Formal black service in the U.S. military dates from the American Revolution. Many freemen and some slaves already served in Northern colonial militias to protect their homes against Indian attack. Their numbers rose in 1770 after Crispus Attucks, a black man believed to be the first casualty at the Boston Massacre, was killed.
Commanding general of the Continental Army, George Washington, was initially against recruiting black soldiers, but military necessity later made him relent.
The most prominent group of black soldiers served in the 1st Rhode Island Regiment. Enough black and Indian soldiers were recruited to eventually make up half of its 225 men. This regiment achieved its greatest fame protecting the Continental army's withdrawal from Aquidneck island during the Battle of Rhode Island in 1778.
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