George Prance Explained

George Prance
Birth Date:c. 1827
Death Date:April 3, 1885
Birth Place:France
Death Place:Temescal, Oakland, California, US
Placeofburial Label:Place of burial
Placeofburial:Mountain View Cemetery (Oakland, California)
Allegiance:
Union
Branch:
Union Navy
Rank:Captain of the Main Top
Battles:American Civil War
Second Battle of Fort Fisher
Awards: Medal of Honor

George Prance (c. 1827 – April 3, 1885) was a sailor in the U.S. Navy during the American Civil War. He received the Medal of Honor for his actions during the Second Battle of Fort Fisher on January 15, 1865.

Military service

Immigrating from his native France, Prance volunteered for service in the U.S. Navy and was assigned to the Union sloop-of-war . His enlistment is credited to the state of Massachusetts.

On January 15, 1865, the North Carolina Confederate stronghold of Fort Fisher was taken by a combined Union storming party of sailors, marines, and soldiers under the command of Admiral David Dixon Porter and General Alfred Terry. Prance directed fire from the Ticonderoga's guns upon Fort Fisher.

Death and burial

Medal of Honor recipient George Prance died April 3, 1885, of a self-inflicted gunshot and was buried in Mountain View Cemetery (Oakland, California).

Prance's death notice in the April 4, 1885, Daily Alta newspaper read:

An inquest was held last evening on the remains of George Prance, who shot himself yesterday at the Park House, Temescal. The jury found that the deceased was a native of France, single, sixty years of age, and that he came to his death from a bullet wound, inflicted with suicidal intent. Prance had been employed on a dredger in the Oakland harbor, and lately had been drinking heavily. He was a member of the George H. Thomas Post, G. A. R. It is believed that his suicide was occasioned by the failure of the Legislature to pass a bill to reimburse him for an eye lost by an injury received while in the employ of the Harbor Commissioners.

See also