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marble falls

(57,073 posts)
Fri Feb 15, 2019, 07:19 PM Feb 2019

Black History: day 15 - Cathay Williams, only Woman Buffalo Soldier

Cathay Williams

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Cathay Williams Only Woman Buffalo Soldier U.S. Army.

Born September 1844
Independence, Missouri
Died 1893 (aged 50–51)
Trinidad, Colorado
Nationality American
Other names John Williams, William Cathay
Occupation soldier, cook, seamstress
Employer U.S. government, self-employed


Military career
Allegiance United States of America
Years of service 1866-1868
Rank private
Unit 38th U.S. Infantry Regiment, U.S. Army (Buffalo soldier)

Cathay Williams (September 1844 – 1893) was an American soldier who enlisted in the United States Army under the pseudonym William Cathay. She was the first African-American woman to enlist, and the only documented to serve in the United States Army posing as a man.[1]
Contents

Early life

Williams was born in Independence, Missouri, to a free man and a woman in slavery, making her legal status also that of a slave. During her adolescence, Williams worked as a house slave on the Johnson plantation on the outskirts of Jefferson City, Missouri. In 1861 Union forces occupied Jefferson City in the early stages of the Civil War. At that time, captured slaves were officially designated by the Union as "contraband," and many were forced to serve in military support roles such as cooks, laundresses, or nurses. At age seventeen, Williams was pressed into serving the 8th Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment, commanded by Colonel William Plummer Benton.
American Civil War

For the next few years, Williams traveled with the 8th Indiana, accompanying the soldiers on their marches through Arkansas, Louisiana, and Georgia. Cathay Williams was present at the Battle of Pea Ridge and the Red River Campaign. At one time she was transferred to Little Rock, where she would have seen uniformed African-American men serving as soldiers, which may have inspired her own interest in military service. Later, Williams was transferred to Washington, D.C., where she served with General Philip Sheridan's command. When the war ended, Williams was working at Jefferson Barracks.
U.S. Army service

Despite the prohibition against women serving in the military, Cathay Williams enlisted in the United States Regular Army under the false name of "William Cathay"[2] on November 15, 1866, at St. Louis, Missouri, for a three-year engagement, passing herself off as a man. She was assigned to the 38th United States Infantry Regiment after she passed a cursory medical examination.[2] Only two others are known to have been privy to the deception, her cousin and a friend, both of whom were fellow soldiers in her regiment.

Shortly after her enlistment, Williams contracted smallpox, was hospitalized and rejoined her unit, which by then was posted in New Mexico. Possibly due to the effects of smallpox, the New Mexico heat, or the cumulative effects of years of marching, her body began to show signs of strain. She was frequently hospitalized. The post surgeon finally discovered she was a woman, and informed the post commander. She was discharged from the Army by her commanding officer, Captain Charles E. Clarke, on October 14, 1868.
Post-military service years

Cathay Williams went to work as a cook at Fort Union, New Mexico, and later moved to Pueblo, Colorado. Williams married, but it ended disastrously when her husband stole her money and a team of horses. Williams had him arrested. She next moved to Trinidad, Colorado, where she made her living as a seamstress. She may also have owned a boarding house. It was at this time that Williams' story first became public. A reporter from St. Louis heard rumors of an African-American woman who had served in the army, and came to interview her. Her life and military service narrative was published in The St. Louis Daily Times on 2 January 1876.
U.S. Army Pension records for Cathay Williams

In late 1889 or early 1890, Cathay Williams entered a local hospital where she remained for some time, and in June 1891, applied for a disability pension based on her military service. The nature of her illness and disability are unknown. There was precedent for granting a pension to female soldiers. Deborah Sampson in 1816, Anna Maria Lane, and Mary Hayes McCauley (better known as Molly Pitcher) had been granted pensions for their service in the American Revolutionary War.
Declining health and death

In September 1893, a doctor employed by the U.S. Pension Bureau examined Cathay Williams. Despite the fact that she suffered from neuralgia and diabetes, had had all her toes amputated, and could only walk with a crutch, the doctor decided she did not qualify for disability payments. Her application was rejected.[3][4]

The exact date of Williams' death is unknown, but it is assumed she died shortly after being denied a pension, probably sometime in 1893. Her simple grave marker would have been made of wood and deteriorated long ago. Thus her final resting place is now unknown.
Honors

In 2016, a bronze bust of Cathay Williams, featuring information about her and with a small rose garden around it, was unveiled outside the Richard Allen Cultural Center in Leavenworth, Kansas.[5]

In 2018, the Private Cathay Williams monument bench was unveiled on the Walk of Honor at the National Infantry Museum.[6]

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akraven

(1,975 posts)
1. My daughter actually found an article on her in the Birmingham Public Library
Fri Feb 15, 2019, 07:24 PM
Feb 2019

and used it for her assignment. What an amazing woman she must have been.

akraven

(1,975 posts)
3. Originally? Merritt Island Florida. Got back here by way of Hoover, Alabama
Fri Feb 15, 2019, 07:39 PM
Feb 2019

and came home (Alaska is home).

marble falls

(57,073 posts)
5. My son is somewhere around Wassilla, he works in one of the Lodges. Loves it up there!
Fri Feb 15, 2019, 07:43 PM
Feb 2019

Too cold, too much snow for me and my wife.

akraven

(1,975 posts)
7. Wasilla is where my brother lives. It's flat gorgeous,
Fri Feb 15, 2019, 07:47 PM
Feb 2019

and the cold is negligible. Seriously. It's mild compared to here in the Interior. We get the extremes - I've seen 55 below and 95 above.

The Mat-Su valley is really not awfully cold and we've seen years where it got so little snow they'd have to truck the dogs and mushers to Fairbanks for safety reasons.

Come up in spring/summer. It really is a place to see!

akraven

(1,975 posts)
4. Sorry, forgot to add I have saved this and sent it to kidlet!
Fri Feb 15, 2019, 07:41 PM
Feb 2019

She has 2 daughters of her own who are as kick butt as their mama!

marble falls

(57,073 posts)
15. As a history buff, I am ashamed by all I did not learn about. It was there in front of me and ...
Sat Feb 16, 2019, 10:54 AM
Feb 2019

I totally missed it.

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