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Sgt.
Clarence L. Proctor
Little is known about Clarence L. Proctor's life
except for what appears in the public record. According to his 1899
application for an invalid pension, he was born in Upperville, Fauquier
County, Virginia. His mother's name was Margaret Smith, and he had six
sisters (one was named Texanna) and three brothers [1].
Proctor was 21 years old and working as a waiter when he
enlisted in the United States military in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on
10 December 1886 [2]. Only a few weeks before his enlistment, he
had married a Miss Viola Jones, but she died less than a year later [1].
At the time of Proctor's enlistment, he was described as
being of mulatto complexion and 5 feet 6 inches tall. After a period of basic training at Jefferson Barracks,
Missouri, Proctor was assigned to the 10th Regular U. S. Cavalry, a Colored
regiment stationed out West. By this time, the Indian wars were pretty
much over. The 10th Cavalry's mission was to maintain order on the Indian
reservations and assist the designated agents of the federal Bureau of
Indian Affairs in carrying out their tasks. During the next twelve years,
Proctor saw duty at Fort Thomas, Fort Grant and San Carlos in the Arizona
Territory, and Fort Custer and Fort Assinniboine in Montana. He served
in the 10th Cavalry's F Troop, G Troop and finally L Troop, attaining the
rank of sergeant in December of 1895 [2].
According to his medical record, Proctor contracted measles
during basic training, dysentery in 1887 and influenza in 1890 while on
duty at Fort Grant, and bronchial pneumonia while serving at Fort Assinniboine
early in 1898. In addition to these ailments, he suffered the occasional
sprains and discomforts of a life lived out of doors and in the saddle [2].
In 24 September
1897, Sgt. Clarence Proctor was reduced to the rank of private. His
military record does not say why. He regained his stripes less than
a year later, however, on 1 June 1898 [2].
When the Spanish-American War broke out early in 1898, the
10th U. S. Cavalry was one of the Colored regiments called up for duty
in Cuba [3]. The 10th was composed of seasoned cavalrymen who needed no
additional training and, it was thought, Colored troops would be immune
to the malaria and yellow fever endemic in the Caribbean. Unfortunately,
this proved not to be the case.
The regiment was assembled at Fort Assinniboine,
Montana, and shipped by rail to Wisconsin, where it was greeted by cheering
throngs, and then on to Lakeland, Florida, where it was to be equipped.
The men of the 10th Cavalry found Florida's Jim Crow restrictions particularly
onerous, as they were not accustomed to the laws and mores of the segregated
South [3].
On 14 June and 15 June 1898, the bulk of the 10th
Cavalry sailed from the port of Tampa, Florida, for Cuba [3].
Whether Proctor was actually with the soldiers sent to Cuba or the smaller
contingent which remained behind in Lakeland cannot be ascertained from the
his military record. It is known, however, that the 10th Cavalry took
part in the battles of Las Guasimas on 24 June, the Battle of San Juan Hill
on 1 July, and siege of Santiago which followed. The men advanced through
swamps and sugarcane fields afoot, their horses having been left behind
[3]. Tropical diseases took a far greater toll than bullets; by the time
the Spanish surrendered on 17 July, 80% of the American forces had contracted
some form of fever [3].
Because so many of the troops serving in Cuba were
ill, Roosevelt urgently requested that these regiments be withdrawn at
once and sent to Camp Wikoff, New York, for convalescence [3]. Sergeant
Proctor spent three months in the hospital there, after which he was directed
to report to Camp Forse, Alabama, for discharge [2]. En route, he stopped
in Washington, D. C. to visit his mother and sisters [1]. Following his
discharge on 20 December 1898 [2], Clarence Proctor made his way back to
Phoenix, Arizona Territory.
Unfortunately, not even the dry desert air could cure
his chronic throat and lung problems. Unable to work, Proctor travelled
to Los Angeles, California, where he filed for an invalid pension on 3 April
1899. While in Los Angeles, he also made the acquaintance of Miss Nannie Goodwin, whom he married on 16
October 1899, Rev. George Byer officiating [2].
Proctor probably
intended to support himself and his new wife on the $72-a-month pension for
which he had applied. However, issuance of the pension was delayed
for many months due to bureaucratic red tape. In December, 1899, Dr.
William Duffield examined Proctor and found him to be emaciated and suffering
from an active case of pulmonary tuberculosis [1].
Over the ensuing
months, Proctor's health and spirits declined. Discouraged and possibly
delirious, he hanged himself from the rafter of his house at 429 East Adams
in Phoenix on 27 March 1900 [4]. At the coroner's inquest, Dr. Duffield
testified that his patient had been in a despondent frame of mind and had
only a few more weeks to live at best. Proctor's death was ruled a
suicide [5].
In an ironic twist of fate, the federal government had issued
Proctor a pension check for $794.40 on 27 March 1900, the very day of his
death [1]. He never received the news.
Proctor's funeral was held at the African Methodist
Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church located at South Second and Jefferson streets
at 2 P.M. on 30 March 1900 [6]. Local military commanders James H. McClintock
and J. W. Crenshaw published a notice requesting all former members of
the First U. S. Volunteer Cavalry (the "Rough Riders") and First Territorial
Volunteer Infantry to appear in uniform to escort Proctor's remains [6]
through downtown Phoenix to his final resting place in the G.A.R. (Porter)
Cemetery.
Sources Cited:
[1] Pension
records of Clarence L. Proctor. U. S. National Archives & Records
Administration (NARA), Washington, D. C.
[2] Military
service record of Sgt. Clarence L. Proctor, 10th U. S. Cavalry, United
States Army. U. S. National
Archives & Records Administration (NARA), Washington, D. C.
[3] History
of the 10th U. S. Cavalry ("Buffalo Soldiers") in the Spanish American
War, http://www.spanamwar.com/10thcavhist.htm,
accessed 30 October 2004.
[4] Death
certificate issued for Clarence L. Proctor, online at http://genealogy.az.gov/azdeath/006/10060149.pdf,
accessed 30 October 2004. Note that on the death certificate, the
word 'Color' has been stricken and replaced with 'Amer'.
[5] Report
of the coroner's inquest held 28 March 1900 and filed 6 July 1900.
Written by Gilbert D. Gray, JP and ex-officio coroner; signed by F.
A. Ames, A. D. Hinton, J. A. R. Irvin, Samuel Cook, A. F. Clark, James
T. Gibson, Gilbert D. Gray.
[6] "Clarence Proctor's Funeral",
Arizona Daily Gazette, Friday
Morning, March 30, 1900. Page 8:2.
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