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Brothers in Valor by Robert F. Jefferson Jr.
Brothers in Valor by Robert F. Jefferson Jr.





Brothers in Valor by Robert F. Jefferson Jr.

Retreating back to the reserve line, he used the flag to rally a small group of men and continue the fight.

Brothers in Valor by Robert F. Jefferson Jr.

Now carrying the American flag, Fleetwood continued forward under heavy fire until it became clear that the unit could not penetrate the enemy defenses.

Brothers in Valor by Robert F. Jefferson Jr.

When Hilton himself was wounded, Fleetwood and another soldier, Charles Veale, each grabbed a flag from him before the colors could touch the ground. Hilton, the bearer of two flags, one of which had been seized from a wounded sergeant. Among the charging soldiers was Sergeant Alfred B. During the 4th Regiment's charge on the enemy fortifications, Fleetwood supervised the unit's left flank. On September 29, 1864, the 3rd Division, including Fleetwood's regiment, participated in the Battle of Chaffin's Farm on the outskirts of the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia. His regiment, assigned to the 3rd Division, saw service with the 10th, 18th, and 25th Army Corps in campaigns in North Carolina and Virginia, particularly on July 16, 1864, in the Battle of Petersburg and on September 29–30, 1864, in the Battle of Chaffin's Farm. Due to his educated background, Fleetwood was given the rank of sergeant upon enlistment and was promoted to sergeant major on August 19. When the American Civil War disrupted travel by ship to Liberia, Fleetwood went to Baltimore's Camp Birney and enlisted into Company G of the 4th Regiment United States Colored Infantry, Union Army, on August 11 or August 17, 1863. He established and published The Lyceum Observer, said to be the first newspaper in the Upper South to be owned and operated by an African American. He continued his education at the Maryland State Colonization Society, went briefly to Liberia and Sierra Leone, and graduated in 1860 from Ashmun Institute (later known as Lincoln University) in Oxford, Pennsylvania. The latter treated Fleetwood like her son and taught him to read and write. He received his early education in the home of a wealthy sugar merchant and chairman of Baltimore's chamber of commerce, John C. He received the Medal of Honor for his actions during the American Civil War.įleetwood was born in Baltimore on July 21, 1840, the son of Charles and Anna Maria Fleetwood, both were free persons of color. National Guard, an editor, a musician, and a government official. National Guard)Ĭhristian Abraham Fleetwood (J– September 28, 1914), was an African American non-commissioned officer in the United States Army, a commissioned officer in the D.C. Washington Cadet Corps (6th, later 7th BN, D.C. 4th Regiment United States Colored Troops,







Brothers in Valor by Robert F. Jefferson Jr.