VENGA LO QUE VENGA!!!!!
The regiment's long-standing motto is, "Honor et Fidelitas",
Latin for "Honor and Fidelity".
BORINQUENEERS CONGRESSIONAL GOLD MEDAL
The "Borinqueneers Congressional Gold Medal" is a Congressional Gold Medal awarded to Puerto Rico's 65th Infantry Regiment. On 19 May 2014, the United States House of Representatives passed the Bill, known as HR 1726, and three days later on 22 May 2014, the Senate approved Bill S. 1174. The President of the United States presented the award at the official ceremony on 10 June 2014.
MONUMENT TO CONNECTICUT'S BORINQUENEERS
On April 28, 2018, officials dedicated the 65th Regiment Borinqueneers Memorial Park to all Borinqueneer veterans. The New Britain Borinqueneers Motorcycle Club escorted guests of honor Borinqueneer Veterans Joseph Picard of Wethersfield, Celestino Cordova of New Haven, and Raul Castaneira Reyes of Florida to the memorial site. Numerous politicians and officials were in attendance, including the Governor of Puerto Rico, Ricardo Nevares, and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico, Jenniffer Gonzalez, Rep. Sanchez summed up and noted that “all Puerto Ricans have someone in their family who served in the Borinqueneers.”
APRIL 13TH IS BORINQUENEERS DAY
April 13th, 2021, was the first national Borinqueneers Day. The national holiday was proclaimed by Congress in 2020.
The Borinqueneers were a highly decorated battalion created during World War I. Officially known as the 65th Infantry Regiment, the battalion included some Hispanic immigrants but was a historically Puerto Rican regiment.
At that time, the U.S. Army was segregated, as were schools and many other institutions in the United States. The Borinqueneers were one of only two recorded Latino segregated units in the Army’s history. The other was the Puerto Rico Women’s Army Corps Unit. Puerto Rican soldiers served in different units, including the Tuskegee Airmen, as did other Hispanic soldiers, but the Borinqueneers were primarily composed of Puerto Rican soldiers.
Other segregated units, including the Navajo Code Talkers, the Japanese American soldiers of World War II, and the Tuskegee Airmen, were awarded the Congressional Medal before the Borinqueneers.
But the Borinqueneers were one of the oldest of the segregated units.
The Borinqueneers were first organized 1899 as the Battalion of Puerto Rican Volunteers. Puerto Ricans had fought in the Revolutionary War and the Civil War, as volunteers in other battalions, but this was the first Puerto Rican battalion. They were considered colonial troops at the time, as the United States was flirting with the idea of becoming an empire.
In 1908, they were brought into the U.S. Army as the Puerto Rican Regiment. During World War I, they fought for the United States in Panama. In 1920, they were renamed the 65th Infantry Regiment.
During World War II, they fought in Europe and North Africa. Having been limited in their military action during WWII, the Borinqueneers were a well-trained group ready for combat when the Korean War broke out.
During the Korean War, despite controversy, the Borinqueneers became legendary heroes. As a unit, they collected 10 Distinguished Service Crosses, 256 Silver Stars, 606 Bronze Stars, and 2,771 Purple Hearts.
Between 1954 and 1956, the Borinqueneers were transformed into a part of the Puerto Rican National Guard.
Segregation in the military officially ended in 1948, when President Truman signed Executive Order 9981. However, implementation of the change took time, as schools and universities, transportation systems, and restaurants became desegregated across the nation.
The Borinqueneers and their long and valiant service continue to be a point of pride for Puerto Ricans despite the many men and women from Puerto Rico who have served in the modern U.S. Army since their time.
Their national day commemorates their service under the difficult circumstances of segregation.