Of all the men who wore blue uniforms in the Civil War, none felt more
keenly the purpose of his mission than the African American soldier.
Every marching step, every swing of a pick and every round fired at
Confederate enemies gave him a chance to strike a blow against slavery
and prove himself equal to his white comrades.
U.S. Colored Troops were consistently good fighters, performing well in
every engagement in which they fought. Even their enemies had to
grudgingly admit that fact. One USCT member, William H. Carney,
transcended good to become great, and was the first black U.S. soldier to earn the Medal of Honor.
On February 17, 1863, at age 23, Carney heeded the call for African
Americans to join a local militia unit, the Morgan Guards, with 45 other
volunteers from his hometown of New Bedford, Mass. That unit would
later become Company C of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment.
There was something unique about the new regiment, commanded by Colonel
Robert Gould Shaw; it was an all-black unit with the exception of
senior officers and a few senior non-commissioned sergeants. The 54th
Massachusetts was created to prove that black men could be good
soldiers.
Carney was born a slave on February 29, 1840, at Norfolk, Va. His
father, also named William, escaped slavery, reaching freedom through
the underground railroad.
William Sr. then worked hard to buy the freedom of the rest of his
family. The free and reunited family settled in New Bedford in the
second half of the 1850s. Young William learned to read and write, and
by age 15 he was interested in becoming a minister.
He gave up his pursuit of the ministry, however, to join the Army. In an
1863 edition of the Abolitionist newspaper The Liberator, Carney
stated: “Previous to the formation of colored troops, I had a strong
inclination to prepare myself for the ministry; but when the country
called for all persons, I could best serve my God serving my country and
my oppressed brothers. The sequel in short — I enlisted for the war.”
That career change had momentous impact on Carney’s life, as the 54th
Massachusetts had a chance to prove its mettle in the July 18, 1863,
Battle of Fort Wagner outside of Charleston, S.C. During the fight, the
54th made heroic attacks on the garrison, and Carney’s bravery earned
him a promotion to sergeant and the U.S. military’s most prestigious
award.
Fort Wagner on Morris Island guarded the entrance to the harbor of
Charleston. Shaw and the 600 men of the 54th Massachusetts would
spearhead the federal assault from a slim strip of sand on the east side
of the fort, which faced the Atlantic Ocean.
The 54th burrowed into a sand dune about 1,000 yards from Fort Wagner.
Behind it was the 6th Connecticut. Federal land and sea artillery
bombarded the fort all day long. By nightfall, orders were passed down
and the 54th stood up, dressed ranks and attacked in two wings of five
companies each.
As the men advanced they were immediately hit by a barrage of canister,
musketry and shelling from the fort. A bullet struck the 54th’s color
sergeant, and as the wounded man faltered, Carney threw down his gun,
seized the flag and moved to the front of the 54th’s assaulting ranks.
He soon found himself alone, on the fort’s wall, with bodies of dead and
wounded comrades all around him. He knelt down to gather himself for
action, still firmly holding the flag while bullets and shell fragments
peppered the sand around him.
Carney surveyed the battlefield and noticed that other Union regiments
had attacked to his right, drawing away the focal point of the Rebel
resistance. To his left he saw a large force of soldiers advancing down
the ramparts of the fort. At first he thought they might be were Union
forces. Flashes of musketry soon doomed his hopes. The oncoming troops
were Confederates.
He wound the colors around the flagpole, made his way to a low
protective wall and moved along it to a ditch. When Carney had passed
over the ditch on his way to the fort, it was dry. But now it was waist
deep with water.
He seemed to be alone, surrounded by the wreckage of his regiment.
Carney wanted to help the wounded, but enemy fire pinned him down.
Crouching in the water, he figured his best chance was to plot a course
back to Federal lines and make a break for it.
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