- Hiram Burnham
Infobox Military Person
name=Hiram Burnham
caption=
born=1814
died=September 29, 1864
placeofbirth=Narraguagus, Maine
placeofdeath=Richmond, Virginia
placeofburial=
placeofburial_label=
nickname=
allegiance=flagicon|USA|1861United States (Union)
branch=
serviceyears=
rank=Brigadier General
unit=
commands=• Militia company
• 6th Maine Infantry
• VI Corps, Light Div.
• XVIII Corps, I Div.
battles=Aroostook War American Civil War :
• Crampton’s Gap
• Antietam
• Fredericksburg
• 2nd Fredericksburg
• Salem Church
• Chancellorsville
• Gettysburg
•Siege of Petersburg
• Chaffin's Farm †
awards=
relations=
laterwork=Coroner, lumberman, county commissionerHiram Burnham (1814 – September 29, 1864) was an officer in the
Union Army who commanded aregiment and then abrigade in the Eastern Theater of theAmerican Civil War . He was killed in battle while assaulting Confederate positions nearRichmond, Virginia , during theBattle of Chaffin's Farm .Early life and career
Hiram Burnham was born in Narraguagus, later
Cherryfield, Maine , in 1814. He formed and led amilitia company as its captain in theAroostook War of 1839. [Munday, p. 17.] He subsequently worked as a lumberman and owned a sawmill. Active in local politics, he held public office as acounty commissioner and acoroner . Burnham is described as a burly man with a strong voice, able to make himself heard on a battlefield. [Sommers, p. 38.]Civil War
ervice in the Army of the Potomac
Early in the war Burnham became lieutenant colonel of the 6th Maine Infantry on July 16, 1861. He was promoted to the rank of colonel on December 12 of that year. He served with the
Army of the Potomac in thePeninsula Campaign , starting out in Brig. Gen.Winfield S. Hancock ’s brigade in a division of the IV Corps under Brig. Gen.William F. Smith . This division later became part of the VI Corps. At theBattle of Crampton's Gap and theBattle of Antietam , Burnham led his regiment in the 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, VI Corps under Hancock. He led the same regiment under Brig. Gen.Calvin E. Pratt at theBattle of Fredericksburg , where the brigade was only lightly engaged.In 1863, a “Light Division” of VI Corps, composed of five regiments, was organized under General Pratt. It was to be able to move rapidly. Instead of wagons, supplies were to be carried on mules. [Parsons, p. 23.] However, Pratt resigned his post and Burnham led the division from May 3 to May 11, including at the
Second Battle of Fredericksburg , where he was wounded, temporarily relinquishing command. [Winslow, pp. 73-74.] The Light Division was among the first VI Corps units to cross theRappahannock River onMay 1 ,1863 to draw Confederate attention away from the main crossing points of the Army of the Potomac upstream. The Light Division made up the rightmost column in Maj. Gen.John Sedgwick ’s attack on Marye’s HeightsonMay 3 . Although Burnham spoke “cheerfully” to his troops before they attacked, casualties were heavy—an estimated 30%. [Sears, pp. 352, 357. Parsons, p. 172 gives a figure of 808 casualties.]Burnham’s Light Division was the right flank anchor of Sedgwick;'s line when VI Corps stood on the defensive during the later stages of the
Battle of Salem Church . Only lightly engaged, Burnham was able to send two regiments to help repel a Confederate attack on the left flank. The 6th Maine of Burnham's command was one of the rearguard units when the corps retreated across theRappahannock River . [Sears, pp. 424-25.] The Light Division was dissolved after theBattle of Chancellorsville , and Burnham’s regiment joined the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, VI Corps under Brig. Gen.David Allen Russell . In that capacity he was present in reserve behindLittle Round Top at theBattle of Gettysburg . A monument to the regiment stands on Howe Avenue behind the Rounds Tops. [Recker, Stephen, [http://www.virtualgettysburg.com/exhibit/monuments/pages/sr107.html Virtual Gettysburg] ]ervice in the Army of the James
Burnham was absent from Russell’s brigade at the beginning of the
Overland Campaign . Having been promoted to the rank of brigadier general on April 26, 1864, he was assigned command of a brigade in the first Division of the XVIII Corps,Army of the James on April 28 of that year. General Burnham led the brigade until July 31, and then again from September 27 to September 29 during theSiege of Petersburg . He commanded the 1st Division briefly in between.Burnham was killed at the Battle of Fort Harrison (also known as the Battle of Chaffin's Farm) on September 29, 1864. His brigade had routed Confederate skirmishers from a cornfield on the Varina Road and pursued toward the Confederate earthworks. In preparation for the planned assault on
Fort Harrison , the division’s commander, Brig. Gen.George J. Stannard , deployed Burnham’s brigade in the front of his column. Burnham was hit in the intestines by a bullet shortly after his brigade penetrated into the fort. He died shortly thereafter. [Sommers, pp. 38, 43-46, 52.]General Burnham was buried in Pine Grove Cemetery in Cherryfield. [ [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=5893356 Find A Grave] ]
The U.S. Army renamed the captured Fort Harrison as Fort Burnham in his honor.
References
* Bigelow, John, Jr., "The Campaign of Chancellorsville: A Strategic and Tactical Study", Norwalk, CT: The Eaton Press, 1991.
* Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3
* Mundy, James H., "No Rich Men's Sons: The Sixth Maine Volunteer Infantry", Cape Elizabeth (Me.): Harp Publications, 1994.
* Parsons, Philip W., "The Union Sixth Corps in the Chancellorsville Campaign", Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2006. ISBN 0-7864-2521-0
* Sears, Stephen W., "Chancellorsville", Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996. ISBN 0-395-63417-2
* Sommers, Richard J., "Richmond Redeemed: The Siege at Petersburg", Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1981. ISBN 0-385-15626-X
* Warner, Ezra J., "Generals in Blue", Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2006). ISBN 0-8071-3149-0
* Winslow, Richard Elliott, "General John Sedgwick: The Story of a Union Corps Commander", Presidio Press 1982 (Diss. University of Pennsylvania, 1970).Notes
External links
*Appletons [http://www.virtualology.com/hiramburnham/ Appletons citation]
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