A Century Later, 17 Wrongly Executed Black Soldiers Are Honored at Gravesites
Source: The New York Times (gift article/no paywall)
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(Just before he was executed, Private Hawkins wrote a letter to his parents, telling them: Although I am not guilty of the crime that Im accused of Mother, its Gods will that I go now and in this way.Credit...Michael A. McCoy for The
New York Times)
By Michael Levenson
Feb. 22, 2024
More than a century ago, 110 Black soldiers were convicted of murder, mutiny and other crimes at three military trials held at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio. Nineteen were hanged, including 13 on a single day, Dec. 11, 1917, in the largest mass execution of American soldiers by the Army.
The soldiers families spent decades fighting to show that the men had been betrayed by the military. In November, they won a measure of justice when the Army secretary, Christine E. Wormuth, overturned the convictions and acknowledged that the soldiers were wrongly treated because of their race and were not given fair trials.
On Thursday, several descendants of the soldiers gathered at Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery as the Department of Veterans Affairs dedicated new headstones for 17 of the executed servicemen.
The new headstones acknowledge each soldiers rank, unit and home state a simple honor accorded to every other veteran buried in the cemetery. They replaced the previous headstones that noted only their name and date of death. (The families of the other two who were hanged reclaimed their remains for private burial.)
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/22/us/army-black-soldiers-fort-sam-houston-cemetery.html?smid=url-share