מכירה פומבית 2 Summer 2021 Militaria & Collectibles Auction
14.8.21
6499 E. Seneca Turnpike Jamesville, NY 13078, ארצות הברית

Original Worldwide Militaria and Collectibles Auction featuring items Pre-US Civil War to Modern to include uniforms, medals, patches, helmets, hats, field gear, war posters, Spanish American War and Admiral Dewey collection, Paperwork, photographs, edged weapons, and more.
המכירה הסתיימה

פריט 2:

Civil War Gettysburg Hero Uniform Medal Sword Group

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מחיר פתיחה:
$ 4,000
הערכה:
$6,000 - $8,000
עמלת בית המכירות: 22.5% לפרטים נוספים
תגיות:

Civil War Gettysburg Hero Uniform Medal Sword Group
Group of items belonging to Brigadier General Tully McCrea, a Union Artillery Officer at Picketts Charge. This lot came directly from his descendant, and has only ever been in the consignors collection with nothing added. The lot includes his named and 1890 dated Officers coat with M1872 bullion 5th Artillery Majors shoulder boards (one board does not attach to the loops), his 5th Artillery Officers helmet, a pair of Civil War Artillery Major shoulder boards, his original boxed and numbered Gold Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS) medal which traces to him (Number 14533), his 1863 dated long Cavalry style Officers sword and scabbard, Civil War dress shoulder boards in the carrying box, some misc. period insignia, belt buckle, and a Colonel of Artillery shoulder board from the 1890s with heavy mothing. Included are two COPIES of photos of him in uniform from the 1880s and 90s era. A member of the West Point Class of 1862 and George A. Custers roommate, he was commissioned 2nd Lieutenant, 1st US Artillery on 17 June 1862 and joined his battery on the Peninsula Campaign in Virginia.He commanded a section of his Battery on the Maryland Campaign, and was honored by brevet to First Lieutenant for Antietam. On 20 September he wrote his cousin Belle McCrea of the action there: We were kept in the rear until eleven oclock [17 September], where we were ordered to go to the front and took up a position in the rear of a brigade of infantry that were flying like sheep. The rebels were pursuing them, but our men persisted in running before the guns, in spite of all our endeavors to get them to get from before the battery, so that we could fire at the rebels. At last our cannoneers became so impatient to fire that it was impossible to restrain them any longer, and the battery opened. Some of our own men, I have no doubt, were killed but it was better to sacrifice a few of their lives than to allow the rebels to capture our battery. Then I am not inclined to pity them, for they were running in a cowardly manner and they deserted the battery and left it without a particle of support. We were in a very critical position and, if the rebels had charged with their usual dash, they surely would have captured the whole lot of us, guns and all, for there was no infantry near us. Artillery is not able to defend itself, but must always be supported on each side with infantry to repel a charge of infantry of the enemy. We saw the Rebels were preparing to charge upon us, when we retired to the rear, took another position in the edge of the woods, and fired upon them again. We remained here an hour until the cannoneers were completely tired out working the guns. We went to the rear and another battery took our place.... By a miracle we only lost six men and four horses. Lieutenant Egans and Lieutenant Frenchs horses were both shot through the shoulders. General Sedgwick, who was standing to the rear of the battery, was wounded in two places and had his horse killed. Major Sedgwick, his aide and brother, was mortally wounded ... The Rebels lost more, I should think, than we did, for we had more artillery than they. He served with his battery in the Army of the Potomac at Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg. He was again brevetted, to Captain, for gallant and meritorious service at Gettysburg, and Picketts Charge, where by the end of the battle he commanded Battery I (Woodruff mortally wounded) and Battery A of the 4th Artillery after the battle as senior officer present. By September 1863 he had transferred to Battery K, but served with Battery M, and saw service in South Carolina. He was promoted to First Lieutenant on 4 November 1863. He was seriously wounded in action at Olustee, FL on 20 February 1862 and given his third brevet, to Major. In March he wrote cousin Belle: I was shot through both legs and compound fracture of the left and a flesh wound through the fleshy part of the right, both below the knee. Neither wound is dangerous, but the one in the left leg has been very painful. I was compelled to ride two nights and one day over the rough roads in an ambulance and all the next day was at sea in a steamer bound for this place [the hospital at Beaufort, SC]. The torture was very great and I have never before suffered such physical pain ...He was absent, recovering, to October 1864, then assigned as instructor back at West Point. He was there to the end of the War. He transferred briefly to the Infantry, promoted to Captain of the 42nd Regiment on 28 July 1866, but served as the Regimental Quartermaster at Ft. Hamilton, NY. He was at the USMA as quartermaster 1868-72, having been reassigned to the First Artillery in December 1870, and was in garrisons in Florida, Connecticut, the Indian Territory (now Oklahoma), and Washington, DC to 1877. He was in California, the Dakotas, and Washington through the 1880s, promoted Major, 5th Artillery in 4 December 1888. He served in the West and in New Jersey and New York to the Spanish-American War, when he was appointed Lieutenant Colonel on 8 March 1898. He was made Colonel of the 6th Artillery on 15 July 1900, and commanded Cartel de Espagna, Manila, later at Puget Sound, WA. He was promoted Brigadier General, USA on 21 February 1903 and retired from active service the next day.

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