
Buffalo soldiers were African American soldiers who mainly served on the Western frontier following the American Civil War. In 1866, six all-Black cavalry and infantry regiments were created after Congress passed the Army Organization Act. Their main tasks were to help control the Native Americans of the Plains, capture cattle rustlers and thieves and protect settlers, stagecoaches, wagon trains and railroad crews along the Western front.
Who Were the Buffalo Soldiers?
No one knows for certain why, but the soldiers of the all-Black 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments were dubbed “buffalo soldiers” by the Native Americans they encountered.
One theory claims the nickname arose because the soldiers’ dark, curly hair resembled the fur of a buffalo. Another assumption is the soldiers fought so valiantly and fiercely that the Indians revered them as they did the mighty buffalo.
Whatever the reason, the name stuck, and African American regiments formed in 1866, including the 24th and 25th Infantry (which were consolidated from four regiments) became known as buffalo soldiers.
WATCH: The HISTORY Channel documentary Black Patriots: Buffalo Soldiers online now.
READ MORE: Meet the Buffalo Soldiers
The 9th Cavalry Regiment
The mustering of the 9th Cavalry took place in New Orleans, Louisiana, in August and September of 1866. The soldiers spent the winter organizing and training until they were ordered to San Antonio, Texas, in April 1867. There they were joined by most of their officers and their commanding officer, Colonel Edward Hatch.
Training the inexperienced and mostly uneducated soldiers of the 9th Calvary was a challenging task. But the regiment was willing, able and mostly ready to face anything when they were ordered to the unsettled landscape of West Texas.
The soldiers’ main mission was to secure the road from San Antonio to El Paso and restore and maintain order in areas disrupted by Native Americans, many of whom were frustrated with life on Indian reservations and broken promises by the federal government. The Black soldiers, facing their own forms of discrimination from the U.S. government, were tasked with removing another minority group in that government’s name.
The 10th Cavalry Regiment

The 10th Cavalry was based in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and commanded by Colonel Benjamin Grierson. Mustering was slow, partly because the colonel wanted more educated men in the regiment and partly because of a cholera outbreak in the summer of 1867.
In August 1867, the regiment was ordered to Fort Riley, Kansas, with the task of protecting the Pacific Railroad, which was under construction at the time.
Before they left Fort Leavenworth, some troops fought hundreds of Cheyenne in two separate battles near the Saline River. With the support of the 38th Infantry Regiment—which was later consolidated into the 24th Infantry Regiment—the 10th Cavalry pushed back the hostile Indians.
The cavalry lost just one man and several horses despite having inferior equipment and being greatly outnumbered. It was just one of many battles to come.
Indian Wars
Both the 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments participated in dozens upon dozens of skirmishes and larger battles of the Indian Wars as America became obsessed with westward expansion.
For instance, the 9th Cavalry was critical to the success of a three-month, unremitting campaign known as the Red River War against the Kiowas, the Comanches, the Cheyenne and the Arapahoe. It was after this battle that the 10th Cavalry was sent to join them in Texas.

Troops H and I of the 10th Cavalry were part of a team that rescued wounded Lieutenant-Colonel George Alexander Forsyth and what remained of his group of scouts trapped on a sand bar and surrounded by Native Americans in the Arikaree River. A couple of weeks later, the same troops engaged hundreds of Indians at Beaver Creek and fought so gallantly that they were thanked in a field order by General Philip Sheridan.
By 1880, the 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments had minimized Indian resistance in Texas and the 9th Cavalry was ordered to Indian Territory in modern-day Oklahoma, ironically to prevent white settlers from illegally settling on Indian land. The 10th Cavalry continued to keep the Apache in check until the early 1890s when they relocated to Montana to round up the Cree.
About 20 percent of U.S. Cavalry troops that participated in the Indian Wars were buffalo soldiers, who participated in at least 177 conflicts.
Buffalo Soldiers Protect National Parks
Buffalo soldiers didn’t only battle Native Americans. They also fought wildfires and poachers in Yosemite and Sequoia National Parks and supported the parks’ infrastructure.
According to the National Park Service, buffalo soldiers billeted at the Presidio army post in San Francisco during the winter and served as park rangers in the Sierra Nevada in the summer.
READ MORE: Why Buffalo Soldiers Served Among the Nation’s First Park Rangers
Buffalo Soldiers in Other Conflicts
In the late 1890s, with the “Indian problem” mostly settled, the 9th and 10th Calvary and the 24th and 25th Infantry headed to Florida at the start of the Spanish-American War.
Even facing blatant racism and enduring brutal weather conditions, buffalo soldiers earned a reputation for serving courageously. They fought heroically in the Battle of San Juan Hill, the Battle of El Caney and the Battle of Las Guasimas.
The 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments served in the Philippines in the early 1900s. Despite proving their military worth time and again, they continued to experience racial discrimination. During World War I, they were mostly relegated to defending the Mexican border.
Both regiments were integrated into the 2nd Cavalry Division in 1940. They trained for overseas deployment and combat during World War II. The 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments were deactivated in May 1944.
Mark Matthews
In 1948, President Harry Truman issued Executive Order 9981 eliminating racial segregation in America’s armed forces. The last all-black units were disbanded during the 1950s.
Mark Matthews, the nation’s oldest living buffalo soldier, died in 2005 at age 111 in Washington, D.C.
Buffalo soldiers had the lowest military desertion and court-martial rates of their time. Many won the Congressional Medal of Honor, an award presented in recognition of combat valor that goes above and beyond the call of duty.
Buffalo Soldiers Legacy
Today, visitors can attend the Buffalo Soldiers National Museum in Houston, Texas, a museum dedicated to the history of their military service. Bob Marley and The Wailers immortalized the group in the reggae song “Buffalo Soldier,” which highlighted the irony of formerly enslaved people and their descendants “stolen from Africa” taking land from Native Americans for white settlers.
Sources
9th Cavalry Regiment. 1st Cavalry Division Association.
Who Are The Buffalo Soldiers? Buffalo Soldier Museum.
9th Cavalry Regiment (1866-1944). Blackpast.org.
10th Cavalry Regiment (1866-1944). Blackpast.org.
Buffalo Soldiers. National Park Service.
Buffalo Soldiers and the Spanish-American War. National Park Service.
Exploring the Life and History of the “Buffalo Soldiers.” National Archives.
Ninth United States Cavalry. Texas State Historical Association.
The Ninth Regiment of Cavalry. U.S. Army Center of Military History.
The Tenth Regiment of Cavalry. U.S. Army Center of Military History.
World War I and the Buffalo Soldiers. National Park Service.
Buffalo Soldiers originally were members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army, formed on September 21, 1866, at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. This nickname was given to the Black Cavalry[1] by Native American tribes who fought in the Indian Wars. The term eventually became synonymous with all of the African-American regiments formed in 1866:
- 9th Cavalry Regiment
- 10th Cavalry Regiment
- 24th Infantry Regiment
- 25th Infantry Regiment
- Second 38th Infantry Regiment
Although several African-American regiments were raised during the Civil War as part of the Union Army (including the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry and the many United States Colored Troops Regiments), the “Buffalo Soldiers” were established by Congress as the first peacetime all-black regiments in the regular U.S. Army.[2] On September 6, 2005, Mark Matthews, the oldest surviving Buffalo Soldier, died at the age of 111. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.[3]

Mark Matthews
American veteran of World War II and Buffalo Soldier
Mark Matthews was an American veteran of the Second World War and a Buffalo Soldier. Born in Alabama and growing up in Ohio, Matthews joined the 10th Cavalry Regiment when he was only 15 years old, after having been recruited at a Lexington, Kentucky racetrack and having documents forged so that he appeared to meet the minimum age of 17. Wikipedia
- Born: August 7, 1894, Greenville, Alabama, United States
- Died: September 6, 2005, Washington, D.C., United States
The Buffalo Soldiers of Fort Huachuca, AZ: Photos
24 PHOTOS9:27 a.m. MST Feb. 3, 2021
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Congress established African-American military divisions in 1866. A portion of a 1899 stereograph shows a formation of Buffalo Soldiers that fought in the Spanish-American War in Cuba.
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An entrance to Fort Huachuca U.S. Army base in Sierra Vista.
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This portrait and plaque tell the story of Col. Charles Young, who served at Fort Huachuca. It is part of an exhibit on the Buffalo Soldiers at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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This plaque is located at the Buffalo Soldier Legacy Plaza on Fort Huachuca near Sierra Vista.
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This painting hangs in the Fort Huachuca Museum as part of the Buffalo Soldier exhibit.
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This display depicts uniforms and equipment worn by soldiers taking part in the U.S. Army Punitive Expedition that went into Mexico in 1916. It is part of the Buffalo Soldier exhibit at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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This display depicts soldiers of the 92nd and 93 Infantry divisions during World War II. It is part of the Buffalo Soldier exhibit at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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This display depicts the engagements of the various units known as Buffalo Soldiers. It is part of an exhibit at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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Six groups at various times in history made up the collection known as the Buffalo Soldiers at Fort Huachuca.
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This 25th Infantry Headquarters sign is part of the Buffalo Soldier exhibit at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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Various uniforms worn by Buffalo Soldiers are depicted at the Fort Huachuca Museum near Sierra Vista.
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This display depicts women soldiers during the World War II era. It is part of the Buffalo Soldier exhibit at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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This 10th Cavalry plaque was designed by Anna R. Russell Jones, an African-American Woman in the Women’s Army Corps. It is part of the Buffalo Soldier exhibit at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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Part of the Buffalo Soldier exhibit at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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Buffalo Soldier statue at the Legacy Plaza at Fort Huachuca on July 31, 2018.
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Buffalo Soldier statue at the Legacy Plaza at Fort Huachuca on July 31, 2018.
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Sign marking the Buffalo Soldier Legacy Plaza at Fort Huachuca on July 31, 2018.
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This photo and plaque tell the story of Corp. Scott. It is part of an exhibit on the Buffalo Soldiers at the Fort Huachuca Museum.
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Buffalo Soldiers were actively involved in border skirmishes with Pancho Villa. This 1916 photograph shows soldiers guarding men of Pancho Villa’s army captured and detained after a raid on Columbus, NM.
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The 24th U.S. Infantry (one of the Buffalo Soldier regiments) at drill, circa 1902.
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A tribute to the Buffalo Soldiers stands at the entrance of Fort Huachuca. The fort was home for the first African-American units in the United States Military.
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Buffalo Soldiers used Tombstone as a base when they went out on patrol. Buffalo Soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment in 1890.
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The 24th Infantry Regiment (one of the Buffalo Soldier regiments) seen here in a portrait, circa 1900.
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Although segregated in life, Buffalo Soldiers were buried in an integrated
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