Background
Bass was born and grew up in Philadelphia, one of six children (Henry Junior, Claude, Harvey, Marcellus, and sister, Willie Belle). His father, Henry Bass, was a Pullman porter, and his mother, Nancy Weston Bass was a housewife who had both emigrated to West Philadelphia from Bennettsville, South Carolina.
Education
West Chester University of Pennsylvania. Temple University.
Career
He is noted as an African-American soldier in World World War II who witnessed the Buchenwald concentration camp. He volunteered for the United States Army during World World War II, trained in Alabama and Florida, and served in the 183rd Engineer Combat Battalion, a segregated unit As a black soldier, he experienced the oppression and humiliation of being a second class citizen in his own Army.
His unit was involved in the Battle of the Bulge.
In April 1945, 183rd Engineer Combat Battalion was designated to be attached to the 1126th Engineer Combat Group. After arriving at Eisenach, Bass and others were detailed to Buchenwald to assist in relief, and were among the first American soldiers to be seen by survivors of the camp.
Bass later referred to the people he saw that day as "the walking dead". After the war, Bass graduated from West Chester University of Pennsylvania and then studied at Temple University where he received a Doctorate.
He later taught history at George School, a Quaker boarding school in Newtown, Pennsylvania.
He was a speaker on the subject of racism and The Holocaust, and has lectured extensively on the subject, bringing his unique perspective as a witness of many forms of oppression. He was a participant in the International Liberators Conference, held in Washington District of Columbia in 1981. He appeared in the Academy Award-nominated Documentary "Liberators: Fighting on Two Fronts in World World War II".
He died at the age of 90 in 2015.
Membership
On April 11, 1945, Bass, then a Sergeant, and another member of the 183rd, Sergeant William A. Scott III, arrived at the headquarters of the 1126th in a forward liaison capacity. The next day, they convoyed with members of the 1126th to the town of Eisenach, approximately 100 kilometers from the Buchenwald camp, which had been discovered by allied troops the previous day.