William W. Chisman Explained

William W. Chisman
Birth Date:24 September 1843
Birth Place:Dearborn County, Indiana
Death Place:Kansas
Placeofburial:Elmwood Cemetery, Augusta, Kansas
Placeofburial Label:Place of burial
Branch:
Union Army
Rank: Sergeant
Serviceyears:1862 - 1865
Unit: 83rd Regiment Indiana Volunteer Infantry - Company I
Battles:American Civil War
Siege of Vicksburg
Awards: Medal of Honor

William W. Chisman (1843–1925) was a Union Army soldier during the American Civil War who received the Medal of Honor for gallantry during the Siege of Vicksburg on May 22, 1863.

Chisman joined the army from Wilmington, Indiana in August 1862, and as mustered out in June 1865.[1]

Union assault

On May 22, 1863, General Ulysses S. Grant ordered an assault on the Confederate heights at Vicksburg, Mississippi. The plan called for a storming party of volunteers to build a bridge across a moat and plant scaling ladders against the enemy embankment in advance of the main attack.The volunteers knew the odds were against survival and the mission was called, in nineteenth century vernacular, a "forlorn hope". Only single men were accepted as volunteers and even then, twice as many men as needed came forward and were turned away. The assault began in the early morning following a naval bombardment.

The Union soldiers came under enemy fire immediately and were pinned down in the ditch they were to cross. Despite repeated attacks by the main Union body, the men of the forlorn hope were unable to retreat until nightfall. Of the 150 men in the storming party, nearly half were killed. Seventy-nine of the survivors were awarded the Medal of Honor.

Medal of Honor citation

For gallantry in the charge of the volunteer storming party on 22 May 1863.

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Notes and References

  1. http://www.indianadigitalarchives.org/ViewRecord.aspx?RID=D9DD69B7DB9B79D3AF8CD6EB4B609864 Indiana Digital Archives