Last
week, Fold 3 sent an email to
subscribers with the subject line: Content Update - New Title Added.
That new
content was described as “…a multitude of
documents chronicling the history and activities of the 54th Massachusetts from
1863 to 1865. They include letters, endorsements, order books, morning reports,
returns, muster rolls, and miscellaneous records.”
Exactly
what was the “54th Massachusetts”?
The
54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry was also known as the 54th
Massachusetts Colored Infantry, a regiment of black soldiers and
non-commissioned officers that was raised in 1863. One of the first regiments of black soldiers
raised after the Emancipation Proclamation and the first recruited in the North,
the 54th Massachusetts is pretty well-known, especially to those who
saw the 1989 movie “Glory”, with Denzel Washington, Morgan Freeman and Matthew
Broderick in lead roles.
Many
of the enlistees were from Massachusetts and other northeastern states;
recruitment was greatly helped by the efforts of abolitionist Frederick
Douglass, whose two sons - Charles and Lewis Douglass - enlisted.
Still, there was great opposition in the north to the very idea of an
all-black regiment; newspapers expressed the sentiments of many people that
black men were ill-equipped to fight.
Others,
like Massachusetts Governor John Andrew – an ardent abolitionist - set out to
prove them wrong. His goal was to make
the 54th Massachusetts a model fighting regiment, well-trained,
well-ordered and well-equipped.
Responding to the order of Lincoln’s Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, who decreed that only
white commissioned officers could lead the regiment, Massachusetts Gov. John
Andrew hand-picked many of the senior officers himself, recruiting them from
well-connected “Boston Brahmin” abolitionist families.
My
own particular interest has been in the officer in command, who died in
battle at a place called Battery (and
sometimes Fort) Wagner on the coast of South Carolina in Charleston Harbor -
shot through the heart, they said - sometime after dusk 149 years ago today.
That
officer in command of the Massachusetts 54th was Col. Robert Gould
Shaw, son of Francis George Shaw (1809 – 1882) and his wife, the former Sarah
Blake Sturgis (1815 – 1902). Sarah
Sturgis’s father, Nathaniel Russell Sturgis (1779 – 1856) was the first cousin
of William Sturgis, about whom I’ve written several times before. William
Sturgis is the grandkids’ 5th great grandfather, so Col. Robert
Gould Shaw is part of their huge extended family of tens of thousands of
cousins, living and dead, known and unknown. Some of those cousins fought for the Union in the Civil War; still others fought for the Confederacy. Families are complex like that.
[The photo at left shows one of the plaster
models of Col. Shaw’s head that Augustus Saint Gaudens used for the Shaw
Memorial. The model is on display at the Saint Gaudens National Historic Site
in Cornish, New Hampshire, where I took this and the other photos on the page.]
Many
members of the large Sturgis clan participated in what was known as "the China trade", hauling furs from the Pacific Northwest to China and silks and porcelains home to Boston; they did well and married
well. William Sturgis and Russell Sturgis were grandsons of Thomas Sturgis and
Sarah Paine, whose many descendants include folks as diverse as the actress
Kyra Sedgewick (a descendant of Robert Gould Shaw’s sister Susannah), Edward
William Sturgis Balfour, 9th Laird of Balbirnie (a William Sturgis
descendant), and Her Highness Sylvia
Brett Brooke, wife of Charles Vyner deWindt Brooke (26 September 1874–9 May
1963), who was the last Rajah of Sarawak; she descended from another of William
and Russell Sturgis’s first cousins – Lucretia Sturgis - daughter of their uncle Samuel and the wife of
Joshua Bates, a New Englander who moved to London and ran Baring’s Bank.
So,
naturally, I wanted to peruse this new Fold
3 title, especially the “General Orders” records issued when the newly-formed
regiment was still training at Fort Meigs in Readville, Massachusetts. [Readville was a Boston suburb at the time;
today it is part of the city’s Hyde park neighborhood.]
Records like these help us tell stories.
Every
record has its own unique story; it’s often just a matter of ferreting it
out. Of course, records can often raise even
more questions than they answer and then lead researchers to new information and new understanding.
But most of all, records can help us understand things that are only partly
known by adding some precious detail.
Here
are just a few examples from the 54th’s “Special Orders”. As you read them, remember that Gov. Andrew
expected that the 54th would be a “model” regiment, both in
performance and appearance. This would
be a uphill battle since Congress would not pay “colored” soldiers as much as
white men; $3.00 a month was deducted (out of their $10 a month pay) for
clothing used, and Congress also refused to give them the same $42 annual
clothing allowance that white soldiers received.
“Special
Orders No. 2”, dated Camp Meigs, March
23, 1863, laid out some of what what Colonel Shaw expected from his men. It was obvious that discipline and the ability to follow orders were
paramount. The Orders began, “On the entrance of a commissioned officer
into the companies quarters the senior non-commissioned officer present will
command ‘Attention’. Each man will take
his place in front of his own bunk and salute.”
Late-night snacks were also off-limits; the Orders stressed that “No
enlisted man excepting the cooks, the 1st sergeant and the
non-commissioned officer in charge of the kitchen will be allowed to enter the
cook house.”
Attention
to detail and neatness were important as well:
“The Knapsacks will be kept
habitualy [sic] packed and on the foot of the bunk. The woolen blanket will be carefully folded
and laid at the head. The india-rubber blanket spread over the bunk.”
Later
on, it’s obvious that Shaw wanted to insure that his men would make a good
impression on the Readville locals. “Commanders of
companies will be careful to allow no man to leave camp who is not neatly
dressed in his uniform and in fine weather with his boots blacked.”
Special
Orders No. 2 was signed:
Less
than four months after issuing the orders above, Robert Gould Shaw - all of 25 years old - was dead, buried without
ceremony in a common mass grave with the soldiers who fell with him on July 18th, stripped
of everything but his underwear. In
time, even the soldiers’ mass grave would disappear, washed out to sea by
erosion and a series of coastal hurricanes.
Today,
visitors to Boston Common will find the memorial to Robert Gould Shaw and his men that was designed years later by Augustus Saint Gaudens; my photo below was taken last year at the Saint Gaudens National Historic Site in Cornish, New Hampshire, where this full-size
version of the Boston monument can be found. The cropped image at the top of the post shows
the detail.
July
18, 1863 was a day of carnage and a day of stories. Most of the stories that recount that day focus on Col. Shaw or the
23 year old former slave named William H. Carney, who was awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor for his service that day. He was the first black
soldier to receive that honor.
But
there were other stories, not as well remembered. One of those stories is about the very young
man from a privileged background whose name and title - G. W.
James Acting Adjutant - appears right
below Shaw’s on the “Special Orders” above.
I’ll
tell you more about his story tomorrow.
Meanwhile, tonight, take a moment to remember the fallen men of the 54th Massachusetts .
Tonight is their night, by rights.
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