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James Pat Daugherty Buffalo Soldier James "Pat" Daugherty, 85, served in the Army's storied 92nd Infantry Division, which was made up almost entirely of African-Americans.

Molly Roberts

  • History & Archaeology

Memoirs of a World War II Buffalo Soldier

In a recently published memoir written over 60 years ago, veteran James Daugherty details his experiences as an African-American in combat

  • By Abby Callard
  • Smithsonian.com, November 06, 2009

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    The Buffalo Saga

    by James Harden Daugherty
    Xlibris, 2009

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    • Black History Heritage Month

    On his dining room table James “Pat” Daugherty had arranged some old faded photographs from his Army days, his Bronze Star, a copy of his recently published World War II memoir, The Buffalo Saga, and his olive-drab steel helmet, marred near the visor by a chunk of now-rusted iron.

    “If you feel the inside of the helmet, you can see how close it was,” he says of the shrapnel from a German mortar that struck the young private in Italy in the fall of 1944. A few more millimeters, and he might never have lived to write his memoir, which is what I went to his home in Silver Spring, Maryland, to learn about.

    Daugherty, 85, served in the Army’s storied 92nd Infantry Division, which was made up almost entirely of African-Americans and was the last racially segregated unit in the U.S. armed forces. Known as the Buffalo Soldiers—a name that Native Americans had bestowed on a black cavalry unit after the Civil War—men of the 92nd division were among the only African-Americans to see combat in Europe, battling German troops in Italy. In 1948, President Truman issued an executive order that ended racial segregation in the military.

    Daugherty, drafted at age 19, was so deeply affected by his two years in the division that he wrote an account of the experience soon after he returned home in 1947. He self-published the story this year, virtually unchanged from the manuscript he had scribbled in longhand. The Buffalo Saga promises to be a significant addition to the history of African-American troops in World War II because it was written by a participant almost immediately following the events in question, rather than recollected or reconstructed years later.

    Daugherty says he put pen to paper because friends and family members were always asking, “ ‘What did you do when you were over there?’ ”

    Years ago he tried once to find a publisher, with no success. “I think the content was too caustic,” says Dorothy, his wife of 59 years.

    The Buffalo Saga is indeed a raw, unvarnished, often angry account of a decorated young soldier’s encounter with institutionalized racial prejudice. Once, while fighting in Italy in 1945, another soldier in the 92nd Infantry Division said his company had lost too many men to continue fighting. Daugherty asked why the officers couldn’t just call up replacements. “Look, bud, they don’t train colored soldiers to fight,” the soldier told Daugherty. “They train them to load ships, and you don’t expect them to put white boys in a Negro outfit, do you? What do you think this is, a democracy or something?”

    Daugherty’s memoir also recalls the time a black soldier got shipped out to the front lines in Italy after confronting a white officer. Word was the officer had threatened to send him where he’d get his “smart Negro brains” blown out. “I merely wondered how many men were here to be punished because they had dared to express a desire to be treated like men,” Daugherty writes.

    But the book isn’t a screed. It’s an honest, even poignant account of a young man fighting in a war.

    On his dining room table James “Pat” Daugherty had arranged some old faded photographs from his Army days, his Bronze Star, a copy of his recently published World War II memoir, The Buffalo Saga, and his olive-drab steel helmet, marred near the visor by a chunk of now-rusted iron.

    “If you feel the inside of the helmet, you can see how close it was,” he says of the shrapnel from a German mortar that struck the young private in Italy in the fall of 1944. A few more millimeters, and he might never have lived to write his memoir, which is what I went to his home in Silver Spring, Maryland, to learn about.

    Daugherty, 85, served in the Army’s storied 92nd Infantry Division, which was made up almost entirely of African-Americans and was the last racially segregated unit in the U.S. armed forces. Known as the Buffalo Soldiers—a name that Native Americans had bestowed on a black cavalry unit after the Civil War—men of the 92nd division were among the only African-Americans to see combat in Europe, battling German troops in Italy. In 1948, President Truman issued an executive order that ended racial segregation in the military.

    Daugherty, drafted at age 19, was so deeply affected by his two years in the division that he wrote an account of the experience soon after he returned home in 1947. He self-published the story this year, virtually unchanged from the manuscript he had scribbled in longhand. The Buffalo Saga promises to be a significant addition to the history of African-American troops in World War II because it was written by a participant almost immediately following the events in question, rather than recollected or reconstructed years later.

    Daugherty says he put pen to paper because friends and family members were always asking, “ ‘What did you do when you were over there?’ ”

    Years ago he tried once to find a publisher, with no success. “I think the content was too caustic,” says Dorothy, his wife of 59 years.

    The Buffalo Saga is indeed a raw, unvarnished, often angry account of a decorated young soldier’s encounter with institutionalized racial prejudice. Once, while fighting in Italy in 1945, another soldier in the 92nd Infantry Division said his company had lost too many men to continue fighting. Daugherty asked why the officers couldn’t just call up replacements. “Look, bud, they don’t train colored soldiers to fight,” the soldier told Daugherty. “They train them to load ships, and you don’t expect them to put white boys in a Negro outfit, do you? What do you think this is, a democracy or something?”

    Daugherty’s memoir also recalls the time a black soldier got shipped out to the front lines in Italy after confronting a white officer. Word was the officer had threatened to send him where he’d get his “smart Negro brains” blown out. “I merely wondered how many men were here to be punished because they had dared to express a desire to be treated like men,” Daugherty writes.

    But the book isn’t a screed. It’s an honest, even poignant account of a young man fighting in a war.

    One night in late December 1944, Daugherty’s platoon got orders to patrol a mountain and not come back until it had a prisoner. He and the rest of his company ducked under friendly fire, and Daugherty advanced ahead of the troops. “The first thing I knew I had stumbled upon a barrier constructed of wooden plank and heavy-cut branches,” he wrote. “I was about to try to cross this when I caught the movement of a form in the darkness. I looked up, and it was a Jerry.” He and another private captured him and returned to camp. For this, Daugherty earned his Bronze Star.

    The Buffalo Soldiers of World War II arouse intense scholarly and popular interest (a recent treatment is Miracle at St. Anna, a 2008 film by director Spike Lee based on the novel by James McBride). Their long-overlooked achievements gained national prominence in 1997, when seven African-American soldiers were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Only Vernon Baker, who served with the 92nd Infantry, was still alive.

    “It was something that I felt should have been done a long time ago,” Baker said at the time. “If I was worthy of receiving a Medal of Honor in 1945, I should have received it then.” In 2006, Baker published his own memoir, Lasting Valor, with the help of journalist Ken Olsen.

    The medals were issued after a historian documented that no African- American who fought in the war had even been nominated for one. “At the end of World War II, the white officers in particular wanted to wash their hands of the Italian campaign experience with the 92nd Division,” says historian Daniel Gibran, author of The 92nd Infantry Division and the Italian Campaign in World War II. “It was an experience that a lot of white officers didn’t really want, and they might as well soon forget that kind of experience.”

    At the end of the war, Daugherty returned to his hometown, Washington, D.C., determined, he wrote at the time, “to help make it a place that shows compassion for, humility for, high regard for, and values all its citizens alike.” Of course, Daugherty and his fellow Buffalo Soldiers returned not to a hero’s welcome but to segregated schools and job discrimination. “The road has been long and hard; blood and sweat, death and destruction have been our companions,” he wrote. “We are home now though our flame flickers low. Will you fan it with the winds of freedom, or will you smother it with the sands of humiliation? Will it be that we fought for the lesser of two evils? Or is there this freedom and happiness for all men?”

    Daugherty didn’t let his own flame go out. He went on to study at Howard University in Washington, D.C. on the G.I. Bill and to work as an administrator in the U.S. Public Health Service. He was the first African-American to serve on the board of the Montgomery County Public Schools, among the nation’s largest public school districts. Following publication of his book, Daugherty has become somewhat of a celebrity in his adopted hometown—July 28 is now officially “Buffalo Soldier James Daugherty Day” in Silver Spring.

    He sits in the living room of the ranch-style house he built nearly five decades ago and in which he and his wife raised their four sons. He recalls that his work in the public health system also taught him about inequity.

    “The majority of the health centers were in poor, black areas where people couldn’t get health care and all that,” Daugherty says. “But I also had to go up into West Virginia to the coal mines, and they were mistreated something terrible. A lot of these weren’t black, they weren’t Asian; they were white, Caucasian.”

    Daugherty’s original handwritten manuscript remains sealed in two yellowed envelopes. Daugherty mailed them to himself more than half a century ago, in lieu of obtaining an official copyright. The postmarks read April 28, 1952. It’s his way of proving that The Buffalo Saga is his story.


    1 2


    Related topics: Writers African Americans World War II

     
    Comments

    How do you keep a people down? You 'never' let them 'know' their history.

    Read some great military history.

    The 7th Cavalry got their butts in a sling again after the Little Big Horn Massacre, fourteen years later, the day after the Wounded Knee Massacre. If it wasn't for the 9th Cavalry Buffalo Soldiers, there would of been a second massacre of the 7th Cavalry. Read the book, ‘Rescue at Pine Ridge”, and visit website/great military history, http://www.rescueatpineridge.com

    Posted by Buffalo Soldier 9 on November 7,2009 | 12:03 AM

    Excellent article by Abby Callard, excellent photos by Molly Roberts! [Mr. Daugherty received Master's Degree in Public Health in 1952 from Columbia University, New York, N.Y.] Thank you for letting me share my book review appearing in the Gazette, 7/22/09.

    Buffalo Soldier Pens Story of Courage

    Buffalo Soldier James Harden Daugherty's new book, "Buffalo Saga," is a "you are there" firsthand account of his journey as a soldier in the Army's 92nd Infantry Division, the only all African-American division-strength unit, the Buffalo Soldiers, who fought in the European theater in World War II.

    Drafted at the age of 19, Daugherty served in northern Italy, and wrote this insightful book at the age of 23 upon his return from the War. He was decorated with the Bronze Star Medal for heroic achievement and the Combat Infantryman Badge for outstanding performance of duty in action.

    This book is also an engaging, compassionate and perceptive essay on human rights, social justice/injustice, and freedom at home and abroad. Daugherty's invincible spirit and his vitality courses through his account as well as his sense of humor and understanding of human nature.

    Daugherty is a profile in courage; his "Buffalo Saga" is also about the heroism, courage and sacrifice of all his distinguished soldier comrades in World War II.

    Marcie Stickle, Silver Spring
    The writer is advocacy chair of the Silver Spring Historical Society.
    www.gazette.net/stories/07222009/montlet184737_32537.shtml

    Posted by Marcie Stickle on November 8,2009 | 10:20 PM

    My church's associate pastor, Brother John Nichols, is a retired Buffalo Soldier, and has some wonderful tales of his time after the war and of the trials and triumphs he had during his military and after careers. I wonder if these men knew each other? Hopewell, VA

    Posted by Vanessa Justice on November 10,2009 | 01:00 PM

    what is this about history is born

    Posted by chuhfu on November 11,2009 | 10:57 PM

    An interesting and wonderful story that demonstrates the value of knowing one's national history.

    Posted by majii on November 14,2009 | 10:32 PM

    What an amazing group of men they must have been. I hear he is a terrific speaker also.

    Posted by Carolyn Morgan on November 15,2009 | 04:17 PM

    Responding to Carolyn Morgan's comment, 11/15/2009,
    Yes, Mr. Daugherty is a terrific and compelling speaker!
    Marcie Stickle, Silver Spring Historical Society

    Posted by Marcie Stickle on December 16,2009 | 08:06 PM

    The 92nd Infantry was far from the last of the segregated units, the Quartermaster Corps, among other service branches had many such units. As the white commanding officer of the 3225th QM Service Co our story has never been told.Most people either don't want to know or could care less. There were many more black soldiers who didn't get shot at but served well and did their part. The black support troops deserve some recognition because they came from the same society as did those who were in combat units. Their story is as compelling if anyone cares to listen.

    Posted by Paul Rechnitzer on December 22,2009 | 12:37 PM

    I had four uncles that were in World War II. One was stationed in Burma, he saw combat, he came home a little shell shocked, at first, but he was fine later on. There was a Movie called "Burma Road" and my uncle said they didn"t show not one black man marching on that road. That wasn't right. Another uncle was stationed in Sipan, but I don't think he saw combat. My youngest uncle served in the Army, and after that he volunteered in the Marines. He was in the Military for quite sometime. My older uncle also served in the Army as well. They are all gone now, but I am and will always be very proud of them.

    Posted by Deloris Simon on February 1,2010 | 10:36 PM

    IT'S A SAME WHEN AN AUTHOR PUTS IN A PLUG FOR HIS BOOK. THIS ARTICLE IS ABOUT A WWII VETERAN, LET'S GIVE HIM CREDIT FOR WHAT HE'S ACCOMPLISHED AND NOT TRY TO OVER SHADOW HIM. WAY TO GO TROOPER JAMES DAUGHERTY! "LEST WE FORGET"

    Posted by THE BUFFALO SOLDIER on February 2,2010 | 10:01 AM

    I've just read "The Buffalo Saga." A great addition to the history of the 92nd. My (white) uncle was a 1st Lt. in a tank destroyer battallion and died near Sarzana, Italy April 22, 1945. Family lore says he might have been in command of a Buffalo Soldiers unit. ?? I'm trying to track this down. If it's true, I'd love to know more, good or bad. I'd like to get in touch with Mr. Daugherty, if possible...even better would be to talk with him! Besides expressing my gratitude for his service in the war, we could talk about MCPS...I'm retired from there.

    Posted by Catherine S. Lyon on February 4,2010 | 12:53 PM

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