"Discrimination in Administration of Military Justice" report for the Commanding General, 199th Infantry Brigade

Access and use

Location of collection:
2400 Fenwick Library
Special Collections Research Center
Fenwick Library MS2FL
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030
Contact for questions and access:
POC: Mieko Palazzo
Phone: (703) 993-2220
Fax: (703) 993-2669
Restrictions:

There are no access restrictions.

Terms of access:

The copyright and related rights status of this collection have not been evaluated (See http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)

Preferred citation:

"Discrimination in Administration of Military Justice" report for the Commanding General, 199th Infantry Brigade, C0384, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.

Collection context

Summary

Extent:
.01 Linear Feet 1 item
Creator:
Kirkpatrick, Donald P., Captain
Abstract:
Content Warning: Contains racist language. A nine-page report, or "Fact Sheet," for the commanding General of the 199th Infantry Brigade, deployed during the Vietnam War. The sheet provides statistics and information regarding racial bias against Black soldiers in military judicial action within the Brigade between April - September 1968.
Language:
English .
Preferred citation:

"Discrimination in Administration of Military Justice" report for the Commanding General, 199th Infantry Brigade, C0384, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.

Background

Scope and content:

Content Warning: Contains racist language.

A nine-page report, or "Fact Sheet," for the commanding General of the 199th Infantry Brigade, deployed during the Vietnam War. The sheet provides statistics and information regarding racial bias against Black soldiers in military judicial action within the Brigade between April - September 1968. The fact sheet was "Submitted by SJA" and the Project Officer is listed as Cpt Donald P. Kirkpatrick.

According to dealer notes, the Brigadier General was Frederick Ellis Davidson, the third Black general to serve in the U.S. Army.

Biographical / historical:

The Vietnam War, which lasted from 1954 - 1975, was a conflict between the Communist North Vietnam and U.S.-allied South Vietnam. U.S. forces assisted South Vietnam - also known at the Viet Cong - in their effort to fight against North Vietnam. The Vietnam War and its protest indelibly changed the culture of the United States, Vietnam, and the world as a whole. Millions of Vietnamese civilians and soldiers died due to the conflict, and over 58,000 U.S. soldiers died or were lost serving in it. Vietnam re-unified in 1975, ending the war.

The Vietnam War was the first racially integrated U.S. conflict. According to a Time Magazine article, "In 1964, American troops began arriving in Vietnam in large numbers following the Gulf of Tonkin incident, with the new integration policies a source of optimism. But many Black soldiers were immediately faced with discrimination and racism during basic training, which typically took place in the Jim Crow south. 'Although we're talking about an era after the Civil Rights Act, officers and soldiers had deep Southern racist roots,' [Professor Hasan Kwame] Jeffries says. 'The racism was there: it was real and felt between soldiers.' These structures persisted overseas, even if Black and white soldiers had to fight side-by-side." The overwhelming sense among Black soldiers was a resistence to serve the United States, a country that had done little to protect their civil rights and to quash systemic racism.

Acquisition information:
Purchased by Lynn Eaton from Read'Em Again Books (now Paper Americana) in May 2019.
Processing information:

Processing completed by Amanda Brent in August 2022. Finding aid completed by Amanda Brent in August 2022.

Arrangement:

This is a single item collection.

Physical location:
R 72, C 3, S 4
Rules or conventions:
Describing Archives: A Content Standard