Johnson Chesnut Whittaker

"The West Point outrage - the Court of Inquiry in session [with insert of head and shoulders portrait of Johnson C. Whittaker, a colored cadet who was assaulted]."

Johnson Chesnut Whittaker (1858–1931) was one of the first black men to win an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point.[1] When at the academy, he was brutally assaulted and then expelled after being falsely accused and convicted of faking the incident.[2] Over sixty years after his death, his name was formally cleared when he was posthumously commissioned by President Bill Clinton.[2]

Biography

Johnson C. Whittaker as a West Point Cadet.

Whittaker was born into slavery on the Chesnut Plantation in Camden, South Carolina.[2] He studied privately with Richard Greener, the first African American to graduate from Harvard college.[3] Whittaker later attended the University of South Carolina, then a freedmen's school.[3] He was appointed to the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1876 under congressman Solomon L. Hoge.[2][4] For most of his time at West Point, he was the only black cadet,[5] and he was ostracized by his white peers.[2]

In the morning of April 5, 1880, he was found tied to his bed, unconscious, bleeding, and bruised.[2][4] His hands and face had been cut by a razor, and burned pages from his Bible were strewn about his room.[2] Whittaker told administrators that he had been attacked by three fellow cadets, but his account of the morning was not believed.[2] West Point administrators said that he had fabricated the attack to win sympathy.[2] After more than a year of nationally publicized hearings, Whittaker was found guilty in an 1881 court martial and expelled from West Point.[2][4] The prosecuting attorney was West Point Judge Advocate Major Asa Bird Gardiner, later a Sachem of Tammany Hall in New York and disgraced New York District Attorney, who blatantly talked of the "inferior" and "superior" races and commented that "Negroes are noted for their ability to sham and feign."[4] Though the verdict was overturned in 1883 by President Chester A. Arthur, West Point reinstated the expulsion on the grounds that Whittaker had failed an exam.[2]

In his later life, Whittaker was a teacher, lawyer, high school principal in Oklahoma City, and psychology professor in South Carolina.[1][2] He died in 1931.[2]

His two sons served as Army officers in World War I, a grandson joined the all-black Tuskegee Airmen in World War II and a great-grandson served as first lieutenant in the Vietnam-era Army.

Posthumous commission

In the 1970s, a book about Whittaker by John Marszalek, a historian at Mississippi State University, drew attention to his case.[2] It was not until 1994, however, when a television movie based on the book aired, that a movement for his posthumous commission gained ground.[2]

On July 25, 1995, President Bill Clinton awarded the commission to Whittaker's heirs, saying, "We cannot undo history. But today, finally, we can pay tribute to a great American and we can acknowledge a great injustice."[1][2]

In popular culture

Matter of Honor, a stage play by Michael Chepiga retelling Whittaker's story while at West Point, was produced at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena, California in September 2007.

See also

References

Further reading/viewing

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