- Strong Vincent
Infobox Military Person
name=Strong Vincent
born= birth date|1837|6|17
died= death date and age|1863|7|7|1837|6|17
placeofbirth=Waterford, Pennsylvania
placeofdeath=Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
placeofburial=
caption=Colonel Strong Vincent
nickname=
allegiance=United States of America
serviceyears=1861–63
rank= Brigadier General
commands=83rd Pennsylvania Infantry 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, V Corps
unit=Erie Regiment
battles=American Civil War Battle of Gettysburg †
awards=
laterwork=Strong Vincent (June 17, 1837 – July 7, 1863) was a lawyer who became famous as a U.S. Army officer during the fighting on
Little Round Top at theAmerican Civil War Battle of Gettysburg , where he was mortally wounded.Early life
Vincent was born in
Waterford, Pennsylvania , son of ironfoundry man B. B. Vincent and Sarah Ann Strong Vincent. He attended Trinity College andHarvard University , graduating in 1859. He practiced law inErie, Pennsylvania .Civil War
At the start of the Civil War, Vincent joined the Pennsylvania Militia as an
adjutant and first lieutenant of the Erie Regiment. On September 14, 1861, he was commissioned lieutenant colonel of the 83rd Pennsylvania Infantry and was promoted to colonel the following June. After the death of his regimental commander in theSeven Days Battles (at theBattle of Gaines' Mill ), Vincent assumed command of the regiment. He developedmalaria on theVirginia Peninsula and was on medical leave until theBattle of Fredericksburg in December 1862. On May 20, 1863, he assumed command of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, V Corps,Army of the Potomac , replacing his brigade commander, who was killed at theBattle of Chancellorsville .At theBattle of Gettysburg , 26-year-old Vincent and his brigade arrived on July 2, 1863. He had started theGettysburg Campaign knowing that his young wife, Elizabeth H. Carter, whom he had married on the day he enlisted in the army, was pregnant with their first child. He had written her, "If I fall, remember you have given your husband to the most righteous cause that ever widowed a woman."Due to a move against orders, Maj. Gen.
Daniel E. Sickles of the III Corps had left a significant terrain feature, Little Round Top, undefended. The chief engineer of the Army of the Potomac, Brig. Gen.Gouverneur K. Warren , recognized the tactical importance of the hill and urgently sought Union troops to occupy it before the Confederates could. A staff officer sent by Warren encountered Vincent's brigade nearby. Vincent, without consulting his superior officers, decided that his brigade was in the ideal position to defend Little Round Top. He and a color bearer immediately moved to the hill and brought his brigade into position at the extreme left flank of the Union line.One of Vincent's regiments, the 20th Maine, led by Colonel
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain , has received most of the fame for the defense of Little Round Top, but there is little doubt that the efforts and bravery of Vincent were instrumental in the eventual Union victory. Vincent impressed upon Chamberlain the importance of his position on the brigade's left flank and then he left to attend to the brigade's right flank. There, the 16th Michigan Infantry was starting to yield to enemy pressure. Mounting a large boulder, Vincent brandished a riding crop given to him by his wife and shouted to his men "Don't give an inch!" A bullet struck him through the thigh and the groin and he fell. Due to gallant performances by the 20th Maine and the 140th New York, the Union line held against the Confederate onslaught. Vincent was carried from the hill to a nearby farm, where he lay dying for the next five days, unable to be transported to his home due to the severity of his injury.The commander of the Army of the Potomac, Maj. Gen.
George G. Meade , recommended Vincent for promotion to brigadier general on the evening of July 2. The promotion was dated July 3, 1863, but it is doubtful that Vincent knew about the honor before he died. [Warner, p. 528. Eicher, p. 614, states that this promotion was not confirmed by theUnited States Senate , and therefore does not list him as a general.] Vincent's wife gave birth to a baby girl two months later, but his daughter died before reaching the age of one and is buried next to her father.His corps commander, Maj. Gen.
George Sykes , described Vincent's actions in his official report from the battle:In memoriam
Strong Vincent is buried in
Erie Cemetery in Erie. He is memorialized by a statue on the 83rd Pennsylvania monument on Little Round Top, by a statue erected in 1997 at Blasco Memorial Library, Erie, and byStrong Vincent High School in Erie. The portion of Little Round Top to the southeast of Sykes Avenue on theGettysburg Battlefield is known as "Vincent's Spur".He was portrayed in the film "Gettysburg" by
Maxwell Caulfield .ee also
References
* Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
* Goellnitz, Jenny, [http://www.vincent.goellnitz.org/ Online biography of Vincent] .
* Warner, Ezra J., "Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders", Louisiana State University Press, 1964, ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.Notes
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