food with which we had to content ourselves.&#13;
BRYAN would have made a good sailor, for he was a great “cusser” and could say those words so fervently. But his work of bringing cheer into the hearts of battle-weary Americans of both races, was a great inspiration, and everywhere it was: “When are you coming back?”&#13;
Well, NELSON was killed in an auto accident, not on the stage to which he was no stranger, and the news of his passing spread like wild-fire, and left a great tinge of sadness and depression all over his comrades, friends and acquaintances. A great guy was gone!&#13;
***&#13;
They were both my friends, and my intimate associates, and each, in his own field, made a great contribution to the war, because WHAT HE DID gave to other soldiers, thousands of them, the inspiration, and the will to carry on, and to back to the field of battle and fight the enemy harder and harder. That they didn’t actually kill thousands of Germans themselves is of little consequence, but the fact that it was what they did that helped OTHER American soldiers to have the courage and desire and inspiration to kill thousands of Germans, which helped shorten the War in Europe!&#13;
Sing a hymn of praise for JOHN S. KINLOCH and NELSON BRYAN, two great Negro heroes of this war, who like hundreds of others, passed into oblivion, minus the glamor of the front-page, and the thrilling radio descriptions of their brilliant combat achievements, for the were HEROES!&#13;
TREZZVANT W. ANDERSON.</text>
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              <text>“Lest We Forget”&#13;
They gave their lives that others might live...that is true of our comrades of the 761st Tank Battalion who, a mere five years ago, were giving their lives on foreign soil. Now, five years later, some of our comrades are again making the great sacrifice in Korea. We salute them during the anniversary of snow-filled Christmas battle at Sarre-Union in France, and a New Year rendezvous with death in “The Bulge” in Belgium. Lest we forget...that we are not alone in our sacrifices and that it takes ALL of us to make a winning team...we dedicate this story of two men who were NOT up front. We dedicate it to our former comrades of the 761st and their fellows, now “somewhere in Korea”: Maj. Richard Williams, M/Sgt. Louis M. Daniels, T/Sgt. William Griffin, Sgt. Austin C. Jackson and others again bringing glory to the name of the 761st...and Captain Leonard P. Taylor, our Battalion Adjutant, who died of leukemia in Savannah, Ga. this month...one whom we all knew and loved.&#13;
Trezzvant W. Anderson,&#13;
President, 761st Tank Battalion Ass’n.&#13;
19 Mercer Street,&#13;
Pittsburgh 19, Pa.&#13;
THIRD RE-UNION, DETROIT, MICH., AUG. 24, 25, 26, 1951&#13;
TEISENDORF, Germany (Oct. 31, 1945) – The snows are capping the tops of the beautiful Bavarian Alps, here in the heart of the Tyrol, where the veteran 761st Tank Battalion is doing occupation, and a thrilling scene lays before my eyes. The sun is shining and it is beautiful here, but my heart is not remotely concerned with that.&#13;
Out of the welter of historical data that surrounds the deeds of the Negro soldiers in Europe in World War II, there are just two incidents which focus themselves into my mental perspective today, and I cannot resist the impulse to write about it, so that the world may know of two incidents, concerning two Negro soldiers (and gentlemen) who were part of the forces in the European Theatre of Operations. Both are dead!&#13;
On the field of battle, out in “No Man’s Land,” many men gave their lives and many Negroes fell to the bullets of the enemy.  Many heroes were made by the valiant work of combat troops who took all the enemy could offer, and then some, and they got Silver Stars, Bronze Stars, D.S.C.’s. But there was no greater contribution made during this war, in its scope than the contributions made by these two Negro soldiers who died, without the accolade of the crowds, with no formal ceremonies to mark their passing, only simple graves on a foreign soil.&#13;
But each one of them was a great man in his own field, and the American Negroes should know about these two men, each of whom made his contribution in his own way, and that contribution was of a far more valuable benefit to the soldiers around them, than any individual performance which either of them could have displayed on the battlefield.&#13;
The first of the two men is the late Pvt. JOHN S. KINLOCH of 4075 South Central Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif., former Managing Editor of The CALIFORNIA EAGLE and nephew of Mrs. Carlotta Bass, the publisher of that newspaper.&#13;
JOHN was my friend and comrade, a fellow-craftsman, who was the most excellent in his capacity as a newspaperman, and was so acclaimed by all those who came into contact with him during his journalistic work in the European Theatre of Operations, where he served as an Army Correspondent at the Normandy Base Section Headquarters, at Cherbourg, France. But JOHN did not die at his copy desk, with reams of copy before him, awaiting the skilled touch of clever fingers, and the agile adjustment which his energetic newspaper mind could make on a news story, to give it that stirring color, so well liked by the U.S. reading public.&#13;
JOHN was killed in action on a battlefield in Germany, as a rifleman in that crack Negro Platoon of Company G, of the 39th Infantry Regiment of the Ninth Infantry Division, which won the prize as the best drilling platoon in that entire division! He was far from his beloved typewriter when the bullets of an enemy machine gun cut him down, as he fired his M-1 against the hated Nazis! There is a great story behind his death, and how he came to be there, and that story forms the basis of my contention that JOHN’S contribution to the war was one of the most outstanding examples of self-sacrifices ever displayed by mortal man, in that he made his supreme sacrifice because he was loyal to his ideals of his duty to his Race, and his country!&#13;
JOHN KINLOCH KNEW, even as did I myself, that the role of the Negro soldier in this war was going to be given scant and casual attention and treatment by those charged with the responsibility of disseminating to the public the activities in the news of the American Negro soldier. WHY JOHN KINLOCH knew this is another story, and the part which HE played in overcoming the obstacles which prevented fuller light being shed on the part being played by the Negro soldier as an integral part of the American Army in Europe resulted in his being killed on the field of battle, NOT AS A NEWSPAPERMAN (WHICH HE REALLY WAS), but as an infantryman, firing the M-1 rifle, which any other soldier could have fired, for it was a simple matter of getting the proper sight-picture over the peep—sight on the end of the barrel, and then squeezing the trigger.&#13;
The Army could have put any other Negro soldier from any port battalion, quartermaster unit, engineer outfit, or service company on that job. But the Army would have had a heluva time putting another soldier at JOHN KINLOCH’S desk to knock out the brilliant news stories which featured his service at the Public Relations Office of the Normany Base Section Headquarters!&#13;
But JOHN KINLOCH and I had a conference back in Paris in November, 1944, when it was evident that we Army correspondents were not going to get into ground force area without great difficulty, (thanks to Lieut.-Gen. John C.H. Lee) and we decided to do something about it.&#13;
If those responsible for the proper dissemination of news about our boys would not make arrangements satisfactory to provide this: WE OURSELVES WOULD TRANSFER TO THE HARDEST FIGHTING FRONT-LINE UNITES WITH NEGRO FIGHTERS, AND THEN WE WOULD BE SURE THAT, AT LEAST, THE SINGLE OUTFIT THAT WE WERE WITH WOULD BE PROPERLY COVERED FROM A NEWS STANDPOINT! I, Anderson, chose the 761st Tank Battalion because it was doing the roughest fighting of any Negro unit on the Western Front; JOHN KINLOCH chose the infantry and we finally got transferred into them! JOHN lost his life on the field of battle, fighting for his country. I was more fortunate, as I am still alive.&#13;
But, before JOHN cashed in his chips, he got out of his big story...the first stories of the work of the famous Negro platoon of “Company G, 39th Regiment, Ninth Infantry Division,” and got their pictures into YANK, the Army magazine! And, then, fulfilling his T/O job as a rifleman, he went forth to the field of battle, and did his duty there, giving his life in the performance of that duty!&#13;
Perhaps no marble statue will adorn the resting place of JOHN KINLOCH’S body, but he rates one. For he was one of the very few Negro correspondents...civilian or military...who was willing to go “all the way” in the carrying out of the ideals that inspired him to his great sacrifice. A brilliant young man, and a great soldier. Someday ALL of the story behind JOHN KINLOCH’S being in the infantry may be told. And then the Negro Race will be proud of this young man, this young Army Correspondent, who gave his life on the battlefield WHERE THE NEWS WAS, and not from the elegant recesses of a swank hotel many miles behind the front lines, describing front-line action from some communique based upon the report of men like himself!&#13;
***&#13;
The second man made his contribution in a far different, but no less effective, manner. He was Sgt. NELSON BRYAN of West 149th Street, New York City, who was formerly hot-trumpet man with Lucky Millinder’s great orchestra, before he entered the armed services. NELSON was killed in an auto accident in September, 1945, in Germany, while a member of the 847th Engineer Aviation Battalion.&#13;
The story about BRYAN? Well, last year, 1944, back in England, I wrote and produced two shows for the 923rd Aviation Engineer Regiment to which BRYAN’S battalion belonged. In these two shows I had two orchestras. One of them was BRYAN’S now-famous “RIO RITA” Orchestra, and we had such performers as Jimmy Daniels, owner of “Jimmy Daniels, Inc.” New York Café Society nite club, like Ike Baker, former member of “The Three Blue Jackets,” and other top flighters. On one occasion our show raised more than 25,000 pounds (about $100,000) for an English “Salute the Soldier Week” Fund.&#13;
Well, we came to the Continent. Here, I consolidated the best features of the two shows into one grand fast-moving hot deluxe show, and we hit the boards for the First Tactical Air Force, then commanded by Maj. Gen. RALPH ROYCE, and also put on shows for the Headquarters of Gen. JACOB DEVERS’ Sixth Army Group. It was BRYAN who paced the band, and was the star performer in his thrilling rendition of Hoagy Carmichael’s immortal “Stardust,” and “I’m Confessin’ That I love You,” as the piece de resistance. That show was known as “The Harlem Express,” and we had men from Millinder, Harlan Leonard, Lester Young, Les Hite, and other great bands, and it was an A-1 show in all respects.&#13;
We hit the Sixth Army Group area during the bitter month of January, just after the Germans had shoved the Seventh Army back along its front in the Vosges Mountains of Alsace-Lorraine. We hit the hospitals, and broadcasted from Dijon. We played before thousands, and Nelson Bryan’s great contribution was the heart-throbbing happiness which settled into the souls of the thousands of sick and wounded soldiers of the Seventh Army, as his tender tones, and the mellow notes of his golden trumpet, carried them back home into their own firesides, and the warm comfortable night clubs which spelled for them AMERICA itself!.&#13;
And their wounds were less painful; their sickness was less misery to them, and their hearts were lighter and gayer, because this dusky huge American artist had come to them, bringing them the warm spirit of their own native land, htere amid the ice and snow that was Alsac-Lorraine in January. Cripples on crutches seemed less like cripples; men with bodies racked with pain seemed more cheerful, and they even attempted to do a sort of “jitterbug” as the great orchestra, guided by NELSON BRYAN, transported them back home to AMERICA.&#13;
That was HIS contribution, not in one place alone, but in many places, and wherever we went, the acclaim of the vast crowds was sweet music to our ears, and we got a thrill out of it, because we knew that we were doing “something for the boys.” And then we didn’t mind the long rides in that cold six-by-six truck in the show, with no fire, and the poor accommodations for sleep and food with which we had to content ourselves.&#13;
BRYAN would have made a good sailor, for he was a great “cusser” and could say those words so fervently. But his work of bringing cheer into the hearts of battle-weary Americans of both races, was a great inspiration, and everywhere it was: “When are you coming back?”&#13;
Well, NELSON was killed in an auto accident, not on the stage to which he was no stranger, and the news of his passing spread like wild-fire, and left a great tinge of sadness and depression all over his comrades, friends and acquaintances. A great guy was gone!&#13;
***&#13;
They were both my friends, and my intimate associates, and each, in his own field, made a great contribution to the war, because WHAT HE DID gave to other soldiers, thousands of them, the inspiration, and the will to carry on, and to back to the field of battle and fight the enemy harder and harder. That they didn’t actually kill thousands of Germans themselves is of little consequence, but the fact that it was what they did that helped OTHER American soldiers to have the courage and desire and inspiration to kill thousands of Germans, which helped shorten the War in Europe!&#13;
Sing a hymn of praise for JOHN S. KINLOCH and NELSON BRYAN, two great Negro heroes of this war, who like hundreds of others, passed into oblivion, minus the glamor of the front-page, and the thrilling radio descriptions of their brilliant combat achievements, for the were HEROES!&#13;
TREZZVANT W. ANDERSON.</text>
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Edward M. Donald, President ....... Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Thomas G. Hill, Vice President .. Washington D.C.&#13;
Ray Robertson, Secretary ...........Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Dr. G. Norman Adamson, Treasurer .. Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Wendell T. Johnson, Chaplain ...... Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Homer Bracy, Sgt.-at-Arms .......... Chicago, Ill.&#13;
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Walter Lewis ................... President&#13;
James Rollins ................ Vice President&#13;
Louis O. Horne ................. Secretary&#13;
Charles Steward .................. Treasurer&#13;
Floyd Humphrey ............. Assistant Treasurer&#13;
George Hairston ............... Business Manager&#13;
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Herman Taylor ............... Washington, D.C.&#13;
Phillip Agnew .................. Detroit, Mich.&#13;
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              <text>National Officers&#13;
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James Rollins ................ Vice President&#13;
Louis O. Horne ................. Secretary&#13;
Charles Steward .................. Treasurer&#13;
Floyd Humphrey ............. Assistant Treasurer&#13;
George Hairston ............... Business Manager&#13;
Reunion Committee&#13;
Herman Taylor ............... Washington, D.C.&#13;
Phillip Agnew .................. Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Walter Lewis ..................... Phila., Pa.&#13;
The 761st Tank Battalion Association cordially invite you as a guest of honor to our TWELFTH ANNUAL REUNION&#13;
Dinner Dance and Cabaret&#13;
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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania&#13;
Saturday, the Third day of September&#13;
Nineteen Hundred Sixty&#13;
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Dance nine to one a.m.&#13;
Music by Leroy Evans&#13;
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Featuring The Philtones&#13;
Presenting The Jerome Gaymon Trio&#13;
In A Dance Fantasy&#13;
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                    <text>War...and its Aftermath&#13;
On Friday, the 27th day of January, 1972, the war in Vietnam was formally brought to a close with the signing of a “cease fire” agreement in Paris. It was the longest war in American history having lasted something more than twelve years at a direct cost of more than $110 billion. It was also the most unpopular war, and the most controversial. Not many Americans were agreed upon what they were fighting for, or whether our goals had been realized when the armistice was signed. There was almost universal agreement however, that it was time, indeed long past time, to get our men out and go home.&#13;
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                    <text>They were the poor and jobless conscripts who fell the inevitable heirs to the uniforms rejected by the white middle class youth, who, if their traditional insulation of cast and class, education and profession proved insufficient to protect them from physical involvement in the war, could quit the country in protest to live in Canada or Sweden. The war was a difficult and shattering experience for most black soldiers. They could not “opt for Canada” as could educated the white youth of the American establishment. By-and-by all will be forgiven and they will come home again to jobs and families and positions. Bitter experience has taught Black Americans that what is “protest” for some may well be considered “treason” for some others. (It was only in 1972 that the Federal Government finally cleared 167 Black soldiers of the all-black First Battalion of the 25th Infantry who were dishonorably discharged by President Theodore Roosevelt for “protesting” their mistreatment in Brownsville, Texas 66 years earlier in 1906!)&#13;
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                    <text>Blacks as a caste, the poor as a class, and its professional military. Many of the last two categories, ironically, come from the Southern United States making for improbably harmony and efficiency in the field. Inevitably as the war dragged on, racial incidents at American bases in Asia (and in occupied Europe) increased. At the front, Black casualties were disproportionately high, suggesting the possibility of bias in military assignments. There were votes in [?]ing Black and white sailors aboard American warships, and between the races at training camps in America and at Army containments[?] abroad. Off duty, Black soldiers and sailors frequented one section of town, whites another. Reflecting the growing sense</text>
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                    <text>of black ethnicity at home, Blacks in the military began to find new pride in their identity. They also demanded that recognition be given their traditional food, recreational and cosmetic preferences, instead of continuing the traditional assumption that what white soldiers preferred to eat, the music they enjoyed most, or the way they liked to cut their hair was necessarily good for, or acceptable to Blacks. By the war’s end, relationships between the races in the military services was seriously deteriorated, and a series of formal investigations had been called for. The return of the war veterans posed critical problems of adjustment. Jobs needed to be found. Rehabilitation to civilian life would not be easy or</text>
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                    <text>automatic. Many soldiers had been brutalized by combat, drugs, and racial experiences. There is a growing demand for an all “volunteer” army. The American establishment does not want its sons to ever again be faced with the choice of serving in a war like “Vietnam,” or expatriating themselves to avoid conscription. The expectation is that if the pay is attractive enough, under the established cadre of professional officers, the Black and the poor will be Hessians to the nation with little inconvenience to the rest of America. Should the possibility that employment and underemployment differentials between whites and blacks continue, the American army of the future may well be the largest “black” military force in the world.</text>
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              <text>War...and its Aftermath&#13;
On Friday, the 27th day of January, 1972, the war in Vietnam was formally brought to a close with the signing of a “cease fire” agreement in Paris. It was the longest war in American history having lasted something more than twelve years at a direct cost of more than $110 billion. It was also the most unpopular war, and the most controversial. Not many Americans were agreed upon what they were fighting for, or whether our goals had been realized when the armistice was signed. There was almost universal agreement however, that it was time, indeed long past time, to get our men out and go home.&#13;
A disproportionate number of the men fighting in Southeast Asia were Black Americans.&#13;
They were the poor and jobless conscripts who fell the inevitable heirs to the uniforms rejected by the white middle class youth, who, if their traditional insulation of cast and class, education and profession proved insufficient to protect them from physical involvement in the war, could quit the country in protest to live in Canada or Sweden. The war was a difficult and shattering experience for most black soldiers. They could not “opt for Canada” as could educated the white youth of the American establishment. By-and-by all will be forgiven and they will come home again to jobs and families and positions. Bitter experience has taught Black Americans that what is “protest” for some may well be considered “treason” for some others. (It was only in 1972 that the Federal Government finally cleared 167 Black soldiers of the all-black First Battalion of the 25th Infantry who were dishonorably discharged by President Theodore Roosevelt for “protesting” their mistreatment in Brownsville, Texas 66 years earlier in 1906!)&#13;
The burden of the war then fell upon&#13;
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                    <text>See – 356-358&#13;
Hymns&#13;
206 see 75&#13;
269&#13;
271&#13;
Sunday June 18, 1944&#13;
Text: 1 Tim 6:12&#13;
Fight the good [?] of faiths&#13;
The Christian Soldier –&#13;
There are many valuable lessons to be learned from wars and conflicts.&#13;
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                    <text>his spirit of sacrificing even his life for a cause. We can see also the reason why so many scriptures[?] passages refer to the spiritual life as a war, and Christians as soldiers.&#13;
Then as Christian soldiers we are to learn that we too – like the soldiers – saints in all these glorious wars must conquer tho[?] we die.”&#13;
Be always on Guard.&#13;
I One of the first lessons we must learn is: the type of enemy we are to face. Our men are facing this tricky and fanatical[?] Japanese in the Pacific.&#13;
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Eternal vigilance is necessary for the Christian soldiers. Be watchful is the admonition through out. So let the words of the poet be like Christian</text>
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                    <text>Solders constant prayer&#13;
My soul Be on thy guard&#13;
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                    <text>For Evangelist&#13;
Daisy Wagner .50&#13;
Lemuel Parlor Jr. .25&#13;
R.S. Caldwell 1.00&#13;
Ada Bond 1.10&#13;
Luella Phifer 1.00&#13;
Ruth Lyerly 1.00&#13;
Hester Roscoe[?] 1.50&#13;
Frances Caldwell .50&#13;
C.A. Biggers .10&#13;
Sallie White 1.10&#13;
Mr &amp; Mrs. J.W. Bost 1.00&#13;
Margaret Williams 1.00&#13;
S.C. Boger 1.00&#13;
Mattie McLaughlin .50&#13;
Christine Alexander .25&#13;
Mattie Bassinger .25&#13;
M.L. Miller .25&#13;
Mary Ingram .25&#13;
Alberta Bost .50&#13;
Mary H. Green 1.00&#13;
Willie J. Bost .50&#13;
Mattie M. Young .50&#13;
Marion Edwards 1.00&#13;
Bertha Miller .50&#13;
E.B. Houston .25&#13;
Janie Miller .35&#13;
Gladys Wagner 1.00&#13;
M.A. Phifer 1.00&#13;
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                    <text>$26.85&#13;
Sarah Morris 1.00&#13;
J.B. Rankin .25&#13;
E.L. James 1.00&#13;
Mrs. L.G. Parlor .50&#13;
K.E. Jones 1.00&#13;
Mr D. Steele .25&#13;
Mrs Emma Thomas .50&#13;
Lizzie Davis .45&#13;
Campbell Caldwell .25&#13;
Carla Caldwell (40) 1.00&#13;
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L.D. Boges – 1.00&#13;
Jamie[?] Murphy – 1.00&#13;
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                    <text>Everyone who bears the name of Christ should by all means endeavor to influence others for good.&#13;
I know it is very discouraging sometimes we wonder whether the continued practice of Bible reading in the home &#13;
Daily[?] prayer – “ “&#13;
Constant religious devotion[?] etc. is doing any good. Parent must rust God for result but keep on – &#13;
A good Christian man was married to one who was not like minded for more than 20 years she was a thorn in his side – There eldest son</text>
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                    <text>Study&#13;
Nov. 9, 1944 11:35 am&#13;
Cara Lee Griffin&#13;
Richardson Miller&#13;
Willie Forest&#13;
Jessie Johnston&#13;
Henrietta Reid&#13;
Janet Drye&#13;
Mildred Stephens</text>
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              <text>See – 356-358&#13;
Hymns&#13;
206 see 75&#13;
269&#13;
271&#13;
Sunday June 18, 1944&#13;
Text: 1 Tim 6:12&#13;
Fight the good [?] of faiths&#13;
The Christian Soldier –&#13;
There are many valuable lessons to be learned from wars and conflicts.&#13;
With all of their horrors and suffering and attendant evils there is no other human experience that affords a great opportunity to learn God’s way in disciplining His people so that they might win a victorious life.&#13;
There is a similarity between the human warfare and the spiritual warfare.&#13;
So as we note the varying details necessary to the waging of a war, organizing troops and preparing them for battle. As we notice the soldier his weapons his loyalty to his country&#13;
his spirit of sacrificing even his life for a cause. We can see also the reason why so many scriptures[?] passages refer to the spiritual life as a war, and Christians as soldiers.&#13;
Then as Christian soldiers we are to learn that we too – like the soldiers – saints in all these glorious wars must conquer tho[?] we die.”&#13;
Be always on Guard.&#13;
I One of the first lessons we must learn is: the type of enemy we are to face. Our men are facing this tricky and fanatical[?] Japanese in the Pacific.&#13;
We failed when they first attacked us because we were not on our guard. The result was we lost nearly our whole mid Pacific fleet when Pearl Harbor was attacked. We have never known positively how many lives were lost.&#13;
Eternal vigilance is necessary for the Christian soldiers. Be watchful is the admonition through out. So let the words of the poet be like Christian&#13;
Solders constant prayer&#13;
My soul Be on thy guard&#13;
Not flesh &amp; blood Eph 6:12&#13;
For Evangelist&#13;
Daisy Wagner .50&#13;
Lemuel Parlor Jr. .25&#13;
R.S. Caldwell 1.00&#13;
Ada Bond 1.10&#13;
Luella Phifer 1.00&#13;
Ruth Lyerly 1.00&#13;
Hester Roscoe[?] 1.50&#13;
Frances Caldwell .50&#13;
C.A. Biggers .10&#13;
Sallie White 1.10&#13;
Mr &amp; Mrs. J.W. Bost 1.00&#13;
Margaret Williams 1.00&#13;
S.C. Boger 1.00&#13;
Mattie McLaughlin .50&#13;
Christine Alexander .25&#13;
Mattie Bassinger .25&#13;
M.L. Miller .25&#13;
Mary Ingram .25&#13;
Alberta Bost .50&#13;
Mary H. Green 1.00&#13;
Willie J. Bost .50&#13;
Mattie M. Young .50&#13;
Marion Edwards 1.00&#13;
Bertha Miller .50&#13;
E.B. Houston .25&#13;
Janie Miller .35&#13;
Gladys Wagner 1.00&#13;
M.A. Phifer 1.00&#13;
Johnie B. White 1.00&#13;
Sam Wagner. 50&#13;
$26.85&#13;
Sarah Morris 1.00&#13;
J.B. Rankin .25&#13;
E.L. James 1.00&#13;
Mrs. L.G. Parlor .50&#13;
K.E. Jones 1.00&#13;
Mr D. Steele .25&#13;
Mrs Emma Thomas .50&#13;
Lizzie Davis .45&#13;
Campbell Caldwell .25&#13;
Carla Caldwell (40) 1.00&#13;
Total: $2.685&#13;
L.D. Boges – 1.00&#13;
Jamie[?] Murphy – 1.00&#13;
Price Biggers – 1.00&#13;
Everyone who bears the name of Christ should by all means endeavor to influence others for good.&#13;
I know it is very discouraging sometimes we wonder whether the continued practice of Bible reading in the home &#13;
Daily[?] prayer – “ “&#13;
Constant religious devotion[?] etc. is doing any good. Parent must rust God for result but keep on – &#13;
A good Christian man was married to one who was not like minded for more than 20 years she was a thorn in his side – There eldest son&#13;
Study&#13;
Nov. 9, 1944 11:35 am&#13;
Cara Lee Griffin&#13;
Richardson Miller&#13;
Willie Forest&#13;
Jessie Johnston&#13;
Henrietta Reid&#13;
Janet Drye&#13;
Mildred Stephens</text>
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                    <text>Sunday December 3, 1950.&#13;
The Source of National Safety.&#13;
Read Zech 4: 1-10&#13;
Text: Zech 4:6-This is the word of the Lord unto Le[?] babel saying “Not by might nor by power, but my spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts.”&#13;
This moment[?] I want to speak to us on the source&#13;
This is one of the most perilous periods in the history of our great nation. Our Nation at this very moment is facing a greater peril than it had to face when the Declaration of Independence which touched off the revolutionary war. Let us look [?] back at our history&#13;
At that time ours was not even a constituted country but 13 small colonies located for the most part on the eastern seaboard seeking freedom of speech and worship with an earnest hope that they could conquer their opposers and initiate[?] Self govern men with the colonies uniting as one nation indivisible with freedom and justice for all.&#13;
That was more than 190 years ago. But what has happened since then?&#13;
The colonies have cemented themselves into the United States of America. It is no longer a little strip on the Atlantic Coast but it includes</text>
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                    <text>All the land from the Atlantic on the east to the Pacific on the West, from the Canadian border and the great lakes on the North to the Gulf of Mexico and the Rio Grande on the South Instead of 13 states – 48 states and the Alaska and a protectorate over Puerto Rico and other colonial possessions.&#13;
It has developed its natural resources and built up a commercial trade beyond any country on any other continent and because of its productivity it has grown to be if not the greatest one of the greatest of the worlds forever. In arts invention – education, wealth per capita it stands first. Its power on land on sea and in the air must recognized by all nations.&#13;
Since 1776 – when this nation fought the revolutionary war it has been victorious in wars – The War of 1812, the Mexican war, the shameful Civil War, 1861-65, The Spanish American War, World War I, WW II. In all of these our nation won the final victory.&#13;
What repercussion came[?] or[?] what was the reaction on us as result of these great victories and the phenomenal rise to power and international fame?</text>
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                    <text>And what would be the natural feeling of other nations –older but not so progressive – as ours toward us when we boastfully flaunt our power before them – or make them appear somewhat small at the conference table? I will not attempt to answer that. You know already that a nation reacts to such things as an individual does.&#13;
But for ourselves: Have we allowed our successes and our prosperity to cause us to forget that it is almighty God who has given us these superior advantages?&#13;
Have we forgotten that God requires great America to do justly, to love mercy and to walk humbly with our God.&#13;
Has national prosperity produce in us pride and arrogance instead of humility and meekness?&#13;
Are our courts merely a Furee[?]? as someone said – where the poor cannot always be assured of justice but where poor innocent is punished but the greatly[?] rich goes free.&#13;
If this picture truthfully [?]</text>
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                    <text>Practices[?] of our nation. Let us ask ourselves what is the peril that we are facing?&#13;
Again I say “we know”. Our Army [?] suffered shameful defeat in South Korea – when we were driven nearly into the sea by the Communist.&#13;
Assuming the greatest part of the Campaign of the United Nations we succeeded in driving the communist beyond the 18th Parallel to the Manchurian borders only to meet with overwhelming numbers of Communists who were well prepared – and succeeded again not only in defeating us but put us in position – diplomatically that we cannot save our face, --- before the world.&#13;
From all appearances – the other powers – do not see us a great nation any longer.&#13;
But it is not so much what the other nations think. It is whether we have the assurance of safety&#13;
In other words are we trusting in him who can save to the utmost? It is not by might nor by power but by the spirit of God that nation can be secured.</text>
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                    <text>It is that inner poise that is needed in the whole American life. Last Monday morning I read Billy Graham’s clear cut straight-to-the point remark on ungodliness and disregard for spiritual values. Such a sermon needs to be preached over and over again by us ministers if we could get our people to trust more in the power of God’s spirit and less in in the power of armies and navies and air planes.&#13;
It is not by the power of armies that men are saved but by the spirit of God. Men have yet to learn how to build a life of safety, with people. We do not make friends by fighting them. You don’t win the love of a [?] or nation by defeating them in battle and bringing them under submission no more than you would win the love of a person by physically overpowering him or abusing him or crushing him because you happen to be stronger. Yet that seems to have been the modus of operandi of the world of all ages.</text>
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                    <text>We struggle to make our selves strong and powerful but having no inner poise or godly spiritual calm, we misuse our powers. Too many of us lack that spiritual calm that gives direction and guidance to whatever power that we have.&#13;
The peril that confronts America has another angle that intensifies it. It is what we might call the nerve shattering element. We use to think that only the large cities were nerve shattering – This is no longer true – The [?] and other [?] of steel, on subway trains and e[?] – trucks and cars are merely the visible cause of outer confusion – But the mental confusion – the clashing of thoughts, ideas, attitudes, may be found along with some noises in almost any city or town nowaday. So what have we – a strained – overtaxed type of human living – shattered nerves – tangled lives, broken homes, hospitals and sanitariums overflowing while physicians and psychiatrists are overworked. In fact – someone said we seem to know everything about life except how to live it.&#13;
With this nerve shattering element added to the perils of human control and ungodliness failing a powerful foe – and losing all of our friends who</text>
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                    <text>Were retained only by our nerves[?] gifts of money and food.&#13;
Can we imagine a greater peril? Have we ever been so lonely in need of an ally. Perhaps not humanly speaking.&#13;
But let us turn to the Christian Church in America. God in the midst of her. We will hear what God the Lord will speak. He will speak peace unto his people.&#13;
You are in trouble.&#13;
Your sons are dying&#13;
Your allies are falling away&#13;
But I will be with and when thru the deep waters.</text>
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              <text>Sunday December 3, 1950.&#13;
The Source of National Safety.&#13;
Read Zech 4: 1-10&#13;
Text: Zech 4:6-This is the word of the Lord unto Le[?] babel saying “Not by might nor by power, but my spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts.”&#13;
This moment[?] I want to speak to us on the source&#13;
This is one of the most perilous periods in the history of our great nation. Our Nation at this very moment is facing a greater peril than it had to face when the Declaration of Independence which touched off the revolutionary war. Let us look [?] back at our history&#13;
At that time ours was not even a constituted country but 13 small colonies located for the most part on the eastern seaboard seeking freedom of speech and worship with an earnest hope that they could conquer their opposers and initiate[?] Self govern men with the colonies uniting as one nation indivisible with freedom and justice for all.&#13;
That was more than 190 years ago. But what has happened since then?&#13;
The colonies have cemented themselves into the United States of America. It is no longer a little strip on the Atlantic Coast but it includes&#13;
All the land from the Atlantic on the east to the Pacific on the West, from the Canadian border and the great lakes on the North to the Gulf of Mexico and the Rio Grande on the South Instead of 13 states – 48 states and the Alaska and a protectorate over Puerto Rico and other colonial possessions.&#13;
It has developed its natural resources and built up a commercial trade beyond any country on any other continent and because of its productivity it has grown to be if not the greatest one of the greatest of the worlds forever. In arts invention – education, wealth per capita it stands first. Its power on land on sea and in the air must recognized by all nations.&#13;
Since 1776 – when this nation fought the revolutionary war it has been victorious in wars – The War of 1812, the Mexican war, the shameful Civil War, 1861-65, The Spanish American War, World War I, WW II. In all of these our nation won the final victory.&#13;
What repercussion came[?] or[?] what was the reaction on us as result of these great victories and the phenomenal rise to power and international fame?&#13;
And what would be the natural feeling of other nations –older but not so progressive – as ours toward us when we boastfully flaunt our power before them – or make them appear somewhat small at the conference table? I will not attempt to answer that. You know already that a nation reacts to such things as an individual does.&#13;
But for ourselves: Have we allowed our successes and our prosperity to cause us to forget that it is almighty God who has given us these superior advantages?&#13;
Have we forgotten that God requires great America to do justly, to love mercy and to walk humbly with our God.&#13;
Has national prosperity produce in us pride and arrogance instead of humility and meekness?&#13;
Are our courts merely a Furee[?]? as someone said – where the poor cannot always be assured of justice but where poor innocent is punished but the greatly[?] rich goes free.&#13;
If this picture truthfully [?]&#13;
Practices[?] of our nation. Let us ask ourselves what is the peril that we are facing?&#13;
Again I say “we know”. Our Army [?] suffered shameful defeat in South Korea – when we were driven nearly into the sea by the Communist.&#13;
Assuming the greatest part of the Campaign of the United Nations we succeeded in driving the communist beyond the 18th Parallel to the Manchurian borders only to meet with overwhelming numbers of Communists who were well prepared – and succeeded again not only in defeating us but put us in position – diplomatically that we cannot save our face, --- before the world.&#13;
From all appearances – the other powers – do not see us a great nation any longer.&#13;
But it is not so much what the other nations think. It is whether we have the assurance of safety&#13;
In other words are we trusting in him who can save to the utmost? It is not by might nor by power but by the spirit of God that nation can be secured.&#13;
It is that inner poise that is needed in the whole American life. Last Monday morning I read Billy Graham’s clear cut straight-to-the point remark on ungodliness and disregard for spiritual values. Such a sermon needs to be preached over and over again by us ministers if we could get our people to trust more in the power of God’s spirit and less in in the power of armies and navies and air planes.&#13;
It is not by the power of armies that men are saved but by the spirit of God. Men have yet to learn how to build a life of safety, with people. We do not make friends by fighting them. You don’t win the love of a [?] or nation by defeating them in battle and bringing them under submission no more than you would win the love of a person by physically overpowering him or abusing him or crushing him because you happen to be stronger. Yet that seems to have been the modus of operandi of the world of all ages.&#13;
We struggle to make our selves strong and powerful but having no inner poise or godly spiritual calm, we misuse our powers. Too many of us lack that spiritual calm that gives direction and guidance to whatever power that we have.&#13;
The peril that confronts America has another angle that intensifies it. It is what we might call the nerve shattering element. We use to think that only the large cities were nerve shattering – This is no longer true – The [?] and other [?] of steel, on subway trains and e[?] – trucks and cars are merely the visible cause of outer confusion – But the mental confusion – the clashing of thoughts, ideas, attitudes, may be found along with some noises in almost any city or town nowaday. So what have we – a strained – overtaxed type of human living – shattered nerves – tangled lives, broken homes, hospitals and sanitariums overflowing while physicians and psychiatrists are overworked. In fact – someone said we seem to know everything about life except how to live it.&#13;
With this nerve shattering element added to the perils of human control and ungodliness failing a powerful foe – and losing all of our friends who&#13;
Were retained only by our nerves[?] gifts of money and food.&#13;
Can we imagine a greater peril? Have we ever been so lonely in need of an ally. Perhaps not humanly speaking.&#13;
But let us turn to the Christian Church in America. God in the midst of her. We will hear what God the Lord will speak. He will speak peace unto his people.&#13;
You are in trouble.&#13;
Your sons are dying&#13;
Your allies are falling away&#13;
But I will be with and when thru the deep waters.</text>
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                <text>"The source of national safety"</text>
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                <text>Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library</text>
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