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At the close of the Civil War Congress authorized the formation of Regular Army units composed of Negro soldiers with white officers. There were to be two cavalry and four infantry regiments, but in the reorganization of 1869 the number of infantry regiments was reduced to two. Recruited from southern plantations and from the ranks of the Negro volunteer units that had fought in the war, the 9th and 10th Cavalry and the 24th and 25th Infantry served continuously on the western frontier throughout the remaining three decades of Indian hostility. In Indian Territory, the Dakotas, Colorado, Montana, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, the Negroes clashed with Cheyennes, Sioux, Arapahos, Kiowas, Comanches, Utes, and Apaches. Observing the kinky hair of their adversaries, the warriors dubbed them "Buffalo Soldiers." With a pride in the uniform, an individual morale, and a unit espirit surpassed by few regiments, the Buffalo Soldiers compiled a notable record on the Indian frontier.
Artist Frederic Remington was fascinated by the Buffalo Soldiers, as these illustrations reveal. Campaigning with them in Arizona, he wrote:
In these sketches for the Century Magazine,
April 1889, Remington has vividly recorded the life of Negro troopers in the
Southwest.
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