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Reload this Page Oldest Buffalo Soldier dies at 111

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Post imported post - 21-09-05, 05:55 PM

By Washington Post reporter Joe Holley
http://www4.army.mil/news/article.php?story=7913

September 15, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Retired 1st Sgt. Mark Matthews, 111, one of the last of the nation's legendary Buffalo Soldiers, died of pneumonia Sept. 6 at Fox Chase Nursing Home in Washington.

Sgt. Matthews, who also was the oldest Buffalo Soldier, was heir to a proud military heritage that originated with the black soldiers who fought in the Indian wars on the Western frontier.

Historians say that the Cheyenne, Kiowa and Apache tribes bestowed the appellation because the soldiers' black, curly hair reminded them of a buffalo's mane.

Given Native American reverence for the sturdy animal of the Plains, the soldiers wore the nickname proudly -- and with good reason. The Buffalo Soldiers won 20 Medals of Honor, more than any other regiment. They also helped lay hundreds of miles of roads and telegraph lines, protected stagecoaches, were involved in the military actions against the Apache chiefs Victorio and Geronimo and fought bravely in Cuba at the side of Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders during the Spanish-American War.

Sgt. Matthews joined up at the end of the Buffalo Soldiers' colorful Western exploits. The regiments that made up the Buffalo Soldiers -- the 9th and 10th cavalries and 24th and 25th infantries -- stayed together for years afterward, however, fighting in World War I and II and Korea. The all-black regiments were disbanded in 1952 after the Army desegregated.

Sgt. Matthews was born Aug. 7, 1894, in Greenville, Ala., and grew up in Mansfield, Ohio. He rode horses starting when he was a child, delivering newspapers on his pony.

According to stories Sgt. Matthews told friends, family members and at least one military historian, he was 15 when he met members of the Buffalo Soldiers' 10th Cavalry; they were visiting a Lexington, Ky., racetrack where he worked exercising the horses. When the soldiers told him that they rode horseback wherever they went, he decided he had to join up. Although young men had to be 17 to enlist, his boss concocted documents that convinced a Columbus, Ohio, recruiter that he was of age.

"I was 16 when I joined the Army to be a soldier," he told Parade Magazine in 2003. "I had to wait awhile before I could get on duty. But then they shipped me to the West."

Fort Huachuca, Ariz., where he was first stationed, was still using local Indians as guides. "I learned all the different rules, how to ride the different horses, how to jump and how to shoot," he recalled in the 2003 interview. "Every time I got in a contest where I shot at a target or something, I usually won."

He served along the U.S.-Mexican border as part of Gen. John Joseph "Black Jack" Pershing's 1916 expedition into Mexico, on the trail of Mexican bandit and revolutionary Pancho Villa. "I never met him," Sgt. Matthews said in the Parade interview, "but I knew where he was at."

In 1931, he was assigned to Fort Myer, where he trained recruits in horsemanship, helped tend the presidential stable for Franklin D. Roosevelt and played on the polo team. Ten years later, although he was in his late forties when the United States entered World War II, he saw action on Saipan in the South Pacific.

He retired from the Army in 1949 and became a security guard at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda. He retired a second time, as chief of guards, in 1970.

In retirement, he liked to fish. He also enjoyed sitting on the front porch and telling tales about the old days out West and the not-quite-so-old days in the Pacific during World War II, often to neighborhood kids who came around and sat at the knee of a man who had experienced an adventure-novel's worth of stirring chapters in U.S. history.

He spent time with the children, enjoyed looking after them. He took them fishing with him, made sure they got to school, took them in if they needed a place to stay. "They called him Daddy," daughter Mary Matthews Watson recalled.

He met with President Bill Clinton at the White House, and in 2002 marked his 108th birthday by meeting with Secretary of State Colin Powell, who for many years campaigned for a monument honoring the Buffalo Soldiers. In 1992, Powell, then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, dedicated the monument at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., birthplace of one of the regiments.

Believed to be Washington's oldest man -- the District's Office on Aging lists a woman, Corrine Taylor, as slightly older -- he had lived with his daughter in the same Northwest neighborhood for more than half a century. He had been in good health until recently. Before he began to lose his eyesight to glaucoma about 10 years ago, he enjoyed reading his Bible daily. He was a former member and trustee of Trinity AME Zion Church in the District, a member of Prince Hall Masonic Temple and a member of the Washington, D.C., Chapter of the 9th and 10th (Horse) Cavalry Association.

His wife, Genevieve Hill Matthews, died in 1986. They had been married 57 years. A daughter, Shirley Ann Matthews Mills, died in 1988.

In addition to Watson, of Washington, survivors include two other daughters, Gloria J. Matthews, also of Washington, and Barbara Jean Young of Dacula, Ga.; a son, Mark Matthews Jr. of Hyattsville; nine grandchildren; and 17 great-grandchildren.

"I did it all," Sgt. Matthews told The Washington Post a few years ago. "Yes, I was there.�

(This article originally appeared in the September 13 Metro edition of The Washington Post and is republished here with permission.)
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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 02:51 PM

That was really an impressive read.I had a GGG grandmother that lived from to be 110.She was born in 1867.RIP 1st Sergant Mark Matthews
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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 03:53 PM

Yes let us be proud of a black man who during forced economic and political segregation of his country helped to wipe out the last of the great indigenous people in America.

Something to be proud of eh?


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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 04:05 PM

clp)what a life! He is a good shining example.

Rest in great peace.

My condolences to the family .
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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 04:37 PM

Fine1952,

I remembered hearing about him(Mark Matthews)on TODAY. It'sone thing to read about Buffalo Soldiers, but it's another to see that there , at least one fo them, was still around. Not many people get to see 111. If he had any great-grandchildren( or x-great-grandchildren),he probably had a lot of good as stories to tell about his life as an actual Buffalo Soldier.
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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 04:40 PM

Appears that retired 1st Sgt. Mark Matthews had a interactive life. But as someone pointed out he helped wiped out his own indegenous American citizens the Native American right to determination. That is something Native Americans have and will use against African Americans. But later he helped protect a growing young republic America against foreign enemies. I see him simply as a soldier. I am not too thrilled as seeing him immortalized but he helped make it safe for million of us "other" Americans travel safely from New York to California. And vice versa. So to the "other" Americans except Native Americans see he has hero qualities. At the tiem, he protected the future of this country against foreign threats including the last of the Native Americans that we see today. I guess let the future generations decide the outcome of this man.

I want to know more about the diet this man kept, it appears fish was important. I wonder about behavior etc.
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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 05:14 PM

defyfear wrote:
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Appears that retired 1st Sgt. Mark Matthews had a interactive life. But as someone pointed out he helped wiped out his own indegenous American citizens the Native American right to determination. That is something Native Americans have and will use against African Americans. But later he helped protect a growing young republic America against foreign enemies. I see him simply as a soldier. I am not too thrilled as seeing him immortalized but he helped make it safe for million of us "other" Americans travel safely from New York to California. And vice versa. So to the "other" Americans except Native Americans see he has hero qualities.
Quote:
Hmm so you can be proud of a man who helped millions of "other" Americans cross safely/ ( are not native Americans American enough?) then you must be equally glad that the ancestors of the "other" Americans also cleared Lousiansa/ Texas/ Georgia etc /no doubt with the help of African soldiers/of those troublesome native americans who dared put up a fight so that other planterscould travel safe. All so they could have a few thousand plantations/ enslave millions of Africans and build the great and mighty land called America.
Quote:
Hell you might as well be glad for slavery too.
Quote:
Its interesting how some of you quick to dissociate yourselves from the genocide of your countries inhabitants/ but cannot run from the salient fact that without that genocide and appropriation of land widescale slavery in the Southern states could not have occured.Neither would your republic be the world power it is today?
Quote:
Small sacrifice I suppose. Got no beef with the old man. He probably had slim choice anyway. But if we are to stick to bare facts/ and not live our acheivements through the eyes of the white manthen there is no way that this mans actions can be said to be in the interest of Blacks worldwide/ or in America/neither does it betsow honour on our warrior tradition.
Quote:
Bottom line.
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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 05:25 PM

"But as someone pointed out he helped wiped out his own indegenous American citizens the Native American right to determination. That is something Native Americans have and will use against African Americans. But later he helped protect a growing young republic America against foreign enemies. I see him simply as a soldier."

Nice reply.

My post hadgeneric intentions w/o all the political plauses. But politically speaking your response is on point....!








The Sibyls: the First Prophetess’ of Mami (Wata) by Mama Zogbé::

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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 05:40 PM

Is that generic as general rubbish. Or are you generally saying that a soldier has no political implications.

The leader of the Confederate Army and countless blacks that fought for them were brave and "just soldiers" too. Funny I never see or hear Black Americans honouring their memory.

Or does the generic pride displayed then get specific. Am I missing something?

Generically speaking of course.
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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 06:46 PM

mansamusa

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Hmm so you can be proud of a man who helped millions of "other" Americans cross safely/ ( are not native Americans American enough?) then you must be equally glad that the ancestors of the "other" Americans also cleared Lousiansa/ Texas/ Georgia etc /no doubt with the help of African soldiers/of those troublesome native americans who dared put up a fight so that other planterscould travel safe. All so they could have a few thousand plantations/ enslave millions of Africans and build the great and mighty land called America.

I am not saying African Americans are good because we have been involved with the terrible history and at the same time innovative proud points in history with 'other' people in this country also. This man lived to a ripe old age so, it didnt bother him it appears. The native Americans and 'other' Americans including blacks also see the noble qualities of the Native American in particular the Apache especially in their 'last stand'. So that is why I leave the decision for future generations to decide.

And this man stood for something and it does not always have to agree. America would certainly be different before my time on this planet if we as a country loss to foreign enemies at the time. Even though many Africans in America went through a nightmarish time at its start and even today, they still carry on with being involved with the affairs of this nation. That means they see a future where they will make a contribution whether good or bad and that is a consequence from where we start. We are always reminded of it. Despite the obstacles, we go through in our nation, I would still defend those who protect the country against a 'shooting enemy' that would destroy all our future.
Quote:
Hell you might as well be glad for slavery too.

It depends on how you look at this I suppose. One famous revered African american who is the only Black American national celebrated in Washington who went through the school of slavery mentioned that it was terrible to see Africans close their eyes and went into a sleep of no return when they were in the Old World Africa but in the new World they open their eyes to a new one and it gave him or her a new 'soul' to start anew. He did not say he was happy with slavery but was happy to make a contribution to America, that slavery was similar to a school brutal in form our people went through but he was hopeful for the future. For all Americans. He wanted to help Africa but at the same time he realize African Americans have a future in this country. And many early African Americans despite their slave background made tremendous achievements in this country that a great deal of Americans certainly are proud of. But many of those African-Americans famous or not did not dwell solely on the past and its great sadness they had to endure but for the future and a free black people involved with it. This created the need for them to carry on. So let the future generation of Americans decide the outcome of such as this man. If Native Americans are left in America in the future then we will all get our just rewards. There were famous Black Americans who helped Native Americans I mean went the extra mile in terms of living with them and seeing that their needs were met at that time so, it would be interesting to know what the future hold for us with 'other' Americans and Native Americans. But as humans we suffer from shortcomings at time.
Quote:
Its interesting how some of you quick to dissociate yourselves from the genocide of your countries inhabitants/ but cannot run from the salient fact that without that genocide and appropriation of land widescale slavery in the Southern states could not have occured.Neither would your republic be the world power it is today?
Quote:
Small sacrifice I suppose. Got no beef with the old man. He probably had slim choice anyway. But if we are to stick to bare facts/ and not live our acheivements through the eyes of the white manthen there is no way that this mans actions can be said to be in the interest of Blacks worldwide/ or in America/neither does it betsow honour on our warrior tradition.


Quote:
Bottom line.
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What about Blacks who are not warriors? Where do they fit in Blacks worldwide?



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Post imported post - 22-09-05, 07:04 PM

defyfear

Ill colour the responses to make it easier on the eye. my response in red

defyfear wrote:
Quote:
mansamusa

Quote:
Hmm so you can be proud of a man who helped millions of "other" Americans cross safely/ ( are not native Americans American enough?) then you must be equally glad that the ancestors of the "other" Americans also cleared Lousiansa/ Texas/ Georgia etc /no doubt with the help of African soldiers/of those troublesome native americans who dared put up a fight so that other planterscould travel safe. All so they could have a few thousand plantations/ enslave millions of Africans and build the great and mighty land called America.

I am not saying African Americans are good because we have been involved with the terrible history and at the same time innovative proud points in history with 'other' people in this country also. This man lived to a ripe old age so, it didnt bother him it appears.
Quote:
Quote:
The age he lived to has nothing to do with it.
Quote:
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The native Americans and 'other' Americans including blacks also see the noble qualities of the Native American in particular the Apache especially in their 'last stand'. So that is why I leave the decision for future generations to decide.
Quote:
Quote:
Fair enough.

And this man stood for something and it does not always have to agree. America would certainly be different before my time on this planet if we as a country loss to foreign enemies at the time. Even though many Africans in America went through a nightmarish time at its start and even today, they still carry on with being involved with the affairs of this nation. That means they see a future where they will make a contribution whether good or bad and that is a consequence from where we start. We are always reminded of it. Despite the obstacles, we go through in our nation, I would still defend those who protect the country against a 'shooting enemy' that would destroy all our future.
Quote:
Quote:
Ok can dig that.

Quote:
Hell you might as well be glad for slavery too.

It depends on how you look at this I suppose. One famous revered African american who is the only Black American national celebrated in Washington who went through the school of slavery mentioned that it was terrible to see Africans close their eyes and went into a sleep of no return when they were in the Old World Africa but in the new World they open their eyes to a new one and it gave him or her a new 'soul' to start anew.
Quote:
Quote:
What do you mean by this? Are you impying that the African in the Old World was figuritively in a political and economic sleep / that his civilisation was at the point of no return. Im merely extending your / famous revered guy thoughtsto elicit a response from you on this.
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Quote:
He did not say he was happy with slavery but was happy to make a contribution to America, that slavery was similar to a school brutal in form our people went through but he was hopeful for the future.
Quote:
Quote:
So we needed schooling? Are you happy to have made a contibution to a country by means of slavery. I take it that your subsequent recompense makes it all worth it.
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For all Americans. He wanted to help Africa but at the same time he realize African Americans have a future in this country. And many early African Americans despite their slave background made tremendous achievements in this country that a great deal of Americans certainly are proud of. But many of those African-Americans famous or not did not dwell solely on the past and its great sadness they had to endure but for the future and a free black people involved with it. This created the need for them to carry on. So let the future generation of Americans decide the outcome of such as this man. If Native Americans are left in America in the future then we will all get our just rewards.
Quote:
Quote:
There were famous Black Americans who helped Native Americans I mean went the extra mile in terms of living with them and seeing that their needs were met at that time so, it would be interesting to know what the future hold for us with 'other' Americans and Native Americans. But as humans we suffer from shortcomings at time.
Quote:
Quote:
And I always thought that these were the real Buffalo soldiers. Not the white mens lackeys.
Quote:
Its interesting how some of you quick to dissociate yourselves from the genocide of your countries inhabitants/ but cannot run from the salient fact that without that genocide and appropriation of land widescale slavery in the Southern states could not have occured.Neither would your republic be the world power it is today?