Horace Bennett
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Horace Bennett (abt. 1838 - abt. 1905)

Sergeant Horace Bennett
Born about in Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania, United Statesmap
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married about 1859 [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 67 in Pennsylvania, United Statesmap [uncertain]
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Profile last modified | Created 6 Jun 2018
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Contents

Biography

Horace Bennett was born about 1838[1][2] in Harrisburg[3], Pennsylvania[2][4]. His mother was born in Maryland[2][4] and his father was born in Pennsylvania[2][4]. He was the husband of Mary Catharine Hughes. He served with the famous 54th Massachusetts during the American Civil War.

Occupations

  • 1900[4]: Laborer
  • 1878-1880[5][2]: Keeper at Furnace
  • 1876[5]: Lochiel Rolling Mill keeper
  • 1863[1]: Farmer

Residences

  • 1900: 225 Cranberry Alley, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania with his wife Sarah, children, granddaughters Rosie and Maud Miner, son-in-law Charles Swan and their four Swan granddaughters[4]
  • 1880: Lochiel Row, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania with his wife Mary and their children[2]
  • 1878-1880: 43 4th Lochiel Row, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania[5]
  • 1863: Middletown, Pennsylvania (military enlistment)[1]

Military Service

During the Civil War, he served as a Sergeant in Company F of the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry of the Union Army, the second[6] regiment in the United States made up entirely of enlisted men of color. He was about 25 years old, married and working as a farmer when he enlisted on 8 April 1863 from Middletown, Pennsylvania. He was wounded in action at the Second Battle of Fort Wagner and again on 18 April 1865 at the Battle Boykin's Mills and was discharged 8 June 1865.[1]

The highest rank attainable to soldiers of color at this time was Sergeant Major. The promotional path was Private -> Corporal -> Sergeant -> First Sergeant -> Quartermaster Sergeant -> Sergeant Major.

Military Pension

Military Pension Application No. 198506 Certificate No. 133699 (23 December 1874)

Battle of Boykin's Mills

General Potter, demonstrating with his main body along Swift Creek in front, sent the Fifty-fourth, One Hundred and Second United States Colored Troops, and One Hundred and Seventh Ohio to attempt crossings down the stream to the right, under the guidance of a native. In this flanking movement Lieutenant-Colonel Hooper led the Fifty-fourth along the creek over ploughed fields bordering the wood of the swamp, with Company F, under Captain Bridge, skirmishing. From contrabands[7] it was learned that the swamp was impassable nearer than Boykin's Mills, some two miles from the road. When in the vicinity of the mills, the enemy's scouts were seen falling back.
Leading from a small clearing, a road was found apparently running in the proper direction, and our skirmishers were again ordered forward. Just then Warren Morehouse, of Company E, who had been scouting in the woods to the left, came to Major Pope, saying, "Major, there's a lot of Rebs through there in a barn." The regiment was moving on; and deeming quick action essential, Major Pope faced the left company about and led it toward the point indicated through the woods; and as we approached, the enemy retired across the stream. This company was left at that point temporarily, and the major hastened to rejoin the regiment.
Captain Bridge pushed forward his skirmishers through the wood bordering the road until the mills were in view. It was found that the stream was there dammed by a dike, the water above it forming a pond. At each end of the dike were sluice-gates, controlling the water, which served to run a grist-mill at one extremity and a saw-mill at the other. The divided waters passed away in two streams, forming a sort of island; but the two branches united further on. The road discovered ran to the first stream, where the water, seven feet deep, was crossed by a bridge, which had been burned, only a stringer remaining, thence over the island to the second stream, where was a ford through water waist-deep. Some fifteen yards beyond the ford up a s slight ascent, the enemy held breastworks of cotton-bales. It was found that the dike and the road were one hundred and fifty yards apart on our side of the creek; but as the stream made a bend there, they met on the enemy's bank.
Captain Bridge's skirmishers, moving rapidly over the road, came to the ruined bridge. The leaders at once attempted to cross over the stringer, but received a volley which killed Corporal James P. Johnson, mortally wounded Corporal Andrew Miller, and wounded Sergeant Bennett and Privates Harding, Postley and Sylvia, all of Company F. Thus checked, Captain Bridge retired to cover of the ground, keeping up a return fire. Lieutenant-Colonel Hooper, seeing that the position was strong and well defended against an attack in front, determined to make a diversion a quarter of a mile farther down the stream, where a ford was reported to be. He therefore sent Acting Adjutant Whitney to Major Pope with instructions to take the left wing and essay the task under the guidance of an old white-headed negro.
As the left company was already detached, Major Pope took only Companies A, D, G and I, proceeding by a detour through the woods and swamps, with Company A under Lieutenant Stevens skirmishing; after pursuing a road fringed with heavy timber and underbrush, this force arrived near the point indicated. The enemy was there, for Major Pope and Lieutenant Stevens in crossing the wood-road dream several shots. To feel the strength of the opposing force opposite, Company A, which was in the brush along the bank of the creek, was directed to fire a volley. As if acting under the same impulse, at the very moment this order was executed, the enemy also fired a volley, one shot striking Lieutenant Stevens in the head, killing him instantly. He fell partially into the stream. It was a dangerous duty to remove him; but two men were selected from volunteers, who crawled forward, brought back his body. As the orders were to entail no unnecessary risk of life, word was sent to Lieutenant-Colonel Hooper of the situation. Captain Chipman with Company D relieved Company A on the skirmish line.
While awaiting the result of Major Pope's flanking movement, Lieutenant-Colonel Hooper caused a musketry fire to be kept up from about the mill and the bridge, which enfiladed the enemy's breastworks. He also cause the sluice-gates of the dam at the first stream to be broken to allow the water in the pond to flow off, that a crossing there might be facilitated should Major Pope's project not succeed. When word came of Major Pope's encounter, Lieutenant-Colonel Hooper sent a message to General Potter informing him that the stream could only be crossed with a considerable sacrifice; but that if a field-gun was sent him, the enemy might be driven out, or a charge covered. At the same time Major Pope was ordered to hold his position.
A gun having been brought, dispositions were made to charge over the log dike at the mill. Lieutenant Hallett with a force was directed to cross the dam to the island between the streams, and open a covering fire from there when all was ready. Then the gun having fired some half a dozen shells, the Fifty-fourth, led most gallantly by Lieutenant Reed, charged across the dike in single file, receiving the enemy's fire, but causing their precipitate retirement. In this charge Corporal William H. Brown, of Company K, always conspicuous for bravery, was the first enlisted man to gain the farther bank. We sustained the loss of Privates Scott, Freeman and Green, of Company H; also Johnson and Jay, of Company B; and McCullar of Company K - all wounded.
This last fight of the Fifty-fourth, and also one of the very last of the war, was well managed by Lieutenant-Colonel Hooper, when less discretion would have resulted in a repulse and heavy loss. The charge was a plucky affair under exceptionally adverse conditions. Our total regimental loss that day was one officer killed, one enlisted man killed, one mortally wounded, and twelve wounded: a total of fifteen, the greatest number of casualties sustained by one regiment in any action during Potter's Raid.[8]

Race

Death

He passed away in 1905 and is buried at Lincoln Cemetery in Penbrook, Pennsylvania.[9]

Research Notes

Raymoure-1 04:27, 7 November 2019 (UTC): Could Mary A. and Aaron M. Bennett be his parents? More research needed. Raymoure-1 02:03, 12 August 2020 (UTC): Also looking at Edward Bennet as a possible parent.

Raymoure-1 21:57, 29 October 2019 (UTC): Unclear which Middletown, Pennsylvania he was from at the moment.

Projects

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Emilio, McKay Roster
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 1880 federal census
  3. Regimental descriptive
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 1900 federal census
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Harrisburg, Pennsylvania city directories
  6. and the first with federal recognition; the 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry regiment was against the wishes of the Secretary of War and filled only six companies, but did see action a full year before the 54th
  7. legal term for refugee slaves semi-protected by the Union
  8. Emilio pp. 301-304
  9. Find a Grave memorial
  • 1876, 1878, 1880 Harrisburg, Pennsylvania city directories
  • 1880 United States Federal Census Year: 1880; Census Place: Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania; Roll: 1123; Page: 101A; Enumeration District: 080
  • 1900 United States Federal Census Year: 1900; Census Place: Harrisburg Ward 4, Dauphin, Pennsylvania; Page: 8; Enumeration District: 0050; FHL microfilm: 1241402
  • Colimore, Edward. The Philadelphia Inquirer. "Reflected glory of a soldier's life." 5 February 1990.
  • Emilio, Luis Fenollosa. History of the Fifty-Fourth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, 1863-1865, Boston, Massachusetts: Boston Book Co., 1891 (1st ed.) and 1894 (2nd ed.)
  • Find A Grave: Memorial #98421067
  • Fold3.com. "Records of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Infantry Regiment (Colored), 1863-1865." National Archives Catalog #577134. "Regimental and Company Books of Civil War Volunteer Union Organizations, compiled 1861 - 1865." Free Access Civil War Records 1-15 April 2018.




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Comments: 1

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From descendant Patricia Garrett: In looking up my great great grandfather, I noticed all the books on the 54th Massachusettes have him only at the Battle of Boykin Mills where he was a Sergeant and was wounded. We have papers that show he also fought at Fort Wagner as a private and then promoted as a sergeant and he was also wounded there. In the Wikitree website it states he was married to Sarah on Cranberry Street..Sarah was his eldest daughter. He was married to Mary Catherine Hughes. Sarah married James Miner and she had 2 daughters, Maude and Rose. Rose married Hunter Evans, a black pharmacist and lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and they had 3 children Winifred, Robert ,who is my father, and Betty who died at 3 years. Winifred Evans, my aunt is alive at 104 years old and she and my father did the ground work of researching Horace Bennett. My father Robert married Bernice Rider. It is interesting that now my grandson is in 7th grade and writing a paper on the 54th Massachusettes. You were so helpful in giving me information and trying to find Horace's parents. I just want to make sure that he is listed in the Battle of Fort Wagner. I am not sure if I gave you a picture of him.
posted by K Raymoure
edited by K Raymoure