Company I 366th
InfantryClick to order via Amazon by Harold E. Russell, Jr. Paperback: 40 pages
In April of 1941, a tall, skinny kid from Harlem named Harold Russell, Jr. decided to join the U.S. Army since so many of his buddies were being drafted. Despite being underage and having a heart condition, he somehow managed to enlist without his parents' permission, relying on the help of a friend of the family who was on the draft board and willing to sign on behalf of his father. So, at just 17, Harold was shipped out to Fort Dix in New Jersey where, as he describes it, he ’was then separated with all the other blacks and sent to an all black unit.’ He was assigned to Company I ’ 366th Regiment of the 92nd Infantry Division, the same so-called Buffalo soldiers, African-American soldiers whose heroic exploits were recently recounted by Spike Lee in the film Miracle at St. Anna.
Although he was wounded in a firefight near Naples, Sgt. Russell nonetheless considers himself fortunate, since most of the men in his regiment didn't return alive. A Purple Heart and Bronze Star recipient, he was lucky enough to reunite with his loved ones, including his beloved wife, Eunice. And their blessed union of 66-years and counting has produced five children, plus numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Look no further, if you want to be inspired by the autobiography of an authentic, African-American role model, check that, simply an All-American role model worth emulating.
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