{"id":13008,"date":"2024-03-28T12:00:56","date_gmt":"2024-03-28T19:00:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sanpedrotoday.com\/?p=13008"},"modified":"2024-03-29T12:33:43","modified_gmt":"2024-03-29T19:33:43","slug":"war-race","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sanpedrotoday.com\/2024\/03\/28\/war-race\/","title":{"rendered":"War & Race"},"content":{"rendered":"
The contributions of Black Americans to victory in World War II, long overlooked, is the subject of a new book by San Pedro\u2019s Peter Gravett, retired Army major general.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n The aptly titled Battling While Black<\/i>, subtitled General Patton\u2019s Heroic African American WWII Battalions<\/i>, focuses on four units that played little-known but key roles on D-Day and in the famous 3rd Army as it marched across Europe: the 320th Barrage Balloon Battalion, 761st Tank Battalion, 333rd Field Artillery Battalion, and 6888th Central Postal Battalion.<\/p>\n\n Gravett puts the accomplishments of the men and women who served in those units \u2014 and all Black soldiers in uniform in WWII \u2014 in perspective with an introduction about the now infamous 1925 Army War College Report<\/i>, known as \u201cThe Study,\u201d released to \u201cfurnish a basis for the employment of the Negro in the next war.\u201d<\/p>\n Based on highly speculative research and prejudicial opinions, \u201cThe Study\u201d was used to justify a segregated military and biased views that prevailed among the majority of America\u2019s military elite through the end of the war. Patton himself, arguably America\u2019s finest field commander, while lauding his Black soldiers in public, privately expressed his disdain for them. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Fortunately for America\u2019s war efforts, most of the Black servicemen and servicewomen chose to be motivated rather than intimidated by the blatant discrimination they faced both on the home front and from their own leaders on the war front. The results paved the way for the postwar integration of the military, which led to success by men such as Gravett.<\/p>\n Amply illustrated with archival photographs, heavily footnoted, and including an extensive bibliography, Battling While Black<\/i> is unique not only for its theme but because it introduces WWII history buffs like myself to two noncombatant formations that have probably not received much attention in the past.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n I\u2019ve seen the pictures of barrage balloons hanging over the D-Day beaches but never knew it was the 320th that arrived on Omaha Beach on June 7 and put up the aerial barriers that helped keep the Luftwaffe at bay. A newspaper correspondent who was there called the 320th\u2019s balloon curtain \u201cone of the most important missions of the war.\u201d<\/p>\n And if you\u2019ve seen as many war movies as I have, you know what it meant for servicemen in far-flung foreign fields of battle to receive mail from home. As Gravett notes, \u201cDuring wartime (and in peace), no matter the decade or circumstance, it\u2019s impossible to overstate the importance of mail for the morale of soldiers.\u201d It was a tremendous undertaking getting that mail delivered, and it was the Women\u2019s Army Auxiliary Corps\u2019 6888th, arriving in England in January 1945, that cleared the backlog within three months.<\/p>\n