125th Infantry org
Summary: One of the first black regiments arriving at Fort Stanton and Fort Selden in 1866.
Completeness: 43/100 Grade D
- Editor summary
- Sourced claims (≥3)— Has 2/3 sourced claims. Extract more from existing chunks or ingest a new source.
- Multiple primary sources— Has 1 source(s). A second independent source dramatically raises credibility.
- Coordinates
- Operating / life dates— A bounding date (year is enough) sharpens the timeline and the map slider.
- Wikidata authority— Link a Wikidata QID to unlock automatic enrichment from authority records.
- Published story— Generate a permanent story page via the admin Story API — drives SEO + reader retention.
- Alternate names— Add the entity’s nicknames, Spanish names, or earlier names — improves searchability.
Next steps to raise the score:
- Sourced claims (≥3): Has 2/3 sourced claims. Extract more from existing chunks or ingest a new source.
- Multiple primary sources: Has 1 source(s). A second independent source dramatically raises credibility.
- Published story: Generate a permanent story page via the admin Story API — drives SEO + reader retention.
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Claims (2)
arrived_at
cited from Remembering New Mexico's Buffalo Soldiers (2023)
Feature on Buffalo Soldiers in New Mexico by Ellen K. Dornan. Covers the formation of black regiments after the Civil War — 57th and 125th Infantry arriving in 1866 at Fort Stanton and Fort Selden; the 24th and 25th Infantry and 9th and 10th Cavalry serving across forts including…
cited from Remembering New Mexico's Buffalo Soldiers (2023)
Feature on Buffalo Soldiers in New Mexico by Ellen K. Dornan. Covers the formation of black regiments after the Civil War — 57th and 125th Infantry arriving in 1866 at Fort Stanton and Fort Selden; the 24th and 25th Infantry and 9th and 10th Cavalry serving across forts including…
Sources (1)
Remembering New Mexico's Buffalo Soldiers ↗
Dornan, Ellen K. (Boogie Mama) · 2023 · other · web · details