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1861-1865
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Dr. Mary Edwards Walker is the sole woman to have been awarded the Medal of Honor.
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Sgt. Henry G. Lillibridge of Co. H, 10th Rhode Island Infantry
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Sarah Rosetta Wakeman
Kitchen, Thomas, Pvt. Georgia regiment
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Walter G Jones, Private in Co.C., 9th NY Cavalry
Dr Walker received the Medal of Honor for her “untiring efforts” on behalf of the government and her “devotion and patriotic zeal to sick and wounded soldiers both in the field and in hospitals to the detriment of her own health.”
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Enoch Hooper Cook, Jr., Pvt, Co. H. 38th Alabama Infantry
At the age of ten he ran away from home to join the Union Army and fight in the Civil War. He was permitted to be a drummer boy in the beginning and at twelve he was famous for shooting a Confederate soldier and demanding that he surrender.
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Johnny Clem of Newark - Drummer Boy
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Jacob Miller
Awarded the Medal of Honor
Sarah Rosetta Wakeman (January 16, 1843 – June 19, 1864)
Her identity was kept secret for many years after her death because the letters she sent home were kept in an attic and unopened.
She often expressed how much she enjoyed being a soldier, in contrast to her life on the farm.
Lieutenant Alonzo Cushings
Awarded with the Congressional Medal of Honor
American Civil War
Hong Neok Woo
Asian American soldier, who fought in the Civil War
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"I am not a Hobson, a Dewey, a Schley, nor a Sampson, but I was a High Private in Co. C., 9th NY Cavalry, and carried this little Testament in my blouse pocket, which, in two battles, saved my life from bullets, as represented in the above photo. The bullet in the upper corner was shot at me at Cedar Creek, Va., October 19, 1864. The bullet in the centre crashed into the Testament during the battle of Appomattox (better known as Lee’s surrender. April 8th and 9th, 1865"
Pvt. Edwin Francis Jemison, 2nd Louisiana Regiment
The best of the Red White and Blue
Lieutenant Cushings graduated West Point and was known to say,
“Press the Attack! Never shrink back!”