AchievementJanuary 1917· politics
Army Forces Colonel Charles Young Into Medical Retirement
The U.S. Army placed Colonel Charles Young, the highest-ranking Black officer, on medical retirement just as the U.S. entered World War I, specifically to prevent him from being promoted to general and commanding white troops. Young, in robust health, rode 500 miles on horseback to prove his fitness but was kept from service. His case became a symbol of the Army's institutionalized racism.