Home / Full timeline / The Southern Christian Leadership Conference office in Jacksonville, FL receives twenty-two complaints in one week from Black soldiers of abusive treatment at Fort Stewart-Hunter near Savannah, GA.
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference office in Jacksonville, FL receives twenty-two complaints in one week from Black soldiers of abusive treatment at Fort Stewart-Hunter near Savannah, GA.
1978 (Sep 7)
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) office in Jacksonville, Florida, reported that within the preceding week it had received twenty-two complaints from Black soldiers of abusive treatment at Fort Stewart-Hunter near Savannah, Georgia. The head of the Jacksonville SCLC office said white officers and non-commissioned officers were harassing Blacks, who were being "inflamed by harsh treatment and harsh words." Black soldiers said the whites used the derisive epithet "nigger” and other such inflammatory words. The Fort Stewart-Hunter incidents followed an announcement in August 1978 by Army Chief of Staff Bernard Rogers that a year-long study would be launched to find out why a greater percentage of Black soldiers were being punished and dishonorably discharged than white soldiers. In a letter sent to commanders of major army installations across the country, Rogers described the situation as a "disturbing trend” that was worsening. Rogers based his comments on a recent army equal opportunity report which showed that Blacks received 54 percent of all dishonorable discharges during the fiscal year 1976 and nearly 57 percent of such discharges during the 1977 fiscal year. Those figures were about twice the rate of dishonorable discharges for white soldiers. In addition, Blacks were charged with more serious offenses than white soldiers.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.