Female Buffalo Soldier- With Documents
Cathay Williams or William Cathay
(Cathey)
Private, Thirty-eighth U.S. Infantry 1866-1868
An Exceptional Woman
Cathay Williams in Cowboy Poetry
Cathay Williams was determined |
Civil War
At the outbreak of the Civil War, the government
was fighting the Indians in the west. It withdrew most of its men and resources from the Indian wars, to concentrate
on ending the rebellion. At the end of the Civil War, 186,000 black soldiers had participated in the war, with
38,000 killed in action. Southerners and eastern populations did not want to see armed Negro soldiers near or in
their communities. They were also afraid of the labor market being flooded with a new source of labor. General
employment opportunities in these communities was not available to blacks, so many African-Americans took a long
hard look at military service which offered shelter, education, steady pay, medical attention and a pension. Some,
such as Cathay Williams, the future female Buffalo Soldier, decided it was much better than frequent civilian unemployment.
In a news paper article, she said "I wanted to make my own living and not be dependent on relations or friends."
Of course in some quarters, it was thought this was a good way of getting rid of two problems at the same time.
When Congress reorganized the peacetime regular army in the summer of 1866, it had taken the above situation into
account. It also recognized the military merits of black soldiers by authorizing two segregated regiments of black
cavalry, the Ninth United States Cavalry and the Tenth United States Cavalry and the 24th, 25th ,38th , 39th, 40th
and 41st Infantry Regiments. Orders were given to transfer the troops to the western war arena, where they
would join the army's fight with the Indians. In 1869, one year after Cathay Williams' discharge from the army,
the black infantry regiments were consolidated into two units, the Twenty-fourth United States Infantry and the
Twenty-fifth United States Infantry. The 38th U.S. Infantry became the Twenty-fourth United States Infantry. All
of the black regiments were commanded by white officers at that time.
Initial recruiting efforts concentrated
on filling recruitment quotas with little regard for the recruit's capability and soldiering skills. These
recruits had to be discharged and replaced, causing a delay in some regiments arriving at their assigned posts."
The army surgeon might have examimed Cathay superficially, or not at all. The result was still historcal. William
Cathay, the new recurit, was declared "fit for duty", thus giving assurance of her place in history as
the only documented female Buffalo Soldier, and as the only documented African-American woman who served in the
U.S. army prior to the 1948 law, which officially allowed women to join the army.
The Buffalo Soldiers had the lowest desertion rate in the army, though their army posts were often in the worst
country in the west. Official reports, show these soldiers were frequently subjected to the harshest of discipline,
racist officers, poor food, equipment and shelter."
Excerpt from "BUFFALO
SOLDIERS & INDIAN WARS"
Cathay Williams as Contraband
President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed it was his duty to maintain the Union in his inaugural address, delivered
on March 4, 1861. He also made it clear he was not going to end slavery where it existed, or repeal the "Fugitive
Slave Law".
At the time of Cathay Williams' impressment by Colonel Benton of the 13th Army Corps , the Emancipation Proclamation
had not been made by President Lincoln and there was no clear federal policy as to the disposition of slaves freed
by the army, and slaves abandoned by their slavemasters. I each case, individual commanders made their own decisions
as to how to handle each of these unique types of "contraband".
Fugitive slaves posed another dilemma. Some commanders put them to work for the Union forces; others wanted to,
and did return them to their owners.
On August 6, 1861, fugitive slaves were declared to be "contraband of war" if their labor had been used
to aid the Confederacy in any way. If found to be contraband, they were declared free.
An excerpt from "McClellan's
Letter to Lincoln on His Evacuation from the Peninsula Campaign" addressing contraband.
Headquarters, Army of
the Potomac,
Camp near Harrison's Landing, Va.,
7 July 1862
"Military power should not be allowed
to interfere with the relations of servitude, either by supporting or impairing the authority of the master, except
for repressing disorder, as in other cases. Slave contraband under the act of Congress, seeking military protection,
should receive it. The right of the Government to appropriate permanently to its own service claims to slave labor
should be asserted, and the right of the owner to compensation therefore should be recognized.
This principle might be extended, upon grounds of military necessity and security, to all the slaves within a particular
State, thus working manumission in such State; and in Missouri, perhaps in Western Virginia also, and possibly
even in Maryland, the expediency of such a measure is only a question of time."
Geo. B. McClellan,
Major-General Commanding
Source: An excerpt "From Revolution to Reconstruction"
- an .HTML project.
The final Emancipation Proclamation was issued on January 1, 1863. The proclamation declared, "all persons held as slaves within any state or designated part of a state,
the people thereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward, and forever
free." In theory, it
officially freed all slaves within the states or parts of states that were in rebellion and not in Union hands.
Over 900, 000 slaves remained in Union territory still in human bondage.
Source: St. Louis Daily
Times, January 2, 1876
"My Father a was a freeman, but my mother a slave, belonging to William Johnson, a wealthy farmer who lived
at the time I was born near Independence, Jackson county, Missouri. While I was a small girl my master and family
moved to Jefferson City. My master died there and when the war broke out and the United States soldiers came to
Jefferson City they took me and other colored folks with them to Little Rock. Col. Benton of the 13th army corps was the
officer that carried us off. I did not want to go. He wanted me to cook for the officers, but I had always been
a house girl and did not know how to cook. I learned to cook after going to Little Rock and was with the army at The Battle
of Pea Ridge. Afterwards
the command moved over various portions of Arkansas and Louisiana. I saw the soldiers burn lots of cotton and was
at Shreveport
when the rebel gunboats
were captured and burned on Red River. We afterwards went to New Orleans, then by way of the Gulf to Savannah Georgia,
then to Macon and other places in the South. Finally I was sent to Washington City and at the time Gen.
Sheridan made his raids
in the Shenandoah valley I was cook and washwoman for his staff I was sent from Virginia to some place in Iowa
and afterwards to Jefferson Barracks,
where I remained some time. You will see by this paper that on the 15th day of November 1866 I enlisted in the
United States army at St. Louis, in the Thirty-eighth United States Infantry Company A, Capt. Charles E. Clarke commanding.
Captain Charles E. Clarke in the Civil War 6th Infantry at the Battle of Baton Rouge.
"The regiment I joined
wore the Zouave uniform and only two persons, a cousin and a particular friend, members of the regiment, knew that
I was a woman. They never 'blowed' on me. They were partly the cause of my joining the army. Another reason was
I wanted to make my own living and not be dependent on relations or friends. Soon after I joined the army, I was
taken with the small-pox and was sick at a hospital across the river from St. Louis, but as soon as I got well
I joined my company in New Mexico. I was as that paper says, I was never put in the guard house, no bayonet was
ever put to my back. I carried my musket and did guard and other duties while in the army, but finally I got tired
and wanted to get off. I played sick, complained of pains in my side, and rheumatism in my knees. The post surgeon
found out I was a woman and I got my discharge. The men all wanted to get rid of me after they found out I was
a woman. Some of them acted real bad to me. After leaving the army I went to Pueblo, Colorado, where I made money
by cooking and washing. I got married while there, but my husband was no account. He stole my watch and chain,
a hundred dollars in money and my team of horses and wagon. I had him arrested and put in jail, and then I came
here. I like this town. I know all the good people here, and I expect to get rich yet. I have not got my land warrant.
I thought I would wait till the railroad came and then take my land near the depot. Grant owns all this land around
here, and it won't cost me anything. I shall never live in the states again. You see I've got a good sewing machine
and I get washing to do and clothes to make. I want to get along and not be a burden to my friends or relatives."
Exerpt from the article "Cathay
Williams Female Buffalo Soldier"
by Mary Williams, Fort Davis NHS
After the war, Cathay enlisted in the 38th U.S. Infantry, one of the newly formed regiments that consisted of troops
of African-American descent. At the time of her enlistment on November 15, 1866, Cathay was 22 years old and was
5'9" tall. At the time medical examinations were not required of those who enlisted into the army. Cathay
remained in the army until October 14, 1868. After leaving the army, Cathay worked as a cook for an officer at
Fort
Union, New Mexico Territory.
From Fort Union, she went to Pueblo, Colorado.
She stayed there for two years and worked in a laundry for a Mr. Dunbar. From Pueblo, Cathay moved to Las
Animas and lived there about
a year again working as a launderess. In 1891, she was living in Trinidad, Colorado.
Cathay Williams was not the only woman to join the army before 1948 - the year that women were allowed for the
first time to officially enlist in the peacetime army. Many a romantic girl dreamed of being a second Joan of Arc
- a heroine - a savior. For example, it has been estimated that approximately 400 women posed as soldiers during
the Civil War. Many of these women enlisted with their husbands, brothers, and fiancés and most were not
found out unless they required hospital treatment.
There is no record of how many women enlisted in the army during the Indian Wars. In all likelihood there were
other "Cathay Williams' and like Cathay Williams they served their country.
An Analysis Of Cathay Williams' Medical
Condition and Efforts
To Gain Pension And Disability Allowances.
Since the publication of this article, facts
concerning Cathay Williams' life and military service have come to light, answering
some of the questions presented in this article.
Note: Cathay was a house slave, joined the army to be independent,
married, and divorced.
CATHAY WILLIAMS
BLACK WOMAN SOLDIER 1866-1868
© 1992 DeAnne Blanton
Cathay Williams' disability discharge,
On November 15, 1866 Cathay Williams became a soldier. She enlisted with the United States Regular Army in St.
Louis, Missouri, intending on a three year tour of duty. She had never been in the army before. She informed the
recruiting officer that she was 22 years old and by occupation a cook. She named Independence, Missouri the place
of her birth. When asked her name, she must have replied William Cathay. As she was illiterate, her papers read
William Cathey, and by that name and spelling she would be known the rest of her army career. The recruiting officer
described William Cathey that day as 5'9", with black eyes, black hair, and black complexion.
An army surgeon examined William Cathey upon enlistment, and determined that the recruit was fit for duty. We can
assume the exam was cursory, only checking for obvious and superficial impairments or abnormalities. If either
the surgeon or the recruiting officer realized that William Cathey was female they kept the fact to themselves.
It seems highly unlikely they knew the truth, because 19th centurly U.S. Army regulations forbade the regular enlistment
or commissioning of women.
Cathay Williams' enlistment document,
courtesy of the National Archives
Other than the place of her birth, nothing is known of this woman prior to her enlistment in the U.S. Army. Information
about her family life and circumstances prior to enlistment, including whether she was born slave or free, has
not been found.(1) Even her age at the time of enlistment is uncertain. She might have been only 16 years old and
lied about her age, a not uncommon ploy among her male counterparts. The army in the 19th century hardly ever checked
the veracity of age claims, or asked for proof of identity.
Her reasons for becoming a soldier are a matter of conjecture, as she never stated them. Was she fleeing an unhappy
life with family or other relations? Was she an orphan? She might have had compelling reasons to change her identity,
such as running from something or someone. Perhaps she viewed the army as a way to get out of Missouri, or get
away from home. Maybe she found cooking for a living unsatisfactory. Or did she simply want the adventure of being
a soldier?
It seems reasonable that she viewed the army as a job open to African-Americans, with prospects for a decent livelihood
and a semblance of respect. We can presume Cathay Williams had no substantial means of support other than herself.
(There is no evidence she ever married.) She was uneducated, and therefore consigned to laboring for her wages.
As a black woman in 1866, her prospects were dim and low-paying. As a black man in the army she would earn more
money than a black female cook.
Whatever her motivations in joining the army, she may not have realized she was setting a precedent. While she
was not the first woman to enlist in the army -- women disguised as men fought in the volunteer armies of the Revolution
and the Civil War -- Cathay Williams may be the first to have served in the United States Regular Army in the 19th
century. To date, she is the only documented
African-American woman who
served in the U.S. Army prior to the official introduction of women.
Very little is known about the details of William Cathey's service because personnel records were not kept for
Regular Army enlisted soldiers during the 19th century. The unit muster rolls, compiled every two months, rated
the company as a whole, listed its members, and occasionally included comments regarding the individual soldier.
The muster rolls reveal that William Cathey did not have an illustrious, or even an exciting army career. She was
an average soldier. She neither distinguished herself nor disgraced her uniform while in the service. She was never
singled out for praise or punishment. The opinions held of William Cathey by peers and officers is unknown. Whether
she was congenial or aloof, outspoken or retiring is a mystery.
Furthermore, the records cannot tell us if she faced difficulties concealing the fact she was female. It may have
been easy for her. She was one of the tallest privates in her company, and she probably never experienced close
physical scrutiny during her service, despite hospital visits. The mechanics of how she successfully concealed
her femininity are left to speculation. We do not know whether or not she found the necessary deception stressful.
Upon enlistment, William Cathey was assigned to the 38th U.S. Infantry. The 38th Infantry was officially established
in August 1866 as a designated, segregated African-American unit. (The 39th, 40th, and 41st Infantries were also
designated black units that year.) The officers of the segregated African-American regiments were white, and the
regimental headquarters of the 38th was located at Jefferson Barracks, Missouri. The 38th through 41st Infantries
were short-lived, however. In March 1869, after William Cathey's discharge, they were consolidated into the historically
familiar African-American 24th and 25th Infantries.(2)
From her enlistment date until February 1867, William Cathey was stationed at Jefferson Barracks. Her time there
would have been spent in training and the daily routine of army camp life. It is uncertain, though, just how long
she actually was present at the installation. On February 13, Company A of the 38th Infantry was officially organized,
and William Cathey, along with 75 other black privates, was mustered into that company. At the time of this organization,
however, she was in an unnamed St. Louis hospital, suffering an undocumented illness. How long she was hospitalized
also is not recorded.
By April 1867 William Cathey and Company A had marched to Fort Riley, Kansas. On the 10th of that month, William Cathey went to the post hospital complaining
of "itch". (Army itch was usually scabies, eczema, lice, or a combination thereof, the perceived result
of the filth of camp life.(3)) On April 30, she was described as ill in quarters, along with 15 other privates.
Because they were sick, their pay was docked 10 dollars per month for three months, so we can presume William Cathey
was not malingering. She did not return to duty until May 14, which indicates that something other than itch bothered
her. In June 1867 the company was at Fort Harker, Kansas.
Indeed, the company was destined to travel. On July 20, 1867, it arrived at Fort Union, New Mexico, after a march
of 536 miles. On September 7, Company A began the march to Fort Cummings, New Mexico, arriving October 1. The unit was stationed there for eight months.
It appears that William Cathey withstood the marches as well as any man in her unit. When the company was not on
the march, the privates did garrison duty, drilled and trained, and went scouting for signs of hostile Native Americans.
William Cathey participated in her share of the obligations facing Company A. There is no record that the company
ever engaged the enemy or saw any form of direct combat while William Cathey was a member.
In January 1868 her health began deteriorating, after about eight months off the sick list. On the 27th of that
month, she was admitted to the post hospital at Fort Cummings, citing rheumatism. She returned to duty three days
later. On March 20, she went back to that hospital with the same complaint. Again, she returned to duty within
three days.
On June 6, the company marched for Fort Bayard, New Mexico, completing the 47 mile trek the next day. This was
the last fort at which William Cathey lived during her army stint. On July 13, she was admitted into the hospital
at Fort Bayard, and diagnosed with neuralgia. (Neuralgia was a catch-all term for any acute pain caused by a nerve,
or parts of the nervous system. It could be a symptom of a wide range of diseases.(4)) She did not report back
to duty for a month. This was the last recorded medical treatment of William Cathey while in the military.
During her military career, she was in four hospitals, on five separate occasions, for varying amounts of time,
and apparently, no one discovered that William Cathey was a woman living as a man. It seems fairly certain in the
Victorian age, in an army hospital, even out West, that the masquerade would have been noted had it been uncovered.
It is a foregone conclusion that she would have been discharged from the army immediately had that discovery been
made.
The fact that five hospital visits failed to reveal that William Cathey was a woman raises questions about the
quality of medical care, even by mid-l9th century standards, available to the soldiers of the U.S. Army, or at
least to the African-American soldiers. Clearly, she never fully undressed during her hospital stays. Perhaps she
objected to any potentially intrusive procedures out of fear of discovery. There is no record of the treatment
given her at the hospitals. There is every indication that whatever treatments she received, they did not work.
On October 14, 1868 William Cathey and two other privates in Company A, 38th Infantry were discharged at Fort
Bayard on a surgeon's certificate
of disability. William Cathey's certificate included statements from both the captain of her company and the post's
assistant surgeon. The captain's statement read that Cathey had been under his command since May 20, 1867 "...
and has been since feeble both physically and mentally, and much of the time quite unfit for duty. The origin of
his infirmities is unknown to me." The surgeon's statement claimed Cathey was of "...a feeble habit.
He is continually on sick report without benefit. He is unable to do military duty.... This condition dates prior
to enlistment." Thus, with such wording on the certificate of disability for discharge, ended the brief army
career of Cathay Williams, alias William Cathey. She served her country for just under two years.
courtesy of the National Archives
Was William Cathey as infirm as the certificate states? Those statements by the captain and the surgeon lend the
impression she was perennially ill. Yet the available records, admittedly scant in detail, indicate she went for
months without seeking medical treatment. Perhaps she was sick in quarters more often than recorded on the company
rolls, or maybe she was ill more often than just when she went to the hospital. But if her infirmities pre-dated
enlistment, why did the recruiting officer and the surgeon in St. Louis make her a soldier?
Was she mentally feeble, as her captain claimed? That is open to debate. Her illiteracy points to a dearth of education,
which is far different from stupidity or mental incapacity. One fact is certain. She was bright enough, or wily
enough, to conceal the fact she was female for nearly two years. Her successful imposture argues for either some
mental ability on her part, or a lack of scrutiny and observation on the army's part.
In any event, in October 1868 Cathay Williams was on her own in New Mexico, far away from any relations she may
have had in Missouri, and she was sick. Some regrettably sparse information is known about her life after the army.
She resumed the garb and identity of a woman, in fact of herself, Cathay Williams. She travelled to Fort Union
and worked as a cook for the family of a colonel in 1869 and 1870. She then travelled to Pueblo, Colorado and worked
as a laundress for a Mr. Dunbar for two years. She moved on and lived in Las Animas County, Colorado for a year,
again working as a laundress. She finally settled permanently in Trinidad, Colorado, making her living as a laundress.
There is some evidence she may also have found work as a nurse.
Why did Cathay Williams return to the identity of a woman working in low-paying servitude? We can only guess at
her reasons. She may have been tired of living as a man. Maybe concealing the fact she was a woman became too much
of a burden. Perhaps she had no choice. Her bad health likely made her incapable of the generally physically demanding
manual labor available to uneducated black men working for wages. She may have viewed the somewhat less physically
demanding "woman's works her only alternative in making a living.
At some point in late 1889 or early 1890, Cathay Williams was hospitalized in Trinidad for nearly a year and a
half. Again, no record has surfaced detailing the nature of this illness. She was probably indigent when she left
the hospital, so she filed in June 1891 for an invalid pension based upon her military service. Her application
brought to light the fact that an African-American woman served in the Regular Army.
Her original application for the pension, sworn before the local County Clerk (as was the procedure for all pension
applications), gave her age as 41. She stated that she was one and the same with the William Cathey who served
as a private in Company A, 38th U.S. Infantry for just under two full years. She claimed in her application that
she was suffering deafness, contracted in the army. She also referred to her rheumatism and neuralgia. She declared
eligibility for an invalid pension because she could no longer sustain herself by manual labor. We can infer she
was unemployed at the time of the application.
The clerk recorded her attorneys as Charles and William King of Washington, D.C. These two men most likely were
professional pension claim handlers. There is no evidence that they over-exerted themselves on behalf of their
client in Colorado.
A supplemental declaration, filed the following month in Trinidad by Cathay Williams before the County Clerk, contended
that she contracted small pox at St. Louis in October 1868, and that she was still recovering from the disease
when she swam the Rio Grande River
on the way to New Mexico. She stated that the combined effects of small pox and exposure led to her deafness.
There are obvious problems with the two declarations. Nowhere do the available records extant today indicate that
she ever complained of, or exhibited signs of deafness while in the army. The Pension Bureau, a forerunner of today's
Department of Veterans Affairs, claimed such documentation could not be found in 1891. If Cathay Williams suffered
hearing impairment during her tour of duty, no one bothered to record the fact. Given the minimal information written
down about Regular Army privates during the 19th century by their commanding officers and their doctors, this is
a possibility. Since Williams was illiterate, she would not have known what they wrote about her anyway.
Her claim of suffering small- pox in October 1868 is even more puzzling. She was in New Mexico that month, and
discharged on the 14th. She could not have been in St. Louis. Did the County Clerk record the wrong month and year?
Was Cathay Williams suffering memory lapse 23 years after she left the army? Did she invent this illness? The attorneys
for Cathay Williams apparently never noticed the discrepancies of dates in the July 1891 declaration.
Assuming an error in recording the year of her bout with small pox does not help Williams' case. If she claimed
hospitalization in October 1866, then she did not have a case for a disability pension based on that disease, as
it happened before her enlistment. She could not have been hospitalized in St. Louis in October 1867, because she
was in New Mexico.
William Cathey was in a St. Louis hospital in February 1867, but the reason she was there was not recorded. Her
illness could have been small pox. If Cathay Williams was mentally feeble, as her captain charged, then she easily
could have been confused about the month when she gave her supplemental affidavit. Swimming the Rio Grande could
have occurred only during the march from Fort Harker to Fort Union, which took place in the summer of 1867. If
she had small pox earlier that year, she conceivably still could have been feeling its effects.
The military medical records document that William Cathey suffered rheumatism and neuralgia while in the service.
The pension case of Cathay Williams would have been stronger if she had claimed disability based on those two problems.
Why didn't she? One wonders if her lawyers gave her any advice at all.
On September 9, 1891 a medical doctor in Trinidad, employed by the Pension Bureau, examined Cathay Williams. (His
name is lost to posterity because his signature on all the paper work is illegible.) He was charged with providing
both a thorough examination of the patient, and a complete description to the Pension Bureau of her physical condition
at the time of the exam. The doctor described Cathay Williams that day as 5'7, 160 pounds, large, stout, and 49
years of age. He reported that she could hear a conversation, and therefore was not deaf. He also reported no physical
changes in her joints, muscles, or tendons indicating rheumatism or neuralgia. This doctor obviously did not know
that neuralgia was a problem of the nerves, not the muscles, thus raising questions of his competency.
Cathay Williams' claim for deafness and loss of toes due
to frostbite, courtesy of the National Archives
Most horrifying, the doctor reported that all her toes on both feet had been amputated, and she could only walk
with the aid of a crutch. He provided no explanation of, or ruminations concerning the cause of amputation. He
may not have even asked her how, why, or when it happened. Other than her loss of toes, the doctor stated she was
in good general health. While he declared the impairment caused by the amputations permanent, he gave his opinion
as "nil" on a disability rating.
In addition to ordering the physical examination of Cathay Williams, the clerks at the Pension Bureau in charge
of her case solicited information from her private doctors in Trinidad. Those men could not, or did not, provide
the bureau with any information. So it is not known if she lost her toes during the Trinidad hospitalization, or
why the procedure was necessary. While it is apparent the amputations happened after her military service, those
severed toes are still another unexplained incident in the life of Cathay Williams.
In February 1892, the Pension Bureau rejected her claim for an invalid pension. Her lawyers were notified in April.
In September, they rallied to their client's defense. While they conceded there was no proof she acquired deafness
in the line of duty, they tried to follow up on the disability of the feet, and claimed she lost her toes due to
'frosted feet'. Frostbite would have qualified her for an invalid pension, if she was afflicted during her service.
Her medical records do not document any such complaint. While it does get cold in Kansas and New Mexico, where
she served, it also gets very cold in Colorado, where she later lived.
Cathay's rejected claim for disability,
courtesy of the National Archives
There is no indication of whether the case went any further, or if Williams' attorneys received any response from
the Pension Bureau regarding their new claim. In any event, Cathay Williams did not receive a government disability
pension based upon her military service.
The Pension Bureau rejected her claim on medical grounds, that no disability existed. Under the existing regulations,
there were five lawful grounds for denial of an invalid pension. The first reason, desertion, is not valid. The
second that disability existed prior to enlistment could have been cited by the bureau, based on the surgeon's
statement on her discharge certificate that the feeble condition pre-dated enlistment. The third reason that disability
was not due to service -- also could have been cited by the bureau, as they could find no documentation of deafness,
small pox, and presumably, frostbite during her tenure in the army. Remember, she did not claim disability due
to neuralgia or rheumatism. A fourth cause of denying a pension was that the service was not legal. The Pension
Bureau could have attempted that excuse immediately, because the former soldier in question was a woman who had
passed herself for a man in order to join the army. Enlistment of women in the military was illegal.
Instead, the Pension Bureau used the fifth reason -- that no disability existed. This is questionable. Perhaps
the Trinidad doctor's report, which basically stated she was fine, held the most weight in the case. But Cathay
Williams was disabled. She could only walk with the permanent
aid of a crutch. And, for different reasons, the army itself had deemed her disabled for service in 1868. The pension
clerks offered no explanation for picking the "no disability" grounds for denial of the pension. The
review personnel of the Pension Bureau rubber-stamped the decision, and did not raise any questions about the case.
Estimate of amount of disability, courtesy of
the National Archives
There was wide room for Cathay Williams' pension case to be disputed as the initial lack of effort and the delayed
activism on the part of her lawyers certainly would be grounds for legal malpractice. The pension clerks had some
other compelling reasons to doubt the circumstances of the case. The inadequate documentation of William Cathey's
illnesses while in the army raised the question of the government's culpability. The conflicting statements of
the application and supplemental affidavit for the pension raised the issue of Cathay Williams' credibility. The
September 1891 medical report by the doctor in Trinidad denied any disability. The damning sentences on her discharge
papers stated that the feeble condition pre-dated enlistment.
The fact that the Pension Bureau chose the least defensible reason for denial, that Cathay Williams was not disabled,
raises the question of how fairly and how thoroughly her case was treated. She was
disabled. True, she was not an invalid in the strictest sense of the word, but as a laundress by occupation, she
was severely impaired by not being able to walk and stand without aid.
Was racism or sexism at work during the pension application and review process? Did those elements play a crucial
role in the denial of a pension for Cathay Williams? One can argue that racism and sexism were pervasive social
attitudes in the 1890's, and the Pension Bureau did not operate in a social vacuum. It should be noted, however,
that nowhere in her pension application file are any written statements that can be perceived, even marginally,
as racist or sexist, and there are no derogatory remarks written about the applicant herself.
Surprisingly, the Pension Bureau never questioned identity, and never appeared to doubt that William Cathey of
the 38th Infantry and Cathay Williams of Trinidad, Colorado were one in the same. This is rather incredible. Granted,
Cathay Williams was not the first woman to apply for a pension based upon milltary service. By 1891, the Pension
Bureau had dealt with more than one woman who disguised herself as a man and served her country during the Civil
War. Women who applied for pensions based upon army service usually met with resistance, not just from the pension
clerks, but from the army itself.
Why was Cathay Williams' service not questioned by the pension investigators? Was it because she produced the original
discharge papers of William Cathey on demand? Was it because the alias was disingenuous, a simple switch of her
first and last names, and therefore credible? Was it because her skill as a soldier was never tested on the battlefield?
Or was it because she was black? The pension clerks might have found it less troubling to believe a black woman
could pass as a man and do soldier duty, and more difficult to accept that white women did the same during the
Civil War.
Maybe a small and brief notation in Cathay Williams' pension file fully sums it up. A clerk wrote in the margins
that the question of identity was never raised, as the claim was rejected for medical reasons. This one sentence
leaves open the probability that her service may have been questioned had there been no recourse to deny her claim
on strictly medical grounds.(5)
It is unfortunate that so little is known of Cathay Williams. The information in her pension file together with
the scattered references to her in military records is all that exists. The fragmentary references to her physical
condition, however, provide some clues as to what may have caused of her various ailments during the course of
her adult life. It is entirely possible that Cathay Williams suffered from mild diabetes, the form that is non-insulin-dependent
and not immediately life-threatening.
Untreated, mild diabetes increases the individual's susceptibility to viruses. Cathay Williams may have contracted
small pox. And another virus later in life may have caused her to be hard of hearing. If she easily caught whatever
bugs were going around the camp or the fort, this would explain why the Fort Bayard surgeon labeled her of feeble
habit. Untreated non-insulin-dependent diabetes can also affect the peripheral nerves, causing pain. We know that
Cathay 'Williams suffered unexplained pain in the nerves, or neuralgia. Another symptom is loss of deep tendon
reflexes and general muscle weakness and soreness. This could be what she and the Fort Cummings doctors diagnosed
as rheumatism. The doctor in Trinidad would not have noticed any physical changes in her muscles or tendons if
her pain was caused by diabetes. If Cathay Williams was a diabetic, then the Fort Bayard surgeon was right -- her
illness did pre-date enlistment.
Mild diabetes, especially in younger patients, can be controlled with diet and exercise. We can assume that Cathay
Williams did not know the cause of her medical problems any omore than the variety of doctors who treated her.
We can also assume that she did not have the proper diet for a diabetic. But it is interesting to note that she
was healthiest when Company A was on the move, marching frequently to different posts between June 1867 and January
1868. She was getting daily exercise, which was good for a diabetic condition.
A major, and one of the final, complications of untreated diabetes is gangrene. Gangrene of the toes would explain
the amputations. If the theory that Williams was diabetic is correct, then she did not have long to live after
her toes were amputated.(6)
Nothing definite is known of Cathay Williams after the Pension Bureau rejected her claim. Where she lived, how
she survived, her quality of life, and the date and place of her death are undetermined. She was born in anonymity,
and so she died.
The 1900 federal census schedule for Trinidad, Colorado does not list Cathay Williams, nor cite any black woman
with a similar name. From this we can deduce that she either left Trinidad sometime after 1892, or she died prior
to the arrival of the census-takers. (Unfortunately, the state-wide census for Colorado is not indexed.) Given
her handicap, and the assump tion she was in financial straits when she applied for the pension, it seems unlikely
she relocated. It is more probable that she died sometime between late 1892 and 1900. This is especially likely
if the diabetes theory is correct, as the amputations illustrate she was in the final stages of the disease.
All theorizing aside, the central and most significant fact of the life of Cathay WiIliams is that this African-American
woman set a precedent. She did it without fanfare, and in all probability, without intention. After all, she did
not enter the army to prove a point, nor did she reveal the fact she was a woman from any social or political motivations.
She probably entered the army to make a living, and when she filed for a pension she very likely was destitute.
Cathay Williams is an improbable pioneer, which makes her life even more significant. Her army service was not
brilliant. It was short-lived, but then, she was mustered out of the army essentially through no fault of her own
-- she was unhealthy. Further, she was uneducated, possibly suffering a long-term debilitating disease, in lowly
circumstance, and perhaps unintelligent. What little is known about her life suggests it was difficult. The importance
of Cathay Williams does not lie just in the recognition that she is the only documented black woman who served
in the Regular Army infantry during the 19th century. She set a precedent against the odds.
Historically, she prevailed, despite whatever illness, hardship, discrimination, and anonymity she faced during
the course of her life. She carved a small, but symbolically important place in the history of American women,
in the history of African-Americans, and in the history of the United States Army.(7)
ENDNOTES
1. A search of the 1860 federal census schedule for the state of Missouri for information about Cathay Williams'
origins was unsuccessful.
2. John K. Mahon and Romana Danysh, Infantry, Part 1: Regular Army, Army Lineage Series (Washington: U.S. Army,
1972) p. 31; and Record Group (RG) 94, Records of the Adjutant General's Office (AGO), returns from Regular Army
units, 38th Infantry, 1866-1869, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).
3. Richard J. Dunglison, M.D., A Dictionary of Medical Science (Philadelphia: Henry C. Lea, 1874), p. 559.
4. Dunglison, p. 698.
5. The following sources were consulted in piecing together the life and military service of Cathay Williams: RG
15, Records of the Veterans Administration, pension application file SO 1032593, Cathay Williams, NARA RG 94, AGO,
carded medical records, Regular Army, 1821-1884, six cards relating to William Cathey, NARA RG 94, AGO, enslistment
papers, US. Army, 1798-July 1894, papers for William Cathey, NARA; and RG 94, AGO, Regular Army muster rolls, Company
A, 38th Infantry, December 1866-October 1868, NARA.
When no evidence existed in the records relating to a particular aspect of Cathay Williams' life, the questions
put forth and possibilities offered are strictly the speculations of the author.
6. Sylvia A. Price and Lorraine M. Wilson, Pathophysiology. Clinical Concepts of Disease Processes (New York: McGraw-Hill,
1986), pp.887-893. This textbook provided the clinical information about diabetes, and formed the basis of the
author's theory that Cathay Williams was a non insulin-dependent diabetic.
7. Special thanks to my former and present colleagues, Michael Knapp and Michael Musick, of the National Archives,
Military Reference Branch, for their initial investigations into the existence of a black woman soldier.
Special thanks also to Rebecca C. Young, BS.N., who provided research asistance into the subject of diabetes, and
to Marc Wolfe, friend and colleague, who proved a thoughtful sounding-board and editor. The Minerva Center
MINERVA: Quarterly Report on Women and the Military, Vol.
X, Nos. 3. & 4, Fall/Winter, 1992, pp. 1-12.
Source Credits: Documents
courtesy of National
Archives and Administration,
Mary Williams- Fort
Davis NHS and Vicki Hagen,
Fort
Sill, Oklahoma
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