Self-expression is hardly a part of life for cadets at the United States Military Academy.
So it was far from ordinary when 16 Black women put their own spin on the traditional graduation photo, hoisting their fists in the air while posing in their dress uniforms, swords at their sides.
A social media firestorm followed. So did an internal inquiry at the school.

In this 1998 family photo provided by Sakima Brown, left, and her roommate Amy Thomas pose for a photo on their graduation day as cadets at West Point, in Hyde Park, N.Y. Self-expression is hardly a part of life for cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point. There were just nine black women in her class, and she says that to make it at West Point meant to โshrink your blackness.โ (Dazell Green Sr. via AP)
Some viewed the cadetsโ pose as a gesture of racial solidarity and strength. Others questioned whether it was a statement of support for Black Lives Matter.
West Point officials decided last week that the photo was not politically motivated and no punishment was warranted. Still, that outcome left some Black female graduates confused: Why would anyone see controversy in how those 16 women celebrated their experience in the Long Gray Line?
โWhen I saw it, I said, โI wish me and my classmates had taken a picture like that,’โ said Shalela Dowdy, a 2012 graduate and a friend of some of the women in the photograph. โBut something clicked in my mind that not too many people would be happy about that picture. The fist stands for unity and solidarity, but some people are going to take this the wrong way.โ
None of the 16 women would agree to be interviewed for this story. Speaking through Black alumnae, they cited a need to focus on their graduation next Saturday, when Vice President Joe Biden will give the commencement address, and life after West Point. For some, that will mean active duty service in the Army. They will become Army officers after leaving the academy.
The picture was one of several the women took in their traditional dress uniforms. A different photo, without the raised firsts, was tweeted by the chairwoman of West Pointโs Board of Visitors.
Mary Tobin, who has mentored other Black female cadets since graduating in 2003, said few are inclined to discuss their experiences publicly.

In this photo taken May 13, 2016, Mary Tobin, wearing her West Point class ring, poses for picture in Washington, Friday, May 13, 2016. Self-expression is hardly a part of life for cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point.Tobin, who has mentored other black women cadets since graduating in 2003, said the experience is one rarely discussed publicly. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
โTo be a Black woman at West Point is essentially to make a choice going in โฆ that the majority of the time, you can never fully express your womanhood or your Blackness,โ Tobin said. โWeโre told weโre all green. We donโt ever talk about it, because itโs hard enough for everyone at West Point to graduate.โ
The cadets pictured are joining a rare but proud group of Black women who have broken barriers on dual fronts at West Point. In interviews with The Associated Press, Black alumnae describe a rewarding experience with challenges that included navigating racial incidents.
Established in 1802, West Point went co-ed in 1976. Four years later, there were 62 female graduates. In that class were the first Black female graduates, Joy Dallas and Priscilla โPatโ Walker Locke. West Point has graduated 357 Black women in its 114-year history, and the Class of 2016 includes 18 Black women.
Blacks have contributed to West Pointโs legacy for centuries, from the first African-American cadet, Henry O. Flipper, who graduated in 1877, to 2nd Lt. Emily Perez, a Black woman who was the first member of the โClass of 9/11โ to die in combat, in 2006.
According to admissions director Col. Deborah McDonald, about 15,000 students apply to West Point each year, and about 9 percent enroll. There were 1,859 Black applicants for the incoming freshman class, and 14 percent of them were accepted, McDonald said.
West Pointโs numbers are mirrored at the other U.S. military service academies. The Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, counts 20 women who identify as African-American in its 2016 graduating class of 1,215. The Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado, has a graduating class of 827, of whom 11 are African-American women. The Coast Guard Academy, in New London, Connecticut, didnโt have a gender breakdown by race, but said three students identifying as African-American are in the graduating class of 186.

In this photo taken May 13, 2016, Sakima Brown poses for a portrait in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Self-expression is hardly a part of life for cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Brown, a 1998 graduate who became the pride of her hometown as the first person from Poughkeepsie, to ever attend West Point. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
The application process at West Point is rigorous. Most cadets get in with a letter of recommendation from a member of Congress or the vice president. A medical and physical test is required.
Once enrolled, students are immersed in a campus environment that doesnโt focus on individuality, explained Donald Outing, West Pointโs chief diversity officer.
โItโs about adopting the culture and the values of the military as an institution,โ Outing said. โThe mission requires us to develop soldiers and leaders to function and fight as one team.โ
Sakima Brown, a 1998 graduate who was the first person from her hometown of Poughkeepsie, New York, to attend West Point, said making it at the storied military academy meant you had to โshrink your Blackness.โ When she and the other eight Black women in her class saw each other on campus, they would greet each other briefly and move on.
Brown, Dowdy and Tobin described a campus life where even the most casual interactions among Black students piqued curiosity. For example, they said, fellow cadets, and sometimes staff or faculty, took notice when more than a handful of Blacks came together for meals on Sundays, when cadets were not required to eat with their companies.
โThere were times we would sit at a table, and if there were more than two or three African-Americans, it was a problem,โ Brown said. โPeople would come over and ask, โWhat are you guys doing?โ I have never seen 10 African-Americans sitting together at West Point. At three or four, the table would get broken up.โ
Still, forging friendships was possible. Brown recalled the day an upperclassman stopped her on campus and whispered quickly, โJoin the gospel choir.โ
โShe didnโt ask if I could sing or not sing,โ Brown said. โYou just joined the gospel choir. It wasnโt just about the singing. It was praying together, the support system. That was the only place you were allowed to be together, and it was once a week for two hours. During that time, you could talk about what was going on. It was the only place we were safe being together.โ
Dowdy, now stationed at Fort Bliss, Texas, said when Barack Obama was elected the countryโs first Black president โ and the cadetsโ new commander in chief โ in 2008, some on campus โwere mad, they were disrespectful, saying the n-word.โ
Dowdy said she was often the only Black woman in her company. Sometimes, she was the only Black person or the only woman in her classes. Support from other Black women on campus helped her get through.
โThey motivated me when I doubted myself,โ she explained. โSometimes things happen at the school and you donโt know if you want to bring it up, but they were family. I talk to all of them every day still, right now.โ
Which is why, Brown said, the backlash over the photograph was hurtful.
โI couldnโt understand why they didnโt see the pride that I saw,โ Brown said.
Tobin, who has served as a mentor to some of the women pictured, said she believed all along that their motive was simply to express their joy over graduation.
โYouโre looking at each other like, โWe made it and we did it together,โ and we did it in an environment that still fights the ghosts of discrimination, sexism and homophobia,โ said Tobin. โYou raise your fist as a sign of victory.โ
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Associated Press writer Deepti Hajela in New York contributed to this report.
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Online:
United States Military Academy at West Point: http://www.westpoint.edu
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Errin Haines Whack covers urban affairs for The Associated Press. Follow her on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/emarvelous and read more of her work at http://bigstory.ap.org/journalist/errin-haines-whack

