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Colonel Charles Young
Military & Service

Colonel Charles Young

Born 1864 · Joined the Ancestors 1922
Fact
Rode 500 miles on horseback to prove his fitness after forced retirement
Fact
Third Black graduate of West Point
Fact
Posthumously promoted to brigadier general in 2020 — over a century later

Charles Young was the third Black graduate of West Point, the first Black military attaché in U.S. history, and the highest-ranking Black officer in the Army — until the military forced him into early retirement in 1917 to prevent him from becoming the first Black general. The official reason was high blood pressure; the real reason was racism. Young rode his horse 500 miles from Ohio to Washington, D.C., to prove his fitness, but the Army refused to reinstate him.

Born in May's Lick, Kentucky, in 1864, the son of formerly enslaved parents, Young entered West Point in 1884. He endured four years of hazing, ostracism, and abuse — his white classmates refused to speak to him — and graduated in 1889, ninth in his class. He served with distinction in the 9th Cavalry (Buffalo Soldiers), the Spanish-American War, and the Philippines.

Young served as military attaché to Haiti and Liberia, supervised road construction projects in Liberia, and was beloved by the troops he commanded. His forced retirement on the eve of World War I — when his leadership was most needed — was one of the most cynical acts of racial discrimination in American military history. He was eventually reinstated in 1918 but died of a kidney infection in Lagos, Nigeria, in 1922. His home in Wilberforce, Ohio, is now a National Monument.

We should be too proud to be bitter, and too great to be unkind.
— Colonel Charles Young
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Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1864
Born March 12 in May's Lick, Kentucky
1889
Graduates from West Point — third Black graduate
1894
Serves as professor of military science at Wilberforce University
1904
Named military attaché to Haiti — first Black military attaché
1917
Forced into retirement to prevent promotion; rides 500 miles to prove fitness
2020
Posthumously promoted to brigadier general by the U.S. Army

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