WILLIAM CARNEY
Sergeant: Civil War
William Carney was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts. He was a member of
Company C, 54th Massachusetts Colored Infantry. On July 18, 1863, during the
Battle of Fort Wagner, South Carolina, nearly 37 years after the Civil War,
he was cited for military valor. During the engagement by the all-Black 54th
and 55th Massachusetts Colored Regiments, Commander Robert G. Shaw was shot
down. A few feet from where he fell laid Sergeant Carney. Summoning all of
his strength, Carney held aloft the colors and continued the charge. Having
been shot several times, he kept the colors flying high, and miraculously
retreated his regiments. Although he made of his comrades did not. For in the
deadly battle, over 1,500 Black troops died.
On this day in 1900, Sergeant William H. Carney was issued the Congressional
Medal of Honor, making him the first Black to ever win the coveted award. It
should be noted that sixteen other Black
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Sgt. William Carney
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