I will post
information about the Drummer Boy of Chickamauga, John Clem from Wikipedia and
other links.
John Clem
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Sergeant John Clem, age 12, in 1863
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Birth name
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John Joseph Clem
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Born
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August 13, 1851
Newark, Ohio |
Died
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May 13, 1937 (aged 85)
San Antonio, Texas |
Buried at
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Arlington National
Cemetery
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Allegiance
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United States of America
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Service/branch
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United States Army
Union Army |
Years of service
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1863 – 1864, 1871 – 1915
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Rank
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Major General
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Unit
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22nd Michigan Infantry
24th Infantry Regiment |
Battles/wars
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American
Civil War
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John Lincoln Clem (August 13, 1851 – May 13, 1937) was a United States
Army general who served as a drummer boy in the Union Army in the American
Civil War. He gained fame for his bravery on the battlefield, becoming the
youngest noncommissioned officer in Army history. He retired from the Army in
1915, having attained the rank of Brigadier General in the Quartermaster Corps.
When advised he should retire, he requested to be allowed to remain on active
duty until he became the last veteran of the Civil War still on duty in the Armed
Forces. By special act of Congress on August 29, 1916, he was promoted to major
general one year after his retirement.
Morris Gallery of the Cumberland, Portrait of
a boy soldier, Nashville, Tennessee.
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Civil
War
Born
with the surname Klem in Newark, Ohio on August 13, 1851, he is said
to have run away from home at age 9 in May 1861, after the death of his mother
in a train accident, to become a Union Army drummer boy. First he attempted to
enlist in the 3rd Ohio Infantry,
but was rejected because of his age and small size. He then tried to join the 22nd
Michigan, which also refused him. He tagged along anyway and the
22nd eventually adopted him as mascot and drummer boy. Officers chipped in to pay
him the regular soldier's wage of $13 a month and allowed him to officially
enlist two years later. Research has shown that Clem's claims about the 3rd
Ohio and running away from home in 1861 (rather than in either 1862 or 1863)
may be fictitious.
A
popular legend suggests that Clem served as a drummer boy with the 22nd
Michigan at the Battle of Shiloh.
The legend suggests that he came very near to losing his life when a fragment
from a shrapnel shell crashed through his drum, knocking him unconscious, and
that subsequently his comrades who found and rescued him from the battlefield
nicknamed Clem "Johnny Shiloh." The weight of historical evidence
however suggests that Clem could not have taken part in the battle of Shiloh.
The 22nd Michigan appears to be the first unit in which Clem served in any
capacity, but this regiment had not yet been constituted at the time of the
battle (mustering into service in August 1862 – four months after the Battle of
Shiloh). The Johnny Shiloh legend appears instead to stem from a popular Civil
War song, "The Drummer Boy of Shiloh" by William S. Hays which was written for Harpers Weekly of New York. The song
was written following the Battle of
Chickamauga in September 1863, and may have been written with Clem
in mind because he had already become a nationally-known figure by that time.
Regardless
of his entry into service, Klem served as a drummer boy for the 22nd Michigan
at the Battle of
Chickamauga. He is said to have ridden an artillery caisson to the front and wielded
a musket trimmed to his size. In the course
of a Union retreat, he shot a Confederate
colonel who had demanded his surrender. After the battle, the "Drummer Boy
of Chickamauga" was promoted to sergeant, the youngest soldier ever to be a
noncommissioned
officer in the United States Army.
Secretary of
the Treasury, later Chief
Justice of the United States Supreme Court, and fellow Ohion, Salmon P. Chase, decorated him for his
heroics at Chickamauga. Clem's fame for the shooting is also open for debate as
there are no records of a Confederate colonel being wounded during the battle
despite press reports supporting the story into the early 20th century.
In
October 1863, Clem was captured in Georgia
by Confederate cavalry while detailed as a train guard.
The Confederate soldiers confiscated his uniform which reportedly upset him
terribly—including his cap which had three bullet holes in it. He was included
in a prisoner exchange a short time later, but the Confederate newspapers used
his age and celebrity status to show "what sore straits the Yankees are
driven, when they have to send their babies out to fight us." After
participating with the Army of the
Cumberland in many other battles, serving as a mounted orderly, he
was discharged in September 1864. Clem was wounded in combat twice during the
war.
John Clem
[PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=2284]
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John Clem with a gun
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Later
life
Clem
graduated from high school in 1870. In 1871, he was elected commander/captain
of the "Washington Rifles" a District of Columbia Army National Guard
militia unit. After he attempted unsuccessfully to enter the United States
Military Academy, after failing the entrance exam, President Ulysses S. Grant
appointed him second lieutenant in the Twenty Fourth United States Infantry in
December 1871. Clem was promoted to first lieutenant in 1874. Clem graduated
from artillery school at Fort Monroe in 1875 and was transferred to the
Quartermaster Department and promoted to captain in 1882 where he stayed for
the rest of his career. From 1906 to 1911 he was chief quartermaster at Fort
Sam Houston in Texas.
Clem
reached the mandatory retirement age of 64 on August 13, 1915, when he was
retired and promoted to the rank of brigadier general, as was customary for
Civil War veterans who retired at the rank of Colonel, becoming the last Civil
War veteran to serve in the US Army. On August 29, 1916, he was promoted on the
retired list to the rank of major general.
John Clem in fine arts.
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American Civil War muster records index card
for John Lincoln Clem, showing he enlisted named Klem. From the US National
Archive
|
Personal
Life
After
retirement he lived in Washington, D.C. before returning to San Antonio, Texas.
He married Anita Rosetta French in 1875. After her death in 1899, he married
Bessie Sullivan of San Antonio in 1903. Sullivan was the daughter of a
Confederate veteran, leading Clem to claim that he was "the most united
American" alive. Clem was the father of three children. Clem was a
companion of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States and
the Military Order of Foreign Wars.
He
died in San Antonio on May 13, 1937, and was buried in Arlington National
Cemetery in Arlington, VA.
John Clem
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Dates
of Promotion
Through
his military career Clem held the following ranks:
- Musician and Lance Sergeant, Co. C, 22nd Michigan Infantry – 1 May 1863 to 19 September 1864
- 2nd Lieutenant – 18 December 1871
- 1st Lieutenant – 5 October 1874
- Captain – 4 May 1882
- Major – 16 May 1895
- Lieutenant Colonel – 2 February 1901
- Colonel – 15 August 1903
- Brigadier General (Retired) – 13 August 1915
- Major General (Retired) – 29 August 1916
Awards
Memorialization
- A 6-foot bronze statue of young John Clem stands near the Buckingham Meeting House in Newark, Ohio.
- A World War II U.S. Army troopship, the USAT John L. Clem, was named in his honor. The ship was scrapped in 1948.
- A public school in Newark, Ohio, is named after him: Johnny Clem Elementary School.
- The city of Heath, Ohio, is co-extensive with Johnny Clem Township.
Major General John Clem in 1922
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Graveside of John Clem
[PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/jlclem.htm]
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Film
portrayals
In 1963, Walt Disney produced a made-for-TV film
entitled Johnny Shiloh,
with Kevin Corcoran
in the title role. The film was telecast on the Disney
anthology television series.
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