Chicago Sun-Times

WWIUNIT’SOVERLOOKE­DACHIEVEME­NTS

DuSable exhibit showshowel­ite black Illinois regiment fought with distinctio­n, cleared path for ‘ democracy at home’

- Email: mihejirika@ suntimes. com

Its lineage dates back to the 1870s, when African- Americans created their own policing and military units, recognized by the city of Chicago but not the state.

ByWorldWar I, however, the 8th Infantry Illinois National Guard, all- African- American— from highest rank of colonel to lowest rank of corporal— had been deployed in two foreign wars. It was the only all- African- American regiment in the entire U. S. Army called into service for that Great War. And it would be awarded more citations than any other American regiment that fought on Europe’sWestern Front.

“This has been a suppressed story, and the narrative we get about WWI leaves out the story of this regiment,” said DuSable Museum of African American History Curator Harold “Hari” Jones. He recently guided a Black History Month tour of the exhibit, “Clearing a Path for Democracy: Citizen Soldiers of the Eighth Illinois National Guard.”

“Commanded by AfricanAme­rican officers and attached to several depleted French infantry divisions, this regiment earned the respect of all who saw them fight,” he said. “Their prowess on the battlefiel­d is one of the best- kept secrets in American history.”

The new exhibit is Part 1 of the story of the “Fighting Eighth,” an introducti­on to the pioneering Chicagoans who organized and led the regiment, their battle to become citizen soldiers, and their accomplish­ments before deployment in Europe. Part 2, coming in April, further delves into the soldiers and officers’ distinguis­hed battle record and their forgotten legacy.

“The story of the 8th Infantry reveals the political sophistica­tion of Chicago’s African- American community in the late 19th and early 20th centuries,” Jones said of the regiment, which earned the nation’s first armory built for an African- American military unit in 1914. “The community stood as a sterling example of what could be done despite racial discrimina­tion.”

The historic armory at 3533 S. Giles is now home to the Chicago Military Academy, the nation’s first public college- prep military school.

Jones, former assistant director and curator of the African American CivilWar Freedom Foundation and Museum inWashingt­on, D. C., and a foremost authority on the role of African- Americans in the military, was commission­ed to tell this Chicago story.

The regiment began as the 9th Infantry Battalion. Under the leadership of pioneers John R. Marshall, J. C. Buckner, J. Bish and J. Jordan, it gained recognitio­n from the state on May 5, 1890, and applied for entry into the National Guard. They were rebuffed by Gov. JosephW. Fifer.

The black community then rallied to elect Buckner to the Illinois Legislatur­e. Buckner got legislatio­n passed to create a new guardsman unit. And that unit, led by Major Buckner, Captain Marshall, Adolf Thomas, Charles L. Hunt and Robert R. Jackson, was admitted into the Guard by Gov. John Altgeld on Nov. 4, 1895.

It rapidly expanded, drawing enlistees statewide. On June 28, 1898, it was redesignat­ed the 8th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment, and under the command of Col. John C. Marshall, was called up for service during the Spanish- AmericanWa­r of April- August 1898.

On Aug. 5, 1917, the regiment was drafted into WWI by proclamati­on of PresidentW­oodrowWils­on, under the command of Col. Franklin A. Denison. Redesignat­ed as the 370th U. S. Infantry, it was attached to French infantry divisions during WWI ( 1914- 1918), where it served with distinctio­n and earned more commendati­ons than any other American regiment. This despite difficulti­es presented by language, military arms and equipment.

The regiment earned streamers for the Lorraine and Oise- Aisne Offensive. In three instances, every officer and enlisted man in its battalions earned decoration­s. In one of those instances, a battalion commanded by Capt. James C. Smith earned the French Croix de Guerre for conspicuou­s bravery and courage in battle. Another battalion, led by Lt. Col. Otis B. Duncan, was notably engaged in advanced pursuit of the retreating enemy when halted by the Armistice.

The 8th Infantry Regiment remained intact until deployed in WWII ( 1939- 1945), when its battalions would be re- assigned, the regiment disbanded.

“African- Americans have overcome many obstacles within the military. The first obstacle was actually being able to pick up arms and fight. The second was to have black leadership within their all- black units. The third struggle was integratio­n into the military to where African- Americans fought alongside white soldiers,” Illinois National Guard Command Historian Adriana Schroeder noted.

Jones conveys the regiment’s history through the soldiers’ own voices, official military records, photograph­s, maps and a time- line video, along with such artifacts as a 1917 combat helmet and enlisted uniform, an M1903 Rifle, and a Mexican Border ServiceMed­al.

“Given the race barriers in their own country, the soldiers viewed their efforts as . . . ‘ clearing a path for democracy at home,’” he said. “If you were not there in the making of the history, you do not get a quote in our exhibit.”

“THEIR PROWESS ON THE BATTLEFIEL­D IS ONE OF THE BEST- KEPT SECRETS IN AMERICAN HISTORY.” HAROLD “HARI” JONES, on the 8th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment

 ?? | MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? DuSable Museum curator Hari Jones introduces the first of a two- part exhibit called Clearing a Path for Democracy: Citizen Soldiers of the Eighth Illinois National Guard on Thursday.
| MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES DuSable Museum curator Hari Jones introduces the first of a two- part exhibit called Clearing a Path for Democracy: Citizen Soldiers of the Eighth Illinois National Guard on Thursday.

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