Fleetwood, Christian A.

ACTION: Chaffin's Farm (Fort Harrison), VA.
DATE: 29 September 1864.
NAME: Fleetwood, Christian Abraham
RANK/UNIT: Sergeant Major, 4th U.S. Colored Troops.
CITATION: "Seized the colors, after two color
bearers had been shot down, and bore them nobly through the fight."
MEDAL PRESENTED: 6 April 1865
BIOGRAPHICAL DATA: Born: Baltimore, MD. 1840.
ENTERED SERVICE: Baltimore, MD. 11 August 1863.
PHOTOGRAPH/SKETCH: Attached.
Attached. Attached.
OTHER: Christian Fleetwood was a 23-year-old clerk
when he enlisted in the U.S. Army. He stood 5'4 and 1/2" tall. He
was promoted to the rank of Sergeant Major on August 19, 1863. Fleetwood
described the act which won him the Medal of Honor citation as follows,
"Saved the regimental colors after eleven of the twelve color guards
had been shot down around it."
The rank of Sergeant Major was at the time the highest
rank a black soldier could attain in the U.S. Army.
SOURCES: Medal of Honor Recipients: 1863-1978,
Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979. p. 88
Mitchell, Joseph B. Lt. Col., The Badge of Gallantry, New York:
MacMillian & Co., 1986 pp. 139-40
Deffield, A.M., Deeds of Valor, 2 vols. Detroit: Perrien-Keyel
Co., 1907. pp. 434-5
Mulholland, St. Claire A., Military Order Congress Medal Of Honor Legion
of the United States, Philadelphia: Town Printing Co., 1905 p. 517
Bearss, Edwin C., "Black Medals of Honor Received a New Market Heights,
29 September 1864." National park Service Memo in Richmond NBP files,
2 April 1979.
Davis, William C., Death in the Trenches: Grant at Petersburg. Alexandria,
VA Time-Life books, 1986.
p. 125.

Christian Fleetwood rose to the rank of sergeant-major and received the
Congressional Medal of Honor. He gives an account
of the African American soldier from the Revolutionary War to the Civil
War to show his suitability for military service, with concentration on
the Civil War. He cites instances of valor and testimonials thereto, statistics
on black enlistments by state and on casualties, and lists African Americans
who received the Congressional Medal of Honor.

An order from Gen. Benjamin Butler, dated 11 October
1864, had this to say:
Christian A. Fleetwood, sergeant-major, Fourth U.S. Colored Troops,
when two color bearers had been shot down, seized the national colors
and bore them nobly through the fight. He has a special medal for
gallant conduct.
Official Records, #89, p169
