Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Buffalo Soldiers Motorcycle Club is at it again!, Clarksville, Tennessee: Clarksville Online, May 13, 2010; Kessel, Tim (June 14, 2012), "The Buffalo Soldiers Motorcycle Club: Positivity Embodied", All About Motorcycles; Fenston, Jacob (May 26, 2013), Military 'Buffalo Soldiers' Ride To Honor Black Veterans, Washington D.C.: WAMU
The Cuyahoga County Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument is a major Civil War monument in Cleveland, Ohio, honoring the more than 9,000 individuals from Cuyahoga County who served the Union throughout the war. [1] It was dedicated on July 4, 1894, and is located on the southeast quadrant of Public Square in Downtown Cleveland. [2]
Mark Matthews (August 7, 1894 – September 6, 2005) was an American soldier. Born in Alabama and growing up in Ohio, Matthews joined the 10th Cavalry Regiment when he was only 15 years old, after having been recruited at a Lexington, Kentucky racetrack and having documents forged so that he appeared to meet the minimum age of 17.
Freewheelers Motorcycle Club [5] Gear Headz MC Akron, Ohio; Gooses Motorcycle Club, in Cleveland, Ohio (patched over in 1967) [82] Grateful Dead Motorcycle Club, in Bridgeport, Connecticut (patched over in 1975) [91] Hackers Motorcycle Club, in Rochester, New York (patched over in 1969) [92] HELLBOUND Motorcycle Club, Ashland, Ohio
On March 25, 2013, under the Antiquities Act, President Barack Obama designated the house as the Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument, a unit of the National Park Service. [1] [8] The house museum has exhibits about Young and the Buffalo Soldiers. A 15-month renovation began in October 2021 to restore the home to its state when ...
The Texas Buffalo Soldiers Association was established in 1991 to preserve and educate young people about the group of African Americans who served in the U.S. Army from the late 1860s to the ...
Robert Walter Dixon (September 11, 1921 – November 15, 2024) was an American World War II veteran who was the last surviving member of the U.S. Army’s all-Black regiment known as the Buffalo Soldiers. [1]
Born into slavery in Louisville, Kentucky in 1842, [a] Allensworth was the youngest of thirteen children of Phyllis (c. 1782 – 1878) and Levi Allensworth. [4] Over the years, their family was scattered: his sister Lila escaped with her intended husband to Canada via the Underground Railroad; and the older boys William, George, Frank, Levi and Major were sold downriver to plantations in the ...