From Library Journal
The prize-winning author of The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain here tells the remarkable tale of Pvt. William Cathay of Company A, 38th U.S. Infantry, who in fact was a big-boned, 5' 7" black woman named Cathy Williams. Tracing Williams through often-spotty records from her birth as a slave near Independence, MO, to her final days as a businesswoman in Trinidad, CO, Tucker extends the narrative to include broad perspectives, sweeping from a West African background to the expanse of the post-Civil War West. He focuses on Williams's service from 1866 to 1868 with the famed Buffalo Soldiers as they patrolled the historic 900-mile Santa Fe Trail. Tucker casts Williams as an inspirational champion against the odds in a feminine Horatio Alger story, brimming with testaments to personal initiative, desire to succeed, strength, and resiliency. He also touts the Buffalo Soldiers' roles as guardians of the frontier on the vanguard of Western development. A unique story of gender and race, time and place, Tucker's work is a recommended read that reaches across categories, from American, African American, and military history to Western and women's history. Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., TempeCopyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Book Description
Few Americans today, black or white, know about the incredible life of Cathy Williams. From her beginnings as a slave in Independence, Missouri, to her enlistment with Company A, 38th U.S. Infantry, in November 1866, the story of this remarkable woman deserves to finally be told. By disguising herself as a man and assuming the name William Cathay, Williams became a "buffalo soldier," serving in one of the six black units formed following the Civil War. Her story tells us much about prevailing attitudes toward both race and gender in post Civil War America.
Language Notes
Text: English, German (translation)
About the Author
Phillip Thomas Tucker is the chief historian of the 81st Training Wing at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Mississippi. He is the author of several books on the Civil War including The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain, winner of the Douglas Southall Freeman Award, Burnside's Bridge: The Climactic Struggle of the 2nd and 20th Georgia at Antietam Creek (0811701999), and The Final Fury: Palmito Ranch, The Last Battle of the Civil War (0811706524). He has also co edited, with Jeffrey Smith, The 1862 Plot to Kidnap Jefferson Davis (0811712710).
Cathy Williams: From Slave to Female Buffalo Soldier FROM THE PUBLISHER
Few Americans today, black or white, know about the incredible life of Cathy Williams. From her beginnings as a slave in Independence, Missouri, to her enlistment with Company A, 38th U.S. Infantry, in November 1866, the story of this remarkable woman deserves to finally be told. By disguising herself as a man and assuming the name William Cathay, Williams became a "Buffalo Soldier," serving in one of the six black units formed following the Civil War: the first and only African American woman to accomplish this feat. Duty as a Buffalo Soldier under the name of Pvt. William Cathay led Cathy Williams on a personal odyssey of adventure from her home state of Missouri to the Mexican border. Wearing a blue uniform and serving beside her male comrades, Cathy Williams experienced hard duty during a winter campaign against the Apaches of southwest New Mexico.
By accepting this host of challenges, Cathy Williams went where no other African American woman -- or any woman, for that matter -- had previously gone. During nearly two years of service, she successfully challenged and eventually overcame a host of demeaning stereotypes about both her race and gender. All the while, she maintained her dignity, pride, and self-respect in a world that sought to deprive her of these virtues simply because she was a black woman. Continuing a tradition of personal independence and self-sufficiency established at an early age, Cathy Williams continued to reach high to fulfill her own dream of creating a life for herself on the Western frontier after her military service. Cathy Williams's odyssey offers an inspiring example of a courageous woman who made her hopes and dreams come true in the West by her own initiative and desire to succeed. In fact, both Cathy's struggle and longing for equality were greater for her than for most white Americans because of her race, gender, and tragic past rooted in slavery.
The story of Cathy Williams also serves as an inspirational example to other women, both black and white. Quite unknowingly and unintentionally, Pvt. William Cathay charted a new course by leading the way for today's important role of women in all branches of the American military. This resourceful former slave can be viewed as a pioneer for the thousands of American women serving in today's United States' armed forces. Cathy Williams's story makes a meaningful contribution to the annals of Women's, American, African American, Military, and Western history. But her remarkable life is especially valuable as an inspiring example for all Americans -- black and white, man or woman -- emphasizing the importance of the power of the will to survive against the odds, and as an enduring testament to the strength and resiliency of the human spirit.
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
The prize-winning author of The Confederacy's Fighting Chaplain here tells the remarkable tale of Pvt. William Cathay of Company A, 38th U.S. Infantry, who in fact was a big-boned, 5' 7" black woman named Cathy Williams. Tracing Williams through often-spotty records from her birth as a slave near Independence, MO, to her final days as a businesswoman in Trinidad, CO, Tucker extends the narrative to include broad perspectives, sweeping from a West African background to the expanse of the post-Civil War West. He focuses on Williams's service from 1866 to 1868 with the famed Buffalo Soldiers as they patrolled the historic 900-mile Santa Fe Trail. Tucker casts Williams as an inspirational champion against the odds in a feminine Horatio Alger story, brimming with testaments to personal initiative, desire to succeed, strength, and resiliency. He also touts the Buffalo Soldiers' roles as guardians of the frontier on the vanguard of Western development. A unique story of gender and race, time and place, Tucker's work is a recommended read that reaches across categories, from American, African American, and military history to Western and women's history. Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.