Here is an article from some paper in New Orleans. Contempt is all it deserves. I am sure all my readers will treat it as I do. Frogs will croak, won't they?
Lieutenant Flipper.
"With the successful examination of the
colored cadet Flipper, at West Point, and
his appearance in the gazette as a full
fledged lieutenant of cavalry, the long
vexed question has been settled just as it
ceased to be a question of any practical
import. Out of three or four experiments
Flipper is the one success. As the whole
South has now passed into Democratic
control, and the prospect for Southern
Republican congressmen is small, the
experiments will hardly be repeated, and he
must stand for those that might have been.
"It would be interesting to know how Flipper
is to occupy his time. The usual employments
of young lieutenants are of a social nature,
such as leading the German at Narraganset
Pier and officiating in select private
theatricals in the great haunts of Fashion.
Flipper is described as a little bow legged
grif of the most darkly coppery hue, and of
a general pattern that even the most
enthusiastic would find it hard to adopt.
Flipper is not destined to uphold the
virtues and graces of his color in the
salons of Boston and New York, then, nor can
he hope to escape the disagreeably
conspicuous solitude he now inhabits among
his fellow officers through any of those
agencies of usage and familiarity which
would result if other Flippers were to
follow him into the army and help to dull
the edge of the innovation. Just what
Flipper is to do with himself does not seem
altogether clear. Even the excitement of
leading his men among the redskins will be
denied him, now that Spotted Tail has
pacified the malcontents and Sitting Bull
has retired to the Canadas. It is to be
presumed that those persons who patronized
Flipper and had him sent to West Point are
gratified at the conclusion, and there is a
sort of reason for believing that Flipper
himself is contented with the lot he has
accepted; but whether the experiment is
worth all the annoyance it occasions is a
problem not so easily disposed of.
"His prospects don t appear to be very
brilliant as regards social delights or
domestic enjoyments, but of course that is
Flipper s business not ours. It merely
struck us that things had happened a little
unfortunately for him, to become the
lonesome representative of his race in the
midst of associations that object to him and
at a time when the supply of colored
officers is permanently cut off. Personally
we are not interested in Flipper."
I am indebted to a Houston Texas, paper for
the following:
The Colored West
Pointer.
"We had a call yesterday from Lieutenant H.
O. Flipper, of the United States Army. Mr.
Flipper, it will be remembered, is the
colored cadet who graduated at the Military
Academy at West Point last session,
occupying in his class a position that
secured his appointment to the cavalry
service, a mark of distinction. He was
gazetted as second lieutenant in the Tenth
Cavalry, and he enjoys the honor of being
the first colored man who has passed by all
the regular channels into an official
station in the army.
"This young officer is a bright mulatto,
tall and soldierly, with a quiet unobtrusive
manner, and the bearing of a gentleman. As
the forerunner of his race in the position
he occupies, he is placed in a delicate and
trying situation, a fact which he realizes.
He remarked that he knew it was one of the
requirements of an officer of the army to be
a gentleman, a man of honor and integrity
under all circumstances, and he hoped to be
equal to his duties in this regard. He goes
on to Fort Concho to join his regiment,
which is likely to have work to do soon, if
there is anything in the signs of the times.
"We bespeak for this young officer the just
consideration to which the difficulties of
his position entitle him."
I was originally ordered to Fort Concho, but
at Houston, Texas I met my lieutenant
colonel, who informed me that My company was
en route to Fort Sill. My orders were then
changed, and I proceeded to Sill.
Here is another article from a paper in the
same place:
The Difference.
"The Age yesterday had a call from Henry O.
Flipper second lieutenant Tenth United
States Cavalry, who is on his way under
orders to join his regiment at Fort Concho.
So far there is nothing very unusual in this
item, but interest will be given to it when
we add that Lieutenant Flipper is the first
colored graduate of West Point. He went to
the institution from Georgia, and graduated
last June, fifty-fifth in a class of
seventy-six. There is a preponderance of
white blood in his veins, and in general
appearance, except for color, he is a
perfect image of Senator Plumb of Kansas. He
reports that since he has struck the South
he has been treated like a gentleman, which
is something different from his experience
in the North. He made the acquaintance of
Senator Maxey at West Point the Senator
himself being a graduate of the Academy and
regards him as a very pleasant gentleman.
During the ten minutes he spent in the Age
editorial rooms several prominent democrats
of the city called to see and shake hands
with him, partly out of curiosity to see the
colored cadet who was so bitterly persecuted
by Northern students at West Point, and
partly to bid him a welcome to the South
such as none of his political party friends
would have thought of giving him in the
North. Before many years he will be, as all
intelligent colored men will be, a
democrat."
Wherever I have traveled in the South it has
been thrown into my face that the Southern
people had, would, and did treat me better
than the Northern people. This is wholly
untrue. It is true that the men generally
speak kindly and treat me with due courtesy,
but never in a single instance has a
Southern man introduced me to his wife or
even invited me to his house. It was done
North in every place I stopped. In many
cases, when invited to visit gentlemen s
residences, they have told me they wanted
their wives to meet me. A distinguished New
York lady, whose name has occurred in print
several times with mine, gave me with her
own hands a handsome floral tribute, just
after receiving my diploma. During five
months stay in the South, after my
graduation, not a single Southern white
woman spoke to me. I mistake. I did buy some
articles from one who kept a book store in a
country town in Georgia. This is the only
exception. This is the way Southern people
treated me better than Northern people. The
white people (men) of Houston, Texas, showed
me every possible courtesy while I was
there. My treatment there was in high and
honorable contrast to that I received in
Atlanta.
Here are two articles that have a few words
to say about me. I adopt and quote them at
length:
(From the New York Tribune.)
| West Point. "The examinations of the boys in the national school have become an object of national interest this year more than any other, simply because there is a stagnation of other news. While the public is waiting for an outbreak from Kars or the new party, it has leisure to look into the condition of these incipient officers. Hence reporters have crowded to West Point, the Board of Visitors and cadets have both been quickened to unwonted zeal by the consciousness of the blaze of notoriety upon them, and the country has read with satisfaction each morning of searching examinations and sweeping cavalry charges, giving a shrug however, at the enthusiastic recommendation of certain members of the board that the number of yearly appointments should be doubled or quadrupled. In this cold ague of economy with which the nation is attacked just now, and which leaves old army officers unpaid for a disagreeably long time, the chances of any addition to the flock in the nest are exceedingly small. In fact, while the average American in war time recognized the utility of a trained band of tacticians, he is apt to grumble at their drain upon his pocket in piping times of peace. Only last year he relieved himself in Congress and elsewhere by a good deal of portentous talking as to the expediency of doing away with the naval and military free schools altogether. He has, in short, pretty much the opinion of the army officer that Hodge has of his parish priest, useful enough for Sundays and funerals, but too consumedly expensive a luxury for week days. "This opinion, no doubt, appears simply ludicrous and vulgar to the gallant young fellows who are being trained for their country s service up the Hudson, and who already look upon themselves as its supports and bulwarks, but there is a substratum of common sense in it which we commend to their consideration, because, if for no other reason, that the average American is the man who pays their bills and to whom they owe their education and future livelihood. If they do not accept his idea of the conduct and motives of action by which they may properly repay him the debt they owe, it certainly is fitting that their own idea should be indisputably a higher one. We begin to doubt whether it is not much lower. The country, in establishing this school, simply proposed to train a band of men skilled to serve it when needed as tacticians, engineers, or disciplinarians; the more these men founded their conduct on the bases of good sense, honor, and republican principles, the better and higher would be their service. The idea of the boys themselves, however, within later years, seems to be that they constitute an aristocratic class (moved by any thing but republican principles) entitled to lay down their own laws of good breeding and honor. Accounts which reach us of their hazing, etc., and notably their treatment of the colored cadets, show that these notions are quite different from those accepted elsewhere. Now such ideas would be natural in pupils of the great French or Austrian military schools, where admission testifies to high rank by birth or to long, patient achievement on the part of the student. But really our boys at West Point must remember that they belong to a nation made up of working and trades men; that they are the sons of just such people; that the colored laborer helps to pay for their support as well as that of the representative of his race who sits beside them. Furthermore, they have done nothing as yet to entitle them to assume authority in such matters. They have recited certain lessons, learned to drill and ride, and to wear their clothes with precision; but something more is needed. The knight of old was skilled in gentleness and fine courtesy to the weak and unfortunate as well as in horsemanship. It was his manners, not his trousers, which were beyond reproach. "It is not as trifling a matter as it seems that these young fellows should thus imbibe mistaken ideas of their own position or the requirements of real manliness and good breeding. The greatest mistakes in the war were in consequence of just such defects in some of our leading officers, and the slaughter of the Indians in the South-West upon two occasions proceeded from their inability to recognize the rights of men of a different color from themselves. Even in trifles, however, such matters follow the rule of inexorable justice as, for instance, in this case of Cadet Flipper, who under ordinary circumstances might have passed without notice, but is now known from one end of the country to the other as a credit to his profession in scholarship, pluck, and real dignity; while his classmates are scarcely mentioned, though higher in rank, except in relation to their cruel and foolish conduct toward him." |
(From the New York World.)
| "West Point, August 29. In my
earnest desire to do justice to the
grand ball last night I neglected to
mention the arrival of the new
colored candidate for admission into
the United States, Military Academy,
although I saw him get off at the
steamboat lauding and was a witness
to the supreme indifference with
which he was treated, save by a few
personal friends. Minnie passed the
physical examination easily, for he
is a healthy mulatto. Whether this
stern Alma Mater will matriculate
him is still a question. It is
really astonishing, and perhaps
alarming, in view of the
enthusiastic endeavors of the
Republican party to confer upon the
colored race all the rights and
privileges of citizens of the United
States, to see with what lofty
contempt every candidate for
academic honors who is in the
slightest degree off color, is
received. As you are aware, there is
at present a colored, or partly
colored, cadet in the Freshman Class
Whittaker by name. This poor young
mulatto is completely ostracized not
only by West Point society, but most
thoroughly by the corps of cadets
itself. Flipper got through all
right, and, strange to say, the
cadets seem to have a certain kind
of respect for him, although he was
the darkest African that has yet
been seen among the West Point
cadets. Flipper had remarkable pluck
and nerve, and was accorded his
parchment well up on the list, too
at last graduation day. He is made
of sterner staff than poor
Whittaker. "A most surprising fact is that not one of the cadets and I think I might safely include the professors tries to dissemble his animosity for the black, mulatto, or octoroon candidate. When I asked a cadet today some questions concerning the treatment of Cadet Whittaker by the corps, he said : Oh, we get along very well, sir. The cadets simply ignore him, and he understands very well that we do not intend to associate with him. This cadet and several others were asked whether Minnie, if admitted, would also be ostracized socially. Their only answer was: Certainly; that is well understood by all. We don t associate with these men, but they have all the rights that we have nevertheless. I asked if he knew whether Whittaker attended the ball last night. The cadet said he didn't see him at the ball, but that he might have been looking on from the front stoop! How does this young man Whittaker usually amuse himself when the rest of the boys are at play? I asked. Well, we don t get much play, and I think that Whittaker has as much as he can do to attend to his studies. He managed to pull through at last examination, but I doubt if he ever graduates, was the reply. Meeting another cadet to whom I had been introduced I asked what he had heard of the prospects of the new colored candidate, Minnie. I haven t heard any thing, but I hope he won t get through, said the cadet. Another cadet who stood near said that the case of Flipper, who graduated so successfully, was an exceptional one. Flipper didn't care for any thing except to graduate, but he was confident that these other colored cadets would fail. So far as I have been able to ascertain, the Faculty have never attempted to prevent the colored cadets from having an equal chance with their white fellows. In fact under the present management it would be next to impossible for them to do so." |
I can t let this article
pass without quoting a few words from a
letter I have from Whittaker, now at West
Point. He says:
"I have been treated bully since I came in
from camp (of summer of 77). Got only one
skin last month (Deccember, 77). I am still
under (tactical officer), and he treats me
bully; he wanted to have a man court
martialled, when we were in camp, for
refusing to close up on me. One day a
corporal put me in the rear rank when there
were plebes in the front rank, and told him
if any such act ever occurred again he would
have him and the file confined to the guard
house. He has never skinned me since you
left. He is O.K. towards me, and the others
are afraid of him. As I am sitting in my
room on third floor, sixth div, a kind of
sadness creeps over me, for I am all alone.
Minnie went home on last Friday. He was
weighed in the math scale and found wanting.
The poor fellow did not study his math and
could not help being found. He was treated
fairly and squarely, but he did not study. I
did all I could to help and encourage him,
but it was all in vain. He did not like (an
instructor) very much, and a carelessness
seized him, which resulted in his dismissal.
I was sorry to see him go away, and he
himself regretted it very much. He saw his
great error only when it was too late. On
the day he left he told me that he did not
really study a math lesson since he entered;
and was then willing to give any thing to
remain and redeem himself. He had a very
simple subject on examination, and when he
came back he told me that he had not seen
the subject for some two or three weeks
before, and he, consequently, did not know
what to put on the board. All he had on it
was wrong, and he could not make his
demonstration."
The World reporter seems to be as ignorant
as some of the others. I was by no means the
"darkest African that has yet been seen
among the West Point cadets." Howard, who
reported in 1870 with Smith, was
unadulterated, as also were Werle and White,
who reported in 1874. There were others who
were also darker than I am: Gibbs and
Napier, as I am informed. I never saw the
last two.
The Brooklyn Eagle is more generous in its
views. It proposes to utilize me. See what
it says:
"Probably Lieutenant Flipper could be made
much more useful than as a target for Indian
bullets, if our government would withdraw
him from the army and place him in some
colored college, where he could teach the
pupils engineering, so that when they reach
Africa they could build bridges, railroads,
etc."
This article was signed by "H. W. B." It is
not difficult to guess who that is.
I have had considerable correspondence with
an army officer, a stranger to me, on this
subject of being detailed at some college.
He is of opinion it would be best for me. I
could not agree with him. After I joined my
company an effort (unknown to me) was made
by the Texas Mechanical and Agricultural
College to have me detailed there. It was
published in the papers that I had been so
detailed. I made some inquiries, learned of
the above statements, and that the effort
had completely failed. Personally I d rather
remain with my company. I have no taste and
no tact for teaching. I would decline any
such appointment.
(From the Thomasville (Ga.) Times.)
"Wm. Flipper, the colored cadet, has
graduated at West Point and been
commissioned as a second lieutenant of
cavalry in the United States Army. He is the
first colored individual who ever held a
commission in the army, and it remains to be
seen how the thing will work. Flipper s
father resides here, and is a first-class
boot and shoe maker. A short time back he
stated that he had no idea his son would be
allowed to graduate, but he will be glad to
know that he was mistaken."
Of course everybody knows my name is not
William.
(From the, Thomasville (Ga.) Enterprise.)
| "Lieutenant Henry O. Flipper of
the United States Army is spending a
few days here with his father s
family, he has been on the streets
very little, spending most of his
time at home. He wears an undress
uniform and deports himself, so far
as we have heard, with perfect
propriety. This we believe he has
done since his graduation, with the
exception of his unnecessary and
uncalled-for criticisms on the
Southern people in his Atlanta
speech. He made a mistake there; one
which his sense and education ought
to teach him not to repeat. Not that
it would affect our people, or that
they care about it, but for his own
good."* *In all the places I visited after graduation I was treated with the utmost respect and courtesy except in Atlanta. The white people, with one exception, didn t notice me at all. All foreigners treated me with all due consideration. One young man, whom I knew many years, who has sold me many an article, and awaited my convenience for his pay, and who met me in New York, and walked and talked with me, hung his head and turned away from me, just as I was about to address him on a street in Atlanta. Again and again have I passed and repassed acquaintances on the streets without any sign of recognition, even when I have addressed them. Whenever I have entered any of their stores for any purpose, they have almost invariably "gotten off" some stuff about attempts on the part of the authorities at West Point to "freeze me out," or about better treatment from Southern boys than from those of the North. That is how they treated me in Atlanta, although I had lived there over fourteen years, and was known by nearly every one in the city. In Thomasville, Southwest, Ga., where I was born, and which I had not seen for eighteen years, I was received and treated by the whites almost as one of themselves. That "undress uniform" was a "cit" suit of blue Cheviot. The people there, like those in Atlanta, don t seem to know a black button from a brass one, or a civilian suit from a military uniform. |
(From the Charleston (S.C.)
News and Courier.)
| The Colored Westpointer. Lieutenant H. O. Flipper, the colored graduate of West Point, was entertained in style at Tully s, King Street, Tuesday night. The hosts were a colored organization called tile Amateur Literary and Fraternal Association, which determined that the lieutenant who will leave this city today to join his regiment, the Tenth Cavalry, now in Texas, should not do so without some evidence of their appreciation of him personally, and of the fact that he had reflected credit on their race by passing through the National Academy. Over forty persons were at the entertainment, to whom the lieutenant was presented by A. J. Ransier, the colored ex-member of Congress. The lieutenant responded briefly, as he has invariably done, and expressed his warm thanks for the courtesy shown by the association. A number of sentiments were offered and speeches made, and the evening passed off very agreeably to all, especially so to the recipient of the hospitality. "Lieutenant Flipper expects to start today for Texas. While he has been in this city he has made friends with whites and blacks by he sensible course he has pursued." |
(From the Charleston (S.C.)
Commercial.)
| Lieutenant Flipper S
Entertainment. "The Amateur Literary and Fraternal Association, of which A. J. Ransier is the President, learning that Lieutenant Flipper, of the United States Cavalry, was preparing to depart to the position assigned him on duty on the plains in Texas, at once determined to give him a reception, and for this purpose the following committee was appointed to arrange the details and programme for an entertainment: J. N. Gregg, W. H. Birny, A. J. Ransier, C. C. Leslie, and George A. Gibson. "The arrangements were made, and the members of the association and invited guests to the number of some forty, of the most respectable colored people of Charleston, met last night at Tully s Hall, King Street, where a bounteous feast was prepared for the occasion. The guest, Lieutenant Flipper, soon arrived, and was introduced to the party, and, in the course of time, all sat down at the table, upon which was spread the most palatable dishes which the king caterer of Charleston could prepare. This was vigorously attacked by all. "Wines were then brought on, and speech making introduced as a set off. A. J. Ransier, in one of his usual pleasant speeches, introduced Lieutenant Flipper, paying him a deserved tribute for his success in the attainment of the first commission issued to a colored graduate of West Point. "Lieutenant Flipper, in a brief and courteous speech, acknowledged the compliment, and thanked the association for the kind attention paid him, promising them that in his future career in the army of his country he would ever strive to maintain a position which would do credit to his race. "W. H. Birney next responded in eloquent terms to the toast, The State of South Carolina. J. N. Gregg was called upon, and responded in a wise and discreet manner to the toast of The Future of the Colored Man in this Country. The Press and Woman were next respectively toasted, and responded to by Ransier and F. A. Carmand. Other speeches were made by C. C. Leslie, J. J. Connor, and others, and at a late hour the party retired, after a most pleasant evening s enjoyment. Lieutenant Flipper leaves for Texas tomorrow." Before closing my narrative I desire to perform a very pleasant duty. I sincerely believe that all my success at West Point is due not so much to my perseverance and general conduct there as to the early moral and mental training I received at the hands of those philanthropic men and women who left their pleasant homes in the North to educate and elevate the black portion of America s citizens, and that, too, to their own discomfort and disadvantage. How they have borne the sneers of the Southern press, the ostracism from society in the South, the dangers of Kuklux in remote counties, to raise up a downtrodden race, not for personal aggrandizement, but for the building up and glory of His kingdom who is no respecter of persons, is surely worthy our deepest gratitude, our heartfelt thanks, and our prayers and blessing. Under the training of a good Christian old lady, too old for the work, but determined to give her mite of instruction, I learned to read and to cipher this in 1866. From her I was placed under control of a younger person, a man. From him I passed to the control of another lady at the famous "Storr s School." I remained under her for two years more or less, when I passed to the control of another lady in what was called a Normal School. From here I went to the Atlanta University, and prepared for the college course, which in due time I took up. This course of training was the foundation of all my after success. The discipline, which I learned to heed, because it was good, has been of incalculable benefit to me. It has restrained and shaped my temper on many an occasion when to have yielded to it would have been ruin. It has regulated my acts when to have committed them as I contemplated would have been base unmanliness. And it has made my conduct in all cases towards others generous, courteous, and Christian, when it might otherwise have been mean, base, and degrading. It taught me to be meek, considerate, and kind, and I have verily been benefited by it. The mind training has been no less useful. Its thoroughness, its completeness, and its variety made me more than prepared to enter on the curriculum of studies prescribed at West Point. A less thorough, complete, or varied training would never have led to the success I achieved. I was not prepared expressly for West Point. This very thoroughness made me competent to enter any college in the land. How my heart looks back and swells with gratitude to these trainers of my youth! My gratitude is deeply felt, but my ability to express it is poor. May Heaven reward them with long years of happiness and usefulness here, and when this life is over, and its battles won, may they enter the bright portals of heaven, and at His feet and from His own hands receive crowns of immortal glory. |
Henry Ossian Flipper, The Colored Cadet at West Point, 1878