Meetings
The Southwest IL Buffalo Soldiers meet at the Scott AFB VFW Post 4183, located at 1516 Old Hwy 158, Belleville, IL 62221. Phone: (618) 746-9801.
We usually meet on the fourth Sunday of each month at 3:30 PM. Please check the Events Calendar or e-mail president@bsmcswil.com to confirm the meeting date and location. Due to holidays or a conflicting out of town event, we may have to reschedule the meeting.
SWIL Awards the 2011 Scholarship to Ms. Jessica Givens of Belleville East High School – May 2011
Ms. Jessica J. Givens, of Belleville East High School is the 2011 recipient of the Southwest Illinois Buffalo Soldiers Motorcycle Club. This year the scholarship was offered to students attending eight metro-east high schools (Belleville East H.S., Belleville West H.S. O’Fallon Township H.S., East Saint Louis Senior H.S., Cahokia H.S., Edwardsville H.S., Alton H.S. and Lovejoy Technology Academy).
Jessica will attend Liberty University in Lynchburg, VA where she will major in Spanish language. While in school shw was an honor roll student and participated in various extra-curricula and church choral activities. She volunteered her free time doing community activities. She traveled with her church to Sandusky, OH to work with Habitat for Humanity and also helped at a Chicago-area Juvenile Detention Center. Jessica maintained a 3.4 grade point average on a 4.0 scale.
We are proud to present this years award to Jessica for her outstanding work.

Buffalo Soldiers Do Presentation at Southwestern Illinois College – Apr 2011
Southwestern Illinois College student Donald Brown Jr.
is a hands-on participant at the college’s Third Annual
Black Student Leadership Conference, which featured a
presentation from the Buffalo Soldiers Motorcycle Club,
Southwest Illinois, Inc. – Provided/BND
Scott personnel, Make-A-Wish re-do teenager’s room – 30 March 2011
Click this picture to read the story about Juan Ortiz and his wish granted by the “Make-A- Wish Foundation and local groups.
Rev. Dorris Davis’ Christmas Dinner and Toy Give Away – Dec 2010
The Soldiers were back for the fourth year to take part in the 2010 Reverend Dorris Davis’ Helping Hand Shelter Christmas Dinner and Toy Give-Away. The event was held in the atrium of the East Saint Louis, IL City Hall building. The number of families that came out was less then usual due to the snow, but volunteers were abundant! Everyone that came out had plenty to eat and the kids got plenty of toys for Christmas.

SWIL Buffalo Soldiers M/C in the December Biking Life Magazine
Click the picture below to read the article about our 2010 “Kicking It In The Country” Block Party.
SWIL Presented with Street Sign in Honor of Mr. Robert Smoot – A True Buffalo Soldier
Cold saved soldier’s life; Brooklyn man earned 10 medals
The Army doctor said the cold saved Robert Smoot’s life in 1944.
Smoot says someone else saved him.
“I was hit by a shell in my back and leg,” said Smoot, placing his hand on the right side of his lower back and running it down his right leg. “I felt the pain, but after awhile the pain went away — I guess because of the cold weather.”
After a moment of unconsciousness, he woke to the sight of his wounded leg covered in frozen blood. After a three-hour ride through the mountains of Italy and a half-mile walk, Smoot arrived at the field hospital.
“When I hit the heat in the tent, I heard a guy say, ‘Get a wheelchair,’ and I passed out. When I came to, I was in bed with needles in both my arms.”
The doctor told Smoot his wounds should have killed him, but the cold weather kept him from bleeding to death.
Smoot, 85, of Brooklyn, said it couldn’t have been the weather that saved him. Several fellow soldiers died in that same cold.
“I said ‘No, the cold weather didn’t save my life, Doc. The Good Lord did.’”
The Purple Heart that Smoot earned is one of about 10 medals he received for his World War II service. He also received the Silver Star, the third-highest Army decoration, awarded for “gallantry in action.”
It was in the Apennine Mountains of northern Italy, and Smoot said the mission was to “hold the position” and keep German forces out.
Smoot was a sergeant in the U.S. Army’s 92nd Infantry Division, the “Buffalo Soldier” division that was the only black division to see combat in Europe. His job was to lead his squad up the side of a mountain to relieve a company of about 200 soldiers who were under German attack.
“We needed ammunition and troops to help us on the mountain,” Smoot said.
When he called down the mountain for help, he was told neither ammunition nor troops would be available until the next day.
Still under attack, Smoot got an order to “fix bayonets,” a phrase he said really means “get ready to die.” He pushed his squad up the mountain that night.
“Then a strange thing happened,” he said. “Fog came down the mountain so thick you could raise your hand 6 inches in front of your face and you couldn’t see it. Then I knew we were safe through the night.”
The squad moved into the German position the next morning only to find the Germans had retreated.
“They’d left their dead and anything they didn’t need,” Smoot said.
When Smoot wasn’t in combat, he dealt with being far from home and missing special family occasions.
“Every day was the same,” Smoot said. “You could say every day is Christmas, or you could say every day is Monday.”
He was 19 when he left college to enter the draft in 1942, and 23 when he returned home in 1946.
He said missing three Christmas dinners was especially difficult. He remembered December 1944 when his unit was promised a Christmas dinner. It would be their first hot meal since going overseas. It was canceled by a German attack.
“We never did get our Christmas dinner,” he said.
Although he was at war in a foreign land, Smoot said there were some parallels to life back home — such as racism.
He saw racism back home in the United States, such as when he was stationed in Fort Polk, La. Members of his all-black division and town residents clashed after a group of black soldiers were severely beaten during a visit into town.
A general was sent from Washington to relocate the unit to Fort Huachuca, Ariz.
In Europe, Smoot said his division ran into racism again after German soldiers spread rumors among Italians about the Buffalo Soldiers, whom the Germans dubbed “the African Outfit.”
“The Germans told the Italians all-black outfits will rape your girls and women, and take anything you have when they sweep through,” he said.
Smoot and other black soldiers dispelled the stereotypes after spotting Italian children playing in the mountains and finding their whole family had been in hiding. After he and other unit members assured the family they weren’t there to harm them, one of the men in the family made the signal for other families to come out of hiding.
“He waved and I guess there were 100 people that came out,” Smoot said.
Smoot said his personal goal was “to try and get the job done and get back home.”
Medals didn’t mean as much to Smoot as getting home to Brooklyn.
“Everybody made a big deal out of it,” he said. “In a way, I was so glad to get home it didn’t really matter.”
When he finally made it home, his post-war plans had changed.
“My ambition was to finish college and become a coach,” said Smoot, who had been one of the top high school athletes in the St. Louis. “But after three years overseas, everything left. My ambitions — boom — blew up.”
Smoot took a job as an instructor with the Army Reserve Corps and went on to become one of few blacks of his time to earn a Green Beret. Smoot served a total of 38 years in the Army before he retired in May 1980.
He married in 1950 and had a son and daughter before divorcing two years later.
“She thought I loved the Army more than her,” he said.
Smoot has been asked to share his story at local high schools, and even got an offer from famous director Spike Lee to talk about his experience for a film expected to come out in October.
He said although his life didn’t turn out as planned, his service left him satisfied.
“It was something that needed to be done,” he said.
Contact reporter Rickeena J. Richards at rrichards@bnd.com or 239-2562.
SWIL Honors The Senior Citizens of Brooklyn, Illinois – Nov 2010
The SWIL Buffalo Soldiers honored the senior citizens of Illinois’ oldest Black community, Brooklyn, IL, with a sit-down Thanksgiving Dinner. Also know as “Lovejoy”, it was a stop on the Underground Railroad and is the oldest town incorporated by African Americans in the United States. It has the first African Methodist Episcopal Church, an independent denomination, built west of the Appalachian Mountains and the first in Illinois. Its motto is “Founded by Change, Sustained by Courage”. The Brooklyn Mayor, Nathaniel O’Bannon, Jr. and Illinois State House Representative Eddie Lee Jackson were in attendance at Lovejoy High School for the festivities.

SWIL Buffalo Soldiers Give Thanksgiving Baskets to Local Area Families – Nov 2010
The SWIL Buffalo Soldiers set out on their third annual Thanksgiving Dinner Basket Give-Way to needy familes from Belleville, East St Louis and Cahokia, Illinois. This year the families were selected through local churches. They were given turkeys and all the fixings for a proper Thanksgiving dinner. This gives our club great pride to be in a position to donate these items to these families once again.
Bluff Road Route
Approximate Distance: 100 miles / 160.93 km
Time to Allow: Plan on lunch, this ride will take 4-6 hours.
Best Time to Go: Spring, Summer, Fall
State(s):
SCENERY:
ROAD CHARACTERISTICS:
AUTHOR’S DESCRIPTION:
Nice ride, an alternative to going north of St. Louis via the river road at Alton. Head south from Columbia down the Bluff Road for your 1st refreshment stop at the Fountain Inn. Take your time an if you see some motorcycles outside an establishment, it will be worth a stop. Take your time and enjoy the scenery and view as you ride south from Fountain to Prairie Du Rocher. Be sure to stop a Lisa’s for refreshments or lunch. After leaving Lisa’s, take a side trip to Fort Kaskaskia State Park. At the intersection of Rt. 3 and Bluff Road, stop at my favorite watering hole in this part of Illinois, Pop A Top Tavern in Ellis Grove. Turn north up Illinois Rt 3 to Waterloo and stop at Sporto’s Tavern if you need to stop. Continue north on Illinois Rt 159 to Hecker and Smithton. DJ’s is Smithton is a good stop as is the Honky Tonk in Hecker, but I think it burned down. Follow Hwy 159 north to Hwy 15, then go west about a mile to Hwy 158. Follow Hwy 158 to Millstadt and into Columbia. Last stop is Michaels in Columbia on Main street, cold beer and good food. Ride this route fast in 3-4 hurs or take all day. Enjoy the ride.













