This World War II cartoon shows how Sgt. Henry Johnson, though snubbed for American medals, was used as a recruiting tool in the Black community. |
He
was the only American enlisted man to
have a battle named for him during World War I. All right, maybe it was more of a nasty skirmish, but you can look up the Battle of Henry Johnson and lo and behold
there it. Sgt. Johnson and his comrade Pvt.
Needham Roberts were the first
members of the American Expeditionary
Force (AEF) awarded the Croix de
guerre (Palm and Star) by French government. Subsequently his whole unit was cited by
the French.
Johnson’s
own U. S. Army, however, refused to
give the soldier any award for combat bravery.
I wonder if it could have had anything to do with the fact that Johnson
was Black and a member of an all
Black regiment.
Henry Lincoln Johnson was born
sometime, the date unknown, in 1897 in Alexandria,
Virginia. As a teenager his family
moved to Albany, New York where he
eventually found work as a Red Cap at
the city’s Union Station. Older readers will recall that Red Caps were
baggage handlers at railway station who were paid in tips by travelers. Depending
on how busy the station was and how deferential and friendly the service, Black
men could make a fairly decent living, even after the usual kick-backs to station masters for the privilege of working.
But
patriotism seized the diminutive young man—he stood only 5’6” and weighed 130
pounds-- when the United States seemed near to entering the war raging in
Europe. Despite having a wife and small
children he enlisted in the all-Black National
Guard 15th New York Infantry. When
war broke out the regiment was mustered into service as the Harlem based 369th Infantry Regiment. It
was among the first units to arrive in France,
landing there on New Year’s Day 1918,
General John J. Pershing, commander of the
AEF, fiercely resisted calls to rotate American units into the line under French
and British command. He insisted that
Americans fight under American command and in charge of their own sector of the
Front. But for some reason, Pershing, who earned his
nick name Black Jack when he commanded
Black Buffalo Soldier Cavalry in Texas and during the futile chase of Pancho Villa in Mexico, allowed the 369th to go into the French line under French
command.
On
night of May 15, 1918 Johnson and Roberts were posted to sentry duty in advance of the main French trenches when they
detected a force of 20 German raiders advancing,
hoping to find a weak spot in the French line.
They engaged the Germans in a brief fire fight during which both men
were wounded. Johnson’s fire killed one
and injured two others, but the enemy quickly advanced and one tried to seize
the wounded Roberts. Throwing down his
rifle, Johnson drew a French bolo knife—a
weapon similar to a short, narrow bladed machete—that
he carried and slashed and stabed the soldier attempting to grab his friend. He then turned on the others in fierce
hand-to-hand combat. Three more Germans
fell dead and more were wounded.
Meanwhile Roberts recovered enough to begin lobbing hand grenades. The raiders
were forced to retreat with heavy casualties.
They certainly had not found a week spot in the line.
In
the brief action, Johnson was wounded by
grenade fragments, and blasts from a
trench shot gun. The French were impressed. They knew élan when they saw
it. When the two soldiers were
sufficiently recovered from their wounds, a French general pinned the Croix de
guerre on each man’s chest. They were
the first American soldiers so decorated.
The
white officers of their own regiment, however, saw no reason for awards to
either man. Johnson returned to front
line duty and was wounded again in action.
In all he was treated for 21 combat wounds in 1918—yet was not even
awarded the Purple Heart which had
already begun to be routinely awarded to all soldiers injured in combat.
Johnson’s
achievements, however, were noted at home, where the Albany papers heralded him
as hero and by the rapidly expanding black
press across the nation. That press
reported that he had earned the nicknames Black
Death and the Harlem Hell Fighter,
but frankly both strike me more has press hype than anything anyone would ever
call him to his face.
At
war’s end Johnson did have a moment or two in the sun, despite the Army’s
continued refusal to honor him. He
marched with his regiment in the grand welcome home review parade down in New York City, although some high
ranking officers and city official had opposed the inclusion of Black
units. He was also among war heroes to
ride in open cars for an early ticker-tape
parade. His story and image were used in the last War Bond campaign to raise money in the
Black community.
Back
home in Albany he was one of the featured speakers at a local Hear
Our War Heroes program. Perhaps
it was the success of that 1919 talk that led to a lecture tour contract. After
several appearances in which he told his story, recited patriotic boiler plate,
and painted a picture of racial harmony in the trenches, Johnson mounted a
stage in St. Louis and threw away
the script. Instead he detailed the
routine humiliations of black troops, including the refusal of white units to
even share trenches with them. The local
press was outraged. Johnson lost his
speaking contract. He was even arrested
and brought up on charges of illegally wearing his uniform past his enlistment—a
common practice among veterans, including members of the newly organized American Legion.
Humiliated,
Johnson returned to Albany. He seemed to
suffer all the symptoms we now identify as post-traumatic
stress syndrome. Previously
industrious and hardworking, he could not hold a job. He began drinking heavily. By the early 20’s he was completely estranged
from his wife and children.
On
July 5, 1929 Johnson died of complications of alcoholism at a Veteran’s
Hospital in New Lenox, Illinois. He died a penniless. His family was told that he was interred in
an unmarked pauper’s grave.
Johnson’s
son Herman A. Johnson went on to his
own distinguished military service as a pilot in the legendary Tuskegee Airmen.
After
World War II Herman Johnson and other supporters began a decades long campaign
to have Henry awarded the Medal of Honor. After almost profligate awards of the Medal
during the Civil War, Indian campaigns, and Spanish American War requirements for
the Medal had been severely tightened during World War I. But comparisons to others who received the
award made a good case for a posthumous award to Johnson. The Army refused to review his case.
Interest
in his case was revived by Black Vietnam
veterans and the family in the ‘80’s and ‘90’s.
In 1991 the City of Albany erected a monument to Johnson in Washington Park. President
Bill Clinton finally ordered a Purple Hart be awarded the oft wounded
Johnson in 1996.
In
2001 researchers into his case “discovered” his grave at Arlington National Cemetery.
The burial there was evidently arranged by someone at the VA Hospital
who knew his story, but his family was never informed. Publicity around that also caused the Army to
finally review his case.
Although
they continued to refuse a recommendation for the Medal of Honor, in February
2003 86 year old Herman Johnson received the Distinguished Service Cross, the second highest Army medal for
bravery in combat, on behalf of his father at a special ceremony in
Albany. The action came after a mandated
review of the cases of African-American troops,
who the Army finally acknowledged had been systematically slighted.
Still,
supporters of Johnson continue to press for a further review in hopes that the
honor might still be upgraded to a Medal of Honor.
All
of that is wonderful for the family and a just correction of a grievous
injustice. But it all comes way too late
for Sgt. Johnson.
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