Robert Gould Shaw (1837-1863)
Harvard-educated Robert Shaw, son of a prominent Boston abolitionist family, was serving as a captain in the 2nd Massachusetts when he was tapped by Governor John Andrew to command the first regiment of black troops organized in a Northern state. Shaw went about the organization of his 54th Massachusetts recruiting free blacks from all over New England and some from beyond. The regiment was mustered into service on May 13, 1863 with Shaw as its colonel and was sent to the South Carolina coast near Charleston.
After leading the regiment in smaller actions on James Island, at Legaresville on July 13, and Secessionville on July 16, Shaw moved the regiment over to Morris Island. On July 18, 1863 he led the 54th Massachusetts in conjunction with two brigades of white troops in a frontal assault on Confederate Battery Wagner. In the unsuccessful charge, Shaw’s well-drilled black troops proved themselves to be fully capable of standing up to enemy fire, even heroic in their combat debut, but in so doing lost about a quarter of those engaged, including Colonel Shaw.
The rebels in the battery were so outraged that the Federals had armed black troops that they deliberately “insulted” the dead white officer by unceremoniously burying him in a common grave with his black soldiers. When Shaw’s parents heard of the slight, they found solace in the act, believing that was the way their son would have wanted it. Shaw’s body was never recovered. The story was made famous in the movie “Glory.”
This assault led by Shaw is memorialized on the Shaw Memorial which stands in the Boston Commons in Massachusetts which was executed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens.
Information courtesy of Cowan’s Auctions Inc., November 2006