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Black '41 opens with the arrival of the class of 1941 at the gates
of West Point in the spring of 1937. It follows that
class-nicknamed "Black '41" for their misdeeds while at the
Academy-over the course of the next four years, as they absorb the
lessons that will help them become military leaders. Their cadet
days provide the backdrop for the ominous events in a world headed
toward war. It would be a war, as Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson
underscored in his commencement address to the class in June 1941,
that "may fall, in large measure, upon your shoulders." The U.S.
Army into which those new graduating second lieutenants were
commissioned in 1941 was in many ways a holdover from the army of
an earlier era, with plenty of cavalry but without a single armored
division. Black '41 became a key part of the new army, quickly
transitioning to a mechanized force and growing its air arm. By the
time of the major Pacific and European action, Black '41's officers
were captains and majors, and leading soldiers into some of the
critical fighting in the war. Told largely through the words of the
graduates, Black '41 is the coming-of-age story of West Point's
finest, during the hour of our country's greatest need.
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