World War I
President Wilson promoted the war to Americans because we were making the "world safe for democracy.” African Americans hoped it would bring democracy to them also. Though some outspoken African Americans like A. Philip Randolph opposed black participation in the war, many black newspapers supported it. “Colored folks should be patriotic,” the Richmond Planet insisted. “Do not let us be chargeable with being disloyal to the flag.” Over one million African Americans responded to their draft calls, and 370,000 were inducted into the army. During training in the South, colored troops were treated horribly, many northern recruits could not bear the oppression resulting in riots in both East St. Louis and Houston in 1917, leaving tensions high and 129 Negroes dead.
In Europe, segregated African American units were denied combat assignments, relegated to mop and bucket jobs.Europeans welcomed the colored soldiers into their pubs, restaurants, and nightclubs giving them a taste of equality. When they returned to America after the war, discrimination was doubly difficult to accept.