
Read more at Legends of American History
   Cathay Williams 
   
   In a tiny shotgun cabin
   Martha's baby girl was born.
   A baby born to slavery
   That no one could forewarn.
Cathay Williams was determined
   And never was deterred
   As she began her life as a house girl
   Being seen but never heard.
   
   Then the Civil War broke out
   And the Union soldiers came
   And taking Cathay with them
   Her life would never be the same.
   
   Cathay learned the ways of military life
   And became an accomplished cook.
   She was sent to General Sheridan
   A job she proudly undertook.
   
   Then the Civil War was ended
   And Cathay was finally free
   And in seeking out her freedom,
   She found her place in history.
   
   Her own way she needed to make
   And a burden to no one be
   So as a Buffalo Soldier she joined up
   In the 38th U. S. Infantry.
   
   Cathay Williams became William Cathay
   And no one was to know
   The secret of her identity
   As a soldier she did grow.
   
   The troops moved west to Ft. Cummings
   To keep the Apache at bay.
   There were one hundred and one enlisted men
   And among them was William Cathay.
   
   After two years as a soldier
   In the 38th Company A
   William went to see the doctor
   And her secret came out that day
   
   Discharged as a Buffalo Soldier
   Cathay did her very best
   As she continued to make her way
   In this land they called the West.
   
   Because of her illegal enlistment
   Her pension passed her by
   But she picked herself up and moved on
   And never questioned why.
   
   Life ended for Cathay Williams
   At the age of eighty-two
   She lived a long independent life
   A life that was tried but true.
   
   A salute to Cathay Williams
   The hero of this rhyme
   A special woman of the west
   A legend in her time.
   
   
   © July 1999, Linda Kirkpatrick
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