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For Race and Country The Life and Career of Colonel Charles Young
Book Code: C8005
ISBN: 0-275-98005-7
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98005-4
216 pages, photos
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 11/30/2003
List Price: $85.00 (UK Sterling Price: £47.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 X 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • David Kilroy has written a good biography of Young, and one that fills an important gap in the historiography of African American military service....Kilroy has produced an important study for many audiences.
    —Army History
    Winter 2008
  • Young's story deserves the widest possible telling. The injustice done him should not be forgotten....Young died with his boots on, but it was not the just finish to his exemplary life that he deserved. It is a life that comes alive again in Kilroy's 183 pages.
    —The Plain Dealer, Ohio
    February 2004
Description: Charles Young served as the highest-ranking African American officer in the U.S. Army until 1917. During his career, he served on the western frontier, in the Philippines, and in Mexico, and as military attache to both Haiti and Liberia. Young was also an accomplished linguist, a musician and composer, a published author, and an active member of the black intelligentsia. A history of Young's life transcends the fields of military, diplomatic, and African American history. For those interested in the history of the United States between Reconstruction and World War I, his life offers a guided tour through one of the most important epochs in the American experience. Charles Young's career was shaped by race. The army regarded him as an anomaly and sought to limit his visibility. He, on the other hand, used his profile to promote the cause of racial equality. As a soldier, he was diligent in his observance of duty. As a citizen, he was committed to the cause of black civil rights. For Charles Young, success was more than a personal dream, it was an obligation to his people. Young's ultimate goal was to attain the rank of general. Thus, his forced retirement on medical grounds in 1917 was a crushing blow, and, for him and his supporters, bore testament to the racism that permeated the armed forces and America.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • Up from Kentucky
  • Alone at West Point
  • A Black Officer in a White Army
  • Wars of Expansion
  • Our Man in Hispaniola
  • Back to Africa
  • On the Trail of Pancho Villa
  • The Glass Ceiling
  • The Making of a Legend
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
LC Card Number: 2003046314
LCC Class: U53
Dewey Class: 35
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