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Robert Gould Shaw
(1837-1863)
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Son of a
prominent Boston abolitionist family, Robert Shaw was serving as a
captain in the 2nd Massachusetts when he was tapped by Massachusetts
Governor John Andrew for a special assignment. Shaw was to raise and
command the first regiment of black troops organized in a Northern
state.
All the previous 11 colored" regiments had been raised
principally from freed slaves in occupied areas. Shaw went
about the organization of his command, recruiting free blacks from
all over New England and some from beyond. The regiment was mustered
into service on May 13, 1863, with Shaw as its colonel, and was sent
to the South Carolina coast to take part in the operations against
the cradle of secession, Charleston. After leading the regiment in
smaller actions on James Island, at Legaresville on July 13, and
Secessionville on July 16, Shaw moved the regiment over to Morris
Island.
On July 18, 1863, he led the 54th, in conjunction with two
brigades of white troops, in an assault on Confederate Battery
Wagner. In the unsuccessful charge, the black troops proved
themselves to be fully capable of standing up to enemy fire but lost
about one quarter of their men, including Colonel Shaw. The rebels
in the battery were so outraged by the Union commanders arming
blacks that they decided to insult the white officer by burying him
in a common grave with his black enlisted men. But Shaw's parents,
when they heard of it, were pleased and believed that was the way
their son woum have wanted it. (Burchard, Peter, One Gallant
Rush: Robert Gould Shaw and His Brave
Black Regiment)
Source: "Who Was Who In The Civil War" by Stewart Sifakis
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