A Shower of Stars: The Medal of Honor and the 27th MaineStackpole Books, 2017 M09 15 - 280 pages Since 1941 the Medal of Honor has been more often awarded to dead than to living men. Of all the medals issues by the United States Government, this singular medal has had a particularly solemn glory attached to its meaning. But a look at its history reveals that, from its inception, it was steeped in controversy, with threats to its integrity swirling in from all sides. Author John. J. Pullen, during the course of research on the 20th Maine, came across an obscure note indicating that the 27th Maine, a group of nine-month volunteers from York Country, had been issued 864 Medals of Honor—one for every member of the regiment—while the 20th main, having distinguished itself at Little Round Top, garnered only four such medals. Was this discovery the beginning of an untold story of extraordinary bravery, or was it an outrageous blunder? Civil War literature yielded nothing about this wholesale “shower of stars” that had rained down upon the little-known regiment. And, as Pullen tracked down its descendants, he found very little information on the whereabouts of those medals. Thus, a mystery was born. After sifting through piles of War Department documents, as well as letters and diaries found in Maine’s “unofficial archives,” Pullen begins to pieces together a puzzle that had already ensnared many, from Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton to such notable figures as Theodore Roosevelt. The hero of this story, however, is Colonel Mark F. Wentworth, the commander of the 27th Maine and later of the 32nd Maine, who thwarted the forces that threatened ignominy on the Medal of Honor, and revealed the true character of valor. “The author has written a fascinating, leisurely book, often disarming in its personal approach to unraveling his mystery” – E. B. Long, Chicago Tribune |
From inside the book
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... battle. When Lee retired below the Rappahannock in the autumn of 1862, where he was to maul and claw his attackers in the battles of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville, there was also need for rearechelon troops for the purpose of ...
... battle. When Lee retired below the Rappahannock in the autumn of 1862, where he was to maul and claw his attackers in the battles of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville, there was also need for rearechelon troops for the purpose of ...
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... battle driving on loaded their and in werearms their our Their slumbers were being disturbed in exactly the manner visualized by John Mosby. However, that winter the men of the 27th Maine were seldom in any danger of sudden physical ...
... battle driving on loaded their and in werearms their our Their slumbers were being disturbed in exactly the manner visualized by John Mosby. However, that winter the men of the 27th Maine were seldom in any danger of sudden physical ...
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... battle during the retreat from the second battle of Bull Run, with a thunderstorm raging and Phil Kearny, the great Union cavalry leader, killed in one of the confusing charges. Now the new grass of another spring was effacing the scars ...
... battle during the retreat from the second battle of Bull Run, with a thunderstorm raging and Phil Kearny, the great Union cavalry leader, killed in one of the confusing charges. Now the new grass of another spring was effacing the scars ...
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... battle name to its colors. The brigade comprising the 25th and 27th Maine was now transferred to the Army of the Potomac and assigned to Slocum's Twelfth Corps. On June 24 the brigade received orders to join the northward march on the ...
... battle name to its colors. The brigade comprising the 25th and 27th Maine was now transferred to the Army of the Potomac and assigned to Slocum's Twelfth Corps. On June 24 the brigade received orders to join the northward march on the ...
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... battle of Bull Run in July of 1861. In fact, if there had been some miraculous way to interpose the enemy between the desperately northward bound Union troops and their homes, the Confederacy might have been overrun and crushed on the ...
... battle of Bull Run in July of 1861. In fact, if there had been some miraculous way to interpose the enemy between the desperately northward bound Union troops and their homes, the Confederacy might have been overrun and crushed on the ...
Contents
Two Paces Forward | |
They Never Failed to Understand | |
Let Not Thy Left Hand Know | |
Wherein the Mouths of Lions Are Stopped | |
A Fast Shuffle on Capitol Hill | |
This Sole Remaining Seal of Honor | |
Alarums and Excavations | |
Acknowledgments | |
Bibliography | |
Notes | |
Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
27th Maine medals 27TH MAINE REGIMENT 32nd Maine Adjutant General’s Ainsworth appeared Archives Arlington Heights Army medal attic authorized awarded battle Brevet Calvin Hayes Captain cavalry citation Civil Cobb Colonel Wentworth com command con Confederate Congressional Medal decoration defenses of Washington Department distinguished enemy enlisted entitled Farwell Fort McClary General’s Office going Government Governor Governor of Maine Honor Legion Honor list Houston Infantry issued July June Kittery later letter Lincoln Little River Turnpike Maine Adjutant Maine regiment March Mark F Mark Wentworth MeAGR Medal of Honor ment Miles military militia Minerva MOHR morning report muster names official records old medals Philadelphia Pollock President pro Rand received recipients ribbon rolls Secretary Secretary of War Senate sent Sergeant soldiers some someone Stanton star thing tion troops unentitled Union volunteered to remain War Department Wentworth house Whitman Wilson wounded wrote York County