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Remembering Henry Johnson, the Soldier Called “Black Death”
SMITHSONIAN ^ | OCTOBER 25, 2011 | Gilbert King

Posted on 05/29/2019 2:03:08 PM PDT by robowombat

Remembering Henry Johnson, the Soldier Called “Black Death” Henry Johnson suffered 21 wounds and rescued a soldier while repelling an enemy raid in the Argonne Forest in 1918 but died 11 years later a forgotten man

Henry Johnson and the Harlem Hellfighters in a parade up Fifth Avenue upon their return to New York in February, 1919. (New York Division of Military and Naval Affairs)

Like hundreds of thousands of young American men, Henry Johnson returned from World War I and tried to make a life for himself in spite of what he had experienced in a strange and distant land. With dozens of bullet and shrapnel wounds, he knew he was lucky to have survived. His discharge records erroneously made no mention of his injuries, and so Johnson was denied not only a Purple Heart, but a disability allowance as well. Uneducated and in his early twenties, Henry Johnson had no expectations that he could correct the errors in his military record. He simply tried to carry on as well as a black man could in the country he had been willing to give his life for.

He made it back home to Albany, New York, and resumed his job as a Red Cap porter at the train station, but he never could overcome his injuries—his left foot had been shattered, and a metal plate held it together. Johnson’s inability to hold down a job led him to the bottle. It didn’t take long for his wife and three children to leave. He died, destitute, in 1929 at age 32. As far as anyone knew, he was buried in a pauper’s field in Albany. A man who had earned the nickname “Black Death” in combat was quickly forgotten.

The denial of a disability pension, the Purple Heart oversight, the fleeting recognition—none of it surprised his son, Herman Johnson, who later served with the famed Tuskegee Airmen. The younger Johnson knew all about Jim Crow, second-class citizenship and the systematic denial of equal rights to black Americans. But in 2001, 72 years after Henry Johnson’s death, a great and unlikely mystery was revealed to the soldier’s estranged son: On July 5, 1929, Henry Johnson had been buried not in an anonymous grave in Albany, but with military honors at Arlington National Cemetery. Historians who located Johnson’s place of burial believed there could be no more appropriate honor for Herman’s father, who proved his valor on the night of May 14, 1918, in the Argonne Forest.

Just a year earlier, Henry Johnson, who stood 5-foot-4 and weighed 130 pounds, had enlisted in the all-black 15th New York National Guard Regiment, which was renamed the 369th Infantry Regiment when it shipped out to France. Poorly trained, the unit mostly performed menial labor—unloading ships and digging latrines—until it was lent to the French Fourth Army, which was short on troops. The French, less preoccupied by race than were the Americans, welcomed the men known as the Harlem Hellfighters. The Hellfighters were sent to Outpost 20 on the western edge of the Argonne Forest, in France’s Champagne region, and Privates Henry Johnson and Needham Roberts, from Trenton, New Jersey, were given French helmets, French weapons and enough French words to understand commands from their superiors. The two American soldiers were posted on sentry duty on the midnight-to-four a.m. shift. Johnson thought it was “crazy” to send untrained men out at the risk of the rest of the troops, he later told a reporter, but he told the corporal he’d “tackle the job.” He and Roberts weren’t on duty long when German snipers began firing at them.

After the shots rang out, Johnson and Roberts lined up a box of grenades in their dugout to have ready if a German raiding party tried to make a move. Just after 2 a.m., Johnson heard the “snippin’ and clippin’ ” of wirecutters on the perimeter fence and told Roberts to run back to camp to let the French troops know there was trouble. Johnson then hurled a grenade toward the fence, which brought a volley of return gunfire from the Germans, as well as enemy grenades. Roberts didn’t get far before he decided to return to help Johnson fight, but he was hit with a grenade and wounded too badly in his arm and hip to do any fighting. Johnson had him lie in the trench and hand him grenades, which the Albany native threw at the Germans. But there were too many enemy soldiers, and they advanced from every direction; Johnson ran out of grenades. He took German bullets in the head and lip but fired his rifle into the darkness. He took more bullets in his side, then his hand, but kept shooting until he shoved an American cartridge clip into his French rifle and it jammed.

By now, the Germans were on top of him. Johnson swung his rifle like a club and kept them at bay until the stock of his rifle splintered; then he went down with a blow to his head. Overwhelmed, he saw that the Germans were trying to take Roberts prisoner. The only weapon Johnson had left was a bolo knife, so he climbed up from the ground and charged, hacking away at the Germans before they could get clean shot at him.

“Each slash meant something, believe me,” Johnson later said. “I wasn’t doing exercises, let me tell you.” He stabbed one German in the stomach, felled a lieutenant, and took a pistol shot to his arm before driving his knife between the ribs of a soldier who had climbed on his back. Johnson managed to drag Roberts away from the Germans, who retreated as they heard French and American forces advancing. When reinforcements arrived, Johnson passed out and was taken to a field hospital. By daylight, the carnage was evident: Johnson had killed four Germans and wounded an estimated 10 to 20 more. Even after suffering 21 wounds in hand-to-hand combat, Henry Johnson had prevented the Germans from busting through the French line.

“There wasn’t anything so fine about it,” he said later. “Just fought for my life. A rabbit would have done that.”

Later the entire French force in Champagne lined up to see the two Americans receive their decorations: the Croix du Guerre, France’s highest military honor. They were the first American privates to receive it. Johnson’s medal included the coveted Gold Palm, for extraordinary valor.

Henry Johnson in 1919, after receiving the French Croix de Guerre. Photo: New York Public Library Digital Collection

In February of 1919, the Harlem Hellfighters returned to New York for a parade up Fifth Avenue, where thousands lined up to cheer for a regiment that had amassed a record of bravery and achievement. Among the nearly 3,000 troops was a small man leading the procession from the convalescents’ section: Promoted to sergeant, Henry Johnson stood in the lead car, an open-top Cadillac, waving a handful of red lilies as the crowd shouted, “Oh, you Black Death!” along the seven-mile route. The Hellfighters’ arrival in Harlem “threw the population into hysterics,” the New York Times reported.

Upon his discharge, the Army used Johnson’s image to recruit new soldiers and to sell Victory War Stamps. (“Henry Johnson licked a dozen Germans. How many stamps have you licked?”) Former President Theodore Roosevelt called Johnson one of the “five bravest Americans” to serve in World War I. But by the mid-1920s, Johnson’s difficulties were catching up with him, and he declined until his death in 1929. Once they examined Johnson’s records and read press accounts of his return to the United States, historians from the New York Division of Military and Naval Affairs suspected that Johnson might have been buried at Arlington, but microfilm records indicated only that a William Henry Johnson was buried there. It wasn’t until administrators requested the paper files that they learned there was a data entry error: It was indeed Henry Johnson who was buried at Arlington. Though his son was surprised to learn that Johnson had not been buried in a pauper’s grave, the soldier’s family was even more surprised to learn that there had been a ceremony at Arlington with full honors. “Learning my father was buried in this place of national honor can be described in just one word—joyful,” Herman Johnson said as he stood at his father’s grave in 2002. “I am simply joyful.”

Historians did not forget what Johnson did in the Forest of Argonne back in 1918, however. In 1996, President Bill Clinton posthumously awarded Henry Johnson the Purple Heart. And once Johnson’s place of burial had been located at Arlington in 2001, the Army awarded him the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation’s second-highest military decoration.

In recent years, a chain-of-command endorsement in the form of a memo from Gen. John J. Pershing, commander-in-chief of the American Expeditionary Force in World War I, written just days after Johnson’s heroics in the Argonne, was discovered in an online database by an aide to Senator Charles Schumer of New York. Schumer believes that this endorsement, not known to exist for nearly a century, will be enough to bestow another posthumous award on the man known as Black Death. “There is no doubt,” Schumer said this past March, standing before a statue of Johnson in Albany, “he should receive the Medal of Honor”—the nation’s highest military honor.

Sources

Books: Ann Hagedorn, Savage Peace: Hope and Fear in America 1919, Simon &Schuster, 2007. W. Allison Sweeney, History of the American Negro in the Great World War, Project Gutenberg Ebook, 2005.

Chad L. Williams, Torchbearers of Democracy: African American Soliders in the World War I Era, University of North Carolina Press, 2010.

Articles: “Beat Back Force of 25 Germans, Willing French War Cross” by Junius B. Wood, Chicago Defender, May 25, 1918. “Ceremony to Honor Memory of Johnson” by Jill Brice, Schenectady Gazette, January 10, 2002.

“Honour At Last For War Hero Ignored for Being Black” by Olivery Burkeman, the Guardian, March 21, 2002.

“Fifth Av. Cheers Negro Veterans,” New York Times, February 18, 1919.

“Henry Johnson and an Honor Long Overdue” by Chad Williams, George Mason University’s History News Network, April 10, 2011. http://hnn.us/articles/138144.html

“Support Grows for Medal of Honor” by Paul Grondahl, Albany Times Union, March 23, 2011. http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Support-grows-for-Medal-of-Honor-1256102.php

“Henry Lincoln Johnson, Sergeant, United States Army,” Arlington National Cemetary Website, http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/henry-johnson.htm

“Dynamite Comes in Small Packages” by Lieutenant Colonel Gerald Torrence , WWW.ARMY.MIL, The Official Homepage of the United States Army, http://www.army.mil/article/8655/DYNAMITE_COMES_IN_SMALL_PACKAGES/


TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: harlemhellfighters; henryjohnson; newyorkcity; worldwarone
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This man probably suffered from PTSD. Before the war he was a Pullman Redcap. An excellent job for an unskilled black man a century ago and also one that required a sort of background investigation by the Pullman Co. After the war he couldn't stop hitting the bottle.
1 posted on 05/29/2019 2:03:08 PM PDT by robowombat
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To: robowombat

Jim Crow....in Albany NY?


2 posted on 05/29/2019 2:04:22 PM PDT by AppyPappy (How many fingers am I holding up, Winston?)
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To: robowombat

Good article.


3 posted on 05/29/2019 2:09:33 PM PDT by KC Burke (If all the world is a stage, I would like to request my lighting be adjusted.)
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To: AppyPappy

In that day and time it was nation wide, a good man was not treated properly


4 posted on 05/29/2019 2:10:08 PM PDT by Equine1952 (Get yourself a ticket on a common mans train of thought. ))
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To: robowombat
He should have stayed in France or Denmark. Why don’t we hear about African American heroes like this? Why aren’t there school textbooks that can tell the stories of heroes like this man and so many others like him.

Never mind, I know why.

5 posted on 05/29/2019 2:14:46 PM PDT by ExpatCanuck
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To: Equine1952

Half way through the aricle I said, “this is a MOH soldier. Yes! Don’t be surprised if President Trump doesn’t make it right.


6 posted on 05/29/2019 2:24:33 PM PDT by Kozy (new age haruspex; "Everyone has a plan 'till they get punched in the mouth.")
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To: Equine1952

Senator Charles Schumer of New York is a man not worthy of being treated civily..

Many a good man was not treated properly giving rise to that old reminder-—The good a man does is buried with him....


7 posted on 05/29/2019 2:26:55 PM PDT by litehaus (A memory toooo long.............)
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To: ExpatCanuck

The game “Battlefield 1” features a Hellfighter on the cover. It inspired me to learn more.


8 posted on 05/29/2019 2:30:44 PM PDT by Unassuaged (I have shocking data relevant to the conversation!)
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To: AppyPappy

9 posted on 05/29/2019 2:41:40 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true, I have no proof, but they're true)
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To: knarf

And to think the Commander In Chief at that time though guys like this were sub-human.


10 posted on 05/29/2019 2:42:38 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator
Check out the shined shoes.


11 posted on 05/29/2019 2:49:07 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true, I have no proof, but they're true)
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To: dfwgator

12 posted on 05/29/2019 2:54:18 PM PDT by Bratch (IF YOU HAVE SELFISH IGNORANT CITIZENS, YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE SELFISH IGNORANT LEADERS-George Carlin)
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To: knarf
“There wasn’t anything so fine about it,” he said later. “Just fought for my life. A rabbit would have done that.”

I like this guy! Fights with grenades and bullets than hand to hand with the butt of his rifle 'til that broke from smashing too many German skulls so he switched to a knife fight, and then says it's the same as a scared rabbit would do. Man!

13 posted on 05/29/2019 3:04:25 PM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Often wrong, but never in doubt!)
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To: dfwgator
And to think the Democrat Commander In Chief at that time though guys like this were sub-human.

Added word for accuracy.

14 posted on 05/29/2019 3:06:13 PM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Often wrong, but never in doubt!)
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To: Bratch

Which is why Wilson tops my list of Worst President, ever. He set race relations back decades.


15 posted on 05/29/2019 3:08:15 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: litehaus

It is hard to grasp the racism of that time. I’ve served with different races. I can guarantee we all bleed red and when the chips are down color don’t mean crap. In a battle we are all brothers. Wish it were so everywhere. Just saying.


16 posted on 05/29/2019 3:11:34 PM PDT by Equine1952 (Get yourself a ticket on a common mans train of thought. ))
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To: Bratch
Ahh...YES! Woodrow Wilson & His "pal" D. W. Griffith...
&
And that "movie" Birth Of A Nation.....

Thanks for that KKK Advertisement...
That's all it was...

It had nothing to do with "Birth" of anything except hate

17 posted on 05/29/2019 3:16:45 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: pepsi_junkie
That's IT !

THAT'S the key missing element in America today.

There's a down home attitude that comes through in everyday language that just says what you mean, and it's a lot in a few words.

The speaker stares blankly ... "What? .. What'd I say?"

And the hearer is wiser for it.

Sam Clemons, Will Rogers, Ronald Reagan, Jeff Foxworthy .......

That's why we're drawn to Trump .... not that he speaks down home, but that he sounds a lot like we're in junior high.


A rabbit would have done THAT.

18 posted on 05/29/2019 3:38:33 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true, I have no proof, but they're true)
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To: ExpatCanuck
He should have stayed in France or Denmark.

Just as long as he wasn't hanging around in either country in 1940.

19 posted on 05/29/2019 3:43:47 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Fiddlstix

The Birth of a Nation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the 1915 silent film. For other uses, see The Birth of a Nation (disambiguation).

The Birth of a Nation (originally called The Clansman) is a 1915 American silent epic drama film directed and co-produced by D. W. Griffith and starring Lillian Gish. The screenplay is adapted from the novel and play The Clansman, both by Thomas Dixon Jr., as well as Dixon's novel The Leopard's Spots. Griffith co-wrote the screenplay with Frank E. Woods, and co-produced the film with Harry Aitken. It was released on February 8, 1915.

The Birth of a Nation is a landmark of film history.[5][6] It was the first 12-reel film ever made and, at three hours, also the longest up to that point.[7] Its plot, part fiction and part history, chronicling the assassination of Abraham Lincoln by John Wilkes Booth and the relationship of two families in the Civil War and Reconstruction eras over the course of several years—the pro-Union (Northern) Stonemans and the pro-Confederacy (Southern) Camerons—was by far the most complex of any movie made up to that date. It was originally presented in two parts separated by another movie innovation, an intermission, and it was the first to have a musical score for an orchestra. It pioneered close-ups, fade-outs, and a carefully-staged battle sequence with hundreds of extras (another first) made to look like thousands.[8] It came with a 13-page "Souvenir Program".[9] It was the first American motion picture to be screened in the White House, viewed there by President Woodrow Wilson.[10]

The film was controversial even before its release and has remained so ever since; it has been called "the most controversial film ever made in the United States".[11]:198 Lincoln, who Dixon saw as a Southerner,[12] was portrayed positively, unusual in a "Lost Cause" environment. But it portrayed black men (many played by white actors in blackface) as unintelligent and sexually aggressive towards white women. It presented the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) as a heroic force.[13][14] There were widespread black protests against The Birth of a Nation, such as in Boston, while thousands of white Bostonians flocked to see the film.[15] The NAACP spearheaded an unsuccessful campaign to ban the film.[15] Griffith's indignation at efforts to censor or ban the film motivated him to produce Intolerance the following year.[16]

It was a huge commercial success and became highly influential, to the point of reinventing the medium. The film's release has also been acknowledged as an inspiration for the rebirth of the Ku Klux Klan only months later. In 1992, the Library of Congress deemed the film "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry.


Read more at Wikipedia.org

20 posted on 05/29/2019 4:38:07 PM PDT by Bratch (IF YOU HAVE SELFISH IGNORANT CITIZENS, YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE SELFISH IGNORANT LEADERS-George Carlin)
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