As background, the U.S. Army served as the official administrator of Yosemite and Sequoia national parks between 1891 and 1913, and, in that capacity, it helped create a model for park management as we know it today. These army troops were garrisoned at the Presidio of San Francisco during the winter months and served in the Sierra only during the summer months. This arrangement was an unusual duty for troops and greatly prized by army men with one army officer referring to the Sierra Nevada as the "Cavalryman's Paradise." Commanding officers became acting military superintendents for these national parks with two troops of cavalry, normally, assigned to each park. Each troop would be made up of approximately 60 men. The troops essentially comprised a roving economy-infusing money into park and local businesses-and thus their presence was generally welcomed. The presence of these soldiers as official stewards of park lands brought a sense of law and order to the mountain wilderness.The hidden chapter of this U.S. Army history revolves around the participation of African-American troops of the 24th Infantry and 9th Cavalry, who protected both Yosemite and Sequoia national parks in 1899, 1903, and 1904. (The parks are located approximately 150 miles apart.) Most of these men were veterans of the Spanish-American War and the Philippine-American War in which they were called "Smoked Yankees." Many of them enlisted in the South where opportunities for African-Americans were limited to sharecropping, and other labor intensive work.
What a joke. You are not serious. That might be the total out of a half million real cowboys. I am from a long line of REAL cowboys and I assure you — there were no black cowboys west of the Mississippi. ZERO!!
Two cavalry regiments were black. Eight weren’t.
Two infantry regiments were black. Twenty-three weren’t.
No field artillery regiments were black.
No coastal artillery batteries were black.
No engineer companies were black.
Awaiting someone to show me that I’m wrong.
Bunch of carpet baggers? Oh there were several carpet baggers. Yes in deed. But we were talking actual “Cowboys “ for hire who strung fence and rode cattle and broke broncs and shot and killed indians who attacked them. Not “Baggers”.