- Henry K. Burgwyn
Infobox Military Person
name=Henry K. Burgwyn
lived= birth date|1841|10|3 – death date and age|1863|7|1|1841|10|3
placeofbirth=Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
placeofdeath=Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
placeofburial=Historic Oakwood Cemetery Raleigh, North Carolina
caption=
nickname= "Boy Colonel"
allegiance=Confederate States of America
branch=Confederate States Army Infantry
serviceyears=1861-1863
rank=Colonel
commands=26th North Carolina Regiment
unit=
battles=American Civil War
*Battle of New Bern
*Peninsula Campaign
**Battle of Malvern Hill
*Battle of Goldsboro Bridge
*New Bern Campaign
*Washington Campaign
*Gettysburg Campaign
**Battle of Gettysburg †
awards=
laterwork=Henry King Burgwyn, Jr. (
October 3 ,1841 –July 1 ,1863 ) was a Confederate colonel in theAmerican Civil War killed at theBattle of Gettysburg .Early life
Burgwyn was born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, to Henry King Burgwyn, Sr. and Ann Greenough Burgwyn while his parents were vacationing there. He was the
second cousin of Brig. GenGeorge B. Anderson . Burgwyn grew up inNorthampton County, North Carolina , at Thornberry, the family plantation. He attended Burlington College in North Carolina. Hoping, but never receiving an appointment to theUnited States Military Academy atWest Point, New York , Burgwyn instead graduated from theUniversity of North Carolina in 1857. He then graduated from theVirginia Military Institute as a member of the class of 1861. Burgwyn spent a few tours as a recruiting officer in North Carolina and then ascommandant of Camp Crabtree inRaleigh, North Carolina , where he drilled and attempted to instill discipline in the recruits. [Hess, pp. 2, 18-19.]Civil War
In August 1861, after a personal recommendation from VMI professor, Thomas Jonathan Jackson, for an appointment as a Confederate officer, Burgwyn became the
lieutenant colonel of the 26th North Carolina Regiment at just 19 years of age. He took part in the 26th North Carolina's fight againstAmbrose E. Burnside at theBattle of New Bern and narrowly escaped capture. [Hess, p. 16.] The regiment next took part in the failed attack on the Union position at Malvern Hill. Burgwyn was promoted to colonel in August 1862 and took command of the regiment when its commander,Zebulon B. Vance (who Burgwyn felt was unfit for command) was elected governor of North Carolina, despite the fact that the 26th North Carolina's brigade commander, Brig. Gen.Robert Ransom was against the promotion. [Hess, pp. 7-9, 34-35.] Ransom and Burgwyn disliked each other and the 26th was transferred from Ransom's command to the brigade of Brig. Gen.J. Johnston Pettigrew . Burgwyn spent much of the fall and winter of 1862 in eastern North Carolina with minor engagements against Union forces. During this period he was also instrumental in recruitment andconscription activity and drilling these new soldiers. Burgwyn next led the 26th at theBattle of Goldsboro Bridge . The regiment was heavily involved inDaniel Harvey Hill 's New Bern and Washington Campaigns. The 26th was then sent north to join theArmy of Northern Virginia , arriving shortly after theBattle of Chancellorsville . When his regiment joined Lee's Army, Burgwyn was thought to be the youngest colonel to have served to that point with the Army, and the 26th was the largest regiment in the Army.Gettysburg and death
Burgwyn and the 26th North Carolina moved north toward
Pennsylvania as part of theGettysburg Campaign . The 26th engaged in brutal fighting againstSolomon Meredith 's vauntedIron Brigade in Herbst's Woods on the afternoon ofJuly 1 ,1863 , at Gettysburg. As the regiment was exiting Herbst's Woods and reaching the crest of McPherson's Ridge, Burgwyn was shot through both lungs and mortally wounded carrying the colors of the 26th (Historian Earl J. Hess wrote that Burgwyn had just passed the colors to a private then the colors fell again and Burgwyn turned to see what had happened and was then shot). [Hess, pp. 129-30.] According to William M. Cheek, an eyewitness at the time,In all, 13 color bearers for the 26th North Carolina were either killed or wounded. [Hess, 132.] Burgwyn died about two hours after he was wounded and was buried on the field north of the Chambersburg Pike in an empty gun case. [Hess, pp. 134-36, 139.]
Another eye witness and a member of Burgwyn's command, Fred A. Olds, wrote in a letter that he was with the Colonel when he died:
His family had his body exhumed in 1867 and he was laid to rest in Raleigh's
Historic Oakwood Cemetery . [Hess, p. 308.]References
* Hess, Earl J. "Lee's Tar Heels: The Pettigrew-Kirkland-MacRae Brigade," The University of North Carolina Press, 2002, ISBN 0-8078-2687-1.
Notes
Further reading
*Davis, Archie K. "Boy Colonel of the Confederacy: The Life and Times of Henry King Burgwyn, Jr.," The University of North Carolina Press, 1985, ISBN 978-0-8078-4709-1
*Gragg, Rod. "Covered With Glory: The 26th North Carolina Infantry at Gettysburg," Harpercollins, 2000, ISBN 978-0-0601-7445-3External links
* [http://www.gdg.org/Research/OOB/Confederate/July1-3/shburgwy.html 1906 article about Burgwyn's death.]
* [http://www.aphillcsa.com/burgwynhk.html Web biography.]
* [http://www.26nc.org/index.html Website devoted to the history of the 26th North Carolina Regiment]
*findagrave|5841191 Retrieved on2008-06-27
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