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Title: History of the American Negro in the Great World War
His Splendid Record in the Battle Zones of Europe; Including
a Resume of His Past Services to his Country in the Wars
of the Revolution, of 1812, the War of Rebellion, the
Indian Wars on the Frontier, the Spanish-American War, and
the Late Imbroglio With Mexico
Author: W. Allison Sweeney
Release Date: August 26, 2005 [EBook #16598]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE GREAT WORLD WAR
HIS
SPLENDID RECORD IN THE BATTLE ZONES OF EUROPE
INCLUDING A RESUME OF HIS PAST SERVICES TO HIS COUNTRY IN THE WARS OF
THE REVOLUTION, OF 1812, THE WAR OF THE REBELLION, THE INDIAN WARS ON THE
FRONTIER, THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR, AND THE LATE IMBROGLIO WITH
MEXICO.
BY
W. ALLISON SWEENEY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR OF THE CHICAGO
DEFENDER.
PROFUSELY AND BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED
1919
THIS HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE GREAT WORLD WAR IS
REINFORCED BY THE OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE WAR DEPARTMENT INCLUDING TRIBUTES FROM
FRENCH AND AMERICAN COMMANDERS
SPOKEN AND WRITTEN WORDS BY
J.E. MORELAND INTERNATIONAL SECRETARY
Y.M.C.A.
ROBERT SENGSTACKE ABBOTT EDITOR CHICAGO DEFENDER
RALPH
TYLER EX-THIRD AUDITOR THE NAVY
JULIUS ROSENWALD
PHILANTHROPIST
COLONEL CHARLES YOUNG UNITED STATES ARMY
WILLIS O.
TYLER MEMBER LOS ANGELES BAR
CAPT. R.P. ROOTS VETERAN SPANISH-AMERICAN
WAR
* * * * *
WITH A COMPLETE SUMMARY OF THE ACTIVITIES OF THE 370th "OLD EIGHTH" IN THE
WORLD WAR FROM THE COUNTRY'S CALL TO THE DAY OF ITS MUSTERING OUT
BY
CAPT. JOHN H. PATTON, ADJUTANT
HISTORY
OF THE
AMERICAN NEGRO
IN THE
GREAT WORLD
WAR
CONTENTS
Chapter
I. SPIRITUAL EMANCIPATION OF NATIONS.
THE MARCH OF CIVILIZATION—WORLD SHOCKS TO STIR THE WOULD
HEART—FALSE DOCTRINES OF THE HUN—THE IRON HAND CONCEALED—THE WORLD BEGINS TO
AWAKEN—GERMAN DESIGNS REVEALED—RUMBLINGS IN ADVANCE OF THE STORM—TRAGEDY THAT
HASTENED THE DAY—TOLSTOY'S PROPHECY—VINDICATION OF NEGRO FAITH IN PROMISES OF
THE LORD—DAWN OF FREEDOM FOR ALL RACES
Chapter
II. HANDWRITING ON THE WALL.
LIKENED TO BELSHAZZER—THE KAISER'S FEASTS—IN HIS HEART BARBARIC
PRIDE OF THE POTENTATES OF OLD—GERMAN MADNESS FOR WAR—INSOLENT
DEMANDS—FORTY-EIGHT HOURS TO PREVENT A WORLD WAR—COMMENT OF STATESMEN AND
LEADERS—THE WAR STARTS—ITALY BREAKS HER ALLIANCE—GERMANIC POWERS WEIGHED AND
FOUND WANTING—SPIRIT WINS OVER MATERIALISM—CIVILIZATION'S LAMP DIMMED BUT NOT
DARKENED
Chapter
III. MILITARISM AND AUTOCRACY DOOMED.
GERMANY'S MACHINE—HER SCIENTIFIC ENDEAVOR TO MOLD
SOLDIERS—INFLUENCE ON THOUGHT AND LIVES OF THE PEOPLE—MILITARISM IN THE
HOME—THE STATUS OF WOMAN—FALSE THEORIES AND FALSE GODS—THE SYSTEM ORDAINED TO
PERISH—WAR'S SHOCKS—AMERICA INCLINES TO NEUTRALITY—GERMAN AND FRENCH TREATMENT
OF NEUTRALS CONTRASTED—EXPERIENCES OF AMERICANS ABROAD AND ENROUTE HOME—STATUE
OF LIBERTY TAKES ON NEW BEAUTY—BLOOD OF NEGRO AND WHITE TO
FLOW
Chapter
IV. AWAKENING OF AMERICA.
PRESIDENT CLINGS TO NEUTRALITY—MONROE DOCTRINE AND WASHINGTON'S
WARNING—GERMAN CRIMES AND GERMAN VICTORIES—CARDINAL MERCIER'S LETTER—MILITARY
OPERATIONS—FIRST SUBMARINE ACTIVITIES—THE LUSITANIA OUTRAGE—EXCHANGE OF
NOTES—UNITED STATES AROUSED—ROLE OF PASSIVE ONLOOKER BECOMES IRKSOME—FIRST
MODIFICATION OF PRINCIPLES OF WASHINGTON AND MONROE—OUR DESTINY
LOOMS
Chapter
V. HUNS SWEEPING WESTWARD.
TOWARD SHORES OF ATLANTIC—SPREAD RUIN AND DEVASTATION—CAPITALS OF
CIVILIZATION ALARMED—ACTIVITIES OF SPIES—APOLOGIES AND LIES—GERMAN ARMS
WINNING—GAIN TIME TO FORGE NEW WEAPONS—FEW VICTORIES FOR ALLIES—ROUMANIA
CRUSHED—INCIDENT OF U-53
Chapter
VI. THE HOUR AND THE MAN.
A BEACON AMONG THE YEARS—TRYING PERIOD FOR PRESIDENT
WILSON—GERMANY CONTINUES DILATORY TACTICS—PEACE EFFORTS FAIL—ALL HONORABLE
MEANS EXHAUSTED—PATIENCE CEASES TO BE A VIRTUE—ENEMY ABANDONS ALL
SUBTERFUGES—UNRESTRICTED SUBMARINE WARFARE—GERMAN INTRIGUES WITH MEXICO—THE
ZIMMERMAN NOTE—AMERICA SEIZES THE SWORD—WAR IS DECLARED—PERSHING GOES
ABROAD—FIRST TROOPS SAIL—WAR MEASURES—WAR OPERATIONS
Chapter
VII. NEGROES RESPOND TO THE CALL.
SWIFT AND UNHALTING ARRAY—FEW PERMITTED TO VOLUNTEER—ONLY NATIONAL
GUARD ACCEPTED—NO NEW UNITS FORMED—SELECTIVE DRAFT THEIR OPPORTUNITY—PARTIAL
DIVISION OF GUARDSMEN—COMPLETE DIVISION OF SELECTIVES—MANY IN TRAINING—ENTER
MANY BRANCHES OF SERVICE—NEGRO NURSES AUTHORIZED—NEGRO Y.M.C.A. WORKERS—NEGRO
WAR CORRESPONDENT—NEGRO ASSISTANT TO SECRETARY OF WAR—TRAINING CAMP FOR NEGRO
OFFICERS FIRST TIME IN ARTILLERY—COMPLETE RACIAL
SEGREGATION
Chapter
VIII. RECRUDESCENCE OF SOUTH'S INTOLERANCE.
CONFRONTED BY RACIAL PREJUDICE—SPLENDID ATTITUDE OF NEGRO SHAMED
IT—KEPT OUT OF NAVY—ONLY ONE PERCENT OF NAVY PERSONNEL NEGROES—MODIFIED
MARINES CONTEMPLATED—FEW HAVE PETTY OFFICERS' GRADES—SEPARATE SHIPS
PROPOSED—NEGRO EFFICIENCY IN NAVY—MATERIAL FOR "BLACK SHIPS"—NAVY OPENS DOOR
TO NEGRO MECHANICS
Chapter
IX. PREVIOUS WARS IN WHICH NEGRO FIGURED.
SHOT HEARD AROUND THE WORLD—CRISPUS ATTUCKS—SLAVE LEADS SONS OF
FREEDOM—THE BOSTON MASSACRE—ANNIVERSARY KEPT FOR YEARS—WILLIAM NELL,
HISTORIAN—3,000 NEGROES IN WASHINGTON'S FORCES—A STIRRING HISTORY—NEGRO WOMAN
SOLDIER—BORDER INDIAN WARS—NEGRO HEROES
Chapter
X. FROM LEXINGTON TO CARRIZAL.
NEGRO IN WAR OF 1812—INCIDENT OF THE CHESAPEAKE—BATTLE OF LAKE
ERIE—PERRY'S FIGHTERS 10 PERCENT NEGROES—INCIDENT OF THE "GOVERNOR
TOMPKINS"—COLONISTS FORM NEGRO REGIMENTS—DEFENDERS OF NEW ORLEANS—ANDREW
JACKSON'S TRIBUTE—NEGROES IN MEXICAN AND CIVIL WARS—IN THE SPANISH-AMERICAN
WAR—NEGROES IN THE PHILIPPINES—HEROES OF CARRIZAL—GENERAL BUTLER'S TRIBUTE TO
NEGROES—WENDELL PHILLIPS ON TOUSSAINT L'OUVERTURE
Chapter
XI. HOUR OF HIS NATION'S PERIL.
NEGRO'S PATRIOTIC ATTITUDE—SELECTIVE DRAFT IN EFFECT—FEATURES AND
RESULTS—BOLD RELIANCE ON FAITH IN PEOPLE—NO COLOR LINE DRAWN—DISTRIBUTION OF
REGISTRANTS BY STATES—NEGRO AND WHITE REGISTRATIONS COMPARED—NEGRO PERCENTAGES
HIGHER—CLAIMED FEWER EXEMPTIONS—INDUCTIONS BY STATES—BETTER PHYSICALLY THAN
WHITES—TABLES, FACTS AND FIGURES
Chapter
XII. NEGRO SLACKERS AND PACIFISTS UNKNOWN.
SUCH WORDS NOT IN HIS VOCABULARY—DESERTIONS EXPLAINED—GENERAL
CROWDER EXONERATES NEGRO—NO WILLFUL DELINQUENCY—STRENUOUS EFFORTS TO MEET
REGULATIONS—NO "CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS"—NO DRAFT EVADERS OR RESISTERS—NEGRO'S
DEVOTION SUBLIME—JUSTIFIES HIS FREEDOM—FORGETS HIS SORROWS—RISES ABOVE HIS
WRONGS—TESTIMONY OF LOCAL BOARDS—GERMAN PROPAGANDA WASTED—A NEW
AMERICANISM
Chapter
XIII. ROSTER OF NEGRO OFFICERS.
COMMISSIONED AT FORT DES MOINES—ONLY EXCLUSIVE NEGRO TRAINING
CAMP—MOSTLY FROM CIVILIAN LIFE—NAMES, RANK AND RESIDENCE
Chapter
XIV. ACROSS DIVIDING SEAS.
BLACK THOUSANDS ASSEMBLE—SOLDIERS OF LIBERTY—SEVERING HOME
TIES—MAN'S WORK MUST BE DONE—FIRST NEGROES IN FRANCE—MEETING WITH FRENCH
COLONIALS—EARLY HISTORY OF 15TH NEW YORK—THEY SAIL AWAY—BECOME FRENCH FIGHTING
MEN—HOLD 20 PERCENT OF AMERICAN LINES—TERROR TO GERMANS—ONLY BARRIER BETWEEN
BOCHE AND PARIS—IMPERISHABLE RECORD OF NEW YORKERS—TURNING POINT OF
WAR
Chapter
XV. OVER THERE.
HENRY JOHNSON AND NEEDHAM ROBERTS—THE TIGER'S CUBS—NEGRO FIRST TO
GET PALM—JOHNSON'S GRAPHIC STORY—SMASHES THE GERMANS—IRVIN COBB'S
TRIBUTE—CHRISTIAN AND MOHAMMEDAN NEGROES PALS—VALOR OF 93RD DIVISION—LAUGHTER
IN FACE OF DEATH—NEGRO AND POILU HAPPY TOGETHER—BUTTE DE MESNIL—VALIANT AND
HUMOROUS ELMER MCCOWIN—WINNING WAR CROSSES—VERDICT OF THE FRENCH—THE NEGRO'S
FAITH
Chapter
XVI. THROUGH HELL AND SUFFERING.
COLORED OFFICERS MAKE GOOD—WONDERFUL RECORD OF THE 8TH
ILLINOIS—"BLACK DEVILS" WIN DECORATIONS GALORE—TRIBUTE OF FRENCH COMMANDER—HIS
FAREWELL TO PRAIRIE FIGHTERS—THEY FOUGHT AFTER WAR WAS OVER—HARD TO STOP
THEM—INDIVIDUAL DEEDS OF HEROISM—THEIR DEAD, THEIR WOUNDED AND SUFFERING—A
POEM
Chapter
XVII. NARRATIVE OF AN OFFICER.
SPECIAL ARTICLE BY CAPTAIN JOHN H. PATTON, ADJUTANT OF 8TH
ILLINOIS—SUMMARIZES OPERATIONS OF THE REGIMENT—FROM FIRST CALL TO MUSTERING
OUT—AN EYE-WITNESS ACCOUNT—IN TRAINING CAMPS, AT SEA, IN FRANCE—SERVICE IN
ARGONNE FOREST—MANY OTHER ENGAGEMENTS—A THRILLING RECORD—BATTALION OPERATIONS
IN DETAIL—SPECIAL MENTION OF COMPANIES AND INDIVIDUALS
Chapter
XVIII. BLOOD OF BLACK AND WHITE IN ONE RIVULET.
LINCOLN'S PROPHETIC WORDS—NEGROES ALONGSIDE BEST SOLDIERS IN THE
WORLD—HOLD THEIR OWN—THE 372ND REGIMENT—BRIGADED WITH VETERANS OF THE
MARNE—FAMOUS "RED HAND" DIVISION—OCCUPY HILL 304 AT VERDUN—NINE DAYS BATTLE IN
"BLOODY ARGONNE"—ADMIRATION OF THE FRENCH—CONSPICUOUS COMPONENTS OF
372ND—CHRONOLOGY OF SERVICE
Chapter
XIX. COMRADES ON THE MARCH—BROTHERS IN THE SLEEP OF DEATH.
POLICY OF SUBSTITUTING WHITE OFFICERS—INJUSTICE TO CAPABLE
NEGROES—DISAPPOINTMENT BUT NO OPEN RESENTMENT—SHOWED THEMSELVES
SOLDIERS—INTENSER FIGHTING SPIRIT AROUSED—RACE FORGOTTEN IN PERILS OF WAR—BOTH
WHITES AND BLACKS GENEROUS—AFFECTION BETWEEN OFFICERS AND MEN—NEGROES
PREFERRED DEATH TO CAPTIVITY—OUTSTANDING HEROES OF 371ST AND 372ND—WINNERS OF
CROSSES
Chapter
XX. MID SHOT AND SHELL.
IN TRENCH AND VALLEY—THE OPEN PLAIN—ON MOUNTAIN TOP—IN NO MAN'S
LAND—TWO CLASSES OF NEGRO SOLDIERS CONSIDERED—TRAINED GUARDSMEN AND
SELECTIVES—GALLANT 92ND DIVISION—RACE CAN BE PROUD OF IT—HAD SIX HUNDRED NEGRO
OFFICERS—SETS AT REST ALL DOUBTS—OPERATIONS OF THE DIVISION—AT PONT A
MOUSSON—GREAT BATTLE OF METZ—SOME REFLECTIONS—CASUALTIES
CONSIDERED
Chapter
XXI. THE LONG, LONG TRAIL.
OPERATIONS OF 368TH INFANTRY—NEGROES FROM PENNSYLVANIA, MARYLAND
AND SOUTH—IN ARGONNE HELL—DEFEAT IRON CROSS VETERANS—VALIANT PERSONAL
EXPLOITS—LIEUTENANT ROBERT CAMPBELL—PRIVATE JOHN BAKER—OPERATIONS OF 367TH
INFANTRY—"MOSS'S BUFFALOES"—365TH AND 366TH REGIMENTS—THE GREAT DIVIDE—THEIR
SOULS ARE MARCHING ON—PRAISED BY PERSHING—SOME CITATIONS
Chapter
XXII. GLORY THAT WONT COME OFF.
167TH FIRST NEGRO ARTILLERY BRIGADE—"LIKE VETERANS" SAID
PERSHING—FIRST ARTILLERY TO BE MOTORIZED—RECORD BY DATES—SELECTED FOR LORRAINE
CAMPAIGN—BEST EDUCATED NEGROES IN AMERICAN FORCES—ALWAYS STOOD BY THEIR
GUNS—CHAPLAIN'S ESTIMATE—LEFT SPLENDID IMPRESSION—TESTIMONY OF FRENCH
MAYORS—CHRISTIAN BEHAVIOR—SOLDIERLY QUALITIES
Chapter
XXIII. NOR STORIED URN, NOR MOUNTING SHAFT.
GLORY NOT ALL SPECTACULAR—BRAVE FORCES BEHIND THE LINES—325TH
FIELD SIGNAL BATTALION—COMPOSED OF YOUNG NEGROES—SEE REAL FIGHTING—SUFFER
CASUALTIES—AN EXCITING INCIDENT—COLORED SIGNAL BATTALION A SUCCESS—RALPH
TYLER'S STORIES—BURIAL OF NEGRO SOLDIER AT SEA—MORE INCIDENTS OF NEGRO VALOR—A
WORD FROM CHARLES M. SCHWAB
Chapter
XXIV. THOSE WHO NEVER WILL RETURN.
A STUDY OF WAR—ITS COMPENSATIONS AND BENEFITS—ITS RAVAGES AND
DEBASEMENTS—BURDENS FALL UPON THE WEAK—TOLL OF DISEASE—NEGROES SINGULARLY
HEALTHY—NEGROES KILLED IN BATTLE—DEATHS FROM WOUNDS AND OTHER
CAUSES—REMARKABLE PHYSICAL STAMINA OF RACE—HOUSEKEEPING IN KHAKI—HEALTHIEST
WAR IN HISTORY—INCREASED REGARD FOR MOTHERS—AN IDEAL FOR CHILD MINDS—MORALE
AND PROPAGANDA
Chapter
XXV. QUIET HEROES OF THE BRAWNY ARM.
NEGRO STEVEDORE, PIONEER AND LABOR UNITS—SWUNG THE AXE AND TURNED
THE WHEEL—THEY WERE INDISPENSABLE—EVERYWHERE IN FRANCE—HEWERS OF WOOD, DRAWERS
OF WATER—NUMBERS AND DESIGNATIONS OF UNITS—ACQUIRED SPLENDID
REPUTATION—CONTESTS AND AWARDS—PRIDE IN THEIR SERVICE—MEASURED UP TO MILITARY
STANDARDS—LESTER WALTON'S APPRECIATION—ELLA WHEELER WILCOX'S POETIC
TRIBUTE
Chapter
XXVI. UNSELFISH WORKERS IN THE VINEYARD.
MITIGATED THE HORRORS OF WAR—AT THE FRONT, BEHIND THE LINES, AT
HOME—CIRCLE FOR NEGRO WAR RELIEF—ADDRESSED AND PRAISED BY ROOSEVELT—A NOTABLE
GATHERING—COLORED Y.M.C.A. WORK—UNSULLIED RECORD OF ACHIEVEMENT—HOW THE "Y"
CONDUCTED BUSINESS—SECRETARIES ALL SPECIALISTS—NEGRO WOMEN IN "Y" WORK—VALOR
OF A NON-COMBATANT
Chapter
XXVII. NEGRO IN ARMY PERSONNEL.
HIS MECHANICAL ABILITY REQUIRED—SKILLED AT SPECIAL TRADES—VICTORY
DEPENDS UPON TECHNICAL WORKERS—VAST RANGE OF OCCUPATION—NEGRO MAKES GOOD
SHOWING—PERCENTAGES OF WHITE AND COLORED—FIGURES FOR GENERAL
SERVICE
Chapter
XXVIII. THE KNOCKOUT BLOW.
WOODROW WILSON, AN ESTIMATE—HIS PLACE IN HISTORY—LAST OF GREAT
TRIO—WASHINGTON, LINCOLN, WILSON—UPHOLDS DECENCY, HUMANITY,
LIBERTY—RECAPITULATION OF YEAR 1918—CLOSING INCIDENTS OF
WAR
Chapter
XXIX. HOMECOMING HEROES.
NEW YORK GREETS HER OWN—ECSTATIC DAY FOR OLD 15TH—WHITES AND
BLACKS DO HONORS—A MONSTER DEMONSTRATION—MANY DIGNITARIES REVIEW TROOPS—PARADE
OF MARTIAL POMP—CHEERS, MUSIC, FLOWERS AND FEASTING—"HAYWARD'S SCRAPPING
BABIES"—OFFICERS SHARE GLORY—THEN CAME HENRY JOHNSON—SIMILAR SCENES
ELSEWHERE
Chapter
XXX. RECONSTRUCTION AND THE NEGRO.
BY JULIUS ROSENWALD, PRESIDENT SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO, AND
TRUSTEE OF TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE—A PLEA FOR INDUSTRIAL OPPORTUNITY FOR THE
NEGRO—TRIBUTE TO NEGRO AS SOLDIER AND CIVILIAN—DUTY OF WHITES POINTED
OUT—BUSINESS LEADER AND PHILANTHROPIST SOUNDS KEYNOTE
Chapter
XXXI. THE OTHER FELLOW'S BURDEN.
AN EMANCIPATION DAY APPEAL FOR JUSTICE—BY W. ALLISON
SWEENEY
Chapter
XXXII. AN INTERPOLATION.
HELD—
BY DISTINGUISHED THINKERS AND WRITERS, THAT THE NEGRO
SOLDIER SHOULD BE GIVEN A CHANCE FOR PROMOTION AS WELL AS A CHANCE TO DIE.
WHY—
WHITE OFFICERS OVER NEGRO SOLDIERS?
Chapter
XXXIII. THE NEW NEGRO AND THE NEW AMERICA.
THE OLD ORDER
CHANGETH, YIELDING PLACE TO NEW.
THROUGH THE
ARBITRAMENT OF WAR, BEHOLD A NEW AND BETTER AMERICA!
A NEW AND GIRDED
NEGRO!
"THE WATCHES
OF THE NIGHT HAVE PASSED!"
"THE WATCHES
OF
THE DAY BEGIN!"
FOREWORD
He was a red headed messenger boy and he handed me a letter in a NILE GREEN
ENVELOPE, and this is what I read:
Dear Mr. Sweeney:
When on the
25th of March the last instalment of the MSS of the "History of the American
Negro in the Great World War" was returned to us from your hands, bearing the
stamp of your approval as to its historic accuracy; the wisdom and fairness of
the reflections and recommendations of the corps of compilers placed at your
service, giving you full authority to review the result of their labors, your
obligation to the publishers ceased.
The transaction between us, a purely
business one, had in every particular upon your part been complied with. From
thenceforward, as far as you were obligated to the publishers, this History;
what it is; what it stands for; how it will be rated by the reading
masses—should be, and concretely, by your own people you so worthily represent
and are today their most fearless and eloquent champion, is, as far as any
obligation you may have been under to us, not required of you to
say.
Nevertheless, regardless of past business relations now at an end,
have you not an opinion directly of the finished work? A word to say; the growth
of which you have marked from its first instalment to its last?
-The
Publishers-
* * * * *
HAVE I—
A word to say? And of this fine book?
THE BEST HISTORY
OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE GREAT WORLD WAR, THAT AS YET HAS BEEN WRITTEN OR
WILL BE FOR YEARS TO COME?
* * * * *
DOES—
The rose in bud respond to the wooing breath of the mornings of
June?
IS—
The whistle of robin red breast clearer and more
exultant, as its watchful gaze, bearing in its inscrutable depths the mystery of
all the centuries; the Omniscience of DIVINITY, discovers a cherry tree bending
to—
"The green grass"
from the weight of its blood red fruit?
* * * * *
DOES—
The nightingale respond to its mate; caroling its amatory
challenge from afar; across brake and dale and glen; beyond a
"Dim old
forest" the earth bathed in the silver light of the harvest moon!
* * * * *
EVEN SO—
And for the same reason which the wisest of us cannot
explain, that the rose, the robin and nightingale respond to the lure that
invites, the zephyrs that caress, I find myself moved to say not only a word—a
few, but many, of praise and commendation of this book; the finished work, so
graciously and so quickly submitted for my inspection by the
publishers.
THERE ARE—
Books and books; histories and histories,
treatise after treatise; covering every realm of speculative investigation;
every field of fact and fancy; of inspiration and deed, past and present, that
in this 20th century of haste and bustle, of miraculous mechanical equipment,
are born daily and die as quickly. But there are also books, that like some men
marked before their birth for a place amongst the "Seats of the MIGHTY"; an
association with the IMMORTALS, that
"Were not born to die."
This book seems of that glorious
company.
* * * * *
IN THE—
Spiritualized humanity that broadened the vision and inspired
the pens of the devoted corps of writers, responding to my suggestions and
oversight in its preparation; the getting together of data and facts, is
reflected the incoming of a NEW AND BROADER CHARITY—a stranger in our midst—of
glimpse and measurement of the Negro. Beyond the written word of the text, the
reader is gripped with a certain FELT but unprinted power of suggestion, a sense
of the nation's crime against him; the Negro, stretching back through the
centuries; the shame and humiliation that is at last overtaking it, that has not
been born of the "Print Shops" since the sainted LINCOLN went his way, leaving
behind him a trail of glory, shining like the sun; in the path of which, freed
through the mandate of his great soul, MARCHED FOUR MILLION NEGROES, now swollen
to twelve, their story, the saddest epic of the ages, of whom and in behalf of
whom their children; the generation now and those to come, this History was
collated and arranged. It is an EVANGEL proclaiming to the world, their
unsullied patriotism; their rapid fire loyalty, that through all the years of
the nation's life, has never flickered—
"Has burned and burned
Forever the same",
from Lexington to the cactus groves of Mexico; in the
slaughter hells of Europe; over fields and upon spots where, in the centuries
gone, the legions of Caesar, of Hannibal and Attila, of Charlemagne and Napoleon
had fought and bled, and perished! Striding "Breast forward" beneath the Stars
and Stripes as this History crowds them on your gaze, through the dust of
empires and kingdoms that; before the CHRIST walked the earth; before
Christianity had its birth, wielded the sceptres of power when civilization was
young, but which are now but vanishing traditions.
You are thrilled!
History nor story affords no picture more inspiring.
MAKING DUE
ALLOWANCE—
For its nearness to the living and dead, whose heroic and
transcendant achievements on the battle spots of the great war secured for them
a distinction and fame that will endure until—
"The records of valor decay",
it is a most notable
publication, quite worthy to be draped in the robes that distinguishes History
from narrative; from "a tale that is told"; a story for the entertainment of the
moment.
AS INTERPOLATED—
By the writers of its text; read between
the lines of their written words; it is a History; not alone of the American
Negro on the "tented field"; the bloody trenches of France and Belgium, it is
also a History and an arraignment, a warning and a prophecy, looking backwards
and forward, the Negro being the objective focus, of many things.
IT
PRESENTS—
For the readers retrospection, as vividly as painted on a
canvas, a phantasmagoric procession of past events, and of those to come in the
travail of the Negro; commencing with the sailing of the first "Slaver's Ship"
for the shores of the "New World", jammed fore and aft, from deck to hold, with
its cargo of human beings, to the conclusion of the great war in which,
individually and in units he wrote his name in imperishable characters, and high
on the scroll on which are inscribed the story of those, who, in their lives
wrought for RIGHT and, passing, died for MEN! For a flag; beneath and within its
folds his welcome has been measured and parsimonious;—a country; the construing
and application of its laws and remedies as applied to him, has inflicted
intolerable INJUSTICE: Has persecuted more often than blessed. And so and thus,
its perusal finished, its pages closed and laid aside, you are shaken and swayed
in your feelings, even as a tree, bent and riven before the march and sweep of a
mighty hurricane.
* * * * *
LOOKING BACKWARDS—
The spell of the book strong upon you, you see in
your mind's eye, thousands of plantations covering a fourth of a continent of a
new and virgin land. The toilers "Black Folk"; men, women and
children—SLAVES!
* * * * *
YOU HEAR—
The crack of the "driver's" lash; the sullen bay of pursuing
hounds.
* * * * *
JUST OVER YONDER—
Is the "Auction Block". You hear the moans and
screams of mothers torn from their offspring. You see them driven away, herded
like cattle, chained like convicts, sold to "master's" in the "low lands", to
toil—
"Midst the cotton and the cane."
YOU
LISTEN—
Sounding far off, faint at first, growing louder each second, you
hear the beat of drums; the bugle's blast, sounding to arms; You see great
armies, moving hitherward and thitherward. Over one flies the Stars and Stripes,
over the other the Stars and Bars; a nation in arms! Brother against brother!
* * * * *
YOU LOOK—
And lo, swinging past are many Black men; garbed in "Blue",
keeping step to the music of the Union. You see them fall and die, at Fort
Pillow, Fort Wagner, Petersburg, the Wilderness, Honey Hill—SLAUGHTERED! Above
the din; the boom of cannon, the rattle of small arms, the groans of the wounded
and dying, you hear the shout of one, as shattered and maimed he is being borne
from the field; "BOYS, THE OLD FLAG NEVER TOUCHED THE GROUND!"
* * * * *
THE SCENE SHIFTS—
Fifty years have passed. You hear the clamor, the
murmur and shouts of gathering mobs. You see Black men and women hanging by
their necks to lamp posts, from the limbs of trees; in lonely spots—DEAD! You
see smoke curling upwards from BURNING HOMES! There are piles of cinders
and—DEAD MENS BONES!
* * * * *
NEARING ITS END—
The procession sweeps on. Staring you in the face;
hailing from East, West, North and South are banners; held aloft by unseen
hands, bearing on them—the quintessence of AMERICA'S INGRATITUDE,—these
devices:
"For American Negroes:
JIM CROW steam and trolley cars;
JIM
CROW resident districts;
JIM CROW amen corners;
JIM CROW seats in
theatres;
JIM CROW corners in cemeteries."
* * * * *
HEREIN—
Lies the strength and worth of this unusual book, well and
deservingly named: A History of the American Negro in the Great World War.
Beyond merely recounting that story; than which there has been nothing finer or
more inspiring since the long away centuries when the chivalry of the Middle
Ages, in nodding plume and lance in rest, battled for the Holy Sepulchre, it
brings to the Negro of America a message of cheer and reassurance. A sign,
couched in flaming characters for all men to see, appealing to the spiritualized
divination of the age, proclaiming that God is NOT DEAD! That a NEW day is
dawning; HAS dawned for the Negro in America. A NEW liberty; broader and BETTER.
A NEW Justice, unshaded by the spectre of: "Previous condition!" That the unpaid
toil of thirty decades of African slavery in America is at last to be
liquidated. That the dead of our people, upon behalf of this land that it might
have a BIRTH, and having it might not PERISH FROM THE EARTH, did not die in
vain. That, in their passage from earth, heroes—MARTYRS—in a superlative sense
they were seen and marked of the Father; were accorded a place of record in the
pages of the great WHITE BOOK with golden seals, in the up worlds; above the
stars and beyond the flaming suns.
IT IS A HISTORY—
That will be
read with instruction and benefit by thousands of whites, but, and mark well
this suggestion, it is one that should be OWNED AND BEAD BY EVERY NEGRO IN THE
LAND.
* * * * *
TYPOGRAPHICALLY—
Mechanically; that is to say, in those features that
reflect the finished artistic achievement of the Print, Picture and Binding art;
as seen in the bold clear type of its text, its striking and beautiful
illustrations, its illuminating title heads of division and chapter; indicating
at a glance the information to follow; the whole appealing to the aesthetic; the
sticklers for the rare and beautiful; not overlooking its superb binding, it is
most pleasing to the sight, and worthy of the title it bears.
HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN NEGRO IN THE GREAT WORLD WAR
CHAPTER I.
SPIRITUAL EMANCIPATION OF NATIONS.
THE MARCH OF CIVILIZATION—WORLD SHOCKS TO STIR THE WORLD HEART—FALSE
DOCTRINES OF THE HUN—THE IRON HAND CONCEALED—THE WORLD BEGINS TO AWAKEN—GERMAN
DESIGNS REVEALED—RUMBLINGS IN ADVANCE OF THE STORM—TRAGEDY THAT HASTENED THE
DAY—TOLSTOY'S PROPHECY—VINDICATION OF NEGRO FAITH IN PROMISES OF THE LORD—DAWN
OF FREEDOM FOR ALL RACES.
The march of civilization is attended by
strange influences. Providence which directs the advancement of mankind, moves
in such mysterious ways that none can sense its design or reason out its import.
Frequently the forces of evil are turned to account in defeating their own
objects. Great tragedies, cruel wars, cataclysms of woe, have acted as
enlightening and refining agents. Out of the famines of the past came
experiences which inculcated the thrift and fore-handedness of today.
Out
of man's sufferings have come knowledge and fortitude. Out of pain and
tribulation, the attribute of sympathy—the first spiritual manifestation
instrumental in elevating the human above the beast. Things worth while are
never obtained without payment of some kind.
Individual shocks stir the
individual heart and conscience. Great world shocks are necessary to stir the
world conscience and heart; to start those movements to right the wrongs in the
world. So long as peace reigned commerce was uninterrupted, and the acquisition
of wealth was not obstructed, men cared little for the intrigues and ambitions
of royalty. If they sensed them at all, they lulled themselves into a feeling of
security through the belief that progress had attained too far, civilization had
secured too strong a hold, and democracy was too firmly rooted for any ordinary
menace to be considered.
So insidious and far reaching had become the
inculcation of false philosophies summed up in the general term Kultur, that the
subjects of the autocratic-ridden empires believed they were being guided by
benign influences. Many enlightened men; at least it seems they must have been
enlightened, in Germany and Austria—men who possessed liberated intellects and
were not in the pay of the Kulturists—professed to believe that despotism in the
modern world could not be other than benevolent.
The satanic hand was
concealed in the soft glove; the cloven hoof artistically fitted into the
military boot; the tail carefully tucked inside the uniform or dress suit;
fiendish eyes were taught to smile and gleam in sympathy and humor, or were
masked behind the heavy lenses of professorial dignity; the serpent's hiss was
trained to song, or drowned in crashing chords and given to the world as a
sublime harmony.
Suddenly the world awoke! The wooing harmony had changed
to a blast of war; the conductor's baton had become a bayonet; the soft wind
instrument barked the rifle's tone; its notes were bullets that hissed and
screamed; tinkling cymbals sounded the wild blare of carnage, and sweet-throated
horns of silver and brass bellowed the cannon's deadly roar.
Civilization
was so shocked that for long the exact sequence of events was not comprehended.
It required time and reflection to clear away the brain benumbing vapors of the
dream; to reach a realization that liberty actually was tottering on her throne.
German propagandists had been so well organized, and so effectively did they
spread their poison; especially in the western world that great men; national
leaders were deceived, while men in general were slow to get the true
perspective; much later than those at the seat of government.
A few
far-seeing men had been alive to the German menace. Some English statesmen felt
it in a vague way, while in France where the experience of 1870-71, had produced
a wariness of all things German, a limited number of men with penetrating,
broadened vision, had beheld the fair exterior of Kaiserism, even while they
recognized in the background, the slimy abode of the serpent. For years they had
sounded the warning until at last their feeble voices attracted
attention.
France, with her traditions of Napoleon, Moreau, Ney, Berthier
and others, with rare skill set about the work of perfecting an army under the
tutelage and direction of Joffre and Foch. The defense maintained by its army in
the earlier part of the struggle provided the breathing space required by the
other allies. All through the struggle the staying power of the French provided
example and created the necessary morale for the co-operating Allied forces,
until our own gallant soldiers could be mustered and sent abroad for the
knockout blow.
As is usual where conspiracies to perform dark deeds are
hatched a clew or record is left behind. In spite of Germany's protestations of
innocence, her loud cries that the war was forced upon her, there is ample
evidence that for years she had been planning it; that she wanted it and only
awaited the opportune time to launch it. It was a gradual unearthing and
examination of this evidence that at length revealed to the world the astounding
plot.
It is not necessary to touch more than briefly the evidence of
Germany's designs, and the intrigues through which she sought world domination
and the throttling of human liberty. The facts are now too well established to
need further confirmation. The ruthless manner in which the Kaiser's forces
prosecuted the war, abandoning all pretense of civilization and relapsing into
the most utter barbarism, is enough to convince anyone of her definite and well
prepared program, which she was determined to execute by every foul means under
the sun.
She had skillfully been laying her lines and building her
military machine for more than forty years. As the time approached for the blow
she intended to strike, she found it difficult to conceal her purposes. Noises
from the armed camp—bayings of the dogs of war—occasionally stirred the sleeping
world; an awakening almost occurred over what is known as the Morocco
incident.
On account of the weakness of the Moroccan government,
intervention by foreign powers had been frequent. Because of the heavy
investment of French capital and because the prevailing anarchy in Morocco
threatened her interests in Algeria, France came to be regarded as having
special interests in Morocco. In 1904 she gained the assent of Britain and the
cooperation of Spain in her policy. Germany made no protest; in fact, the German
Chancellor, von Bulow, declared that Germany was not specially concerned with
Moroccan affairs. But in 1905 Germany demanded a reconsideration of the entire
question.
France was forced against the will of her minister of foreign
affairs, Delcasse, to attend a conference at Algeciras. That conference
discussed placing Morocco under international control, but because France was
the only power capable of dealing with the anarchy in the country, she was left
in charge, subject to certain Spanish rights, and allowed to continue her work.
The Germans again declared that they had no political interests in
Morocco.
In 1909, Germany openly recognized the political interests of
France in Morocco. In 1911 France was compelled by disorders in the country to
penetrate farther into the interior. Germany under the pretext that her
merchants were not getting fair treatment in Morocco, reopened the entire
question and sent her gunboat Panther, to Agadir on the west coast of Africa, as
if to establish a port there, although she had no interests in that part of the
country. France protested vigorously and Britain supported her.
Matters
came very close to war. But Germany was not yet ready to force the issue. Her
action had been simply a pretext to find out the extent to which England and
France were ready to make common cause. She recalled her gunboat and as a
concession to obtain peace, was permitted to acquire some territory in the
French Congo country. But German newspapers and German political utterances
showed much bitterness. Growling and snarling grew apace in Germany, and to
those who made a close study of the situation it became evident that Germany
sooner or later intended to launch a war.
One of the characteristic
German utterances of the time, came from Albrect Wirth, a German political
writer of standing, in close touch with the thought and aims of his nation. The
utterance about to be quoted may, in the light of later events, appear
indiscreet, as Germany wished to avoid an appearance of responsibility for the
world war; but the minds of the German people had to be prepared and this could
not be accomplished without some of the writers and public men letting the cat
out of the bag. Wirth said:
"Morocco is easily worth a big war, or
several. At best—and even prudent Germany is getting to be convinced of this—war
is only postponed and not abandoned. Is such a postponement to our advantage?
They say we must wait for a better moment. Wait for the deepening of the Kiel
canal, for our navy laws to take full effect. It is not exactly diplomatic to
announce publicly to one's adversaries, 'To go to war now does not tempt us, but
three years hence we shall let loose a world war'—No; if a war is really
planned, not a word of it must be spoken; one's designs must be enveloped in
profound mystery; then brusquely, all of a sudden, jump on the enemy like a
robber in the darkness." The heavy footed German had difficulty in moving with
the stealth of a robber, but the policy here recommended was followed.
In
1914, the three years indicated by Wirth had expired. There began to occur dark
comings and goings; mysterious meetings and conferences on the continent of
Europe. The German emperor, accompanied by the princes and leaders of the German
states, began to cruise the border and northern seas of the Fatherland, where
they would be safe from listening ears, prying eyes, newspapers, telephones and
telegraphs. It became known that the Kaiser was cultivating the weak-minded
Russian czar in an attempt to win his country from its alliance with England and
France. There were no open rumblings of war, but the air was charged with
electricity like that preceeding a storm.
An unaccountable business
depression affected pretty much the entire world. Money, that most sensitive of
all things, began to show nervousness and a tendency to go into hiding. The bulk
of the world was still asleep to the real meaning of events, but it had begun to
stir in its dreams, as if some prescience, some premonition had begun to reach
it even in its slumbers.
Finally the first big event occurred—the tragedy
that was not intended to accomplish as much, but which hastened the dawn of the
day in which began the Spiritual Emancipation of the governments of earth. The
Archduke Francis Ferdinand, nephew of the emperor of Austria, heir to the throne
of Austria-Hungary and commander in chief of its army, and his wife the duchess
of Hohenburg, were assassinated June 28, 1914, by a Serbian student, Gavrio
Prinzip. The assassination occurred at Sarajevo in Bosnia, a dependency, or
rather, a Slavic state that had been seized by Austria. It was the lightning
flash that preceeded the thunder's mighty crash.
Much has been written of
the causes which led to the tragedy. Prinzip may have been a fanatic, but he was
undoubtedly aided in his act by a number of others. The natural inference
immediately formed was that the murder was the outcome of years of ill feeling
between Serbia and Austria-Hungary, due to the belief of the people in the
smaller state, that their aspirations as a nation were hampered and blocked by
the German element in the Austrian empire. The countries had been on the verge
of war several years before over the seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina by
Austria, and later over the disposition of Scutari and certain Albanian
territory conquered in the Balkan-Turkish struggle.
Events are coming to
light which may place a new construction on the causes leading to the
assassination at Sarajevo. It was undoubtedly the pretext sought by Germany for
starting the great war. Whether it may not have been carefully planned to serve
that object and the Serbian Prinzip, employed as a tool to bring it about, is
not so certain.
Several years prior to the war, the celebrated Russian,
Tolstoy, gave utterance to a remarkable prophecy. Tolstoy was a mystic, and it
was not unusual for him to go into a semi-trance state in which he professed to
peer far into the future and obtain visions of things beyond the ken of average
men. The Russian czar was superstitious and it is said that the German emperor
had a strong leaning towards the mystic and psychic. In fact, it has been stated
that the Kaiser's claim to a partnership with The Almighty was the result of
delusions formed in his consultations with mediums—the modern descendants of the
soothsayers of olden times.
Tolstoy stated that both the Czar and the
Kaiser desired to consult with him and test his powers of divination. The three
had a memorable sitting. Some time afterwards the results were given to the
world. Tolstoy predicted the great war, and he stated his belief that the torch
which would start the conflagration would be lighted in the Balkans about
1913.
Tolstoy was not a friend of either Russian or German autocracy,
hence his seance may have been but a clever ruse to discover what was in the
minds of the two rulers. Germany probably was not ready to start the war in
1913, but there is abundant warrant for the belief that she was trimming the
torch at that time, and, who knows, the deluded Prinzip may have been the
torch.
The old dotard Francis Joseph who occupied the throne of
Austria-Hungary, was completely under the domination of the Germans. He could be
relied upon to further any designs which the Kaiser and the German war lords
might have.
The younger man, Francis Ferdinand, was not so easy to handle
as his aged uncle. Accounts agree that he was arrogant, ambitious and had a will
of his own. He was unpopular in his country and probably unpopular with the
Germans. Being of the disposition he was, it is very likely that the Kaiser
found it difficult to bend him completely to his will. Being a stumbling block
in the way of German aims, is it not reasonably probable that Germany desired to
get rid of him, thus leaving Austria-Hungary completely in the power of its tool
and puppet, Francis Joseph, and in the event of his death, in the power of the
young and suppliant Karl; another instrument easily bent to the German
will?
The wife of the archduke, assassinated with him, was a Bohemian,
her maiden name being Sophie Chotek. She was not of noble blood as Bohemia had
no nobles. They had been driven out of the country centuries before and their
titles and estates conferred on indigent Spanish and Austrian adventurers. Not
being of noble birth, she was but the morgantic wife of the Austrian heir.
Titles were afterwards conferred upon her. She was made a countess and then a
duchess. Some say she had been an actress; not unlikely, for actresses possessed
an especial appeal to Austrian royalty. The cruel Hapsburgs rendered dull witted
and inefficient by generations of inbreeding, were fascinated by the bright and
handsome women of the stage. At any rate, Sophie Chotek belonged to that virile,
practical race Bohemians, (also called Czechs) that gave to the world John Huss,
who lighted the fires of religious and civil liberty in Central Europe, giving
advent later to the work of Martin Luther.
Bohemians had always been
liberty-loving. They had been anxious for three centuries to throw off the yoke
of Austria. There is no record that Sophie Chotek sympathized with the aims of
her countrymen or that she was not in complete accord with the views of her
husband and the political interests of the empire. But the experiences of the
Germans and Austrians had taught them that a Bohemian was likely to remain
always a Bohemian and that his freedom-loving people would not countenance plans
having in view the enslavement of other nations. The Germans may have looked
with suspicion upon the Bohemian wife of the archduke and thought it advisable
to remove her also.
Prinzip was thrown into prison and kept there until
he died. No statement he may have made ever had a chance to reach the world. No
one knows whether he was a German or a Serbian tool. He does not seem to have
been an anarchist; neither does he seem to have been of the type that would
commit such a crime voluntarily, knowing full well the consequences. It is not
hard to believe that he was under pay and promised full
protection.
Probably no Bohemian considers Sophie Chotek a martyr;
indeed, the evidence is strong that she was not. Her heart and soul probably
were with her royal spouse. But an interesting outcome is, that her
assassination, a contributing cause to the war, finally led to the downfall of
Germany, the wreck of Austria, the freedom of her native country, and that
Spiritual Emancipation of nations and races, then so gloriously under
way.
Also, to the thoughtful and philosophic observer of maturing
symptoms transpiring continuously in the affairs of mankind; the fate of those
nations of earth that in their strength and arrogance mock the Master, furnish a
striking corroborative vindication of the Negro's faith in the promises of the
Lord; the glory and power of His coming. From the date, reckoning from moment
and second, that Gavrio Prinzip done to death the heir to the throne of
Austria-Hungary and his duchess, there commenced not alone a new day, a new hope
and Emancipation of the whites of earth; empire kingdom, principality and tribe,
but of the blacks; the Negro as well, so mysteriously; bewilderingly, moves God
His wonders to perform.
It was that subliminated faith in the ubiquity
and omniscience of God; the unchangeableness of His word; than which the world
has witnessed; known nothing finer; the story of the concurrent causes that
projected the Negro into the World War, from whence he emerged covered with
glory, followed by the plaudits of mankind, that became the inspiration of this
work—his story of devotion, valor and patriotism; of unmurmuring sacrifice;
worthy the pens of the mighty, but which the historian, as best he may will
tell: "NOTHING extenuate, nor set down AUGHT in malice."
CHAPTER II.
HANDWRITING ON THE WALL.
Likened to Belshazzar—The Kaiser's Feasts—In His Heart Barbaric Pride of the
Potentates of Old—German Madness for War—Insolent Demands—Forty-eight Hours to
Prevent a World War—Comment of Statesmen and Leaders—The War Starts—Italy Breaks
Her Alliance—Germanic Powers Weighed and Found Wanting—Spirit Wins Over
Materialism—Civilization's Lamp Dimmed but not Darkened.
Belshazzar
of Babylon sat at a feast. Very much after the fashion of modern kings they were
good at feasting in those olden days. The farthest limits of the kingdom had
been searched for every delight and delicacy. Honeyed wines, flamingo's tongues,
game from the hills, fruits from vine and tree, spices from grove and forest,
vegetables from field and garden, fish from stream and sea; every resource of
Mother Earth that could contribute to appetite or sensual pleasure was brought
to the king's table. Singers, minstrels, dancers, magicians, entertainers of
every description were summoned to the palace that they might contribute to the
vanity of the monarch, and impress the onlooking nations about him.
He
desired to be known and feared as the greatest monarch on earth; ruling as he
did over the world's greatest city. His triumphs had been many. He had come to
believe that his power proceeded directly from the god Bel, and that he was the
chosen and anointed of that deity.
This was the period of his prime; of
Babylon's greatest glory; his kingdom seemed so firmly established he had no
thought it could be shaken. But misleading are the dreams of kings; his kingdom
was suddenly menaced from without, by Cyrus of Persia, another great monarch.
There were also dangers from within, but courtiers and flatterers kept this
knowledge from him. Priests of rival gods had set themselves up within the
empire; spies from without and conspirators within were secretly undermining the
power of the intrenched despot.
Such was Belshazzar in his pride; such
his kingdom and empire. And, so it was, this was to be an orgy that would set a
record for all time to come.
Artists and artisans of the highest skill
had been summoned to the work of beautifying the enormous palace; its gardens
and grounds, innumerable slaves furnishing the labor. The gold and silver of the
nation was gathered and beaten into ornaments and woven into beautiful designs
to grace the occasion. There was a profusion of the most gorgeous plumage and
richest fabrics, while over all were sprinkled in unheard of prodigality, the
rarest gems and jewels. It was indeed to be a fitting celebration of the glory
of Bel, and the power and magnificence of his earthly representative; heathen
opulence, heathen pride and sensuality were to outdo themselves.
The
revel started at a tremendous pace. No such wines and viands ever before had
been served. No such music ever had been heard and no such dancers and
entertainers ever before had appeared, but, fool that he was, he had reckoned
without his host; had made a covenant with Death and Hell and had known it not,
and the hour of atonement was upon him; the handwriting on the wall of the true
and outraged God, conveyed the information; short and crisp, that he had been
weighed; he and his kingdom in the balance and found wanting; the hour—his hour,
had struck; the time of restitution and atonement long on the way, had come;
Babylon was to fall—FELL!—and for twenty-five centuries its glory and its power
has been a story that is told; its magnificence but heaps of sand in the desert
where night birds shriek and wild beasts find their lair.
In the Kaiser's
heart was the same barbaric pride, the same ambition, the same worship of a
false god and the same belief that he was the especial agent of that
deity.
His extravagances of vision and ambition were no less demoralizing
to humanity and civilization, than those that brought decay and ruin to the
potentates of old. He graced them with all the luxury and exuberance that modern
civilization, without arousing rebellious complaint among his subjects, would
permit. His gatherings appeared to be arranged for the bringing together of the
bright minds of the empire, that there might be an exchange of thought and
sentiment that would work to the good of his country and the happiness of the
world. Frequently ministers, princes and statesmen from other countries were
present, that they might become acquainted with the German idea—its
kultur—working for the good of humanity.
Here was The Beast mentioned in
Revelations, in a different guise; wearing the face of benevolence and clothed
in the raiment of Heaven. There were feasts of which the German people knew
nothing, and to which foreign ambassadors were not invited. At these feasts the
wines were furnished by Belial. They were occasions for the glorification of the
German god of war; of greed and conquest; ambition and vanity; without pity,
sympathy or honor.
Ruthless, vain, arrogant minds met the same qualities
in their leader. Some knew and welcomed the fact that the devil was their guest
of honor; perhaps others did not know it. Deluded as they all were and blinded
by pride and self-seeking, the same handwriting that told Belshazzar of disaster
was on the wall, but they could not or would not see it. There was no Daniel to
interpret for them.
German madness for war asserted itself in the
ultimatum sent by Austria to Serbia after the assassination at Sarajevo.
Sufficient time had hardly elapsed for an investigation of the crime and the
fixing of the responsibility, before Austria made a most insolent demand upon
Serbia.
The smaller nation avowed her innocence of any participation in
the murder; offered to make amends, and if it were discovered that the
conspiracy had been hatched on Serbian soil, to assist in bringing to justice
any confederates in the crime the assassin may have had.
 |
| NEGRO SOLDIERS ON THE RIFLE RANGE AT CAMP GRANT, ILLINOIS. BEING
TAUGHT MARKSMANSHIP. AN IDEAL LOCATION RESEMBLING BATTLE AREAS IN
FRANCE. |
 |
| MEDICAL DETACHMENT 365TH INFANTRY. A REPRESENTATIVE GROUP OF MEDICAL
OFFICERS AND THEIR FIELD ASSISTANTS. THIS BRANCH OF THE 92ND DIVISION
RENDERED MOST VALOROUS SERVICE. |
 |
| BAYONET EXERCISES IN THE TRAINING CAMP. |
 |
| SPORTS AND PHYSICAL EXERCISE IN THE TRAINING
CAMP. |
 |
| NEGRO TROOPS DRILLING. SCENE AT CAMP MEADE, MD., WHERE A PORTION OF
THE 93RD DIVISION AND OTHER EFFICIENT UNITS WERE
TRAINED. |
 |
| AN EQUINE BARBER SHOP NEAR THE CAMP. ONE OF THE DUTIES INCIDENT TO THE
TRAINING CAMP. |
 |
| TROOPERS OF 10TH CAVALRY GOING INTO MEXICO. THESE HEROIC NEGRO
SOLDIERS WERE AMBUSHED NEAR CARRIZAL AND SUFFERED A LOSS OF HALF THEIR
NUMBER IN ONE OF THE BRAVEST FIGHTS ON RECORD. |
 |
| TENTH CAVALRY SURVIVORS OF CARRIZAL. DESPOILED OF THEIR UNIFORMS BY
THE MEXICANS THEY ARRIVE AT EL PASO IN OVERALLS. LEM SPILLSBURY, WHITE
SCOUT IN CENTER. EACH SOLDIER HAS A BOUQUET OF
FLOWERS. |
 |
| AMERICA'S WAR TIME PRESIDENT. THIS PHOTOGRAPH OF WOODROW WILSON WAS
ESPECIALLY POSED DURING THE WAR. IN HIS STUDY AT THE WHITE
HOUSE. |
 |
| DR. J.E. MOORLAND, SENIOR SECRETARY OF COLORED MEN'S DEPT.,
INTERNATIONAL Y.M.C.A. THE MAN LARGELY RESPONSIBLE FOR SUCCESS OF HIS RACE
IN "Y" WORK. |
 |
| A TYPICAL GROUP OF "Y" WORKERS, SECRETARY SNYDER AND STAFF. Y.M.C.A.
NO.7, CAMP GRANT, ILLINOIS. |
 |
| PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON (AT HEAD OF TABLE) AND HIS WAR CABINET.
LEFT—W.G. MCADOO SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY; THOMAS W. GREGORY, ATTY.
GENL.; JOSEPHUS DANIELS, SEC. OF NAVY; D.F. HOUSTON, SEC. OF AGRICULTURE;
WILLIAM B. WILSON, SEC. OF LABOR. RIGHT—ROBERT LANSING, SEC. OF STATE;
NEWTON D. BAKER, SEC. OF WAR; A.S. BURLESON, POSTMASTER-GENERAL; FRANKLIN
K. LANE, SEC. OF INTERIOR; WILLIAM C. REDFIELD, SEC. OF
COMMERCE. |
With a war likely to involve the greater part of Europe hanging on the issue,
it was a time for cool judgment, sober statesmanship and careful action on all
sides. Months should have been devoted to an investigation.
But Germany
and Austria did not want a sober investigation. They were afraid that while it
was proceeding the pretext for war might vanish. As surmised above, they also
may have feared that the responsibility for the act would be placed in quarters
that would be embarrassing to them.
On July 23, 1914, just twenty-five
days after the murder, Austria delivered her demands upon Serbia and placed a
time limit of forty-eight hours for their acceptance. With the fate of a nation
and the probable embroiling of all Europe hanging on the outcome, forty-eight
hours was a time too brief for proper consideration. Serbia could hardly summon
her statesmen in that time. Nevertheless the little country, realizing the awful
peril that impended, and that she alone would not be the sufferer, bravely put
aside all selfish considerations and practically all considerations of national
pride and honor.
The records show that every demand which Austria made on
Serbia was granted except one, which was only conditionally refused. Although
this demand involved the very sovereignty of Serbia—her existence as a
nation—the government offered to submit the matter to mediation or arbitration.
But Austria, cats-pawing for Germany, did not want her demands accepted. The one
clause was inserted purposely, because they knew it could not be accepted. With
Serbia meeting the situation honestly and going over ninety percent of the way
towards an amicable adjustment, the diplomacy that could not obtain peace out of
such a situation, must have been imbecile or corrupt to the last
degree.
An American historian discussing causes in the early stages of
the war, said:
"The German Imperial Chancellor pays no high compliment to the
intelligence of the American people when he asks them to believe that 'the war
is a life-and-death struggle between Germany and the Muscovite races of
Russia', and was due to the royal murders at Sarajevo.
"To say that all
Europe had to be plunged into the most devastating war of human history
because an Austrian subject murdered the heir to the Austrian throne on
Austrian soil in a conspiracy in which Serbians were implicated, is too absurd
to be treated seriously. Great wars do not follow from such causes, although
any pretext, however trivial, may be regarded as sufficient when war is
deliberately sought.
"Nor is the Imperial Chancellor's declaration that
'the war is a life-and-death struggle between Germany and the Muscovite races
of Russia' convincing in the slightest degree. So far as the Russian menace to
Germany is concerned, the Staats-Zeitung is much nearer the truth when its
editor, Mr. Ridder, boasts that 'no Russian army ever waged a successful war
against a first-class power.'
"The life-and-death struggle between
Germany and the Muscovite races of Russia is a diplomatic fiction invented
after German Autocracy, taking advantage of the Serbian incident, set forth to
destroy France. It was through no fear of Russia that Germany violated her
solemn treaty obligations by invading the neutrality of Belgium and Luxemburg.
It was through no fear of Russia that Germany had massed most of her army near
the frontiers of France, leaving only six army corps to hold Russia in check.
Germany's policy as it stands revealed by her military operations was to crush
France and then make terms with Russia. The policy has failed because of the
unexpected resistance of the Belgians and the refusal of Great Britain to buy
peace at the expense of her honor."
A nearer and equally clear view
is expressed for the French by M. Clemenceau, who early in the war said:
"For twenty-five years William II has made Europe live under the
weight of a horrible nightmare. He has found sheer delight in keeping it in a
state of perpetual anxiety over his boastful utterances of power and the
sharpened sword.
"Five threats of war have been launched against us
since 1875. At the sixth he finds himself caught in the toils he had laid for
us. He threatened the very springs of England's power, though she was more
than pacific in her attitude toward him.
"For many years, thanks to
him, the Continent has had to join in a giddy race of armaments, drying up the
sources of economic development and exposing our finances to a crisis which we
shrank from discussing. We must have done with this crowned comedian, poet,
musician, sailor, warrior, pastor; this commentator absorbed in reconciling
Hammurabi with the Bible, giving his opinion on every problem of philosophy,
speaking of everything, saying nothing." M. Clemenceau summed up the Kaiser as
"another Nero; but Rome in flames is not sufficient for him—he demands the
destruction of the universe."
The Socialist, Upton Sinclair,
speaking at the time, blamed Russia as well as Germany and Austria. He also
inclined to the view that the assassination at Sarajevo was instigated by
Austria. He said:
"I assert that never before in human history has there been a war
with less pretense of justification. It is the supreme crime of the ages; a
blow at the very throat of civilization. The three nations which began it,
Austria, Russia and Germany, are governed, the first by a doddering imbecile,
the second by a weak-minded melancholic, and the third by an epileptic
degenerate, drunk upon the vision of himself as the war lord of Europe. Behind
each of These men is a little clique of blood-thirsty aristocrats. They fall
into a quarrel among themselves. The pretext is that Serbia instigated the
murder of the heir apparent to the Austrian throne. There is good reason far
believing that as a matter of fact this murder was instigated by the war party
in Austria, because the heir apparent had democratic and anti-military
tendencies. First they murder him and then they use his death as a pretext for
plunging the whole of civilization into a murderous strife."
Herman
Ridder, editor of the Staats-Zeitung of New York contributed a German-American
view. Mr. Ridder saw the handwriting on the wall and he very soundly deprecated
war and pictured its horrors. But he could not forget that he was appealing to a
large class that held the German viewpoint. He therefore found it necessary to
soften his phrase with some hyphenated sophistry. He dared not say that Germany
was the culprit and would be the principal sufferer. His article was:
"Sooner or later the nations engaged in war will find themselves
spent and weary. There will be victory for some, defeat for others, and profit
for none. There can hardly be any lasting laurels for any of the contending
parties. To change the map of Europe is not worth the price of a single human
life. Patriotism should never rise above humanity.
"The history of war
is merely a succession of blunders. Each treaty of peace sows the seed of
future strife.
"War offends our intelligence and outrages our
sympathies. We can but stand aside and murmur 'The pity of it all. The pity of
it all.'
"War breeds socialism. At night the opposing hosts rest on
their arms, searching the heavens for the riddle of life and death, and
wondering what their tomorrow will bring forth. Around a thousand camp fires
the steady conviction is being driven home that this sacrifice of life might
all be avoided. It seems difficult to realize that millions of men, skilled by
years of constant application, have left the factory, the mill, or the desk to
waste not only their time but their very lives and possibly the lives of those
dependent on them to wage war, brother against brother.
"The more
reasonable it appears that peace must quickly come, the more hopeless does it
seem. I am convinced that an overwhelming majority of the populations of
Germany, England and France are opposed to this war. The Governments of these
states do not want war.
"War deals in human life as recklessly as the
gambler in money.
"Imagine the point of view of a commanding general
who is confronted with the task of taking a fortress; 'That position will cost
me five thousand lives; it will be cheap at the price, for it must be
taken.'
"He discounts five thousand human lives as easily as the
manufacturer marks off five thousand dollars for depreciation. And so five
thousand homes are saddened that another flag may fly over a few feet of
fortified masonry. What a grim joke for Europe to play upon
humanity."
There were not wanting those to point out to Mr. Ridder
that the sacrifice of life could have been avoided had Germany and its tool
Austria, played fair with Serbia and the balance of Europe. Also, his statement
that the government of Germany did not want the war has been successfully
challenged from a hundred different sources.
H.G. Wells, the eminent
English author, contributed a prophecy which translated very plainly the
handwriting on the wall. He said:
"This war is not going to end in diplomacy; it is going to end
diplomacy.
"It is quite a different sort of war from any that have gone
before. At the end there will be no conference of Europe on the old lines, but
a conference of the world. It will make a peace that will put an end to Krupp,
and the spirit of Krupp and Kruppism and the private armament firms behind
Krupp for evermore."
Austria formally declared war against Serbia,
July 28, 1914. During the few days intervening between the dispatch of the
ultimatum to Serbia and the formal declaration of war, Serbia and Russia, seeing
the inevitable, had commenced to mobilize their armies. On the last day of July,
Germany as Austria's ally, issued an ultimatum with a twelve hour limit
demanding that Russia cease mobilization. They were fond of short term
ultimatums. They did not permit more than enough time for the dispatch to be
transmitted and received, much less considered, before the terms of it had
expired. Russia demanded assurances from Austria that war was not forthcoming
and it continued to mobilize. On August 1, Germany declared war. France then
began to mobilize.
Germany invaded the duchy of Luxemburg and demanded
free passage for its troops across Belgium to attack France at that country's
most vulnerable point. King Albert of Belgium refused his consent on the ground
that the neutrality of his country had been guaranteed by the powers of Europe,
including Germany itself, and appealed for diplomatic help from Great Britain.
That country, which had sought through its foreign secretary, Sir Edward Grey,
to preserve the peace of Europe, was now aroused. August 4, it sent an ultimatum
to Germany demanding that the neutrality of Belgium be respected. As the demand
was not complied with, Britain formally declared war against
Germany.
Italy at that time was joined with Germany and Austria in what
was known as the Triple Alliance. But Italy recognized the fact that the war was
one of aggression and held that it was not bound by its compact to assist its
allies. The sympathies of its people were with the French and British.
Afterwards Italy repudiated entirely its alliance and all obligations to Germany
and Austria and entered the war on the side of the allies. Thus the country of
Mazzini, of Garibaldi and Victor Emmanuel, ranged itself on the side of
emancipation and human rights.
The refusal of Italy to enter a war of
conquest was the first event to set the balance of the world seriously thinking
of the meaning of the war. If Italy refused to join its old allies, it meant
that Italy was too honorable to assist their purposes; Italy knew the character
of its associates. When it finally repudiated them altogether and joined the war
on the other side, it was a terrific indictment of the Germanic powers, for
Italy had much more to gain in a material way from its old alliance. It simply
showed the world that spirit was above materialism; that emancipation was in the
air and that the lamp of civilization might be dimmed but could not be darkened
by the forces of evil.
CHAPTER III.
MILITARISM AND AUTOCRACY DOOMED.
GERMANY'S MACHINE—HER SCIENTIFIC ENDEAVOR TO MOLD SOLDIERS—INFLUENCE ON
THOUGHT AND LIVES OF THE PEOPLE—MILITARISM IN THE HOME—THE STATUS OF WOMAN—FALSE
THEORIES AND FALSE GODS—THE SYSTEM ORDAINED TO PERISH—WAR'S SHOCKS—AMERICA
INCLINES TO NEUTRALITY—GERMAN AND FRENCH TREATMENT OF NEUTRALS
CONTRASTED—EXPERIENCES OF AMERICANS ABROAD AND ENROUTE HOME—STATUE OF LIBERTY
TAKES ON NEW BEAUTY—BLOOD OF NEGRO AND WHITE TO FLOW.
Those who had
followed the Kaiser's attitudes and their reflections preceeding the war in the
German military party, were struck by a strange blending of martial glory and
Christian compunction. No one prays more loudly than the hypocrite and none so
smug as the devil when a saint he would be.
During long years the
military machine had been under construction. Human ingenuity had been reduced
to a remarkable state of organization and efficiency. One of the principal
phases of Kultur was the inauguration of a sort of scientific discipline which
made the German people not only soldiers in the field, but soldiers in the
workshop, in the laboratory and at the desk. The system extended to the schools
and universities and permeated the thought of the nation. It particularly was
reflected in the home; the domestic arrangements and customs of the people. The
German husband was the commander-in-chief of his household. It was not that
benevolent lordship which the man of the house assumes toward his wife and
family in other nations. The stern note of command was always evident; that
attitude of "attention!" "eyes front!" and unquestioning
obedience.
German women always were subordinate to their husbands and the
male members of their families. It was not because the man made the living and
supported the woman. Frequently the German woman contributed as much towards the
support of the family as the males; it was because the German male by the system
which had been inculcated into him, regarded himself as a superior being and his
women as inferiors, made for drudgery, for child-bearing, and for contributors
to his comforts and pleasures. His attitude was pretty much like that of the
American Indian towards his squaw.
Germany was the only nation on earth
pretending to civilization in which women took the place of beasts of burden.
They not only worked in the fields, but frequently pulled the plow and other
implements of agriculture. It was not an uncommon sight in Germany to see a
woman and a large dog harnessed together drawing a milk cart. When it became
necessary to deliver the milk the woman slipped her part of the harness, served
the customer, resumed her harness and went on to the next stop. In Belgium, in
Holland and in France, women delivered the milk also, but the cart always was
drawn by one or two large dogs or other animals and the woman was the driver. In
Austria it was a strange sight to foreigners, but occasioned no remark among the
people, to see women drawing carts and wagons in which were seated their lords
and masters. Not infrequently the boss wielded a whip.
The pride of the
German nation was in its efficient workmen. Friends of the country and its
system have pointed to the fact of universal labor as its great virtue; because
to work is good. Really, they were compelled to work. Long hours and the last
degree of efficiency were necessary in order to meet the requirements of life
and the tremendous burdens of taxation caused by the army, the navy, the
fortifications and the military machine in general; to say nothing of the
expense of maintaining the autocratic pomp of the Kaiser, his sons and
satellites. Every member of the German family had his or her task, even to the
little three-year-old toddler whose business it was to look after the brooms,
dust rags and other household utensils. There was nothing of cheerfulness or
even of the dignity of labor about this. It was hard, unceasing, grinding toil
which crushed the spirits of the people. It was part of the system to cause them
to welcome war as a diversion.
To the German mind everything had an
aspect of seriousness. The people took their pleasures seriously. On their
holidays, mostly occasions on which they celebrated an event in history or the
birthday of a monarch or military hero, or during the hours which they could
devote to relaxation, they gathered with serious, stolid faces in beer gardens.
If they danced it was mostly a cumbersome performance. Generally they preferred
to sit and blink behind great foaming tankards and listen to intellectual music.
No other nation had such music. It was so intellectual in itself that it
relieved the listeners of the necessity of thinking. There was not much of
melody in it; little of the dance movement and very little of the lighter and
gayer manifestations of life. It has been described as a sort of harmonious
discord, typifying mysterious, tragic and awe-inspiring things. The people sat
and ate their heavy food and drank their beer, their ears engaged with the
strains of the orchestra, their eyes by the movements of the conductor, while
their tired brains rested and digestion proceeded.
To the average German
family a picnic or a day's outing was a serious affair. The labor of preparation
was considerable and then they covered as much of the distance as possible by
walking in order to save carfare. In the parade was the tired, careworn wife
usually carrying one, sometimes two infants in her arms. The other children
lugged the lunch baskets, hammocks, umbrellas and other paraphernalia. At the
head of the procession majestically marched the lord of the outfit, smoking his
cigar or pipe; a suggestion of the goose-step in his stride, carrying nothing,
except his dignity and military deportment. With this kind of start the reader
can imagine the good time they all had.
MILITARISM AND AUTOCRACY DOOMED
Joy to the German mind in mass was an unknown quantity. The literature on which
they fed was heavier and more somber than their music. When the average German
tried to be gay and playful he reminded one of an elephant trying to caper.
Their humor in the main, manifested itself in coarse and vulgar
jests.
For athletics they had their turn vereins in which men went
through hard, laborious exercises which made them muscle-bound. Their favorite
sports were hunting and fencing—the desire to kill or wound. They rowed some but
they knew nothing of baseball, boxing, tennis, golf or the usual sports so
popular with young men in England, France and America. Aside from fencing, they
had not a sport calculated to produce agility or nimbleness of foot and
brain.
Their emotions expanded and their sentiments thrilled at the
spectacle of war. Uniforms, helmets and gold lace delighted their eyes. The
parade, the guard mount, the review were the finest things they knew. To a
people trained in such a school and purposely given great burdens that they
might attain fortitude, war was second nature. They welcomed it as a sort of
pastime.
In the system on which Kultur was based, it was necessary to
strike deeply the religious note; no difference if it was a false note. The
German ear was so accustomed to discord it could not recognize the true from the
false. The Kaiser was heralded to his people as a deeply religious man. In his
public utterances he never failed to call upon God to grant him aid and bless
his works.
One of the old traditions of the Fatherland was that the king,
being specially appointed by God, could do no wrong. To the thinking portion of
the nation this could have been nothing less than absurd fallacy, but where the
majority do not think; if a thing is asserted strongly and often enough, they
come to accept it. It becomes a belief. The people had become so impressed with
the devoutness of the Kaiser and his assumption of Divine guidance, that the
great majority of them believed the kaiser was always right; that he could do no
wrong. When the great blow of war finally was struck the Kaiser asked his God to
look down and bless the sword that he had drawn; a prayer altogether consistent
coming from his lips, for the god he worshipped loved war, was a god of famine,
rapine and blood. From the moment of that appeal, military autocracy and
absolute monarchy were doomed. It took time, it took lives, it took more
treasure than a thousand men could count in a lifetime. But the assault had been
against civilization, on the very foundation of all that humanity had gained
through countless centuries. The forces of light were too strong for it; would
not permit it to triumph.
The President of the United States, from the
bedside of his dying wife, appealed to the nations for some means of reaching
peace for Europe. The last thoughts of his dying helpmate, were of the great
responsibility resting upon her husband incident to the awful crisis in the
lives of the nations of earth, that was becoming more pronounced with each
second of time.
The Pope was stricken to death by the great calamity to
civilization. A few minutes before the end came he said that the Almighty in His
infinite mercy was removing him from the world to spare him the anguish of the
awful war.
The first inclination of America was to be neutral. She was
far removed from the scenes of strife and knew little of the hidden springs and
causes of the war. Excepting in the case of a few of her public men; her
editors, professors and scholars, European politics were as a sealed book. The
president of the United States declared for neutrality; that individual and
nation should avoid the inflaming touch of the war passion. We kept that
attitude as long as was consistent with national patience and the larger claims
of HUMANITY and universal JUSTICE.
As an evidence of our
lack of knowledge of the impending conflict, a party of Christian men were on
the sea with the humanitarian object in view of attending a world's peace
conference in Constance, Germany—Germany of all places, then engaged in trying
to burn up the world. Arriving in Paris, the party received its first news that
a great European war was about to begin. Steamship offices were being stormed by
crowds of frantic American tourists. Martial law was declared. The streets were
alive with soldiers and weeping women. Shops were closed, the clerks having been
drafted into the army. The city hummed with militarism.
Underneath the
excitement was the stern, stoic attitude of the French in preparing to meet
their old enemy, combined with their calmness in refraining from outbreaks
against German residents of Paris. One of the party alluding to the incongruous
position in which the peace delegates found themselves, said:
"It might be interesting to observe the unique and almost humorous
situation into which these peace delegates were thrown. Starting out a week
before with the largest hope and most enthusiastic anticipation of effecting a
closer tie between nations, and swinging the churches of Christendom into a
clearer alignment against international martial attitudes, we were instantly
'disarmed,' bound, and cast into chains of utter helplessness, not even
feeling free to express the feeblest sentiment against the high rising tide of
military activity. We were lost on a tempestuous sea; the dove of peace had
been beaten, broken winged to shore, and the olive branch lost in its general
fury."
Describing conditions in Paris on August 12, he says:
"We are in a state of tense expectation, so acute that it dulls
the senses; Paris is relapsing into the condition of an audience assisting at
a thrilling drama with intolerably long entr'acts, during which it tries to
think of its own personal affairs.
"We know that pages of history are
being rapidly engraved in steel, written in blood, illuminated in the margin
with glory on a background of heroism and suffering, not more than a few score
miles away.
"The shrieking camelots (peddlers) gallop through the
streets waving their news sheets, but it is almost always news of twenty-four
hours ago. The iron hand of the censor reduces the press to a monotonous
repetition of the same formula. Only headlines give scope for originality. Of
local news there is none. There is nothing doing in Paris but steady
preparation for meeting contingencies by organizing ambulances and relief for
the poor."
From the thousands of tales brought back by American
tourists caught in Germany at the outbreak of the war, there is more than enough
evidence that they were not treated with that courtesy manifested towards them
by the French. They were arrested as spies, subjected to all sorts of
embarrassments and indignities; their persons searched, their baggage and
letters examined, and frequently were detained for long periods without any
explanation being offered. When finally taken to the frontier, they were not
merely put across—frequently they were in a sense thrown across.
Nor were
the subjects of other nations, particularly those with which Germany was at war,
treated with that fine restraint which characterized the French. Here is an
account by a traveller of the treatment of Russian subjects:
"We left
Berlin on the day Germany declared war against Russia. Within seventy-five miles
of the frontier, 1,000 Russians in the train by which they were travelling were
turned out of the carriage and compelled to spend eighteen hours without food in
an open field surrounded by soldiers with fixed bayonets.
"Then they were
placed in dirty cattle wagons, about sixty men, women and children to a wagon,
and for twenty-eight hours were carried about Prussia without food, drink or
privacy. In Stettin they were lodged in pig pens, and next morning were sent off
by steamer to Rugen, whence they made their way to Denmark and Sweden without
money or luggage. Sweden provided them with food and free passage to the Russian
frontier. Five of our fellow-passengers went mad."
The steamship
Philadelphia—note the name, signifying brotherly love, so completely lost sight
of in the conflict—was the first passenger liner to reach America after the
beginning of the European war. A more remarkable crowd never arrived in New York
City by steamship or train. There were men of millions and persons of modest
means who had slept side by side on the journey over; voyagers with balances of
tens of thousands of dollars in banks and not a cent in their pocketbooks; men
able and eager to pay any price for the best accommodations to be had, yet
satisfied and happy sharing bunks in the steerage.
There were women who
had lost all baggage and had come alone, their friends and relatives being
unable to get accommodations on the vessel. There were children who had come on
board with their mothers, with neither money nor reservations, who were happy
because they had received the very best treatment from all the steamship's
officers and crew and because they had enjoyed the most comfortable quarters to
be had, surrendered by men who were content to sleep in most humble
surroundings, or, if necessary, as happened in a few cases, to sleep on the
decks when the weather permitted.
Wealthy, but without funds, many of the
passengers gave jewelry to the stewards and other employees of the steamship as
the tips which they assumed were expected even in times of stress. The crew took
them apologetically, some said they were content to take only the thanks of the
passengers. One woman of wealth and social position, without money, and having
lost her check book with her baggage, as had many others of the passengers, gave
a pair of valuable bracelets to her steward with the request that he give them
to his wife. She gave a hat—the only one she managed to take with her on her
flight from Switzerland—to her stewardess.
The statue of Liberty never
looked so beautiful to a party of Americans before. The strains of the Star
Spangled Banner, as they echoed over the waters of the bay, were never sweeter
nor more inspiring. As the Philadelphia approached quarrantine, the notes of the
American anthem swelled until, as she slowed down to await the coming of the
physicians and customs officials, it rose to a great crescendo which fell upon
the ears of all within many hundred yards and brought an answering chorus from
the throngs who waited to extend their hands to relatives and
friends.
There was prophecy in the minds of men and women aboard that
ship. Some of them had been brought into actual contact with the war; others
very near it. In the minds of all was the vision that liberty, enlightenment and
all the fruits of progress were threatened; that if they were to be saved,
somehow, this land typified the spirit of succor; somehow the aid was to proceed
from here.
Liberty never had a more cherished meaning to men of this
Republic. In the minds of many the conviction had taken root, that if autocracy
and absolute monarchy were to be overthrown; that "government of the people, by
the people, for the people" should "not perish from the earth," it would
eventually require from America that supreme sacrifice in devotion and blood
that at periods in the growth and development of nations, is their last resort
against the menace of external attack, and, regardless of the reflections of
theorists and philosophers, the best and surest guarantee of their longevity;
that the principles upon which they were builded were something more than mere
words, hollow platitudes, meaning nothing, worthy of nothing, inspiring nothing.
It was the dawning of a day; new and strange in its requirements of America
whose isolation and policy, as bequeathed by the fathers, had kept it aloof from
the bickerings and quarrels of the nations that composed the "Armed Camp" of
Europe, during which, as subsequent events proved, the blood of the Caucasian
and the Negro would upon many a hard fought pass; many a smoking trench in the
battle zone of Europe, run together in one rivulet of departing life, for the
guarantee of liberty throughout all the earth, and the establishment of justice
at its uttermost bounds and ends.
CHAPTER IV.
AWAKENING OF AMERICA.
PRESIDENT CLINGS TO NEUTRALITY—MONROE DOCTRINE AND WASHINGTON'S
WARNING—GERMAN CRIMES AND GERMAN VICTORIES—CARDINAL MERCIER'S LETTER—MILITARY
OPERATIONS—FIRST SUBMARINE ACTIVITIES—THE LUSITANIA OUTRAGE—EXCHANGE OF
NOTES—UNITED STATES AROUSED—ROLE OF PASSIVE ONLOOKER BECOMES IRKSOME—FIRST
MODIFICATION OF PRINCIPLES OF WASHINGTON AND MONROE—OUR DESTINY
LOOMS.
August 4, 1914, President Wilson proclaimed the neutrality of
the United States. A more consistent attempt to maintain that attitude was never
made by a nation. In an appeal addressed to the American people on August 18th,
the president implored the citizens to refrain from "taking sides." Part of his
utterance on that occasion was:
"We must be impartial in thought as well as in action, must put a
curb upon our sentiments as well as upon every transaction that might be
construed as a preference of one party to the struggle before
another.
"My thought is of America. I am speaking, I feel sure, the
earnest wish and purpose of every thoughtful American that this great country
of ours, which is, of course, the first in our thoughts and in our hearts,
should show herself in this time of peculiar trial a nation fit beyond others
to exhibit the fine poise of undisturbed judgment, the dignity of
self-control, the efficiency of dispassionate action; a nation that neither
sits in judgment upon others, nor is disturbed in her own counsels, and which
keeps herself fit and free to do what is honest and disinterested and truly
serviceable for the peace of the world.
American poise had been
somewhat disturbed over the treatment of American tourists caught in Germany at
the outbreak of the war. American sentiment was openly agitated by the invasion
of Belgium and the insolent repudiation by Germany of her treaty obligations.
The German chancellor had referred to the treaty with Belgium as "a scrap of
paper." These things had created a suspicion in American minds, having to do
with what seemed Germany's real and ulterior object, but in the main the people
of this county accepted the president's appeal in the spirit in which it was
intended and tried to live up to it, which attitude was kept to the very limit
of human forbearance.
A few editors and public men, mostly opposed to the
president politically, thought we were carrying the principle of neutrality too
far; that the violation of Belgium was a crime against humanity in general and
that if we did not at least protest against it, we would be guilty of national
stultification if not downright cowardice. Against this view was invoked the
time-honored principles of the Monroe Doctrine and its great corollary,
Washington's advice against becoming entangled in European affairs. Our first
president, in his farewell address, established a precept of national conduct
that up to the time we were drawn into the European war, had become almost a
principle of religion with us. He said:
"Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence (I conjure you
to believe me, fellow citizens) the jealousy of a free people ought to
constantly awake, since history and experience prove that foreign influence is
one of the most baneful foes of republican government—Europe has a set of
primary interests which to us have none or a very remote relation. Hence she
must be engaged in frequent controversies, the causes of which are essentially
foreign to our concern. Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate
ourselves by artificial ties in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics or
the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or
enmities."
The Monroe Doctrine was a statement of principles made by
President Monroe in his famous message of December 2, 1823. The occasion of the
utterance was the threat by the so-called Holy Alliance to interfere forcibly in
South America with a view to reseating Spain in control of her former colonies
there. President Monroe, pointing to the fact that it was a principle of
American policy not to intermeddle in European affairs, gave warning that any
attempt by the monarchies of Europe "to extend their system to any portion of
this hemisphere" would be considered by the United States "as dangerous to our
peace and safety." This warning fell in line with British policy at the time and
so proved efficacious.
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| OFFICIAL RED CROSS PHOTOGRAPHS NEGRO SOLDIERS AND RED CROSS WORKERS IN
FRONT OF CANTEEN, HAMLET, N.C. |
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| PHOTO FROM UNDERWOOD & UNDERWOOD, N.Y. COLORED RED CROSS WORKERS
FROM THE CANTEEN AT ATLANTA, GA., FEEDING SOLDIERS AT RAILWAY
STATION. |
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| OFFICIAL RED CROSS PHOTOGRAPHS COLORED WOMEN IN HOSPITAL GARMENTS
CLASS OF BRANCH NO. 6. NEW ORLEANS CHAPTER, AMERICAN RED CROSS. LOUISE J.
ROSS, DIRECTOR. |
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| PHOTO FROM UNDERWOOD & UNDERWOOD, N.Y. RED CROSS WORKERS.
PROMINENT COLORED WOMEN OF ATLANTA, GA., WHO ORGANIZED CANTEEN FOR RELIEF
OF NEGRO SOLDIERS GOING TO AND RETURNING FROM
WAR. |
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| THE GAME IS ON. A BASEBALL MATCH BETWEEN NEGRO AND WHITE TROOPS IN ONE
OF THE TRAINING AREAS IN FRANCE. |
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| OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHS, U.S. ARMY COL. WILLIAM HAYWARD OF 369TH INFANTRY
PLAYING BASEBALL WITH HIS NEGRO SOLDIERS AT ST. NAZAIRE,
FRANCE. |
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| JAZZ AND SOUTHERN MELODIES HASTEN CURE. NEGRO SAILOR ENTERTAINING
DISABLED NAVY MEN IN HOSPITAL FOR
CONVALESCENTS. |
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| ENJOYING A BIT OF CAKE BAKED AT THE AMERICAN RED CROSS CANTEEN AT
IS-SUR-TILLE, FRANCE. |
 |
| CORPORAL FRED. McINTYRE OF 369TH INFANTRY, WITH PICTURE OF THE KAISER
WHICH HE CAPTURED FROM A GERMAN OFFICER. |
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| LIEUT. ROBERT L. CAMPBELL, NEGRO OFFICER OF THE 368TH INFANTRY WHO WON
FAME AND THE D.S.C. IN ARGONNE FOREST. HE DEVISED A CLEVER PIECE OF
STRATEGY AND DISPLAYED GREAT HEROISM IN THE EXECUTION OF
IT. |
 |
| EMMETT J. SCOTT, APPOINTED BY SECRETARY BAKER, AS SPECIAL ASSISTANT
DURING THE WORLD WAR. HE WAS FORMERLY CONFIDENTIAL SECRETARY TO THE LATE
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. |
 |
(TOP)—GENERAL DIAZ, COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF ITALIAN ARMIES. MARSHAL FOCH,
COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF ALLIED FORCES.
(CENTER)—GENERAL PERSHING,
COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF AMERICAN ARMIES. ADMIRAL SIMS, IN CHARGE OF AMERICAN
NAVAL OPERATIONS OVERSEAS.
(BOTTOM)—KING ALBERT, COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF
BELGIAN ARMY. FIELD MARSHAL HAIG, HEAD OF BRITISH
ARMIES. |
In a later section of the same message
the proposition was also advanced that the American continent was no longer
subject to colonization. This clause of the doctrine was the work of Monroe's
secretary of state, John Quincy Adams, and its occasion was furnished by the
fear that Russia was planning to set up a colony at San Francisco, then the
property of Spain, whose natural heir on the North American continent, Adams
held, was the United States. It is this clause of the document that has
furnished much of the basis for its subsequent development.
In 1902
Germany united with Great Britain and Italy to collect by force certain claims
against Venezuela. President Roosevelt demanded and finally, after threatening
to dispatch Admiral Dewey to the scene of action, obtained a statement that she
would not permanently occupy Venezuelan territory. Of this statement one of the
most experienced and trusted American editors, avowedly friendly to Germany,
remarked at the time, that while he believed "it was and will remain true for
some time to come, I cannot, in view of the spirit now evidently dominant in the
mind of the emperor and among many who stand near him, express any belief that
such assurances will remain trustworthy for any great length of time after
Germany shall have developed a fleet larger than that of the United States." He
accordingly cautioned the United States "to bear in mind probabilities and
possibilities as to the future conduct of Germany, and therefore increase
gradually our naval strength." Bismarck pronounced the Monroe Doctrine "an
international impertinence," and this has been the German view all
along.
Dr. Zorn, one of the most conservative of German authorities on
international affairs, concluded an article in Die Woche of September 13, 1913,
with these words: "Considered in all its phases, the Monroe Doctrine is in the
end seen to be a question of might only and not of right."
The German
government's efforts to check American influence in the Latin American states
had of late years been frequent and direct. They comprised the encouragement of
German emigration to certain regions, the sending of agents to maintain close
contact, presentation of German flags in behalf of the Kaiser, the placing of
the German Evangelical churches in certain South American countries under the
Prussian State Church, annual grants for educational purposes from the imperial
treasury at Berlin, and the like.
The "Lodge resolution," adopted by the
senate in 1912, had in view the activities of certain German corporations in
Latin America, as well as the episode that immediately occasioned it; nor can
there be much doubt that it was the secret interference by Germany at Copenhagen
that thwarted the sale of the Danish West Indies to the United States in
1903.
In view of a report that a Japanese corporation, closely connected
with the Japanese government, was negotiating with the Mexican government for a
territorial concession off Magdalena Bay, in lower California, the senate in
1912 adopted the following resolution, which was offered by Senator Lodge of
Massachusetts:
"That when any harbor or other place in the American continent is
so situated that the occupation thereof for naval or military purposes might
threaten the communications or the safety of the United States, the government
of the United States could not see without grave concern, the possession of
such harbor or other place by any corporation or association which has such a
relation to another government, not American, as to give that government
practical power of control for naval or military purposes."
All of
the above documents, arguments and events were of the greatest importance in
connection with the great European struggle. America was rapidly awakening, and
the role of a passive onlooker became increasingly irksome. It was pointed out
that Washington's message said we must not implicate ourselves in the "ordinary
vicissitudes" of European politics. This case rapidly was assuming something
decidedly beyond the "ordinary." As the carnage increased and outrages piled up,
the finest sensibilities of mankind were shocked and we began to ask ourselves
if we were not criminally negligent in our attitude; if it was not our duty to
put forth a staying hand and use the extreme weight of our influence to stop the
holocaust.
From August 4 to 26, Germany overran Belgium. Liege was
occupied August 9; Brussels, August 20, and Namur, August 24. The stories of
atrocities committed on the civil population of that country have since been
well authenticated. At the time it was hard to believe them, so barbaric and
utterly wanton were they. Civilized people could not understand how a nation
which pretended to be not only civilized, but wished to impose its culture on
the remainder of the world, could be so ruthless to a small adversary which had
committed no crime and desired only to preserve its nationality, integrity and
treaty rights.
Germany did not occupy Antwerp until October 9, owing to
the stiff resistance of the Belgians and engagements with the French and British
elsewhere. But German arms were uniformly victorious. August 21-23 occurred the
battle of Mons-Charleroi, a serious defeat for the French and British, which
resulted in a dogged retreat eventually to a line along the Seine, Marne and
Meuse rivers.
The destruction of Louvain occurred August 26, and was one
of the events which inflamed anti-German sentiment throughout the world. The
beautiful cathedral, the historic cloth market, the library and other
architectural monuments for which the city was famed, were put to the torch. The
Belgian priesthood was in woe over these and other atrocities. Cardinal Mercier
called upon the Christian world to note and protest against these crimes. In his
pastoral letter of Christmas, 1914, he thus pictures Belgium's woe and her
Christian fortitude:
"And there where lives were not taken, and there where the stones
of buildings were not thrown down, what anguish unrevealed! Families hitherto
living at ease, now in bitter want; all commerce at an end, all careers
ruined; industry at a standstill; thousands upon thousands of workingmen
without employment; working women; shop girls, humble servant girls without
the means of earning their bread, and poor souls forlorn on the bed of
sickness and fever crying: 'O Lord, how long, how long?'—God will save
Belgium, my brethren; you can not doubt it. Nay, rather, He is saving
her—Which of us would have the heart to cancel this page of our national
history? Which of us does not exult in the brightness of the glory of this
shattered nation? When in her throes she brings forth heroes, our mother
country gives her own energy to the blood of those sons of hers. Let us
acknowledge that we needed a lesson in patriotism—For down within us all is
something deeper than personal interests, than personal kinships, than party
feeling, and this is the need and the will to devote ourselves to that most
general interest which Rome termed the public thing, Res publica. And this
profound will within us is patriotism."
Meanwhile there was a slight
offset to the German successes. Russia had overrun Galicia and the Allies had
conquered the Germany colony of Togoland in Africa. But on August 26 the
Russians were severely defeated in the battle of Tannenburg in East Prussia.
This was offset by a British naval victory in Helgoland Bight. (August 28.) So
great had become the pressure of the German armies that on September 3 the
French government removed from Paris to Bordeaux. The seriousness of the
situation was made manifest when two days later Great Britain, France and Russia
signed a treaty not to make peace separately. Then it became evident to the
nations of the earth that the struggle was not only to be a long one, but in all
probability the most gigantic in history.
The Germans reached the extreme
point of their advance, culminating in the Battle of the Marne, September 6-10.
Here the generalship of Joffre and the strategy of Foch overcame great odds. The
Germans were driven back from the Marne to the River Aisne. The battle line then
remained practically stationary for three years on a front of three hundred
miles.
The Russians under General Rennenkampf were driven from East
Prussia September 16. Three British armored cruisers were sunk by a submarine
September 22. By September 27 General Botha had gained some successes for the
Allies, and had under way an invasion of German Southwest Africa. By October 13
Belgium was so completely occupied by the Germans that the government withdrew
entirely from the country and established itself at Le Havre in France. By the
end of the year had occurred the Battle of Yser in Belgium (October 16-28); the
first Battle of Ypres (decisive day October 31), in which the British, French
and Belgians saved the French channel ports; De Wet's rebellion against the
British in South Africa (October 28); German naval victory in the Pacific off
the coast of Chile (November 1); fall of Tsingtau, German possession in China,
to the Japanese (November 7); Austrian invasion of Serbia (Belgrade taken
December 2, recaptured by the Serbians December 14); German commerce raider
Emden caught and destroyed at Cocos Island (November 10); British naval victory
off the Falkland Islands (December 8); South African rebellion collapsed
(December 8); French government returned to Paris (December 9); German warships
bombarded West Hartlepool, Scarborough and Whitby on the coast of England
(December 16). On December 24 the Germans showed their Christian spirit in an
inauguration of the birthday of Christ by the first air raid over England. The
latter part of the year 1914 saw no important action by the United States
excepting a proclamation by the president of the neutrality of the Panama canal
zone.
The events of 1915 and succeeding years became of great importance
to the United States and it is with a record of those having the greatest
bearing on our country that this account principally will deal.
On
January 20 Secretary of State Bryan found it necessary to explain and defend our
policy of neutrality. January 28 the American merchantman William P. Frye was
sunk by the German cruiser Prinz Eitel Friedrich. On February 10 the United
States dispatched a note to the German government holding it to a "strict
accountability if any merchant vessel of the United States is destroyed or any
American citizens lose their lives." Germany replied February 16 stating that
her "war zone" act was an act of self-defense against illegal methods employed
by Great Britain in preventing commerce between Germany and neutral countries.
Two days later the German official blockade of Great Britain commenced and the
German submarines began their campaign of piracy and pillage.
The United
States on February 20 sent an identic note to Germany and Great Britain
suggesting an agreement between them respecting the conduct of naval warfare.
The British steamship Falaba was sunk by a submarine March 28, with a loss of
111 lives, one of which was an American. April 8 the steamer Harpalyce, in the
service of the American commission for the aid of Belgium, was torpedoed with a
loss of 15 lives. On April 22 the German embassy in America sent out a warning
against embarkation on vessels belonging to Great Britain. The American vessel
Cushing was attacked by a German aeroplane April 28. On May 1 the American
steamship Gullflight was sunk by a German submarine and two Americans were lost.
That day the warning of the German embassy was published in the daily papers.
The Lusitania sailed at 12:20 noon.
Five days later occurred the crime
which almost brought America into the second year of the war. The Cunard line
steamship Lusitania was sunk by a German submarine with a loss of 1,154 lives,
of which 114 were Americans. After the policy of frightfulness put into effect
by the Germans in Belgium and other invaded territories, the massacres of
civilians, the violation of women and killing of children; burning, looting and
pillage; the destruction of whole towns, acts for which no military necessity
could be pleaded, civilization should have been prepared for the Lusitania
crime. But it seems it was not. The burst of indignation throughout the United
States was terrible. Here was where the terms German and Hun became synonomous,
having in mind the methods and ravages of the barbaric scourge Attilla, king of
the Huns, who in the fifth century sacked a considerable portion of Europe and
introduced some refinements in cruelty which have never been
excelled.
The Lusitania went down twenty-one minutes after the attack.
The Berlin government pleaded in extenuation of the sinking that the ship was
armed, and German agents in New York procured testimony which was subsequently
proven in court to have been perjured, to bolster up the falsehood. In further
justification, the German government adduced the fact that the ship was carrying
ammunition which it said was "destined for the destruction of brave German
soldiers." This contention our government rightly brushed aside as
irrelevant.
The essence of the case was stated by our government in its
note of June 9 as follows:
"Whatever be the other facts regarding the Lusitania, the
principal fact is that a great steamer, primarily and chiefly a conveyance for
passengers, and carrying more than a thousand souls who had no part or lot in
the conduct of the war, was sunk without so much as a challenge or a warning,
and that men, women and children were sent to their death in circumstances
unparalleled in modern warfare."
Three notes were written to Germany
regarding the Lusitania sinking. The first dated May 13 advanced the idea that
it was impossible to conduct submarine warfare conformably with international
law. In the second dated June 9 occurs the statement that "the government of the
United States is contending for something much greater than mere rights of
property or privileges of commerce. It is contending for nothing less high and
sacred than the rights of humanity." In the third note dated July 21, it is
asserted that "the events of the past two months have clearly indicated that it
is possible and practicable to conduct submarine operations within the so-called
war zone in substantial accord with the accepted practices of regulated
warfare." The temper of the American people and the president's notes had
succeeded in securing a modification of the submarine campaign.
It
required cool statesmanship to prevent a rushing into war over the Lusitania
incident and events which had preceded it. There was a well developed movement
in favor of it, but the people were not unanimous on the point. It would have
lacked that cooperation necessary for effectiveness; besides our country was but
poorly prepared for engaging in hostilities. It was our state of unpreparedness
continuing for a long time afterwards, which contributed, no doubt, to German
arrogance. They thought we would not fight.
But the United States had
become thoroughly awakened and the authorities must have felt that if the
conflict was to be unduly prolonged, we must eventually be drawn into it. This
is reflected in the modified construction which the president and others began
to place on the Monroe Doctrine. The great underlying idea of the doctrine
remained vital, but in a message to congress delivered December 7, 1915, the
president said:
"In the day in whose light we now stand there is no claim
of guardianship, but a full and honorable association as of partners between
ourselves and our neighbors in the interests of America." Speaking before the
League to Enforce Peace at Washington, May 27, 1916, he said: "What affects
mankind is inevitably our affair, as well as the affair of the nations of Europe
and of Asia." In his address to the senate of January 22, 1917, he said: "I am
proposing, as it were, that the nations should with one accord adopt the
doctrine of President Monroe as the doctrine of the world—that no nation should
seek to extend its policy over any other nation or people, but that every people
should be left free to determine its own policy, its own way of development,
unhindered, unthreatened, unafraid, the little along with the great and
powerful." This was a modifying and enlarging of the doctrine, as well as a
departure from Washington's warning against becoming entangled with the affairs
of Europe.
CHAPTER V.
HUNS SWEEPING WESTWARD.
TOWARD SHORES OF ATLANTIC—SPREAD RUIN AND
DEVASTATION—CAPITALS OF CIVILIZATION ALARMED—ACTIVITIES OF SPIES—APOLOGIES AND
LIES—GERMAN ARMS WINNING—GAIN TIME TO FORGE NEW WEAPONS—FEW VICTORIES FOR
ALLIES—ROUMANIA CRUSHED—INCIDENT OF U-53.
The powerful thrusts of the
German armies toward the English channel and the Atlantic ocean, the pitiless
submarine policy, and the fact that Germany and Austria had allied with them
Bulgaria and Turkey, began to spread alarm in the non-belligerent nations of the
world.
That Germany was playing a Machiavellian policy against the United
States soon became evident. After each submarine outrage would come an apology,
frequently a promise of reparation and an agreement not to repeat the offense,
with no intention, however, of keeping faith in any respect. As a mask for their
duplicity, the Germans even sent a message of sympathy for the loss of American
lives through the sinking of the Lusitania; which but intensified the state of
mind in this country.
Less than three weeks after the Lusitania outrage
the American steamship Nebraskan was attacked (May 25) by a submarine. The
American steamship Leelanaw was sunk by submarines July 25. The White Star liner
Arabic was sunk by a submarine August 19; sixteen victims, two
American.
Our government received August 24 a note from the German
ambassador regarding the sinking of the Arabic. It stated that the loss of
American lives was contrary to the intention of the German government and was
deeply regretted. On September 1 Ambassador von Bernstorff supplemented the note
with a letter to Secretary Lansing giving assurance that German submarines would
sink no more liners.
The Allan liner Hesperian was sunk September 4 by a
German submarine; 26 lives lost, one American.
On October 5 the German
government sent a communication regretting again and disavowing the sinking of
the Arabic, and stating its willingness to pay indemnities.
Meanwhile
depression existed among the Allies and alarm among nations outside the war over
the German conquest of Russian Poland. They captured Lublin, July 31; Warsaw,
August 4; Ivangorod, August 5; Kovno, August 17; Novogeorgievsk, August 19;
Brest-Litovsk, August 25, and Vilna, September 18.
Activities of spie