Quick Facts
Also called:
Second Assault on Morris Island
Or:
Battle of Fort Wagner, Morris Island
Date:
July 18, 1863
Location:
South Carolina
Participants:
Confederate States of America
United States
Context:
American Civil War

Second Battle of Fort Wagner, unsuccessful Union assault on July 18, 1863, during the American Civil War (1861–65) on Confederate-held Fort Wagner on Morris Island, South Carolina. An early assault on the fort on July 11 (the First Battle of Fort Wagner) had been just as unsuccessful. Despite the Union defeats, the second battle was especially noteworthy for the courageous performance of a regiment of black federal troops, the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, that transformed the image of the African American soldier, aided in the recruitment of additional African American soldiers, and helped to swing Northern opinion in favor of freeing slaves. Its heroic actions were depicted in the 1989 film Glory.

Despite President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of 1862, there was no great enthusiasm among Northern whites for the abolition of slavery and widespread skepticism about the ability of blacks to fulfill combat roles. The 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment was one of the first Union military units made up of black soldiers under white officers. Its recruitment had been a high-profile event, and its commander, Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, hailed from a prominent Boston abolitionist family. The regiment’s assignment to lead the assault on Fort Wagner was thus seen as a crucial chance to prove that African Americans could fight for their own freedom.

On arriving at James Island on July 16, the 54th Massachusetts was attacked by a large force of Georgia infantry but repelled the assault, impressing commanding Union General A. H. Terry with their disciplined fire. The 54th moved toward Fort Wagner, on neighbouring Morris Island, the following day. The approach to Fort Wagner was a narrow strip of beach 180 feet (55 m) wide with the Atlantic to the east and a marsh to the west. Once on this beach, the Union troops had to cross a shallow moat surrounding the 750 foot- (685 m) wide fort, which was heavily fortified with mortars and other guns. The assault began at 7:45 PM, with a total of ten regiments engaged. The soldiers of the 54th, forming the spearhead of the attack, fought their way on to the fort’s parapet and held out there for over an hour under heavy fire before the attack was called off at around 10:00 PM and they were ordered to retreat. The black regiment had taken more than 50 percent casualties, with Colonel Shaw among those killed. The Confederate commander at Fort Wagner ordered the Union dead to be buried in a common grave, with Shaw among them, intending this as an insult. Shaw’s family in Boston, however, retorted that they regarded it as an honour.

The soldiers were hailed for their valor, and the recruitment of African Americans into the Union army sharply increased as a result of the public recognition. Sgt. William H. Carney, for his bravery at Fort Wagner, became the first African American to receive the Medal of Honor, the country’s highest military award.

Losses: Confederate, 174 dead, wounded, or captured of 1,800; Union, 1,515 dead, wounded, or captured of 5,000.

Simon Adams
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54th Regiment

United States military
Also known as: 54th Massachusetts Regiment, 54th Regiment of the Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Quick Facts
In full:
Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Date:
1861 - 1865
Areas Of Involvement:
African Americans
Related People:
Robert Gould Shaw

54th Regiment, Massachusetts infantry unit made up of African Americans that was active during the American Civil War (1861–65). The 54th Regiment became famous for its fighting prowess and for the great courage of its members. Its exploits were depicted in the 1989 film Glory.

The abolitionist governor of Massachusetts, John Andrew, assembled the 54th Regiment in early 1863 after receiving authorization to do so from U.S. Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. Although all of the regiment’s officers were white—a fact that upset many Northern leaders at the time—Andrew’s outspoken advocacy persuaded many prominent African Americans to support the idea. Among those who actively recruited for the unit were Frederick Douglass, Martin Delany, Henry Highland Garnet, and John Mercer Langston. They and other leaders believed that if the 54th Regiment could succeed in battle, charges of racial inferiority, so frequent at the time, would be undermined decisively. Because of the widespread recruitment efforts, the 54th Regiment, unlike other Civil War units, drew its ranks from across the northern United States and beyond, including some Confederate states, Canada, and the West Indies.

Led by Col. Robert Gould Shaw, a member of a prominent abolitionist family in Boston, the 54th Regiment soon distinguished itself in battle. Its first success came on July 16, 1863, in the Sea Islands off South Carolina, where the unit repelled a Confederate attack on James Island. Just two days later came a more decisive test. In an attack on Fort Wagner, on Morris Island in Charleston, South Carolina, the 54th Regiment fought valiantly against a stronger Confederate force. More than half the regiment was lost in that battle. For his bravery at Fort Wagner, Sgt. William H. Carney became the first African American to earn the Medal of Honor, the country’s highest military award.

Washington Monument. Washington Monument and fireworks, Washington DC. The Monument was built as an obelisk near the west end of the National Mall to commemorate the first U.S. president, General George Washington.
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The performance of the 54th Regiment at Fort Wagner convinced many Northern leaders that African Americans could be good soldiers, which paved the way for further enlistment of African Americans in the war effort. By the end of the Civil War, more than 178,000 African Americans had served in the Union army, playing a crucial part in the Northern victory. The experiment in allowing African Americans in the military had been a resounding success.

Unfortunately, battlefield hardships were not the only difficulties that the 54th Regiment had to endure. The federal government reneged on its initial guarantee that it would pay black soldiers the same as white soldiers. In response, the regiment led other African American units in refusing to accept money from the federal government for nearly one year. Under the threat of mutiny by African American units and faced with increasing pressure from antislavery congressmen and a large letter-writing campaign waged by the soldiers and their supporters, the federal government finally granted equal pay in June 1864. The regiment was mustered out of the army after the war, in August 1865.

Peter Kuryla
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