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J. H. Childs

J. H. Childs

Federal (USV)

Colonel

James Harvey Childs

(1834 - 1862)

Home State: Pennsylvania

Education: Miami University (Ohio), Class of 1852

Command Billet: Commanding Regiment

Branch of Service: Cavalry

Unit: 4th Pennsylvania Cavalry

Before Antietam

From Pittsburgh, he was 1st Lieutenant of the Pittsburgh City Guards, before the War and he enlisted as 1st Lieutenant of Company K, 12th Pennsylvania Infantry in April 1861. After that regiment's service was complete, in August, he was active in recruiting the 4th Pennsylvania Cavalry, and was commissioned Lieutenant Colonel at its organization on 18 October 1861. He was promoted to Colonel of the Regiment on 12 March 1862 when Colonel Campbell resigned to take command of the 5th PA Cavalry.

On the Campaign

He commanded the regiment in Maryland.

The brigade crossed the Antietam with the troops upon the left, and was posted in front of the Stone Bridge, where the Fourth supported Clark's Battery and held the line upon its right. A single solid shot, which fell in the midst of the squadron supporting these guns, killed two men and four horses. Colonel Childs was among the killed in this battle. He had completed an inspection of the skirmish line, and was with the staff, under cover of a hill, in a place of comparative safety. While there chatting pleasantly, he was struck by a solid shot on the right hip. The ball passed across him, throwing him from his horse and disemboweling him. He was at once carried to better shelter, when conscious of his certain death, he first arranged his military duties, sending Captain Hughes to report to General Pleasanton, and another of his aids to Lieutenant Colonel Kerr, that he might take command of the brigade [sic*]. He then dispatched an orderly to Dr. Marsh, to tell him " \if not attending to any one whose life could be saved, to come to him, as he was in great pain." Lastly, he called Captain Henry King, Assistant Adjutant General, to whom he delivered his last messages to his family, and wishes as to his property. He lived forty minutes after he was struck, but was unconscious during the last twenty.

References & notes

His service and the quote above from Bates.1,2 His gravesite is on Findagrave.

* Bates says Colonel Childs had command of the Brigade in the absence of "General Averell" in Maryland, but that is probably an error. Carman3 is clear that Colonel Rush, 6th Pennsylvania Cavalry led the Brigade.

More on the Web

There is a stone monument on the battlefield marking the spot where he was wounded on the 17th.

Birth

07/04/1834; Pittsburgh, PA

Death

09/17/1862; Sharpsburg, MD; burial in Allegheny Cemetery, Pittsburgh, PA

Notes

1   Bates, Samuel Penniman, History of the Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1861-65, Harrisburg: State of Pennsylvania, 1868-1871  [AotW citation 25876]

2   Bates, Samuel Penniman, Martial Deeds Of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia: T. H. Davis & Co., 1876  [AotW citation 25877]

3   Carman, Ezra Ayers, and Dr. Thomas G. Clemens, editor, The Maryland Campaign of September 1862, 3 volumes, El Dorado Hills (CA): Savas Beatie, 2010-17, Vol. II, pg. 541  [AotW citation 29536]