
Vocabulary
Building the West: Buffalo Soldiers
Definitions and Context
Cavalry - They were soldiers trained to fight and patrol
on horseback. They were armed with carbines (short rifles) and pistols.
Context- Cavalry regiments could travel greater distance
than soldiers could on foot as they rode horses.
Infantry- They were soldiers trained to fight and patrol
on foot. They were armed with rifles and bayonets.
Context: Infantry units were often reasonable for garrisoning forts
and guarding outposts.
Regiment - During the Indian Wars, this was the largest
organization of soldiers. A regiment contained between 800 and 1200 enlisted
men and officers. A Colonel commanded each regiment.
Context: There were four regiments of Buffalo Soldiers, each having
about 800 to 1000 men each.
Company - This is a division of a regiment. Each regiment
had multiple company divisions. In the Cavalry, this was a unit of less than
100 men and officers. A Captain commanded a company.
Context: The Buffalo Soldiers were often deployed to various forts
with only one or two companies of about 200 men.
Officer - This is a member of an Army who holds a position
of authority. Commissioned officers get their authority from the President.
Their commission charges them with the duties and responsibilities of a specific
company, regiment, or officer such as Paymaster.
Context: The officer was in charge of making orders and commanding
the enlisted men during their various duties.
Non-Commission Officer - A subordinate officer (such as
a sergeant) in the army appointed from among enlisted personnel by an officer.
He had limited authority over a squad of enlisted men.
Context?Non-commissioned officers often had many more responsibilities than
an enlisted man, but little respect from him.
Enlisted men - This is the basic soldier. He is the lowest
rank and has no authority. They make up the majority of the army.
Context: When a man joined the army without a commission, he started
at the lowest rank and was known as an enlisted man.
Enlistment - This is a contract that a member of the army
signed when he joined the service. During the nineteenth century, enlistments
normally lasted for five years.
Context: When you joined the army, you signed a contract called an
enlistment.
Patrol - A detachment of soldier sent out from a fort to
search for the enemy. They were often much shorter than scouts.
Context: Groups of soldiers were sent out on patrol to explore the
area around a fort for potential enemies
Scout - A detachment of soldiers sent out to explore new
paths, locate resources, and determine the position of enemies.
Context: The cavalry often spent many months on scouts trying to
determine new roads, locate water, and even find enemies.
Haversack - A canvas sack carried over the shoulder of a
soldier that held the necessities he needed.
Context: Infantry soldier carried their plates, food, and even tooth
brushes in their haversack.
Saddlebag - A leather bag strapped to a saddle and used
to carry the necessities of a cavalry soldier.
Context: Cavalry soldiers carried all of their basic needs like food
and toothbrushes in their saddlebag.
Barracks - Generally, a long building with one large open
room for soldiers to sleep in when at a fort.
Context: Enlisted men slept in one large room together called a barracks
where they kept a cot or bed and a box (called a footlocker) for their gear.
