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Auction archive: Lot number 40

Thomas H. Allsup 10th Cavalry Buffalo Soldiers Archive

Estimate
US$5,000 - US$7,000
Price realised:
US$3,750
Auction archive: Lot number 40

Thomas H. Allsup 10th Cavalry Buffalo Soldiers Archive

Estimate
US$5,000 - US$7,000
Price realised:
US$3,750
Beschreibung:

Lot of 11 documents from the archive of Thomas H. Allsup of the 10th Cavalry. (5) Discharge Papers; (1) Muster Roll; (1) Promotion Paper; (2) Marksman Certificates; (1) Marriage Certificate; (1) Regular Army and Navy Union Certificate. The exceptional archive of Buffalo Soldier Thomas Henry Allsup I (1847-1920) documenting his military service with the 10th Cavalry during the entirety of the Late Indian Wars. Born in Talbot County, Maryland in 1847, it is a distinct possibility that Allsup was born into slavery. In the 1910 census, both his parent’s birthplaces were listed as “Africa,” suggesting their likely enslavement in antebellum Maryland. Regardless of his status before and during the Civil War, Allsup must have wanted to forge a new path and joined the nascent 10th Cavalry, enlisting on November 25, 1867 in Baltimore, Maryland. He would serve in excellent standing for thirty years, presumed to have retired in 1897. The documents in the archive chart his pioneering path across the American West. Included in the archive is an 1872 Muster Roll of Troop A of the 10th Cavalry for April to June 1872 at Fort Sill, Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) paid and signed on July 10, 1872. It notes that the “Troop performed the usual garrison duty and furnished mounted details for detached service and also fatigue parties for the Post, during the time for which musters,” that their discipline is “excellent” and their instruction and military appearance are “good.” Allsup is listed as Corporal, one of four, among the 33 men in the troop. In the earliest of his five discharge papers, issued at the expiration of his five-year terms of service, on November 25, 1872, his character is listed as “very good.” On August 1, 1877, Allsup was promoted to First Sergeant, a rank he would hold for the remainder of his career. In 1877, he was stationed at Fort Concho, Texas with the second of his Discharge papers issued there, noting his character as “excellent” and that he was “a reliable and intelligent soldier.” It was in this same year that he played a significant role in the Buffalo Soldier Tragedy of 1877 (also known as the Staked Plains Horror), an ill-fated sortie of 10th Cavalry troops led by Nicholas Merrit Nolan in July 1877 in an attempt to catch Comanche warriors on behalf of a group of buffalo hunters who had been raided. The expedition occurred during a severe drought and the group may have been deliberately misled resulting in the “Thirsting Time” with most of the men going five days without water, resorting to drinking the blood of their dying horses. Four soldiers and one civilian died during the ordeal. During the calamity, Nolan demoted an officer, First Sergeant William Umbles who would then separate from the main group. Umbles would claim later during his trial that he was searching for water as ordered, while Nolan believed that he had deserted. During all of this, Allsup was in charge of the Bull Creek supply camp and was on duty when Umbles arrived and claimed that Nolan and the other men were dead. Allsup was skeptical and instead headed to Doubles Lake with a wagon of water and other supplies, reuniting with Nolan and the main group of men. There is no doubt that Allsup brought much-needed relief for his fatigued and dehydrated comrades and helped to prevent further deaths. Allsup would go on to testify in the October trial of Umbles. Allsup continued to serve the 10th Cavalry with distinction with his further discharge papers reporting his character as “excellent.” He is known to have served at Fort Davis, Texas; San Carlos, Arizona territory; Fort Bayard, New Mexico territory; and his final post at Fort Assinniboine, Dakota Territory in what is now north-central Montana. In an August 1, 1988 LA Times article “The Proud Legacy of a Buffalo Soldier,” his grandson Thomas H. Allsup III recalls that “Black Jack Pershing was his commanding officer for his last two years. My grandfather had 17 children. He talked to Geronimo.” Whil

Auction archive: Lot number 40
Auction:
Datum:
20 Feb 2020
Auction house:
Cowan's Auctions, Inc.
Este Ave 6270
Cincinnati OH 45232
United States
info@cowans.com
+1 (0)513 8711670
+1 (0)513 8718670
Beschreibung:

Lot of 11 documents from the archive of Thomas H. Allsup of the 10th Cavalry. (5) Discharge Papers; (1) Muster Roll; (1) Promotion Paper; (2) Marksman Certificates; (1) Marriage Certificate; (1) Regular Army and Navy Union Certificate. The exceptional archive of Buffalo Soldier Thomas Henry Allsup I (1847-1920) documenting his military service with the 10th Cavalry during the entirety of the Late Indian Wars. Born in Talbot County, Maryland in 1847, it is a distinct possibility that Allsup was born into slavery. In the 1910 census, both his parent’s birthplaces were listed as “Africa,” suggesting their likely enslavement in antebellum Maryland. Regardless of his status before and during the Civil War, Allsup must have wanted to forge a new path and joined the nascent 10th Cavalry, enlisting on November 25, 1867 in Baltimore, Maryland. He would serve in excellent standing for thirty years, presumed to have retired in 1897. The documents in the archive chart his pioneering path across the American West. Included in the archive is an 1872 Muster Roll of Troop A of the 10th Cavalry for April to June 1872 at Fort Sill, Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) paid and signed on July 10, 1872. It notes that the “Troop performed the usual garrison duty and furnished mounted details for detached service and also fatigue parties for the Post, during the time for which musters,” that their discipline is “excellent” and their instruction and military appearance are “good.” Allsup is listed as Corporal, one of four, among the 33 men in the troop. In the earliest of his five discharge papers, issued at the expiration of his five-year terms of service, on November 25, 1872, his character is listed as “very good.” On August 1, 1877, Allsup was promoted to First Sergeant, a rank he would hold for the remainder of his career. In 1877, he was stationed at Fort Concho, Texas with the second of his Discharge papers issued there, noting his character as “excellent” and that he was “a reliable and intelligent soldier.” It was in this same year that he played a significant role in the Buffalo Soldier Tragedy of 1877 (also known as the Staked Plains Horror), an ill-fated sortie of 10th Cavalry troops led by Nicholas Merrit Nolan in July 1877 in an attempt to catch Comanche warriors on behalf of a group of buffalo hunters who had been raided. The expedition occurred during a severe drought and the group may have been deliberately misled resulting in the “Thirsting Time” with most of the men going five days without water, resorting to drinking the blood of their dying horses. Four soldiers and one civilian died during the ordeal. During the calamity, Nolan demoted an officer, First Sergeant William Umbles who would then separate from the main group. Umbles would claim later during his trial that he was searching for water as ordered, while Nolan believed that he had deserted. During all of this, Allsup was in charge of the Bull Creek supply camp and was on duty when Umbles arrived and claimed that Nolan and the other men were dead. Allsup was skeptical and instead headed to Doubles Lake with a wagon of water and other supplies, reuniting with Nolan and the main group of men. There is no doubt that Allsup brought much-needed relief for his fatigued and dehydrated comrades and helped to prevent further deaths. Allsup would go on to testify in the October trial of Umbles. Allsup continued to serve the 10th Cavalry with distinction with his further discharge papers reporting his character as “excellent.” He is known to have served at Fort Davis, Texas; San Carlos, Arizona territory; Fort Bayard, New Mexico territory; and his final post at Fort Assinniboine, Dakota Territory in what is now north-central Montana. In an August 1, 1988 LA Times article “The Proud Legacy of a Buffalo Soldier,” his grandson Thomas H. Allsup III recalls that “Black Jack Pershing was his commanding officer for his last two years. My grandfather had 17 children. He talked to Geronimo.” Whil

Auction archive: Lot number 40
Auction:
Datum:
20 Feb 2020
Auction house:
Cowan's Auctions, Inc.
Este Ave 6270
Cincinnati OH 45232
United States
info@cowans.com
+1 (0)513 8711670
+1 (0)513 8718670
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