COL. GEORGE WASHINGTON BRUSH MEDAL OF HONOR WAR MEMORIAL MARKER
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Listing Details
Access: Public
Wars Commemorated: CIVIL WAR
Photograph By: ANDREW RUPPENSTEIN
Submitted By: COURTESY OF HMdb.org
The 34th Infantry Regiment was ordered on May 24, 1864 on an expedition to Asheepo River, South Carolina to burn a railroad trestle across a marsh at that point. About 400 members of the black regiment were loaded onto the troop steamer Boston, including 1st Lieutenant George W. Brush and the men of his company. The men had been ferried out to the Boston by small boats and one was fastened to the ships stern. Sailing down the Asheepo River in fog and darkness the ship became stranded upon an oyster bed. The Confederates planted a battery of guns on the river bank and began shelling the Boston. Lieutenant Brush quickly assembled four volunteers and began transporting men from the Boston to shore with the one small boat available. His Medal of Honor citation reads as follows “voluntarily commanded a boat crew, which went to the rescue of a large number of Union soldiers on board the stranded steamer Boston, and with great gallantry succeeded in conveying them to shore, being exposed during the entire time to heavy fire from a Confederate battery”. Instrumental in attaining the Medal of Honor for Lieutenant Brush were the efforts of the unit’s Chaplain Homer W. Moore.
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