The
Army Board for Correction of Military Records overturned the
convictions, restoring their service records as having concluded
honorably and making their descendants eligible for military
benefits, the Army said in a statement.
"After a thorough review, the Board found that these Soldiers
were wrongly treated because of their race and were not given
fair trials. By setting aside their convictions and granting
honorable discharges, the Army is acknowledging past mistakes
and setting the record straight," Army Secretary Christine
Wormuth said in a statement.
The reversal comes as right-wing politicians and parents banning
books dealing with race and slavery in schools and the U.S.
Supreme Court striking down affirmative action policies intended
to promote racial equality in university admissions.
The Army convictions arose out of the Houston Riots of Aug. 23,
1917, an outbreak of violence that followed months of racist
taunts against Black soldiers of the 3rd Battalion, 24th
Infantry Regiment. They were also known as the Buffalo Soldiers,
a name of Native American origin that was given to Black
regiments in the Army dating to the 19th Century.
On that day Black soldiers guarding a military property were
subjected to racist slurs and physical attacks, the Army said.
About 100 fellow Black soldiers came to their aid and marched
into the city, where ensuing violence killed 19 people, the Army
said.
Army courts-martial eventually convicted 110 Black soldiers,
including 19 who received the death penalty, in a process that
historians determined contained "numerous irregularities," the
Army said.
The review board found the court-martial cases were so
fundamentally unfair that all the convictions should be set
aside.
The mass execution of 19 soldiers was the largest carried out by
the Army of American soldiers in history, the Army said.
The first group of men was hung in secret within one day of
sentencing, the Army said.
The convictions were overturned after the South Texas College of
Law petitioned the Army to review the cases, prompting requests
from retired officers to grant clemency to all 110 soldiers, the
Army said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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