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40th & 74th New York Infantry - Medal of Honor - Witness to the Shooting of STONEWALL JACKSONFelix Brannigan(Brannigan i...
02/22/2026

40th & 74th New York Infantry - Medal of Honor - Witness to the Shooting of STONEWALL JACKSON

Felix Brannigan

(Brannigan is standing on the extreme right)

Felix Brannigan was one of a number of Irishmen who were awarded the Medal of Honor for actions at Chancellorsville. The circumstances behind Brannigan’s award are surely among the more unusual. A comrade would later claim that one of the reason’s Brannigan received the honor was that he was one of two Yankees actually present when Confederate General Stonewall Jackson was mortally wounded, struck by friendly fire on the night of 2nd May, 1863.

Felix Brannigan is a hard man to locate prior to the outbreak of the American Civil War. Born in Ireland in 1844, it is not known what county he was from or when he emigrated to the United States. A ‘Felix Branagan’ was naturalized in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1856 but it is unclear if this is the same individual. Felix was an early volunteer in 1861, enlisting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on 22nd April 1861. Unusually his company became part of a New York regiment, the 74th Infantry, one of the units of the famed Excelsior Brigade.

Felix appears to have been a natural leader of men. He mustered in as a Corporal of Company A in July 1861 before becoming First Sergeant in Company K on 14th June 1862. However, an indiscretion led to him being returned to the rank of Private, and back to Company A, on 1st October that year. It was here that he found himself when the Battle of Chancellorsville erupted in May 1863.

The 2nd May had seen Stonewall Jackson launch a ferocious attack against the Army of the Potomac’s right flank, which consisted of the Eleventh Corps. Achieving complete surprise, the Rebels swept all before them. As the day drew to a close it fell to other units of the Northern army, including the Excelsior Brigade of the Third Corps, to hold the line. Private Felix Brannigan and his comrades formed part of Major-General Hiram Berry’s Division, and as night fell, they were in position to the north of the Orange Plank Road, facing towards the west, and Stonewall Jackson’s victorious Confederates.

Everyone expected the battle to resume with unrelenting fury on the morning of 3rd May. In the darkness of night, the men heard firing to their front, and wondered if some of the Eleventh Corps may still be ahead of them. The confused fighting of the day meant that no-one was sure of exactly what they faced. Captain F.E. Tyler of the 74th New York was with his men when Brigadier-General Joseph Revere, who commanded the Excelsior Brigade, rode up. Tyler remembered their conversation:

‘He then told it me it was of the utmost importance to know what was in front, and ordered me to pick out some trusty men and send them out to get the best information they could. I went to my old company (A), and called for Felix Brannigan, who had been with me all during the war, and whom I knew from long experience to be a cool, courageous, intelligent soldier. I told him what I wanted, gave him my ideas as to how to get out of the lines and what to do, and suggested the other men who he should take along.’

The four men in the scouting group, all of whom volunteered for the mission, were Sergeant-Major Eugene P. Jacobson, Private Joseph Gion, Private Gotlieb Luty and Private Felix Brannigan. They decided to split into two groups of two to increase their chances of success. Slipping out of the lines, the men set off through their own pickets and into the thickets and swamps where they had to negotiate enemy pickets before hoping to find out what was in front of them. Felix Brannigan and Gotlieb Luty went together. Luty described what happened next:

‘We had advanced about fifty yards beyond the outposts, and were close to the plank road, when we heard horses coming down. We concluded to hide and await developments. A party of horsemen rode to within fifteen yards of us and we discovered by listening to their conversation that it was a body of rebels. Suddenly the firing commenced from all sides at once. There was only one round, and just as the firing ceased, we heard them say that ‘the General’ was shot. The reconnoitering party consisted of General Jackson and his staff.’

Luty was admittedly writing after the war, but if his testimony is to be believed than he and Felix Brannigan were present when Stonewall Jackson was mortally wounded by his own troops. The two men appeared to have tried to get back to their own lines at this point, but confused by the woods and darkness actually pressed on in the wrong direction. They came upon a large body of enemy troops which they realized were Jackson’s men, who appeared to be in a position to launch an attack against their line at first light. The Yankees successfully retraced their steps back to their own lines, all the while hearing occasional crashes of musketry as nervous soldiers fired at every perceived danger. All four men had returned by daylight, armed with valuable information as to the enemy’s intentions.

The reconnaissance the men had undertaken had ultimately been ordered by Major-General Berry, the men’s divisional commander. When the expected Rebel attack was about to get underway shortly after 7am on 3rd May, Berry was at the front having just delivered orders to one of his brigades. When he moved to return to his headquarters he was struck by a sharpshooter and wounded. He knew it to be mortal, informing his staff: ‘I am dying, carry me to the rear.’ Berry died that morning at the Chancellor House. It was reported that one of his last instructions was that the four men who had reconnoitered the enemy positions the night before be rewarded for their services.

So it was that Private Felix Brannigan and his three comrades received the Medal of Honor. Brannigan’s award was issued on the 29th June 1866. The citation read: ‘Volunteered on a dangerous mission and brought in valuable information.’ The remainder of the war saw Brannigan’s continued rise. He transferred to the 40th New York in August 1864 but soon decided to take the opportunity to become and officer. In December that year he accepted the position of Second Lieutenant with the 32nd United States Colored Troops, and ended the war as First Lieutenant and Adjutant of the 103rd United States Colored Troops, a position he took up in April 1865.

After the war Felix became an attorney and in the 1870s was practicing in Mississippi; he was living in Jackson in 1875. On 4th January 1877 he married Sarah P. Pegram, with whom he had a daughter. Felix Brannigan died on 10th June 1907 of disease of the kidneys. Unfortunately, he did not have a significant estate and could afford only limited life insurance, and so his death left his wife destitute. Efforts were made to secure her an increased pension based on her husband’s wartime service, as by this stage in her life she suffered from impaired sight and was unable to work to support herself and her daughter. Sarah followed her husband to the grave in 1913.

Source: Irishamericancivilwar.com

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/CDV-11723

The Clark Brothers - All Wounded and One Medal of Honor James W. Whiting S & Charles A. ClarkLeft: James W. Clark1st Mai...
02/22/2026

The Clark Brothers - All Wounded and One Medal of Honor

James W. Whiting S & Charles A. Clark
Left: James W. Clark
1st Maine Heavy Artillery
Wounded at Petersburg (Died of wounds)

Center: Whiting S. Clark
1st Maine Heavy Artillery
Wounded at Petersburg

Right: Charles A. Clark
6th Maine Infantry
Wounded at Rappahannock Station
Medal of Honor for action at Brooks Ford, VA

Image Size: Albumen 4 x 5 1/2 inches
Card stock 6 x 7 1/2 inches

Precarious Position at Brook’s Ford.

On April 27, 1863, the Clark brothers of Sangerville, Maine, strode into Brady’s studio and posed for this portrait. The timing of the impromptu family reunion is noteworthy. A week later and 60 miles south in Virginia, a member of this trio performed an act of gallantry that resulted in the Medal of Honor.

Charles Amory Clark, right, started his service in the 6th Maine Infantry as a corporal and had advanced to first lieutenant and regimental adjutant. A few days later near Chancellorsville, Clark and his comrades, along with four other regiments designated the Light Division, numbered among the first U.S. troops to cross the Rappahannock River. The Light Division fought hard and lost heavily during the unfolding battle. It’s success, however, was not enough to turn the larger tide of battle.

Late in the evening of May 4, as U.S. forces retreated across the Rappahannock River, the 6th found itself in a precarious position guarding a pontoon crossing at Brooks’ Ford. Facing imminent attack by rebel forces, the quickest escape route involved a steep descent of 50-60 feet down a bluff to the pontoons. The senior captain balked. Clark, astride his trusty horse Jim, managed to lead the regiment in silence beneath a moonlit sky to the river’s edge and safety.
The commander of the Light Division and colonel of the 6th, Hiram Burnham, paid tribute to Clark in his after action report: “His coolness, gallantry, and presence of mind in the engagement at Brooks’ Ford contributed in a great measure to saving his regiment from annihilation and capture.” Burnham added, “He is deserving of a brevet, medal, or mention in general orders” for his courage along the Rappahannock.

Six months later along the same river, Clark suffered a wound in the leg during the Battle of Rappahannock Station. The injury ended his service. He resigned in October 1864 after a stint in the Adjutant General’s Office, leaving the army with the rank of captain and two brevets. In 1896, he received the Medal of Honor. Clark lived until age 72, dying in 1913. He had outlived his two brothers.

Colby University student Whiting Stevens Clark, center, organized Company E of the 18th Maine Infantry after his 1862 graduation and became its captain. Before the year’s end, the War Department changed the regiment’s designation to the 1st Maine Heavy Artillery. Like many of the Heavies, the Mainers left the Defenses of Washington and joined the Army of the Potomac on the 1864 Overland Campaign. Whiting survived it all. He mustered out in 1865 with a colonel’s brevet and died in 1891 at age 53.

James William Clark, left, served as first lieutenant in brother Whiting’s company and advanced to regimental adjutant. He suffered a wound to his right arm in the Second Battle of Petersburg on June 18, 1864. Surgeons amputated the limb, and he succumbed to its effects a month later at age 25.

Source: Military Images Magazine. March 10, 2022.

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/CDV-11725

5th Maine Light Artillery - Medal of Honor at Chancellorsville & Wounded at GettysburgJohn F. ChaseCabinet Card size ima...
02/22/2026

5th Maine Light Artillery - Medal of Honor at Chancellorsville & Wounded at Gettysburg

John F. Chase

Cabinet Card size image and note the word "Gettysburg" on his hat.

THEY STOOD BY THEIR GUNS.

"ON SUNDAY morning, May 3rd," Private John F. Chase narrates, "my battery, the Fifth Maine, was ordered to take position in an apple orchard between the Chancellor House and the woods. The sight which presented itself to our eyes as we came through the woods to our designated position was enough to make the heart of the bravest man falter. Limbs and twigs of trees were falling struck by a storm of iron hail; the very air was laden with these flying missiles of death and it seemed impossible to be in that hell of shot and shell and survive.

Into that position shot and shell and survive. Into that position of death and annihilation we were ordered, and obeyed. Our battery was ordered to strip for action, a short prayer was offered and the command given: 'Mount battery, forward, gallop,' and as fast as the horses could go, we galloped forward.

" The boys were singing: 'I am going home, to die no more,' and in less than thirty minutes half of our number had gone 'home.' Even before we could get into position our horses and men went down like grass before the scythe. We had to place our guns by hand, and open fire on the enemy's batteries, which were masked on a wooded ridge about 200 yards in our front, and on several regiments of Confederate infantry to the right and left. Our orders were; 'Fight your guns to the death.' Our beloved Captain, George F. Leppien, had his leg shattered, the other officers were soon killed or wounded, and within a short time only two guns out of the six could be worked.

" General Hancock sent Lieutenant Kirby, of the First U. S. Battery, to take charge of us. He had just reached my gun, when a shell exploded, shattering his hip and breaking his horse's leg. I shot the horse to keep him from tramping on the wounded officer, whom I asked whether I should take him from the field. Lieutenant Kirby answered: 'No, not as long as a gun can be fired.' He was lying on the ground near the gun, bleeding from his wound, and liable to be hit again at any moment.

" Only one gun going now, and that short handed! I was number one cannoneer-my duty was to sponge the gun and ram the cartridge home. Beside myself, there was now left only Corporal Lebrooke. We could have gone to the rear and carried honors with us, but we had made up our minds to lie there on the battle field with our dead comrades, and fight the last gun to the death. We loaded several times with canister, and fired at the column of infantry that was charging up to capture our guns. Oh! how we hated to see the guns that we had served through many a hard fought battle, go into the hands of the enemy. At last a rebel shell struck our piece, exploding in the muzzle, and battering it so that we could not get another charge into it. I stepped to the rear of the gun, and reported to Lieutenant Kirby that our last gun was disabled and only two of us left. I also asked him if I could take him off the field. He replied: 'No, not until the guns are taken off.' What a display of courage in that young officer, lying there with his life's blood slowly ebbing away and putting duty before life.

" At this moment the Irish Brigade came charging in to our support. Corporal Lebrooke and I held up the trail of our gun, while the men of the One hundred and sixteenth Pennsylvania, belonging to the Irish Brigade, and led by Colonel St. Claire A. Mulholland, hitched on with the prolong rope and helped us draw it off the field. As soon as I saw that the guns were safe, I returned to Lieutenant Kirby, took him up in arms and carried him to the rear, where I put him into an ambulance and started him back across the river. I was informed later on that he died before reaching Washington, but before he left, he took the names of myself and my comrade, saying: 'If ever two men have earned a Medal of Honor, you have, and you shall have it."

PRIVATE CHASE's experience at the battle of Gettysburg was still more exciting and resulted disastrously for the heroic soldier, who at that battle was made a cripple for life.

" My battery," he says, "took position on the north side of the Seminary buildings on Seminary Hill, where we fought from 10 o'clock until four on the first day's battle at Gettysburg, July 1st, losing nearly two-thirds of our corps, and being outnumbered five to one. We were forced to fall back through the town of Gettysburg and take position on a knoll between Cemetery and Culps Hills, which position the battery held during the second and third days' battles. It was the time of the historic charges of Early's Division, led by the Louisiana 'Tigers,' on the Union batteries on East Cemetery Hill. My battery was enfilading the charging column as it dashed up the hill. Our shot, shrapnel, and canister was doing such terrible ex*****on that the Confederates opened three or four batteries on us, and made the shot rattle around us pretty lively.

" One of those shrapnel shells exploded near me and forty-eight pieces of it entered my body. My right arm was shattered and my left eye was put out. I was carried a short distance to the rear as dead, and knew nothing more until two days after.

" When I regained consciousness, I was in a wagon with a lot of dead comrades being carted to the trenches to be buried. I moaned and called the attention of the driver, who came to my assistance, pulled me up from among the dead, and gave me a drink of water. He said the first words I uttered, after he gave me the water, were: 'Did we win the battle ?'

" Then I was taken to the First Army Corps Hospital. It was a farm owned by Isaac Lightner, three miles from Gettysburg, on the Baltimore Turnpike. They laid me down beside the barn, where I waited three more days before my wounds were dressed. The surgeon let me lie there to 'finish dying,' as they said, while they attended to all the rest of the wounded. No one thought that I could live another hour. I lay on the barn floor several days, and was then taken into the house, where I stopped for a week. From there I was removed to Seminary Hospital.

" After about three weeks I was carried out of the hospital to die again, and was told by the head surgeon that I could not live six hours, but I did not do him the favor. I graduated with honors from that Seminary in about three months, and was sent to West Philadelphia Hospital, where I remained until I was able to return to my home in Augusta, Maine."

Source: Deeds of Valor, p. 157

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/CDV-11724

The History and Legal Effects, Brevets: Armies of Great Britain and the United States1877James B. FryThe History and Leg...
11/22/2025

The History and Legal Effects, Brevets: Armies of Great Britain and the United States

1877
James B. Fry

The History and Legal Effect, Brevets: Armies of Great Britain and the United States From Their Origin in 1692 to the Present Time

First Edition. Hardcover.

By James B. Fry, Colonel and Assistant Adjutant General, Brevet Major General, U.S. Army.

This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.

This historical study explores the origins and complexities of the use of brevet rank in the United States Army. Tracing its inception in the Colonial era to its later iterations during the Revolutionary War and beyond, the book provides a comprehensive analysis of the legal implications and practical effects of brevet commissions. It examines how brevet rank, a commission conferring a higher rank than a recipient's corps commission, was initially used as a means to secure services of officers already holding a rank and later evolved into a distinctive system of command and reward. The author delves into controversies and legal disputes that shaped brevet rank's evolving role in the military, highlighting its impact on issues of authority and entitlement. Through meticulous research, this book sheds light on a significant aspect of military organization, offering valuable insights into its historical and legal complexities.

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/BKS-11610

Seventh Michigan Volunteer Cavalry1901-1902William O. LeePersonal and historical sketches and facial history of and by m...
11/22/2025

Seventh Michigan Volunteer Cavalry

1901-1902
William O. Lee

Personal and historical sketches and facial history of and by members of the Seventh Regiment, Michigan Volunteer Cavalry, 1862-1865 by William O. Lee

Published by 7th Michigan Cavalry Association, Detroit Michigan.

Hardcover. Blue cloth boards with title on spine. Text pages are clean. Clear plastic book jacket. This scarce antiquarian book. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, and marginalia.

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/BKS-11612

Memoirs of Major General George H. ThomasBy Richard W. JohnsonFirst edition of the biography of Union General George Hen...
11/22/2025

Memoirs of Major General George H. Thomas

By Richard W. Johnson

First edition of the biography of Union General George Henry Thomas. Octavo, original cloth, tissue-guarded frontispiece. In very good condition.
One of the principal commanders in the Western Theater of the American Civil War, George Henry Thomas served in the Mexican–American War and later chose to remain with the U.S. Army for the Civil War as a Southern Unionist, despite his heritage as a Virginian. He won one of the first Union victories in the war, at Mill Springs in Kentucky, and served in important subordinate commands at Perryville and Stones River. His stout defense at the Battle of Chickamauga in 1863 saved the Union Army from being completely routed, earning him his most famous nickname, "the Rock of Chickamauga." He followed soon after with a dramatic breakthrough on Missionary Ridge in the Battle of Chattanooga. In the Franklin–Nashville Campaign of 1864, he achieved one of the most decisive victories of the war, destroying the army of Confederate General John Bell Hood, his former student at West Point, at the Battle of Nashville.
https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/BKS-11613

Grierson Raids, and Hatch's Sixty-Four Days March, with Biographical Sketches, and the Life and Adventures of Chickasaw,...
11/22/2025

Grierson Raids, and Hatch's Sixty-Four Days March, with Biographical Sketches, and the Life and Adventures of Chickasaw, the Scout.

First Edition. Hardcover.

By R. W. SURBY
Chicago: Rounds and James, Steam Book and Job Printers, 1865. 396pp.

Original pictorial pebbled cloth, stamped in blind and gilt, spine gilt. With clear plastic book jacket. The scarce Chicago-printed first edition of this account of the activities and heroics of Grierson's Illinois Cavalry in their march from La Grange, Tennessee, to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in April 1863. Grierson and his men marched through eight hundred miles of Confederate territory in seventeen days, repeatedly engaging the Rebels, ruining railroads, and destroying vast amounts of property. Among the plates are portraits of Grierson and other officers, as well as portrayals of the cavalry ransacking a plantation on a "foraging expedition," and two plates showing charges against Rebel positions in Nashville. Biographical sketches of other officers are also included. Surby was a sergeant in Grierson's command and wrote from personal experience. He was imprisoned briefly at Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia, after being captured near Port Hudson. A testimonial by Gen. Grierson preceding the text notes that he has "carefully perused the manuscript of the work...and I pronounce it correct in every particular." Also included in Surby's work is a fifty-page account of the Second Brigade's activities in Tennessee in the fall of 1864, and a biography of L.H. Naron, a southern-born scout also known as "Chickasaw," who provided great aid to Union troops operating in the South.

Note: All books are used but in excellent shape. Books are mailed book rate due to weight and according to the United States Postal Service, will take up to 12 days for delivery.

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/BKS-11611

The Hall Carbine Affair: A Study in Contemporary Folklore (First Edition)1948R. Gordon WassonThe Hall Carbine Affair:  A...
11/16/2025

The Hall Carbine Affair: A Study in Contemporary Folklore (First Edition)

1948
R. Gordon Wasson

The Hall Carbine Affair: A Study in Contemporary Folklore (First Edition)
By R. Gordon Wasson

This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.
This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.
As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/BKS-11604

United States Marines - 250 years proud!Semper Fidelis!Jim Quinlan USMC1972-1997
11/10/2025

United States Marines - 250 years proud!
Semper Fidelis!
Jim Quinlan USMC
1972-1997

The Book of C**t Fi****ms - Third EditionItem BKS-10917 2008R. L. WilsonThe Third Edition Book of C**t Fi****ms is a com...
11/10/2025

The Book of C**t Fi****ms - Third Edition
Item BKS-10917

2008
R. L. Wilson

The Third Edition Book of C**t Fi****ms is a complete C**t library in one 648-page volume, with over 1.2 million words, 1,250 B&W images, and 75 color images. This mammoth work tells the C**t story from 1832 to the present. No other reference book covers the C**t company and its products in such detail.

Note: All books are used but in excellent shape. Books are mailed book rate due to weight and according to the United States Postal Service, will take up to 12 days for delivery.

https://www.excelsiorbrigade.com/products/details/BKS-10917

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