Re:Gettysburg Trivia
Posted: Sat May 02, 2009 1:04 pm
From: 'Vermont in the Civil War', volume II, page 477; by G.G. Benedict, one of General Stannard's staff officers:
"Major General Hancock, after rallying troops to meet Pickett's charge farther to the right, rode down to speak to General Stannard, and fell, while addressing him, close to the front line, just after the flank attack had been ordered. He was caught, as he sank from his horse, by Lieutenants Hooker and Benedict, of Stannard's staff, and the bleeding from his wound - a singular and very severe one from the joint entrance, at the upper part of the thigh, of a minie ball and a twisted iron nail, carried from his saddle-bow, through which the buller first passed, into his body, was stopped by their hands."
The Lieutenant Benedict who caught Hancock went on to become the author of 'Vermont in the Civil War'.
"Major General Hancock, after rallying troops to meet Pickett's charge farther to the right, rode down to speak to General Stannard, and fell, while addressing him, close to the front line, just after the flank attack had been ordered. He was caught, as he sank from his horse, by Lieutenants Hooker and Benedict, of Stannard's staff, and the bleeding from his wound - a singular and very severe one from the joint entrance, at the upper part of the thigh, of a minie ball and a twisted iron nail, carried from his saddle-bow, through which the buller first passed, into his body, was stopped by their hands."
The Lieutenant Benedict who caught Hancock went on to become the author of 'Vermont in the Civil War'.