CDV ETCHING OF COL. GEORGE D. WELLS, 34TH MASS. INFANTRY

$40.00 SOLD

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Item Code: 490-6182

Printed etching of George Duncan Wells. Clear image and “signature” with gold rule border. No backmark. Card remains in fine condition.

Wells entered the Civil War almost immediately after the bombardment on Fort Sumter, enlisting in the 1st Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry in April 1861. He was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in May 1861. In July 1862 he was promoted to Colonel and commander of the 34th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. He was present in the First Battle of Bull Run and the Spring 1862 Peninsular Campaign.

After taking over the 34th Massachusetts, he was station with his command amongst the defenses of Washington, DC from August 1862 to July 1863, then the defenses of Harper’s Ferry, Virginia from July 1863, to May 1864. Elevated to brigade command (1st Brigade, 1st Division, VIII Army Corps), he fought in the final campaigns in the Shenandoah Valley, where he took part in the Battles of Piedmont, 3rd Winchester, and Fishers Hill.

In a skirmish that preceded the Battle of Cedar Creek, Virginia, he was wounded and captured by the Confederates. His wound proved mortal, and he died in the hands of the Rebels. His remains were then forwarded to the Union Lines under a flag of truce, and brought back to his hometown of Greenfield, Massachusetts for burial.

He was posthumously brevetted Brigadier General, US Volunteers (backdated to October 12, 1864, the date of his wounding) for “gallant and distinguished services at the battle of Cedar Creek, Va.”. The monument to the 34th Massachusetts Infantry, erected in the Westchester National Cemetery in Westchester, Virginia, is topped with a bust of Colonel Wells.  [jet] [PH:L]

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