Moses Greeley Parker Memorial Library (Dracut)

Carrying the colors, the life and legacy of Medal of Honor recipient Andrew Jackson Smith, W. Robert Beckman and Sharon S. MacDonald ; with Andrew S. Bowman and Esther L. Bowman

Label
Carrying the colors, the life and legacy of Medal of Honor recipient Andrew Jackson Smith, W. Robert Beckman and Sharon S. MacDonald ; with Andrew S. Bowman and Esther L. Bowman
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages [245]-255) and index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
illustrationsmaps
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Carrying the colors
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1129168294
Responsibility statement
W. Robert Beckman and Sharon S. MacDonald ; with Andrew S. Bowman and Esther L. Bowman
Sub title
the life and legacy of Medal of Honor recipient Andrew Jackson Smith
Summary
In 1862, Andrew "Andy" Jackson Smith, son of a white landowner and enslaved woman, esƯcaped to Union troops operating in Kentucky, made his way to the North, and volunteered for the 55th Massachusetts, one of the newly formed African American regiments. The regiment was deployed to South Carolina, and during a desperate assault on a Confederate battery, the color bearer was killed. Before the flag was lost, Smith quickly retrieved it and under heavy fire held the colors steady while the decimated regiment withdrew. The regiment's commanding officer proƯmoted Smith to color sergeant and wrote him a commendation for both saving the regimental flag and bravery under fire. Honorably discharged, Smith returned to Kentucky, where over the course of the next forty years he invested in land. In the early twentieth century, Burt G. Wilder, medical officer of the 55th, contacted Smith about his experiences for a book he was writing. During their correspondence, Wilder realized Smith was eligible for the nation's highest award. In 1916, Wilder applied to the army, but his request for Smith's medal was denied due to the "absence of records." At Smith's death in 1932, his daughter Caruth received a box of his papers revealing the extent of her father's heroism. Her nephew took up the cause and through long and painstaking research located the lost records. With the help of historians, local politicians, and others, Andrew Jackson Smith received his long overdue Medal of Honor in 2001., --Provided by publisher
Target audience
adult
resource.variantTitle
Life and legacy of Medal of Honor recipient Andrew Jackson Smith
Classification
Mapped to