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Book Review
The Black Regulars, 18661898. By William A. Dobak
and Thomas D. Phillips. (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001. xviii
+ 360 pp. Illustrations, notes, bibliography, index. $34.95.)
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Enlisted men provide the focus
of this volume, which offers much new information in its topical
chapters. The introduction discusses sources and why, for economic
reasons, the units were created. Two cavalry and four infantry regiments
faced reduction to two cavalry and two infantry regiments, 9 percent
of the army. One-half of the recruits came from black Union regiments
in the Civil War, with few clerks and skilled workers because of
limited literacy or better civilian opportunities. Yet for most
blacks the military offered more possibilities and a less hostile
environment than civilian life. Among the white officers, most had
served in the Union army, many with black units. |
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Black regulars reenlisted more often than
whites. They also deserted less, although some departed to escape
harsh treatment. Congressional suggestions about army integration,
or reduction of the military and elimination of black units, failed.
African Americans did gain positions in staff bureaus, including
the medical corps and the commissary department. Black and white
units shared posts, with cooperation more typical than tension.
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