February 20, 2025

Idavox

The Media Outlet of One People's Project

Ruben Rivers (1921-1944)

A lot of Black military heroes didn’t get their get until years after they were they were gone. President Bill Clinton awarded WWII hero SSgt. Rivers his Medal of Honor.

A note: The Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth currently cracks on the observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Pride Month, Holocaust Days of Remembrance, The Tuskegee Airmen and other cultural or historical annual events that pay tribute to those who contribute more than he ever has. We felt the need to fill in the gaps of the approved history of Hegseth and Trump. This Black History Month we will be spotlighting military heroes, and encourage everyone to learn more about these heroes we write about!

BlackPast

Ruben Rivers was a United States Army staff sergeant who served as a tank company platoon leader during World War II. Rivers was born in 1921 to Willie and Lillian Rivers in Tecumseh, Oklahoma. He grew up nearby Hotulka, Oklahoma where he and his eleven brothers and sisters worked on the family farm. In 1930, the family moved to Earlsboro, Oklahoma. After graduating from high school in Earlsboro, Rivers worked on the railroad for a while. When the United States entered World War II, Rivers and his two brothers joined the armed forces in 1942. Rivers was assigned to the 761st Tank Battalion at Camp Hood in Texas. The Battalion was nicknamed the Black Panthers and they were attached to General George Patton’s U.S. Third Army.

After the D-Day Invasion, the 761st was sent to France. During the fall of 1944, General Patton selected the 761st to be part of the Saar Campaign in the Allied drive to the Siegfried Line near the border of Germany and France. On November 8, 1944, the battalion joined with the 104th Infantry and 26th Infantry Division in an attack on German positions near Vic-Sur-Sellie in Northeastern France. As they were entering the town, a roadblock improvised by the Germans using a falling tree and several land mines, stopped the progress of the tank battalion and infantry. The Germans then trained their fire on the tanks and the infantrymen stranded in the roadside ditches

Rivers, who was positioned in Able Company’s lead tank, dismounted from his tank and in the face of enemy small arms fire, attached a cable to the roadblocking tree and moved it off the road which permitted the combat team to proceed. His actions prevented a serious delay in the overall offensive which included the capture of the town of Vic-Sur-Sellie. For this action, Rivers was awarded the 761st’s first Silver Star.

On November 16, 1944, Rivers and Able Company led another assault. The main target was German positions around Guebling in Northeastern France. As Rivers’ lead tank entered the town, it struck a mine that disabled the vehicle and injured him. Despite his seriously deteriorating medical condition, Rivers on November 19, continued to lead his tank company as they now advanced toward German positions near the town of Bougaitroff. There the Germans fired on Rivers’ tank, killing him and the other crew members instantly.

Rivers posthumously earned the Medal of Honor. It was scheduled to be given on November 20, 1944 but was not received until 50 years later due to what was subsequently revealed as racial discriminatory delays by the U.S. Army bureaucracy. On January 13, 1997, President William “Bill” Clinton presented the Medal of Honor Rivers to his surviving sister, Grace Woodfolk.


25 Years of Hate Having Consequences !

2025 is a milestone year and we want to give a huge THANK YOU to all of our supporters who have been in the trenches with us for the past 25 years. A lot of groups and people we have dealt with since we started are long gone: Richard Barrett, Matt Hale, the Minutemen and others! But we are still here fighting the good fight, contending with the new generation's version of hate politics. There are trying times ahead, but we believe our reality would be even worse if we did not come together to do this work. If you value the research and reporting that we have done at One People’s Project and Idavox- and you want to see it continue- we hope you will consider helping to keep our mission fired up.

One People's Project is a 501 (c)(3) organization. All donations are tax-deductible. EIN: 47-2026442


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