Home / Full timeline / Captain Curtis R. Smothers and six other Black army officers petition Secretary of the Army Stanley R. Resar for a court of inquiry and an investigation of alleged racial bias against Black soldiers in west Germany.
Captain Curtis R. Smothers and six other Black army officers petition Secretary of the Army Stanley R. Resar for a court of inquiry and an investigation of alleged racial bias against Black soldiers in west Germany.
1970 (Dec 1)
Captain Curtis R. Smothers and six other Black army officers petitioned Secretary of the Army Stanley R. Resar for a court of inquiry and an investigation of alleged racial bias against Black soldiers in west Germany. The seven Black servicemen complained of widespread housing discrimination and charged that the bias was going unchallenged because the United States government failed to press the West Germans to enforce the laws against discrimination. According to the Blacks, "only an open court of inquiry convened by the Secretary of the Army could adequately determine the facts, assess the feasibility of alternative solutions, and inquire into factors motivating the long-standing noncompliance with applicable laws and regulations." Smothers, also a military circuit judge in West Germany, was joined in the petition by Major Washington C. Hill, Lieutenant Edwin Dorn, Sergeant Willie Payne and three specialists, 4th class: Gregory Jones, Bobby Metcalf, and James Wilder. Pentagon officials returned to Washington, D.C., on March 13, 1971, after having discussed the December petition with Smothers in West Germany. Smothers was then summoned to Washington for further discussions. This was seen by some as an attempt to persuade Smothers to withdraw his petition. But on June 3, 1971, the Black members of the U.S. House of Representatives announced they were sending a staff member to Germany, Greece, Italy, and Turkey to investigate complaints of racism and discrimination in the armed forces abroad. Representative Shirley Chisholm, Chairman of the Black Caucus's Military Affairs Committee, later reported that racial tension between Germans and Black enlisted men was critical.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.