What was also driving these first "buffalo soldiers" in the war of secession apart from a justifiable degree of vengence seeking was that they often really had nowhere to go home to, no one waiting for them. They later earned great respect particularly from their Native American adversaries and the reputation as the most efficient, effective and disciplined troops in the US army
What was also driving these first "buffalo soldiers" in the war of secession apart from a justifiable degree of vengence seeking was that they often really had nowhere to go home to, no one waiting for them. They later earned great respect particularly from their Native American adversaries and the reputation as the most efficient, effective and disciplined troops in the US army
What was also driving these first "buffalo soldiers" in the war of secession apart from a justifiable degree of vengence seeking was that they often really had nowhere to go home to, no one waiting for them. They later earned great respect particularly from their Native American adversaries and the reputation as the most efficient, effective and disciplined troops in the US army
And, that tradition was carried into the mid 20th Century with the Tuskegee Airmen Red Tails in WWII in a still racially segregated Air Force.