Black Soldiers, Indian Wars, and the Quest for Equality. Dr. Leonard was inspired to write this book when her child asked her if freedmen really joined the army and killed Native Americans. Dr. Leonard wrote this book to understand how that kind of strange, Victorian, racial hypocrisy could happen, and, in the end, it seems like she doesn't want to know, and we readers don't find out either. In a book titled Men of Color to Arms! (!), about soldiers, one would assume some military history, or an overview of which battles were fought and against whom, or what the fighting entailed, or how soldiers felt about the Indian Wars in diaries and letters, or a Native perspective on colored troops, or tribal resistance to territorial incursions, or some maps. Like, maps of where the USCT were in stationed the American West. There are some letters, but they’re not about the Indian Wars; just “Dear Prudence, it continues cold here all week.” Instead, we have:
1. The formation of active colored units during the last years of the Civil War with biographies of too many military men, black and white, who were involved.
2. The fight to keep African-American men in the army after the Civil War and what to do with them
3. Old white captains are racist, even when you're 200 miles from the nearest town
4. Integrating West Point
5. Integrating West Point didn't work and the dawn of Jim Crow
Taken as a book on early civil rights work within the military, this book has some good information, but was hampered by the author's lack of interest in actual military matters, and too much biographical information on every single person she mentions, which was probably the low-hanging fruit of her research. While the author is abhorring racism and genocide in this book, and I agree with her, that's not enough to make Men of Color to Arms! a history worth reading.