Robert Gould Shaw - Research Article from American Civil War Reference Library

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 12 pages of information about Robert Gould Shaw.

Robert Gould Shaw - Research Article from American Civil War Reference Library

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 12 pages of information about Robert Gould Shaw.
This section contains 3,548 words
(approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Robert Gould Shaw Encyclopedia Article

Born October 10, 1837
Boston, Massachusetts
Died July 18, 1863
Morris Island, South Carolina

Union colonel of the all-black Fifty-Fourth
Massachusetts Regiment

Led the assault on Fort Wagner in
South Carolina that proved the courage
of black soldiers in combat

"Isn't it extraordinary that the Government won't make use of the instrument that would finish the war sooner than anything else—the slaves?"

Robert Gould Shaw. (From Harper's Weekly, August 15, 1863.)

Robert Gould Shaw became a hero as commanding officer of the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Regiment—the first all-black regiment to be organized in the North. Black men were not allowed to join the Union Army in the early days of the Civil War. Even when the law was changed in mid-1862, many people still doubted whether black men could be good soldiers. Prominent black leaders and abolitionists (people who wanted to eliminate slavery) organized the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts and selected...

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This section contains 3,548 words
(approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Robert Gould Shaw Encyclopedia Article
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Robert Gould Shaw from UXL. ©2005-2006 by U•X•L. U•X•L is an imprint of Thomson Gale, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved.