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Old 10-03-2008, 12:58 AM
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Default Chinese Who Fought......

I found this about Chinese who fought in our Civil War. The one's listed fought for the north.....




By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, April 24, 2001 -- In the 1860s, if you wanted to send someone "to the ends of the Earth" you sent them to China.

Those were the days of sailing ships augmented by steam power and China was as remote from the Eastern United States as it was possible to be. Still, Chinese Americans found their way to the East Coast, and researchers claim that as many as 50 Chinese fought as soldiers during the American Civil War.

The number does not include the Chinese who served in the U.S. Navy during the war. The soldiers fought on both sides, researchers claim.

The first Chinese on record arrived in what became the United States in 1815. A Chinese ship's cook settled in Monterey, Calif., then a Spanish province.

The mariners of the Eastern seaboard traded with China. American ships vied with European traders to bring back the riches of the Orient. That was how a Chinese child ended up in Massachusetts.

In 1845, Sargent S. Day, captain of the square-rigged merchant ship Cohota, left Shanghai, China, bound for Massachusetts. Two days from port, he discovered two little half-starved Chinese boys on board. The older boy died, but Day "adopted" the younger boy and named him Edward Day Cohota.

Edward sailed the world with Captain and Mrs. Day until the captain retired to Gloucester, Mass. in 1857. He attended school and the other Day children treated him as a brother.

With the outbreak of the American Civil War, Cohota joined the 23rd Massachusetts Infantry. He fought in the Battle of Drury's Bluff near Richmond, Va., on May 16, 1864, and came out of the battle with "seven bullet holes thru" clothes. None touched his flesh."

At the Battle of Cold Harbor, Va., June 3, 1864, a Confederate Minie ball parted Cohota's hair permanently, but he was not otherwise hurt. He stayed with the Army of the Potomac through the end of the war.

After the war, Cohota rejoined the Army and was stationed at Fort Randall, Dakota Territory. He married and had six children. He served in the Army for 30 years. All that time, he thought he was a U.S. citizen and believed his Civil War service qualified him for the right. But he didn't take out his second set of naturalization papers until after the Senate passed the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 . He was not a citizen and could not become one.

Cohota died at the Battle Mountain Sanitarium for Veterans in Hot Springs, S.D., in 1935.

Another Chinese soldier of the Union participated in the most famous battle of the Civil War -- the three-day Battle of Gettysburg, Pa.

Pvt. Joseph L. Pierce was age 21 when he enlisted in the 14th Connecticut Infantry in August 1862. It's unclear how Pierce ended up in the United States. One story has it that his father sold him to Connecticut ship Captain Amos Peck for $6. Another story was that his brother sold him for $60. Still another was that Peck picked up the lad, who was adrift in the South China Sea. Peck, a lifelong bachelor, turned the 10-year-old he called "Joe" over to his mother in Connecticut.

Young Joe went to school with the Pecks and formally became Joseph Pierce in 1853. He picked up the last name from President Franklin Pierce.

At the time of his enlistment Pierce was a farmer in New Britain, Conn. He listed his height at 5 feet 5 inches, dark complexion with dark hair and black eyes. His birthplace was Canton in Kwangtung Province, China.

His regiment participated in the Battle of Antietam, Md. Sept. 17, 1862.

He suffered some sickness during his time around Washington and was in the hospital for a time. He was assigned to the Quartermaster Department for a bit and rejoined the 14th in time for the Battle of Chancellorsville, Va. in May 1863.

The 14th had a distinguished role in the Gettysburg campaign. "It fought on the north part of Cemetery Ridge on July 2 and was one of the units that helped repel Pickett's Charge," said Gettysburg Historian John Heiser. "The 14th was primarily responsible for turning back Brig. Gen. James Pettigrew's North Carolina division." Today, you can see the 14th Memorial to the north of the grove of trees marking the High-water Mark of the Confederacy.

The 14th's regimental history says that during Pickett's charge, Pierce appeared "pig-tail and all, the only Chinese in the Army of the Potomac." But he wasn't.



Cpl. John Tommy, of Company D, 70th New York Infantry, fought with III Corps on July 2. Tommy also was Chinese and from Canton. "We don't know how he ended up in the United States," Heiser said. "He lost both arms and legs during the fighting around the Peach Orchard. He died in the hospital on Oct. 19, 1863."

A third Chinese soldier, Antonio Dardell, fought with Union troops at Gettysburg. "He was taken as a child from China by a sea captain," Heiser said. "He enlisted Oct. 22, 1862, in Company A, 27th Connecticut Infantry. He was from Clinton, Conn. The unit fought at the wheat field." Little else is known of Dardell except he was a tinsmith in civilian life and applied for a pension from the government in 1912.

Historians say there may be more Chinese soldiers. It is tough to pick them out because they often took American names. Another member of the 14th Connecticut Infantry, John Lee, may have been Chinese. Of course, he may have been no more Chinese than the Confederate commander at Gettysburg, Robert E. Lee.

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Old 10-03-2008, 01:27 AM
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Thank you for sharing that article with us.

A Civil War magazine, perhaps America's Civil War published an article over ten years ago about the Chinese who fought. The article stated there were about 150 who served on both sides. The majority served in their respective side's navy (both North & South).
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Old 10-03-2008, 09:58 AM
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Dear 5Fish;

Bravo! Good researching.

Respectfully submitted,
M. E. Wolf
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Old 10-05-2008, 05:17 AM
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Wonderful post, 5fish! Makes one wonder if you moved to a foreign country to stay, would you adapt your name to the new language?

Two sons of Chang and Eng, the famous Siamese Twins of the 19th century, fought for the Confederacy.

Chang and Eng settled in Wilkesboro, North Carolina in 1839 and became natrualized citizens of the U.S. They purchased a plantation and slaves, and adopted the surname, "Bunker". They married and had children. Their families offered warm and generous hospitality to the troops passing thru, from providing food and clothing to nursing the wounded. (1)

Chang's son Christopher Wren Bunker and Eng's son Stephen Decatur Bunker saw action on the battlefields with General John McCausland, prisoner camps and hospitals.

Christopher enlisted in Company I of the 36th Battalion, Virginia Cavalry on April 1, 1863 -- he was called up for service on September 14, 1863. His cousin Stephen enlisted in the same Cavalry unit on July 2, 1863. (1)

In the summer of 1864, Brigadier General John McCausland, under orders of General Jubal Early, was sent from the Shenandoah Valley Campagin to relieve pressure on the defense of the siege of Petersburg, then invaded Pennsyvania again and took Chamberburg, and crossed the Potomac River with 2600 cavalrymen, including Christopher and Stephen. (1)

Sweeping aside the Union Cavalry, McCausland took control of Chambersburg on July 30th and demanded either $100,000 in gold coin or $500,000 in U.S currency to spare the city. When the inhabitants failed to rasie the money in the 3 hours alloted to them, McCausland ordered Chambersburg destroyed. While the city burned, drunken soldiers plundered freely, going as far as tearing brooches, finger rings and earrings off of women on the streets. (1)

From Chambersburg, McCausland skirmished with pursuing Federals, then moved onto Moorefield, West Virginia. 3 miles outside of town, he ordered his men to set up camp. (1) General Bradley T. Johnson, traveling with McCausland, had his men encamped on the road just outside of town, which created a barrier between McCausland and the advancing Union forces led by General William Averell. (2)

Confederate spies arrived from the nearby town of Romney, with information that the Union forces were coming. McCausland sent word to his men and Johnson's soldiers to be ready.(2) Within 24 hours, Union Cavalry ambushed a Confederate scouting party, then, dressed in stolen Confederate uniforms, they surprised and overwhelmed Confederate sentinels, pickets and a small detachment on night duty. This allowed Averell's men to enter McCausland's camp. (1) (After the war, Gen. Bradley T. Johnson stated his men had no prior warning of Averell's advance(2). Christopher became one of the many Confederates who were wounded and captured. (1)

Stephen escaped with McCausland and the rest of his men to rejoin Early by way of Mount Jackson, to take part in a campaign around Winchester and the Upper Valley. (2)

The largest Federal military prison at the time was Camp Chase, 4 miles west of Columbus, Ohio. Under charge of Colonel Wlliam F. Richardson, the prison was surrounded by a 12 foot wooden wall. Christopher was asigned to a hut with 197 other prisoners, had straw for a bed and probably short on clothes and infected with lice. Along with all the horrors and deprivations of prison camp life, Christopher was diagnosed and hospitalized with "variola", a virus that could have been either smallpox (which was raging thru the camp) or the less serious chickenpox. Finally on March 4, 1865, Christopher was exchanged for a Union prisoner, and his family welcomed him home on April 17, 1865. (1)

This artlcle picks back up on Stephen on September 3, 1864. He was wounded in fighting near Winchester, Virginia. According to Judge Jesse F. Graves (who wrote an unpublished biograph of Chang and Eng), Stephen "Bore himself gallantly", going back into action despite his wound. Stephen's 2 sons claim shortly before the end of the war, their father was wounded a second time and then captured by the Union army. (1)

After the Confederates surrendered, Stephen and Christopher both chose to live in Mount Ary, North Carolina, farming like their fathers, but of course, no slaves. (1)

--BBF

(1) an adaptation from a posting by the Association to Commemorate the Chinese Serving in the American Civil War, page 26.

(2) wvculture.org / Life of Brigadier General John McCausland

Last edited by Bonny Blue Flag; 10-05-2008 at 09:23 PM.
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