.
VR
ThedarkprinceVvvvV's Journal



THIS JOURNAL IS ON 249 FAVORITE JOURNAL LISTS

Honor: 0    [ Give / Take ]

PROFILE




2 entries this month
 

“Black Death” – Henry Johnson – American’s First World War Hero

02:09 Jan 31 2017
Times Read: 417


I did a little digging and found this guy. Hidden history is always an interesting topic.

“Black Death” – Henry Johnson – American’s First World War Hero



FEATURED

WORLD WAR I



Mar 6, 2016 Colin Fraser



William Henry Johnson and Needham Roberts standing with their French Croix de Guerre medals in 1918



SHARE:FacebookTwitter



Henry Johnson was a World War I soldier who singlehandedly beat back a German assault while critically wounded. He was a great American hero and received the highest military honor of two different countries. One of those countries, however, his very own didn’t bestow him with that medal until nearly 100 years after his service in WWI.



The honor this man deserved was not awarded by the U.S. government upon his return home because he was black. But that racism, like the Germans Johnson, in that dark trench in 1918, was overcome, if only by the undeniable memory of his heroism.



In 1917, a young man working as a Red Cap porter at an Albany, New York train station joined the 15th New York National Guard Regiment. Due to U.S. segregation policies, it was an all-black regiment. To be shipped out to France as the U.S. declared war on Germany and its allies, it was renamed the 369th Infantry Regiment and placed within the American Expeditionary Force under General John J. Pershing.



Johnson arrived in France on New Years Day, 1918. The African-American troops of the U.S. Army were harassed, sometimes even killed, by their Caucasian counterparts who would refuse to fight alongside them. The officers also distrusted them, harassed them, and issued disparaging remarks and pamphlets to French military and civilians about their black soldiers.

William Henry Johnson and Needham Roberts standing with their French Croix de Guerre medals in 1918

William Henry Johnson and Needham Roberts standing with their French Croix de Guerre medals in 1918



Thus, black regiments were very poorly trained and most often assigned to menial labor like carrying supplies and digging ditches and latrines.



The French, however, didn’t nearly conform to the U.S.’s blind racial prejudice and when their Fourth Army, short on troops, was offered the 369th Infantry Regiment to reinforce their line, they gladly took on the soldiers and put them to use as just that. They were given French rifles and helmets and stationed at Outpost 20 in the Argonne Forest, in France’s Champagne region, just West of the infamous battlefields of Verdun.



In the early morning hours of May 14th, 1918, Johnson and Needham Roberts of Trenton New Jersey were on guard duty. Just before 2 AM, shots from German snipers whizzed by and they knew the enemy was on the prowl.



Right at 2 AM, Johnson and Roberts heard the snip and clip of cutters on the perimeter wire and readied themselves for an attack. Johnson, with a box of grenades at his side, told Roberts to run back and alert the French troops.



As Roberts ran, Johnson began to hurl grenades out of the trench, towards the Germans. From the darkness, the Germans responded in kind with grenades and gunfire. Roberts couldn’t leave his comrade behind and ran back to help. But he was struck by a German grenade and severely wounded in the arm and hip.



Continues on Page 2



Continued from Page 1



When he was out of grenades, Johnson fired his rifle, taking several shots himself, including in the hand and right to the face. He fired round after round until grabbing an American ammo cartridge by mistake and jamming his French rifle.



Suddenly, the Germans were all around, jumping into the trench. At least a dozen soldiers descended upon the two wounded men thought to be inferior by their white U.S. comrades. Johnson, already with numerous bullet holes in his body, proved that notion to be utter nonsense.



Using his rifle as a club, he swung at the enemy, landing crippling hits until his stock finally shattered. Johnson was hit over the head and collapsed. Perhaps if he was alone, he would have called it quits, obviously outnumbered and badly injured. But he could see the German soldiers grabbing Roberts, taking him away as a prisoner.



Johnson leaped up, pulled out his bolo knife and charged into the enemy once more.



The knife he gripped in his hand was adopted by the U.S. Army almost ten years earlier. The Army first encountered it in the Spanish-American war, wielded by native guerrilla fighters in the Philippines. Mostly used for agricultural purposes, this long knife (often between a foot and two feet long) was made by metal workers all across the country. Weighted along the back of its sharp, curved blade, the bolo made an exceptional slicing and hacking weapon that could cleave bones in one swing.



The Germans in that trench received a quick lesson in just how terrifying this weapon was when wielded by a man committed to giving every last breath.



Johnson stabbed one soldier in the stomach. He killed an officer as he was shot in the arm. One German tried to tackle him by jumping on his back, but instead was stopped by Johnson’s blade between his ribs. Overwhelmed by his ferocity and with the sound of French and American troops running towards the skirmish, the Germans ran back into the night.



As the reinforcements arrive, Johnson collapsed. He had been shot or otherwise severely injured 21 times.



The whole French force in the region gathered to see Johnson and Roberts awarded the Croix du Guerre, the county’s highest military honor. They were the first U.S. soldiers ever to earn this distinction. Johnson’s medal was further adorned with the Gold Palm. He became known as “Black Death.”



Upon his return home, Johnson, since promoted to Sergeant, lead a parade of 3,000 men from the 369th through New York City to Harlem. More than 500 men of the 369th had earned the Croix du Guerre since Johnson and Roberts and furthermore became one of the most decorated U.S. regiments to serve in WWI. They garnered the nickname the “Harlem Hellfighters.” But despite this, the parade Johnson led was for black servicemen only since they weren’t allowed to participate in the main victory parade.



To add further insult to Johnson’s injuries, no mention of his battle wounds was made in his discharge papers. This meant he not only that he did not receive a Purple Heart but also was denied medical benefits due to an injured veteran, even when the U.S. Army was using his story as propaganda for recruitment.



Henry_johnson



A 1946 biographical cartoon of Henry Johnson created by Charles Alston



Because of his injuries, he couldn’t keep a job. Descending into alcoholism, he was left by his wife and three children. In 1929, he died at the age of 32, a discarded American hero.



But his memory did live on. His son, Herman Johnson, who served in the Tuskegee Airmen in World War II, along with New York Senator Chuck Schumer and others, fought to have his father’s valor officially recognized. In the 1990s, a monument was erected in Albany in Johnson’s honor and President Bill Clinton posthumously awarded him the Purple Heart. In 2002, the U.S. Army granted him the Distinguished Service Cross, the second-highest honor the military has. In 2015, President Barack Obama awarded Johnson the top honor, the Medal of Honour. The French had long since recognized him as a war hero.



Before Johnson’s son passed away in 2004, he got to stand at his father’s grave. Herman Johnson had spent most of his life believing his father was laid to rest in some unknown pauper’s grave. But military records found in 2001 revealed Johnson was buried at Arlington National Cemetery with full honors.



By Colin Fraser for War History Online



Sources:



History Channel – WWI Hero Henry Johnson Finally Receives Medal of Honor

Smithsonian – Remembering Henry Johnson, the Soldier Called “Black Death”

Wikipedia – Henry Johnson (World War I soldier)

All photos sourced from wikipedia.org



COMMENTS

-



 

Dragon Soul: Dragon Master, Dragon Lord

23:17 Jan 07 2017
Times Read: 447


Now considering a few things iknow about quizes it makes me think in some other ways because of how one answeres the questions, but also about what is arround me most of the time. Dragons are always something ive been pulled to considering every Culture has them in one shape or another. A friend of mine and i were discussing my love of dragons to begin with, as a educational interest but curiousity of where it came from and the possibilty of other souls out in the universe we just have not seen in this life time or perhaps experenced. I tend to take notes on these conversations at times to see if their are any similarties I pick up. Lets just say notes have been taken.



The Book this mentions is something i will keep in mind for future reading, as it is a work of fiction i am curious how that book will play out.

About the Book:



Eve has no idea she’s the oldest soul on earth, with a pre-wired connection to every other soul on the planet and that the boy she’s mysteriously drawn to, named Roman, has been her soul mate, her love of nearly three hundred lifetimes—until he tells her.



But what Roman doesn’t mention is that the new genetic test called Animus will soon expose what she is to the whole world and that he’s being tasked with the impossible; steering her, into the open arms of another, a boy named Jude. She’ll learn that Jude’s the only brand new soul on earth; the one who’s come to change the world, and that the future of humanity rests in their intertwined destiny.

Dragon Soul





You're playing with power in this life, maybe even playing with fire.



You're able to access divine abilities for building and creating human achievements to previously incomprehensible new heights in the realms of music, technology, corporate leadership, or even the alliances of nations! From Taylor Swift to beloved Presidents to fearsome dictators, Dragons know that their words and actions are as powerful as a breath of fire; you can burn down the world if you want to, or you can save and protect it from the greatest most seemingly insurmountable threats ... namely, other Dragons.



Capable of achieving grandiose levels of success and drawn to academics, business, politics, all areas of science, the arts or entertainment, Dragon Souls are now distinctly operating as beings of light and beauty and expansion or darkness and pain and havoc.





You may be a Dragon of Light but may know a Dark Dragon as often these types of souls are attracted to each other to learn lessons of power.



Dragons have the deepest awareness of the distinction between good and evil than any other soul type. You have the power over your own will and that of others too, you can flip opinions and change minds. You might even feel your hand resting on the switch, even with the people you love the most. You might also feel a little elastic inside. Because of these distinct feelings, some Dragons can come across as rigid and overly steadfast in their ideals.



All Dragons can be masters of illusion when they choose to be; able to spin intricate webs without any effort and easily causing hurricanes of confusion to those around them. It’s one of their most distinctive traits.



IMG_6303



You can pull power, influence, money, or anything else you want out of the universe ... and you probably already know it. One day you'll suddenly tire of the energy expense of being a Dragon and soon after become a Mountain Soul! Your soul age becomes your identity in the new hit novel Animus...



2



















COMMENTS

-






COMPANY
REQUEST HELP
CONTACT US
SITEMAP
REPORT A BUG
UPDATES
LEGAL
TERMS OF SERVICE
PRIVACY POLICY
DMCA POLICY
REAL VAMPIRES LOVE VAMPIRE RAVE
© 2004 - 2024 Vampire Rave
All Rights Reserved.
Vampire Rave is a member of 
Page generated in 0.0612 seconds.
X
Username:

Password:
I agree to Vampire Rave's Privacy Policy.
I agree to Vampire Rave's Terms of Service.
I agree to Vampire Rave's DMCA Policy.
I agree to Vampire Rave's use of Cookies.
•  SIGN UP •  GET PASSWORD •  GET USERNAME  •
X