www.nytimes.com /2024/11/27/us/robert-dixon-dead.html

Robert Dixon, Last Surviving Buffalo Soldier, Dies at 103

Trip Gabriel 3-3 minutes 11/27/2024

U.S.|Robert Dixon, Last Surviving Buffalo Soldier, Dies at 103


A member of one of the U.S. Army’s all-Black regiments, formed after the Civil War, he trained West Point cadets in horsemanship during World War II.

A black-and-white portrait of Robert Dixon, wearing a pastor’s robe and standing beside a stained-glass window.
Robert Dixon in 2002 at Mount Calvary Baptist Church, in Albany, N.Y., where he was a pastor for 36 years. He was the last known survivor of the U.S. Army’s Black regiments, known as the Buffalo Soldiers.Credit...Luanne M. Ferris/Times Union

The Rev. Robert W. Dixon Sr., the last known survivor of the U.S. Army’s all-Black regiments known as Buffalo Soldiers, died on Nov. 15 near Albany, N.Y. He was 103.

His wife, Georgia Dixon, said he died at a rehabilitation center.

During World War II, Mr. Dixon was a corporal stationed at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, where members of the Ninth Cavalry Regiment, composed of African Americans, trained cadets in horseback riding and mounted tactics.

Created after the Civil War, the Army’s all-Black cavalry and infantry regiments were nicknamed “Buffalo Soldiers” by Native Americans who encountered them in the nation’s Western expansion in the post-Civil War 19th century. The name may have been a reference to the soldiers’ curly black hair or to the fierceness that buffalo show in fighting. In either case, the soldiers embraced it.

The troops could serve only west of the Mississippi River because most white Southerners would not tolerate armed Black soldiers in their communities. They fought in the Indian Wars and protected settlers moving west. During the Spanish-American War, the experienced horsemen of the 10th Cavalry led the way for Col. Theodore Roosevelt’s novice Rough Riders in fighting in Cuba.

In the 20th century, official racism by the Army diminished the role that Buffalo Soldier regiments played in major engagements during both world wars, although some troops saw action in World War II during the invasion of Italy and in the Pacific theater.

Image

A black-and-white vintage photo of nine Black Army officers posing in World War I-era uniforms. A young girl stands in front of them, holding a bouquet of flowers.
Officers of the Buffalo Soldiers in 1915, during World War I. The all-Black regiments were established in 1866 and existed until 1948, when the U.S. Army was desegregated.Credit...Education Images/Universal Images Group, via Getty Images