- Freeman McGilvery
Freeman McGilvery (
October 17 ,1823 –September 3 ,1864 ) was aUnited States Army artillery officer during theAmerican Civil War . He gained fame at theBattle of Gettysburg for taking the initiative to piece together a line of guns that greatly contributed to the Union victory.McGilvery was born in
Prospect, Maine . Born with a love for the sea, he was a sailor and then a ship master. He was inBrazil atRio de Janeiro when the Civil War erupted. He soon returned home and raised the 6th Maine Battery, which first saw action at the battles of Cedar Mountain and Sulfur Springs in Western Virginia. At theBattle of Antietam , McGilvery's battery supported the attack of the XII Corps. OnFebruary 5 ,1863 , he was promoted to major and given command of the First Volunteer Brigade in the Artillery Reserve in the UnionArmy of the Potomac , which he commanded during the Chancellorsville Campaign.During the
Gettysburg Campaign , onJune 23 ,1863 , he was promoted to lieutenant colonel. OnJuly 2 , the second day of the battle of Gettysburg, McGilvery discovered a wide and undefended gap in the Union line along the southern end ofCemetery Ridge , north ofLittle Round Top . McGilvery patched together a line of artillery from various commands to fill the gap. Initially without infantry support, McGilvery's "Plum Run line" of fieldpieces was instrumental in halting the final Confederate advance toward the Union center. On July 3, the lengthy artillery line assisted in the repulse ofPickett's Charge , and in particular stopped the supporting attack of Confederate brigades underCadmus Wilcox and David Lang.Promoted to
colonel in September 1863, he continued to command his Artillery Reserve brigade until May 1864. He replacedRobert O. Tyler in command of the army’s reserve artillery and its ammunition train. He served with distinction in this role during theOverland Campaign and theSiege of Petersburg . OnAugust 9 ,1864 , he was promoted to Chief of Artillery for the X Corps, commanding fifteen batteries. Only a week later, at theBattle of Deep Bottom , he was slightly wounded in a finger. The wound did not heal properly, and surgeons performed an amputation, during which McGilvery died from an overdose ofchloroform being used as ananesthesia . His body was returned to his native Maine and buried in the Village Cemetery in Searsport.Memorialization
Fort McGilvery, part of the Union earthworks at Petersburg constructed later during the siege, was named in his memory. The antebellum Post #30 of the
Grand Army of the Republic in Maine was also named for McGilvery. In 2001, the Maine state legislature passed an act designating the first Saturday in September as "Colonel Freeman McGilvery Day."ee also
References
* Wilson, James Grant and Fiske, John, editors, "Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography." Six volumes. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1887-1889.
* U.S. Army War Department, "The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies," 70 volumes in 4 series. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1880-1901.External links
* [http://janus.state.me.us/legis/ros/lom/LOM120th/1Pub1-50/Pub1-50-16.htm Maine statute honoring McGilvery]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.