The US Army’s Youngest Sergeant
After the Battle of Chickamauga, twelve-year-old John Clem was officially promoted to the rank of sergeant. That made him the youngest noncommissioned officer in the history of the United States Army. A distinction he holds to this day. Clem’s conduct was widely reported in contemporary newspapers, and he became a nationally-known figure. Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury and future Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, decorated Clem for his courage. A popular Civil War song, “The Drummer Boy of Shiloh“, written by William S. Hays and published in Harper’s Weekly soon after the Battle of Chickamauga, was reportedly inspired by Clem’s exploits.
A month after the Battle of Chickamauga, John Clem was captured by the Rebels and became a prisoner of war. He was eventually released in a prisoner exchange. He returned to the ranks, and resumed the fight with the Army of the Cumberland. Clem was twice-wounded, before his discharge in September, 1864. After the war, Clem graduated high school in 1870. He rejoined the US Army in 1871, when he was commissioned a second lieutenant by President Grant. Clem married twice, raised a family, and served until 1915. He retired as a brigadier general, and as the last Civil War veteran still serving in the US Army. A year later, a special act of Congress promoted him to major general. John Lincoln Clem died in 1937, aged 85, and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
_________________
Where Did We Find This Stuff? Some Sources and Further Reading
American Battlefield Trust – Chinese-Americans in the Civil War
American Battlefield Trust – John Clem
Brown, Dee – Grierson’s Raid (1954)
Catton, Bruce – Bruce Catton’s Civil War: Three Volumes in One (1984)
Davis, Burke – Sherman’s March (2016)
Extra History – US Civil War Surprising Soldiers
Find a Grave – Gustav Albert Schurmann (1849 – 1905)
Foote, Shelby – The Civil War: A Narrative, Vol. 3, Red River to Appomattox (1974)
History Collection – 18 Little Known Facts About Abraham Lincoln
History Net – George W. Kincaid and the 37th Iowa Infantry in the US Civil War
Keesee, Dennis M. – Too Young to Die: Boy Soldiers of the Civil War (2001)
Loring, William Wing – A Confederate Soldier in Egypt (1884)
Military Network – The ‘Graybeards’ Were an Infantry Unit Just for Men Too Old for Military Service
National Museum of the United States Navy – Powder Monkeys and the American Civil War
Ohio History Central – Johnny Klem
Sears, Stephen W. – To the Gates of Richmond: The Peninsula Campaign (1992)
Time Magazine, June 29th, 2015 – The Civil War Was Won by Immigrant Soldiers
United States Navy Memorial – Aspinwall Fuller
Warfare History Network – Grierson’s Raid: Wrecking the Railroad With the Butternut Guerrillas