In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt said, "This generation
has a rendezvous with destiny." When Roosevelt said that he
had no idea of how much World War II would make his prophecy
ring true. More than fifty years later, Americans are remembering
the sacrifices of that generation, which took up arms in defense
of the nation. Part of that generation was a neglected minority,
Native American Indians, who flocked to the colors in defense
of their country. No group that participated in World War II
made a greater per capita contribution, and no group was changed
more by the war. As part of the commemoration of the fiftieth
anniversary of World WarII, it is fitting forthe nation to recall
the contributions of its own "first citizens."
The Vanishing American
At the time of Christopher Columbus ' arrival
in the New World, the Native American population living in
what is now the United States was estimated at about one million.
By 1880, only 250,000 Indians remained and this gave rise
to the "Vanishing American" theory. By 1940, this population
had risen to about 350,000. During World War II more than
44,000 Native Americans saw military service. They served
on all fronts in the conflict and were honored by receiving
numerous Purple Hearts, Air Medals, Distinguished Flying Crosses,
Bronze Stars, SilverStars, Distinguished Service Crosses,
and three Congressional Medals of Honor. Indian participation
in World War II was so extensive that it later became part
of American folklore and popular culture.
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The Warrior
Image
The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor seemed to waken
an ancestral warrior spirit in many Native Americans. Thousands
of young Indians went into the armed forces or to work in
the war production plants that abruptly emerged during military
and industrial mobilization.
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A 1942 survey indicated that 40 percent more Native Americans
voluntarily enlisted than had been drafted. Lt. Emest Childers
(Creek), Lt. Jack Montgomery (Cherokee), and Lt. Van Barfoot
(Choctaw) all of the famed 45th "Thunderbird" Infantry Division-won
Medals of Honor in Europe. Childers had first distinguished
himself in Sicily, where he received a battlefield commission.
Later in Italy, unaided and despite severe wounds, he destroyed
three German machine gun emplacements. During the Anzio Campaign
in Italy, Montgomery attacked a German strongpoint single-handed,
killing eleven of the enemy and taking thirty-three prisoners.
During the breakout from Anzio to Rome, Barfoot knocked out
two machine gun nests and captured seventeen prisoners. Subsequently,
he defeated three German tanks and carried two wounded men
to safety.
All of these exploits reinforced the "warrior" image in the
American mind. Maj. Gen. Clarence Tinker, an Osage and a career
pilot, was the highest ranking Indian in the armed forces
at the beginning of the war. He died leading a flight of bombers
in the Pacific during the Battle of Midway. Joseph J. "Jocko"
Clark, the first Indian (Cherokee) to graduate from Annapolis,
participated in carrier battles in the Pacific and became
an admiral. Brumett Echohawk (Pawnee), a renowned expert in
hand-to-hand combat, trained commandos. 
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A Tradition
as Fighters
The Iroquois Confederacy, having declared war on Germany
in 1917, had never made peace and so automatically became
party to World War II. The Navajo and other tribes were so
eager to go to war that they stood for hours in bad weather
to sign their draft cards, while others carried their own
rifles so they would be ready for battle when they joined
up. Unwilling to wait for their draft numbers, one-fourth
of the Mescalero Apaches in New Mexico enlisted. Nearly all
the able-bodied Chippewas at the Grand Portage Reservation
enlisted. In a story that has been attributed to many other
tribes as well, Blackfeet Indians mocked the need for a conscription
bill. "Since when," their members cried, "has it been necessary
for Blackfeet to draw lots to fight?"
The annual enlistment for Native Americans jumped from 7,500
in the summer of 1942 to 22,000 at the beginning of 1945.
According to the Selective Service in 1942, at least 99 percent
of all eligible Indians, healthy males aged 21 to 44, had
registered for the draft. War Department of ficials maintained
that if the entire population had enlisted in the same proportion
as Indians, the response would have rendered Selective Service
unnecessary. The overwhelming majority of Indians welcomed
the opportunity to serve. On Pearl Harbor Day, there were
5,000 Indians in the military.
By the end of the war, 24,521 reservation Indians, exclusive
of officers, and another 20,000 off-reservation Indians had
served. The combined figure of 44,500 was more than ten percent
of the Native American population during the war years. This
represented one-third of all able-bodied Indian men from 18
to 50 years of age. In some tribes, the percentage of men
in the military reached as high as 70 percent. Also, several
hundred Indian women served in the WACS, WAVES, and Army Nurse
Corps. 
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The "Chiefs"
Go to War
In spite of years of inefficient and often corrupt
bureaucratic management of Indian affairs, Native Americans
stood ready to fight the "white man's war." American Indians
overcame past disappointment, resentment, and suspicion to
respond to their nation's need in World War II. It was a grand
show of loyalty on the part of Native Americans and many Indian
recruits were affectionately called "chiefs." Native Americans
responded to America's call for soldiers because they understood
the need to defend one's own land, and they understood fundamental
concepts of fighting for life, liberty, property, and the
pursuit of happiness.
Even the clannish Pueblo tribe, whose members exhibited a
historical suspicion of the white world, contributed 213 men,
10 percent of their population of 2,205, to the armed forces.
Wisconsin Chippewas at the Lac Oreilles Reservation contributed
100 men from a population of 1,700. Nearly all the able-bodied
Chippewas at the Grand Portage Reservation enlisted. Blackfeet
Indians enlisted in droves. Navajo Indians responded by sending
3,600 into military service; 300 lost their lives. Many volunteered
from the Fort Peck Sioux-Assinibois Reservation in Montana,
the descendants of the Indians that defeated Custer. The Iroquois
took it as an insult to be called up under compulsion. They
passed their own draft act and sent their young braves into
National Guard units.
There were many disappointments as well-intentioned Indians
were rejected for the draft. Years of poverty, illiteracy,
ill- health, and general bureaucratic neglect had taken its
toll. A Chippewa Indian was furious when rejected because
he had no teeth. "I don't want to bite 'em," he said, "I just
want to shoot 'em!" Another Indian, rejected for being too
fat to run, said that he had not come to run, but to fight.

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The Swastika
Shadow Over Native Americans
World War II signalled a major break from the past
and offered unparalleled opportunities for Indians to compete
in the white man's world. Because the Choctaw language had
befuddled German code-breakers in World War I, the Gemman
government feared the likelihood of Indian communications
specialists as World War II loomed. During the 1930s, Nazi
agents posing as anthropologists and writers on reservations
tried to subvert some Indian tribes and learn their language.
Pan-Nazi agitators from the German-American Bund tried to
persuade Indians not to register for the draft. Third Reich
Propaganda Minister Josef Goebbels predicted Indians would
revolt rather than fight Gemmany because the Swastika was
similarto an Indian mystical bird symbol depicting good luck.
Goebbels went so far as to declare the Sioux to be "Aryans,"
but the Indians knew that as a Mongoloid race, they would
be enslaved by the Nazis. Fascist attempts to convert Indians
to their cause not only met with failure, but it may have
encouraged Indians to register for the draft in the large
numbers they did. About 20 percent of the Indian population,
80,000 men and women, marched off to fight in the armed forces
and at the home front against Adolph Hitler, a man they called,
"he who smells his moustache." Benito Mussolini fared little
better, as the Indians called him "Gourd Chin."
Indians saw the Axis Powers as a threat to their liberty,
and the Indian tribes responded patriotically. The Chippewa
and Sioux joined the Iroquois in declaring war on the Axis.
Indians took extreme measures to get into the war. Illiterate
Papago Indians memorized a few English phrases and learned
to write their names when called to the induction centers.
The Navajo, also rejected in large numbers for not speaking
English, were extremely determined to serve. They organized
remedial English training on their reservations to qualify
for service in the armed forces.
The draft created a structure within which Indians and whites
had to operate together for the defense of their country.
The draft set Indians on a new course where they would be
integrated into military life with their white counterparts
. Their lives and their land-based society would never be
the same. The Indians' success in weakening racial barriers
in the armed forces during World war II presaged the rise
of the Civil Rights movement later. 
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The Home Front
Well-known American humorist Will Rogers, a Cherokee
from Oklahoma, said, "The United States never broke a treaty
with a foreign government and never kept one with the Indians."
Nevertheless, the government of the United States found no
more loyal citizens than their own "first Americans." When
President Roosevelt mobilized the country and declared war
on the Axis Powers, it seemed as if he spoke to each citizen
individually. Therefore, according to the Indians' way of
perceiving, all must be allowed to participate. About 40,000
Indian men and women, aged 18 to 50, left reservations for
the first time to find jobs in defense industries. This migration
led to new vocational skills and increased cultural sophistication
and awareness in dealings with non-Indians.
The purchase of Treasury Stamps and Bonds by Indian tribes
and individuals was considerable. By 1944, war bond sales
to Indians had reached $50 million. Indians also made generous
donations to the Red Cross and other organizations, giving
what they had. All of this from a minority group at the bottom
rung of the economic ladder.
Some 2,500 Navajos helped construct the Fort Wingate Ordnance
Depot in New Mexico, and Pueblo Indians helped build the Naval
Supply Depot in Utah. Because of their hunting, survival,
and navigational skills in the harsh regions of the north,
Alaskan Indians were involved in territorial defense. The
entire football team at the Santa Fe Indian School volunteered
for the armed forces after the 1942 homecoming game.
Women took over traditional men' s duties on the reservation,
manning fire lookout stations, and becoming mechanics, lumberjacks,
farmers, and delivery personnel. Indian women, although reluctant
to leave the reservation, worked as welders in aircraft plants.
Many Indian women gave their time as volunteers for American
Womens' Volunteer Service, Red Cross, and Civil Defense. They
also tended livestock, grew victory gardens, canned food,
and sewed uniforms. A wealthy Kiowa woman in Oklahoma sent
a $1,000 check to the Navy Relief signed with her thumbprint.
Alaskan women trapped animals to earn war bond money. By 1943,
the YWCA (Young Women's Christian Association) estimated that
12,000 young Indian women had left the reservation to work
in defense industries. By 1945, an estimated 150,000 Native
Americans had directly participated in industrial, agricultural,
and military aspects of the American war effort.
The Indian Service sent 1,119 of its 7,000 employees into
military service. Of these, 22 died, while 7 won Silver or
Bronze Stars. In 1942, the Japanese captured 45 Aleuts on
Attu. Only 24 returned from captivity in Japan, where they
had worked in clay pits.
The federal government designated some Indian lands and even
tribes themselves as essential natural resources, appropriating
tribal minerals, lumber, and lands for the war effort. After
the war, Native Americans discovered thattheirservice forthe
warefforthad depleted their resources without reward. Indian
lands provided essential war materials such as oil, gas, lead,
zinc, copper, vanadium, asbestos, gypsum, and coal. The Manhattan
Project used Navajo helium in New Mexico to make the atomic
bomb. The war effort depleted the Blackfeet's tribal resources
of oil. 
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Tell it to the
Marines
German soldiers during World War I had been befuddled
by Indians who transmitted messages over field phones in the
Choctaw language. The 32d Infantry Division, Third Ammy, used
Indians from Michigan and Wisconsin to work with microphones
and to transmit messages in the Louisiana Maneuvers of 1940.
During World War II, the U.S. Marine Corps recruited Navajo
Indians for the same purpose. Navajo marines used their language
as a battlefield code that the Japanese never broke. The Navajo
Code Talkers became the most celebrated and publicized of
the radio units.
Marines were "elite" fighters and welcomed Indians because
of their warrior reputation. The Navajo marines ended their
ceremonial chants by singing the Marine Corps Hymn in Navajo.
Their eloquence came naturally to Indians because theirs is
an oral culture. Navajos formed special all-Navajo Marine
Corps signal units that encoded messages in their native tongue.
Taking advantage of the flexibility and range of the Navajo
language, they worked out translations of military and naval
terms so that orders and instructions could be transmitted
by voice over the radio in a code the Japanese were never
able to break. They were used first in late 1942 on Guadalcanal.
Special Code Talker units were eventually assigned to each
of the Marine Corps' six Pacific divisions. By war's end,
over 400 Navajo had served as Code Talkers. Untold numbers
of Marines owe their lives to the Navajo Code Talkers.
Indians also excelled at basic training. Maj. Lee Gilstrop
of Oklahoma, who trained 2 ,000 Native Americans at his post,
said, "The Indian is the best damn soldier in the Army." Their
talents included bayonet fighting, marksmanship, scouting,
and patrolling. Native Americans took to commando training;
after all, their ancestors invented it. One Sioux soldier,
Kenneth Scisson of South Dakota, became an American commando
unit's leading Gemman-killer. On a single patrol, Scisson
added ten notches to his Garand rifle. Native Americans endured
thirst and lack of food better than the average soldier. They
had an acute sense of perception and excellent endurance,
along with superior physical coordination.
Indians first saw action in the Pacific theater. Over 300
Indians, including a descendant of the famed Apache chief
Geronimo, took part in the defense of Bataan and Corregidor.
Over 2,000 Indian farmers, workers, and businessmen in Oklahoma
and New Mexico trained and fought as part of the 45th Infantry
Division for 511 days of combat in Italy and Central Europe.
The "Thunderbirds" had the highest propor tion of Indian soldiers
of any division, but Indians served conspicuously in the 4th
and 88th Divisions, the l9thand 180thInfantryRegiments, and
the 147thField Artillery Regiment, and in sundry Oklahoma
National Guard units.
For Native Americans, World War II signalled a majorbreak
from the past. Many Indians inthe military made a decent living
for the first time in their lives. By 1944, the average Indian's
annual income was $2,500, up two and one-half times since
1940. Military life provided a steady job, money, status,
and a taste of the white man's world. Indians leamed assertiveness
they could use in their fight for equal rights after the war.

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The Warriors
and War Workers Return
The war, therefore, provided new opportunities for
American Indians, and these opportunities disrupted old patterns.
The wartime economy and military service took thousands of
Indians away from the reservations. Many of these Indians
settled into the mainstream, adapting pemmanently to the cities
and to a non-Indian way of life. Moreover, thousands retumed
to the reservation even after they had proved themselves capable
of making the adjustment to white America. Those who left
traditional cultures did not necessarily reject their heritage.
Instead, they forged a new Pan-Indian identity to cope with
the differences they perceived between themselves and whites.
World War II became a turning point for both Indians and
Caucasians because its impact on each was so great and different.
Whites believed that World War II had completed the process
of Indian integration into mainstream American society. Large
numbers of Indians, on the other hand, saw for the first time
the non-Indian world at close range. It both attracted and
repelled them. The positive aspects included a higher standard
of living, with education, health care, and job opportunities.
The negatives were the lessening of tribal influence and the
threat of forfeiting the security of the reservation. Indians
did not want equality with whites at the price of losing group
identification. In sum, the war caused the greatest change
in Indian life since the beginning of the reservation era
and taught Native Americans they could aspire to walk successfully
in two worlds.
A good deal of credit must go to the Native Americans for
their outstanding part in America's victory in World War II.
They sacrificed more than most-both individually and as a
group. They left the land they knew to travel to strange places,
where people did not always understand their ways. They had
to forego the dances and rituals that were an important part
of their life. They had to leam to work under non-Indian supervisors
in situations that were wholly new to them. It was a tremendously
difficult adjustment; more than for white America, which had
known modem war and mobilization before. But in the process,
Native Americans became Indian-Americans, not just American
Indians. 
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Chronology
- 1918 - Iroquois Indians declare war on Germany. Since
they were not included in the 1919 Peace Treaty, they simply
renewed their Declaration of War in 1941 and included Italy
and Japan.
- 1919 - Indian soldiers and sailors receive citizenship.
- 1924 -The Snyder Act grants full citizenship to all American
Indians.
- 1938 -Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) estimates number
of potential registrants for a draft in case of war.
- 1939 - BIA updates male Indian age groups.
- Jun 1940-The Navajo tribe announces that any un-American
activity among its people will be dealt with severely.
- Aug 1940- BIA Commissioner John Collier meets with Selective
Service representatives to determine how to register Indians.
- Sep 1940- Congress passes Selective Service Act.
- Oct 1940 - Congress passes Nationalities Act granting
citizenship to all Native Americans without impairing tribal
authority.
- - For the first time, American Indians register for
the draft.
- Jan 1941- The Fourth Signal Company recruits thirty Oklahoma
Comanche Indians to be part of a special Signal Corps Detachment.
- Oct 1940- The armed forces have inducted 1,785 Native
Americans.
- Dec 1941- There are 5,000 Native Americans in the armed
forces when Japanese forces attack Pearl Harbor.
- Jan 1942 - Accordingto Selective Service of ficials, 99
percent of all eligible Native Americans had registered
for the draft. This ration set the national standard for
the nation.
- Jan 1942 - The Navajo Tribal Council calls a special convention
to dramatize their support for the war effort; 50,000 attend.
- Jul 1 942 - The Six Nations (Mohawks, Oneida, Seneca,
Cayuga, Onondaga, 1942 and Iroquois) declare waron the Axis
Powers.
- 1942-1943- The Ammy Air Corps runs a literacy program
in Atlantic City, N.J., for native Americans who could not
meet military literacy standards.
- Apr 1943- Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes announces
that Indians have bought $12.6 million in war bonds.
- 1944 - Over 46,000 Indian men and women have left their
reservations for defense-related jobs.
- Nov 1944- Fifty tribes establish the National Congress
of American Indians (NCAI) in Denver, Colorado.
- Jan 1945 - John Collier resigns as Indian Commissioner
after years of political controversy.
- 1946- TheTrumanCommissiononCivilRightsurges more humanitarian
consideration for Native Amencans.
- -Indian Claims Commission Act created by Congress
to adjudicate Indian land claims in the aftermath of
WWII.
- 1947 - Army Indian Scouts discontinued as a separate element
of the U.S. armed forces.
- They had last been used on border patrol duties.
- 1957 - Utah becomes the last state to permit Indians to
vote
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