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151 Years Later, Pickett's Charge Hero Gets Medal of Honor

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151 Years Later, Pickett's Charge Hero Gets Medal of Honor

http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2014/09/01/344313857/151-years-later-picketts-charge-hero-gets-medal-of-honor

A century and a half after Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg, a 22-year-old Union officer whose heroics helped stop the rebels and turn the tide of the Civil War will finally receive the Medal of Honor.

The White House announced this week that Lt. Alonzo Cushing will receive the award, ending a near three-decade campaign begun by a Wisconsin woman, now in her 90s, who lives on what had been the family farm where Cushing was born.

"When he dies, he dies repelling one of the most fabled charges, attacks, ever in American military history," said Kent Masterson Brown, a Kentucky lawyer and historian who wrote a biography of Cushing after learning of him from an exhibit at Gettysburg during a childhood visit.

Cushing was only two years out of West Point on that third day of the battle, in charge of an artillery battery in the Army of the Potomac. According to the White House announcement, Cushing was manning the only artillery piece in his unit that still worked.

"During the advance, he was wounded in the stomach as well as in the right shoulder. Refusing to evacuate to the rear despite his severe wounds, he directed the operation of his lone field piece, continuing to fire in the face of the enemy," the White House statement said. "With the rebels within 100 yards of his position, Cushing was shot and killed during this heroic stand."

Brown said it was Cushing's pivotal role that has caught so many people's attention. "What caused them to latch onto Cushing was how he died, what he was doing when he died, who he was defending that position against when he died," Brown said.

It was in the course of researching his book that he learned of Margaret Zerwekh, who in 1987 started a letter-writing campaign to honor Cushing, including one to the late William Proxmire, a Democratic senator from Wisconsin.

"It's been a long time in coming, but I think it falls under the category of 'it's never too late to do the right thing,'" said Ron Kind, who started as an intern in Proxmire's office, and is now the Democratic congressman who inserted language into the 2014 Defense authorization bill that allows the award.

But why 27 years from Zerwekh's first letter to Proxmire to President Obama's announcement?

Congressional action was necessary because Medal of Honor referrals are supposed to take place no later than two years after the event. For years, members of Congress from the South were uneasy about re-opening the Civil War, particularly a battle that has become the focus of lost-cause lore for generations.

"I think there may have been some concerns about a Union soldier receiving recognition at Gettysburg, and I think there are still some people who are sensitive about the Civil War and how it's depicted," Kind said.

In recent years, the vocal congressional opposition boiled down to Jim Webb, the former Democratic senator from Confederate Gen. George Pickett's home state, Virginia. Webb blocked attempts to honor Cushing, Kind said, because so much time had passed since the war that it would be nearly impossible to determine the facts of what Cushing did in the battle.

An assistant to Webb pointed to a letter he wrote to Senate colleagues in 2012 about his concerns.

"As a point of observation, the Confederate Army lost more than 250,000 dead — one third of its soldiers — and received no Medals of Honor," Webb wrote in a letter to other senators in 2012. "While one would never wish to demean any act of courage, I believe that the retroactive determination in one case would open up an endless series of claims. The better wisdom for this body would be to leave history alone."

Webb retired from the Senate in 2012, and Kind said Webb's successor, Democrat Tim Kaine, did not share Webb's concerns. What's more, a Pentagon review Webb had wanted was completed, which further supported Cushing's case.

"If there were objections being raised, we obviously talked to those individuals to make sure that there weren't any problems in moving forward," Kind said.

Whether most members of Congress knew they were wading into the Civil War when they passed that bill is unclear. Kind's amendment authorizing Cushing's medal was contained in a package of 14 proposed changes offered on the House floor last summer by Texas Republican Mac Thornberry — everything from permission for the defense secretary to evaluate suicide prevention to a prohibition against collaborating with China on cyber-security.

They were passed without any mention about Cushing on a voice vote — on a Thursday evening following seven hours of debate, when most House members had already gone for the night.

Six months later, negotiators for the House and Senate hammered out a compromise defense bill. This passed both chambers without much discussion, as Congress worked to wrap up for the year quickly.

"There were no surprises in any of this," Kind said.

Cushing will become the 1,523rd Union soldier to receive the Medal of Honor, and only the second since 1915, said Laura Jowdy, the archivist at the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. "The Confederate side would not qualify for a medal," she said. "Although some might argue they should."
 
So the officer gets an MOH.  What about the gunners who were actually manning that lone cannon?  Nothing for them?  How is their heroism any less than Cushing's?  Not to diminish Cushing's bravery but what did he do that every soldier in the Union line didn't do?  Fought on while injured?  How many others did the same.

Wait for the avalanche of ACW MOH requests from amateur historians looking to right their perceived wrongs.

Cheers,
Dan.
 
There must have been a reason that Cushing was not awarded a Medal of Honor at the time.I dont much care for these retroactive MoH awards 150 years after the fact.
 
Almost as bad as battle honours 200 years after the fact...
 
tomahawk6 said:
There must have been a reason that Cushing was not awarded a Medal of Honor at the time.I dont much care for these retroactive MoH awards 150 years after the fact.

Knowing how poorly subaltern's behave, my guess is he probably had some sort of relationship with a certain General's daughter... those damn Lieutenants!
 
dapaterson said:
Almost as bad as battle honours 200 years after the fact... especially, for units with no direct lineage or presence at the battles.

TFTFY
 
Dan M said:
So the officer gets an MOH.  What about the gunners who were actually manning that lone cannon?  Nothing for them?  How is their heroism any less than Cushing's?  Not to diminish Cushing's bravery but what did he do that every soldier in the Union line didn't do?  Fought on while injured?  How many others did the same.

Wait for the avalanche of ACW MOH requests from amateur historians looking to right their perceived wrongs.

Cheers,
Dan.

There are many cases cited where the officer received the highest award for actions they led.  This is not something new.
 
George Wallace said:
There are many cases cited where the officer received the highest award for actions they led.  This is not something new.

On the other hand, I came across the case of the recipient of the Queen's Scarf allotted to the South African forces by Queen Victoria as the most distinguished member serving at the time. He (I am not home and am having trouble remembering his name) had previously been awarded the Medal of Honor in the Spanish-American War as part of a team from a USN ship sent to cut the undersea telegraph cable between Cuba and Spain. All the members of the party that carried out the mission close to shore and under heavy fire received the Medal of Honor.
 
During the Civil War the one sure way to get a MoH was to capture an enemy flag.The odds were stacked against you as the flag was the closely protected on the battlefield.The link below will display all recipients of the Medal of Honor.

http://www.cmohs.org/
 
Old Sweat said:
On the other hand, I came across the case of the recipient of the Queen's Scarf allotted to the South African forces by Queen Victoria as the most distinguished member serving at the time. He (I am not home and am having trouble remembering his name) had previously were awarded the Medal of Honor in the Spanish-American War as part of a team from a USN ship sent to cut the undersea telegraph cable between Cuba and Spain. All the members of the party that carried out the mission close to shore and under heavy fire received the Medal of Honor.

Here you go

Leonard McKuiry Chadwick was born at Middletown, Delaware, USA, on Nov 24, 1878. He joined the US Navy and served as an Apprentice, First Class. During the Spanish/American War on May 11,1898, he was with a boat Party attempting to cut a chain in Santiago Harbour under a heavy fire. His courage earned him the Congressional Medal of Honour, the US equivalent of the VC.

Citation: On board the USS Marblehead during the operation of cutting the cable leading from Cienfuegos, Cuba, 11 May 1898. Facing the heavy fire of the enemy, Chadwick set an example of extraordinary bravery and coolness throughout this period.

Leonard Chadwick apparently brought mules to South Africa, then decided to join up. A 1902 magazine refers to "a brave American trooper of Roberts Horse who galloped out to save wounded men at Koorn Spruit under heavy fire, and who was later prominent, still under fire, in helping to save the guns." As reported in 'Black and White Budget' (page 750): "Lord Roberts has confirmed the award of the Queen's Scarf to Trooper Chadwick, of Roberts' Horse, whom his fellow troopers chose as the most distinguished of his corps for bravery. Trooper Chadwick proves to be an American, who was one of the boat's crew who cut the cable across Santiago Harbour during the Spanish American War... South Africa's scarf has, therefore, gone to America."

In the SA Field Force Casualty List, No 2.479 Private L Chadwick is shown as having been taken prisoner by the Boers, together with Privates W Benson and G Redpath. They were captured at Rhenoster on July 28, 1900, and released shortly afterwards.

General De Wet was at Rhenosterpoort, near Schoeman's Drift on the Vaal River. He created a diversion by sending Captain Danie Theron to Rhenoster Kop, 12 miles to the south. On July 28 Theron attacked America Siding unsuccessfully. Presumably he succeeded in taking three unwanted prisoners! [The Times History, Vol IV p 420-1 ]
Trooper Chadwick proved to be the most decorated of all the Queen's Scarf awardees, for he held the American Congressional Medal of Honour and was awarded the DCM for the Anglo-Boer War. Lord Roberts recommendations for meritorious service of April 2,1901, refers to J [sic] McKuiry Chadwick, while the DCM award is to J McKinry Chadwick.

Chadwick was next heard of in 1920 at a boarding house in Boston, where he awaited his niece's graduation as a nurse, then accompanied her to Nova Scotia. She later married a Dr Fowler. It is assumed that Chadwick died before 1940.

:cheers:
 
Thanks FJAG. It is a little known fact that two of the eight Queen's Scarves went to Americans as Private Richard Rowland Thompson of 2 RCRI had been living in Buffalo, NY before he enlisted and returned there after being invalided home in October 1900. Colonel Otter mailed the scarf to him in Buffalo rather than having a formal parade.

 
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