Tag Archives: Darrel Nash

USA HISTORIAN DARREL NASH AT COLUMBUS FOR RAID DAY

           Darrel Nash, PA Officer

At left is the featured guest speaker, MSGT – US Army Retired, Darrel Nash. Darrel described the history of his beloved Buffalo Soldiers in the US Army, which of course included their tenure right here in Columbus, and their famous battle exploits during the Punitive Expedition out of Columbus deep into the adjoining state of Chihuahua, Mexico back in 1916 and 1917.

In his address, Sgt. Nash spoke to the audience for just 10 minutes (see video below), but his words were well-chosen and highly educational.  Some more than 150 assembled visitors and special guests (which included a large group of Buffalo Soldier Motorcycle Club enthusiasts from several nearby states, including Arizona and Texas) enthusiastically applauded his inspirational message. The event was opened by Columbus Mayor, Philip Skinner.

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Buffalo Soldier Patch

The annual Raid Day Memorial Services are held in Columbus, NM, and are conducted each year by the Columbus Historical Society (CHS) at the drill grounds immediately behind their popular tourist attraction, the “Depot Museum.”  These services are held on March 9, each year.  The same date on which the infamous 1916 Raid took place by the Mexican Villistas, under the command of the Mexican Revolutionary, General “Pancho” Villa.  As a result of this wanton act of terror, President Wilson ordered American General “Black Jack” Pershing to lead the “Punitive Expedition” into Mexico to capture Villa, “dead or alive.”  Although the Expedition was terminated 11 months later, in 1917, just prior to the entry of the U.S. into the fiery holocaust of WWI in Europe, the Buffalo Soldiers maintained their presence in Columbus until 1922, five years later.

Buffalo Soldier Motorcyclists and their friends pose by the CHS RAID DAY memorial on the Drill Grounds.

The Army units that would come to be known as “Buffalo Soldiers” were created during the post-Civil War Reconstruction Era. On June 28, 1866, Congress passed legislation that allowed Black men to enlist in the peacetime army. Officially called “An Act to Increase and Fix the Military Peace Establishment of the United States,” Two regiments of all-Black cavalry and four regiments of all-Black infantry, commanded by white officers, were subsequently organized and equipped.

What Is a Buffalo Soldier?

Journalist Raechel Running of Bisbee Arizona, an ardent follower of the Buffalo Soldiers

The original Buffalo Soldiers came from these units. The U.S. Army’s 9th and 10th Cavalry were the first. Then came the four infantry units. The 38th U.S. (Colored) Infantry Regiment and the 41st U.S. (Colored) Infantry Regiment, were eventually consolidated into the 24th Infantry Regiment. The 39th and 40th (Colored) Infantry Regiments were consolidated into the 25th Infantry Regiment.

They weren’t the first Black men to serve in defense of the United States. Black men served in the Continental Army and state militias during the Revolutionary War. Black troops served in the War of 1812, and freedmen and former slaves fought in the Civil War for the Union Army. The 1866 legislation was the first to call for specific units composed of Black troops and recruited from Washington, Louisiana, Kentucky, Kansas, and Missouri.

                             Sergeant Dash welcomes CHS member from Deming, NM, Mary Galbraith.

Columbus Historical Society member speaks, Allen Rosenberg, chats with Shirley Garber, President of CHS

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107TH RAID DAY MEMORIAL SERVICE HELD IN COLUMBUS

The annual remembrance ceremony was held yesterday in downtown Columbus under the auspices of the Columbus Historical Society (CHS) and within their dedicated memorial park behind their well-known “Depot Museum.”

CHS President, Shirley Garber lead the ceremony which featured Professor Brandon Morgan, whose presentation was entitled: “Protector and Aggressor: Pancho Villa’s Complicated Relationship with the Lower Mimbres Valley.

Visitors came from as far as Kansas, Washington (state), and several from El Paso, Texas, as well.

The CHS always holds its service on the exact date of the tragic raid, regardless of which day of the week on which that date falls, whereas Columbus itself, holds their Raid Day events over the closest weekend to that date of March 9, 1916, assuring working families can make the occasion.  Next year, in 2024, the date of the actual raid will fall on a Saturday, which will mean the attendees will number in at least the hundreds.

Yesterday’s turnout was estimated to be just short of 60 people.  This weekend the renowned “Cabalgata Binacional,” traditionally witnesses a large group of Horsemen and women coming up from Mexico to meet with hundreds of horsemen and women from the states.  It’s an across-the-border celebration less of the raid, and more about the kinship and closeness of the sister nations.  As in recent years past, the large public event is directed by its principal organizer and promoter, Norma Gomez, who is the landlord for the FASF headquarters Office in Columbus.  The celebratory occasion is usually attended by several thousand celebrants.

The following photos are of yesterday’s Memorial Service:

          Richard and Elizabeth Pendleton in the foreground speaking with John Tyo

L to R: Allen Rosenberg (an ex-Marine!), in a 1916 Army uniform, joking with Corby Burns, and Patricia Kiddney

 CHS Officers and distinguished guests on the Gazebo for the Ceremony – with Professor Brandon Morgan at Podium

Audience gathering in readiness to hear the program

After the ceremony concluded, Steven Zobeck (L)  and Dr. Kathleen Martin (R) look on as  Dr. Morgan shakes hands with Pancho Villa look-alike re-enactor, Rafael Celestino

L to R: Rafael Celestino, Patricia Kiddney, Head Columbus Librarian, Maria Constantine, and Columbus C of C Director, Norma Gomez pose with Darrel Nash (R), Historian for the famed Buffalo Soldiers of the Punitive Expedition – Norma had just presented the Environmental Book Chihuahua to the Library, courtesy of the Mexican Government.

L to R: Maria Constantine and Norma Gomez discuss the Buffalo Soldiers museum and the soldiers’ organization with Darrel Nash