Henry Ossian Flipper was born on March
21st, 1856. He was the oldest of five brothers. Both of his parents
were owned by a slave dealer. During Reconstruction he attended
Atlanta University where he was encouraged to head to West Point. He
and the other four Black students there were not exactly welcomed,
but he got through it and became the first Black graduate of West
Point. He earned a commission as a second lieutenant of the US Army
cavalry. He then became the first Black officer to command troops in
the Army.
In 1881 was under the command of an Colonel that tolerated
Black soldiers but hated seeing one that was an officer. Soon Flipper
was asked to keep a location safe and realized that $2,000 was
missing. He tried to cover this up knowing it could be used against
him but was found out. He was arrested for embezzling government
funds. He was eventually found innocent during a court martial but
found guilty of, get this, “of conduct unbecoming an officer and
gentleman” and dismissed from the military. Could you imagine
knowing that you were set up for some dirty stuff like this and no
one believing you after making a career in the military? Two other
officers were guilty of embezzlement but neither were discharged
because they were White. Flipper spent the rest of his life
attempting to get this charge dismissed. He ended up working in Latin
America as an assistant to the Secretary of the Interior before
retiring in 1931. He died in 1940. In 1994 his family asked the
military to review his court martial. They found the punishment and
conviction harsher than it should've been. In February of 1999 Bill
Clinton pardoned Flipper.
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