🚨U.S Military Opened Fire On Black American Soldiers In Britain For Refusing To Segregate🚨
On June 24, 1943, white American military police opened fire on Black U.S. soldiers stationed in the small English village of Bamber Bridge during World War II, killing Private William Crossland.
The violence began after two white MPs took issue with Black soldiers from the segregated 1511th Quartermaster Truck Regiment spending time with white British civilians at a local pub. At the time, the U.S. military was still enforcing segregation and even tried to export Jim Crow overseas. American military officials pressured British communities to separate Black and white servicemen, including in restaurants and pubs.
The people of Bamber Bridge refused. They welcomed the Black American soldiers into their businesses and treated them like everyone else. That refusal to go along with American-style segregation created growing tension between the local community and some U.S. military authorities. What started as a confrontation outside a pub escalated into an armed firefight, ending with Private William Crossland being shot and killed.
To me, this is one of the clearest examples of what Black Americans have endured throughout this country’s history. Black men have fought and died in America’s wars for generations, serving a country that, time and time again, refused to recognize their full humanity once they returned home. They were expected to wear the uniform, risk their lives, and defend freedom abroad while being denied equal treatment, dignity, and basic civil rights in the very nation they were fighting for.
In my opinion, no Black American should ever serve a country that has repeatedly shown it does not value Black lives the same way it values others. Even today, I believe this country still refuses to fully do right by Black Americans. We have shed our blood for America for centuries, yet America has never truly repaid that sacrifice with justice, equality, or the treatment our ancestors earned.
Angry Biracial Studios
The atrocious acts of violence against us without provocation and yet we have not made these wicked inferior cowards pay for their atrocious acts of injustice against us.











