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Storming Fort Wagner

Storming Fort Wagner
Artist
Kurz & Allison Lithography Company, c. 1880 - 1899
Sitter
Robert Gould Shaw, 10 Oct 1837 - 18 Jul 1863
Date
1890
Type
Print
Medium
Chromolithograph on paper
Dimensions
Image: 47.6 × 65.4 cm (18 3/4 × 25 3/4")
Mount: 62.4 × 80 cm (24 9/16 × 31 1/2")
Topic
Exterior\Waterscape\Seascape
Vehicle\Ship
Weapon\Gun
Weapon\Sword
Exterior\Landscape\Battleground
Weapon\Cannon
Symbols & Motifs\Flag\National\United States
Robert Gould Shaw: Male
Robert Gould Shaw: Military and Intelligence\Army\Officer\Colonel
Robert Gould Shaw: Military and Intelligence\Army\Officer\Civil War\Union Army
Portrait
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Restrictions & Rights
CC0
Object number
S/NPG.2014.33
Exhibition Label
Storming Fort Wagner
As the first black regiment to be organized in a Northern state, the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Colored Regiment included recruits from twenty-five states as well as Canada. In late May 1863, under the leadership of its white commander, Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, the Fifty-Fourth was ordered to the South Carolina coast to prepare to take the city of Charleston. Fort Wagner, the heavily fortified Confederate bastion that guarded Charleston’s main shipping channel, was the regiment’s target. The Fifty-Fourth began its attack at dusk on July 18, 1863.
Despite withering Confederate fire that decimated their ranks and killed Colonel Shaw, the men of the Fifty-Fourth bravely mounted two assaults before the fort’s defenders drove them back. Although a defeat for Union forces, the admirable performance of the Fifty-Fourth laid to rest any lingering doubts about African American soldiers’ fitness for battle.
Data Source
National Portrait Gallery
Location
Currently not on view