Exhibit on soldier David Oram (Courtesy Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
The Library Company of Philadelphia |
Many immigrants had fought in European conflicts and were prepared for combat. Others arrived impoverished, ripe for recruiting – drawn by a bounty (enlistment bonus) and steady military pay.
“Some had families to support, or wives and children awaiting money for passage,” the museum says in an article about the exhibit. “Many men enlisted on the spot, or within days of reaching American soil. Others went to war for draftees who paid them to take their place.”
More than 500,000 immigrants showed uncompromised bravery while fighting for the Union.
Norwegian-born Col. Hans Heg (left), commanded the 15th Wisconsin, a regiment comprising mostly Scandinavian immigrants. David Oram, who came to the United States from Dundee, Scotland, when he was about 8, joined the 24th Wisconsin.
Both were at the Battle of Chickamauga in September 1863. Oram was seriously wounded and spent six months recovering. Heg became the highest-ranking Wisconsin officer to die in battle.
Heg, 33, died defending the freedoms he found in the United States. “The State has sent no braver soldier, and no truer patriot to aid in this mighty struggle for national unity, than Hans Christian Heg,” the State Journal wrote Sept. 29, 1863, reporting word of his death. “The valorous blood of the old Vikings ran in his veins, united with the gentler virtues of a Christian and a gentleman.”
Early in the conflict, Heg wrote about what motivated he and other immigrants.
(Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
“More than a third of Wisconsin’s population was foreign-born, giving it the second-highest proportion of immigrants of all states, says Patrick Young, who writes “The Reconstruction Era” and “Immigrants’ Civil War” blogs.
“For
every one immigrant who served in the Confederate army, nine served with the
Union. Many, particularly the Germans, said they did so to end slavery. Without
these men, and their wives who supported their service, it is difficult to see
how the Union could have been preserved,” Young tells the Picket.
A large proportion of those on the Union side were German and Irish, but Poland, Italy and many other countries were represented.
Some 369 immigrants received the Medal Honor for their heroism in the Civil War.
(Courtesy of Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
In a video posted to the museum’s Facebook page, education coordinator Doug Dammann details the life and service of David Oram, who settled in Racine. He enlisted in August 1862.
Oram rejoined the Union army after he was wounded at Chickamauga, and mustered out in June 1865. He returned home, married and worked for a machine company. Like many Union veterans, Oram was active in the fraternal Grand Army of the Republic – in his case, the Gov. Harvey post.
Oram and his wife, Rosina, attended many events, including the 1915 encampment in Washington, DC, marking the 50th anniversary of the war’s end.
In April 1935, a few months before Oram died at age 94, he was honored at a patriotic and military ball in Race County. Besides Chickamauga, he was a veteran of the battles at Perryville, Stones River and Franklin-Nashville.
David Oram before the Civil War |
“To Our
Comrade David Oram
The last of Abe Lincoln’s boys,
And to his Comrades departed;
Our Boyhood Heroes
To You, We the younger veterans,
Affectionately dedicate this Program.
Ourselves, we dedicate
To Carry On the Work, so well and nobly done
By the Grand Army of the Republic
(Courtesy of Civil War Museum, Kenosha, WI) |
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