
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 2022, US Army COL Charles Young was posthumously promoted to brigadier general – a rank he likely would have advanced to during World War I. In 1917 he was the highest ranking African American officer in the US Army. A veteran of the 1916 Mexican Expedition, his name even appeared on a list of the campaign’s officers that GEN John J. Pershing recommended for future brigade command. Then, months into World War I, he was controversially sidelined after failing a medical exam. To discuss Young's career and why he was sidelined in World War I, the World War I Podcast hosted Dr. David Kilroy, author of For Race and Country: The Life and Career of Colonel Charles Young.
Have a comment about this episode? Send us a text message! (Note: we can read texts, but we cannot respond.)
Follow us:
www.macarthurmemorial.org
By MacArthur Memorial; Amanda Williams4.4
185185 ratings
In 2022, US Army COL Charles Young was posthumously promoted to brigadier general – a rank he likely would have advanced to during World War I. In 1917 he was the highest ranking African American officer in the US Army. A veteran of the 1916 Mexican Expedition, his name even appeared on a list of the campaign’s officers that GEN John J. Pershing recommended for future brigade command. Then, months into World War I, he was controversially sidelined after failing a medical exam. To discuss Young's career and why he was sidelined in World War I, the World War I Podcast hosted Dr. David Kilroy, author of For Race and Country: The Life and Career of Colonel Charles Young.
Have a comment about this episode? Send us a text message! (Note: we can read texts, but we cannot respond.)
Follow us:
www.macarthurmemorial.org

3,193 Listeners

3,977 Listeners

4,716 Listeners

1,681 Listeners

1,229 Listeners

747 Listeners

4,026 Listeners

6,050 Listeners

186 Listeners

571 Listeners

3,212 Listeners

911 Listeners

1,530 Listeners

736 Listeners

115 Listeners