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Edgar A. Bras

Edgar A. Bras (October 6, 1841 – June 24, 1923) was a United States soldier who fought with the 8th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War. He received his nation's highest award for valor, the U.S. Medal of Honor, for the bravery he displayed during the Battle of Spanish Fort in Alabama on April 8, 1865. That award was conferred on June 8, 1865.[1][2][3][4]

Edgar A. Bras
Born(1841-10-06)October 6, 1841
Jefferson County, Iowa
DiedJune 24, 1923(1923-06-24) (aged 81)
Florida
Buried
Evergreen Cemetery, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service1861 – 1866
RankFirst Sergeant
Unit 8th Regiment Iowa Volunteer Infantry
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War:
Awards Medal of Honor

Formative years edit

Born on October 6, 1841, in Jefferson Township, in Louisa County, Iowa, Edgar A. Bras was a son of Massachusetts native and farmer John Bras and Claretta/Mary (Means) Bras. a native of New York. In 1850, he resided in Jefferson Township with his parents and siblings: Letitia (aged 13), Mary (aged 11), Alexander (aged 7), Garry (aged 5), and Amanda (aged 2).[5][6][7]

By 1860, he was still residing with his parents in Jefferson Township. Also still at home were siblings: Mary, Alexander, Garry, and Amanda, as well as sister Lucy (aged 9), and twin brothers Charlie and Henry (aged 7).[8]

Civil War edit

At the age of 20, Edgar A. Bras enrolled for Civil War military service in Louisa County, Iowa on September 11, 1861.[9] He then officially mustered in for duty with Company K of the 8th Iowa Volunteer Infantry. Military records at the time described him as being 5’8” tall, with dark hair and blues eyes. He was then promoted to the rank of Fifth Corporal on December 7, 1861.[10][11]

 
Thure de Thulstrup's illustration of the April 6, 1862 Battle of Shiloh, Tennessee.

Engaged with his regiment in several of the most intense actions of the American Civil War, he was wounded multiple times in combat. On April 6, 1862, he sustained a bullet wound to his upper thigh while fighting with his regiment in the Battle of Shiloh, Tennessee. Because surgeons elected not to remove the projectile, he carried the bullet around with him in his leg for the remainder of his life. In recognition of his service to the regiment, he was subsequently promoted to the rank of Fourth Corporal on September 29, 1862. He was then wounded a second time during the second Battle of Corinth, Mississippi, on October 4, 1862. That bullet struck him in the head and lodged behind his left eye.[12][13]

Once again, in recognition of his service to the regiment, he was promoted — first to the rank of Fourth Sergeant on March 1, 1863, and then to the rank of Third Sergeant on September 1, 1863. Upon expiration of his initial term of service, he then re-enlisted, mustering in again with the same regiment on January 11, 1864. He was also later promoted to the rank of First Sergeant on February 1, 1864.[14][15]

On April 8, 1865, during the Battle of Spanish Fort, one of the efforts by Union forces to capture the forts protecting the city of Mobile, Alabama, Bras charged through the Confederate camp, capturing a flag from a color-bearer. It is for this act of bravery that he was awarded the Medal of Honor.[16]

He was honorably discharged from the military at Selma, Alabama on April 20, 1866.[17]

Post-war life edit

Following his honorable discharge from the military, Bras pursued farming, moving from Iowa to Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Florida in search of a better life. His U.S. Civil War Pension rate rose steadily throughout this phase of his life in recognition of his increasing level of disability, which was directly attributable to the injuries he sustained during the American Civil War. In 1870, he was an unmarried farmer residing in Big Sandy, Jefferson County, Nebraska.[18][19]

By 1880, he and his wife had relocated to Marshall County, Kansas, where they resided in the District of Wells with their son Lester (aged 7), and daughters Gertrude (aged 5) and Olive (aged 3).[20] Bras supported his family by farming the land. Still residing in Marshall County, Kansas by the 1890s,[21] but now residing in the District of Elm Creek, he and his wife witnessed the Marshall County marriage of their 19-year-old daughter Gertrude to 31-year-old farmer Stephen Jester on January 25, of that year.[22]

By 1910, he had been married for 38 years, was employed as a carpenter, and had relocated to Stillwater, Oklahoma, where he resided with his wife and daughter Ethel (aged 26), and her nine-year-old son, Oliver.[23]

After relocating to Broward County, Florida with his wife and daughter, Ethel, Bras and his wife were documented in 1920, as residing with their daughter and her husband, Herbert Otto, at their Fort Lauderdale home. During this time, Bras became a deacon and superintendent of the Sunday School at that community's First Baptist Church. His wife then preceded him in death.[24][25][26]

Death and interment edit

Bras died in Florida on June 24, 1923, and was laid to rest at the Evergreen Cemetery in Fort Lauderdale.[27][28][29]

Medal of Honor citation edit

Bras was awarded the U.S. Medal of Honor for his bravery at Mobile, Alabama on April 8, 1865, during an engagement of his regiment in which he captured the colors of a Confederate army unit.[30][31][32] According to the State Historical Society of Iowa, General Order No. 24 was issued by headquarters of the 16th U.S. Army Corps in Montgomery, Alabama on July 6, 1865, to recognize the valor of Bras and others from his regiment, and directed that:[33]

The Eighth Iowa Infantry Veteran Volunteers be paraded on Saturday, July 8, 1865, at 5 p.m. ... and that the medals be presented to the proper persons, in the name of the honorable Secretary of War. Lieut. Col. J. J. Lyon, assistant inspector-general, Sixteenth Army Corps, is charged with the presentation and the execution of this order.

By order of Maj. Gen. A. J. Smith

See also edit

External links edit

  • "Edgar A. Bras" (memorial and grave site information). Salt Lake City, Utah: Find A Grave, retrieved online August 10, 2018.
  • "U.S., Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles, 1861-1865" (searchable database; subscription required). Salt Lake City, Utah: Ancestry.com.

References edit

  1. ^ "Civil War (A-L) Medal of Honor Recipients 2012-09-02 at the Wayback Machine". Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History, retrieved online September 14, 2013.
  2. ^ "Bras, Edgar A." (profile). Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina: Congressional medal of Honor Society, retrieved online September 28, 2013.
  3. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipient Edgar Bras", in "Iowa Civil War Monuments." Carson, Iowa: Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, Iowa Department, retrieved online September 28, 2013.
  4. ^ "Edgar A. Bras Memorial Service". Carson, Iowa: Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, Department of Iowa, retrieved online August 10, 2018.
  5. ^ "Edgar A. Bras", in Death Certificates. Jacksonville, Florida: Bureau of Vital Statistics, Department of Health, State of Florida.
  6. ^ "Bras, Edgar A., John, Claretta, et. al.", in U.S. Census (Jefferson Township, Louisa County, Iowa, 1850. Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.
  7. ^ "Bras, Edgar A.", Congressional Medal of Honor Society.
  8. ^ "Bras, Edgar A. and John, et. al.", in U.S. Census (Jefferson Township, Louisa County, Iowa, 1860). Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.
  9. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipients", U.S. Army Center of Military History.
  10. ^ "First Sgt. Edgar A. Bras", in "", in "Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes." Des Moines, Iowa: State Historical Society of Iowa.
  11. ^ "Bras, Edgar A." in National Graves Registration Database. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, National Civil War Museum, retrieved online September 2, 2018.
  12. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipient Edgar Bras", in "Iowa Civil War Monuments", Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War.
  13. ^ "", in "Biography", in "Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes." Des Moines, Iowa: State Historical Society of Iowa.
  14. ^ "First Sgt. Edgar A. Bras", in "Service Record, in "Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes", State Historical Society of Iowa.
  15. ^ "Bras, Edgar A." in "Soldiers and Sailors Database". Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Park Service, retrieved online September 2, 2018.
  16. ^ "", in "", in "Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes." Des Moines, Iowa: State Historical Society of Iowa, retrieved online September 28, 2013.
  17. ^ "First Sgt. Edgar A. Bras", in Service Record", in "Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes", State Historical Society of Iowa.
  18. ^ "Bras, Edgar A.", in "U.S. Veterans Administration Pension Payment Cards". Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, 1911-1923.
  19. ^ "Bras, Edgar A." in U.S. Census (Big Sandy, Jefferson County, Nebraska, 1870). Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.
  20. ^ "Bras, Edgar, Mary, et. al.", in U.S. Census (Wells District, Marshall County, Kansas, 1880). Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.
  21. ^ "Edgar A. Bras", in "Pensions". Wichita, Kansas: The Wichita Daily Eagle, May 23, 1891.
  22. ^ "Bras, Gertrude, E. A. Bras, Stephen Jester, et. al.", in Marriage Records. Marshall County, Kansas: Office of the County Clerk.
  23. ^ "Bras, E. A., Mary, et. al.", in U.S. Census (Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma, 1910). Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.
  24. ^ "Bras, Edgar A., Mary, Ethel Otto, et. al.", in U.S. Census (Fort Lauderdale, Broward County, Florida, 1920.
  25. ^ "First Sgt. Edgar Bras", in "Biography", in "Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes." Des Moines, Iowa: State Historical Society of Iowa.
  26. ^ "Edgar A. Bras Memorial Service". Carson, Iowa: Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, Department of Iowa, retrieved online August 10, 2018.
  27. ^ "Civil War Medal of Honor Recipients; Where Are They Now?", in The Dispatch: The Quarterly Newsletter of the Department of Florida S.U.V.C.W., Autumn 2012, p. 5. Land O' Lakes, Florida: Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, Department of Florida, retrieved online August 27, 2018.
  28. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipient Edgar A. Bras", in "Iowa Civil War Monuments", Sons of Veterans of the Civil War.
  29. ^ "Edgar A. Bras", Death Certificates, Florida Bureau of Vital Statistics.
  30. ^ "Edgar A. Bras Memorial Service", Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War.
  31. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipients", U.S. Army Center of Military History.
  32. ^ "Bras, Edgar A.", Congressional Medal of Honor Society.
  33. ^ "Official Citation", in "Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes", State Historical Society of Iowa.

edgar, bras, october, 1841, june, 1923, united, states, soldier, fought, with, iowa, volunteer, infantry, regiment, during, american, civil, received, nation, highest, award, valor, medal, honor, bravery, displayed, during, battle, spanish, fort, alabama, apri. Edgar A Bras October 6 1841 June 24 1923 was a United States soldier who fought with the 8th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War He received his nation s highest award for valor the U S Medal of Honor for the bravery he displayed during the Battle of Spanish Fort in Alabama on April 8 1865 That award was conferred on June 8 1865 1 2 3 4 Edgar A BrasBorn 1841 10 06 October 6 1841Jefferson County IowaDiedJune 24 1923 1923 06 24 aged 81 FloridaBuriedEvergreen Cemetery Fort Lauderdale FloridaAllegiance United States of AmericaService wbr branch United States ArmyYears of service1861 1866RankFirst SergeantUnit8th Regiment Iowa Volunteer InfantryBattles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of Shiloh Siege of Corinth Second Battle of Corinth Siege of Vicksburg Red River Campaign Battle of Spanish FortAwardsMedal of Honor Contents 1 Formative years 2 Civil War 3 Post war life 4 Death and interment 5 Medal of Honor citation 6 See also 7 External links 8 ReferencesFormative years editBorn on October 6 1841 in Jefferson Township in Louisa County Iowa Edgar A Bras was a son of Massachusetts native and farmer John Bras and Claretta Mary Means Bras a native of New York In 1850 he resided in Jefferson Township with his parents and siblings Letitia aged 13 Mary aged 11 Alexander aged 7 Garry aged 5 and Amanda aged 2 5 6 7 By 1860 he was still residing with his parents in Jefferson Township Also still at home were siblings Mary Alexander Garry and Amanda as well as sister Lucy aged 9 and twin brothers Charlie and Henry aged 7 8 Civil War editAt the age of 20 Edgar A Bras enrolled for Civil War military service in Louisa County Iowa on September 11 1861 9 He then officially mustered in for duty with Company K of the 8th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Military records at the time described him as being 5 8 tall with dark hair and blues eyes He was then promoted to the rank of Fifth Corporal on December 7 1861 10 11 nbsp Thure de Thulstrup s illustration of the April 6 1862 Battle of Shiloh Tennessee Engaged with his regiment in several of the most intense actions of the American Civil War he was wounded multiple times in combat On April 6 1862 he sustained a bullet wound to his upper thigh while fighting with his regiment in the Battle of Shiloh Tennessee Because surgeons elected not to remove the projectile he carried the bullet around with him in his leg for the remainder of his life In recognition of his service to the regiment he was subsequently promoted to the rank of Fourth Corporal on September 29 1862 He was then wounded a second time during the second Battle of Corinth Mississippi on October 4 1862 That bullet struck him in the head and lodged behind his left eye 12 13 Once again in recognition of his service to the regiment he was promoted first to the rank of Fourth Sergeant on March 1 1863 and then to the rank of Third Sergeant on September 1 1863 Upon expiration of his initial term of service he then re enlisted mustering in again with the same regiment on January 11 1864 He was also later promoted to the rank of First Sergeant on February 1 1864 14 15 On April 8 1865 during the Battle of Spanish Fort one of the efforts by Union forces to capture the forts protecting the city of Mobile Alabama Bras charged through the Confederate camp capturing a flag from a color bearer It is for this act of bravery that he was awarded the Medal of Honor 16 He was honorably discharged from the military at Selma Alabama on April 20 1866 17 Post war life editFollowing his honorable discharge from the military Bras pursued farming moving from Iowa to Kansas Nebraska Oklahoma and Florida in search of a better life His U S Civil War Pension rate rose steadily throughout this phase of his life in recognition of his increasing level of disability which was directly attributable to the injuries he sustained during the American Civil War In 1870 he was an unmarried farmer residing in Big Sandy Jefferson County Nebraska 18 19 By 1880 he and his wife had relocated to Marshall County Kansas where they resided in the District of Wells with their son Lester aged 7 and daughters Gertrude aged 5 and Olive aged 3 20 Bras supported his family by farming the land Still residing in Marshall County Kansas by the 1890s 21 but now residing in the District of Elm Creek he and his wife witnessed the Marshall County marriage of their 19 year old daughter Gertrude to 31 year old farmer Stephen Jester on January 25 of that year 22 By 1910 he had been married for 38 years was employed as a carpenter and had relocated to Stillwater Oklahoma where he resided with his wife and daughter Ethel aged 26 and her nine year old son Oliver 23 After relocating to Broward County Florida with his wife and daughter Ethel Bras and his wife were documented in 1920 as residing with their daughter and her husband Herbert Otto at their Fort Lauderdale home During this time Bras became a deacon and superintendent of the Sunday School at that community s First Baptist Church His wife then preceded him in death 24 25 26 Death and interment editBras died in Florida on June 24 1923 and was laid to rest at the Evergreen Cemetery in Fort Lauderdale 27 28 29 Medal of Honor citation editBras was awarded the U S Medal of Honor for his bravery at Mobile Alabama on April 8 1865 during an engagement of his regiment in which he captured the colors of a Confederate army unit 30 31 32 According to the State Historical Society of Iowa General Order No 24 was issued by headquarters of the 16th U S Army Corps in Montgomery Alabama on July 6 1865 to recognize the valor of Bras and others from his regiment and directed that 33 The Eighth Iowa Infantry Veteran Volunteers be paraded on Saturday July 8 1865 at 5 p m and that the medals be presented to the proper persons in the name of the honorable Secretary of War Lieut Col J J Lyon assistant inspector general Sixteenth Army Corps is charged with the presentation and the execution of this order By order of Maj Gen A J SmithSee also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp American Civil War portalIowa in the American Civil War List of Medal of Honor recipients List of American Civil War Medal of Honor recipients A FExternal links edit Edgar A Bras memorial and grave site information Salt Lake City Utah Find A Grave retrieved online August 10 2018 U S Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles 1861 1865 searchable database subscription required Salt Lake City Utah Ancestry com References edit Civil War A L Medal of Honor Recipients Archived 2012 09 02 at the Wayback Machine Washington D C U S Army Center of Military History retrieved online September 14 2013 Bras Edgar A profile Mt Pleasant South Carolina Congressional medal of Honor Society retrieved online September 28 2013 Medal of Honor Recipient Edgar Bras in Iowa Civil War Monuments Carson Iowa Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Iowa Department retrieved online September 28 2013 Edgar A Bras Memorial Service Carson Iowa Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Department of Iowa retrieved online August 10 2018 Edgar A Bras in Death Certificates Jacksonville Florida Bureau of Vital Statistics Department of Health State of Florida Bras Edgar A John Claretta et al in U S Census Jefferson Township Louisa County Iowa 1850 Washington D C U S National Archives and Records Administration Bras Edgar A Congressional Medal of Honor Society Bras Edgar A and John et al in U S Census Jefferson Township Louisa County Iowa 1860 Washington D C U S National Archives and Records Administration Medal of Honor Recipients U S Army Center of Military History First Sgt Edgar A Bras in Service Record in Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes Des Moines Iowa State Historical Society of Iowa Bras Edgar A in National Graves Registration Database Harrisburg Pennsylvania Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War National Civil War Museum retrieved online September 2 2018 Medal of Honor Recipient Edgar Bras in Iowa Civil War Monuments Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War First Sgt Edgar A Bras in Biography in Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes Des Moines Iowa State Historical Society of Iowa First Sgt Edgar A Bras in Service Record in Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes State Historical Society of Iowa Bras Edgar A in Soldiers and Sailors Database Washington D C U S National Park Service retrieved online September 2 2018 First Sgt Edgar A Bras in Official Citation in Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes Des Moines Iowa State Historical Society of Iowa retrieved online September 28 2013 First Sgt Edgar A Bras in Service Record in Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes State Historical Society of Iowa Bras Edgar A in U S Veterans Administration Pension Payment Cards Washington D C U S National Archives and Records Administration 1911 1923 Bras Edgar A in U S Census Big Sandy Jefferson County Nebraska 1870 Washington D C U S National Archives and Records Administration Bras Edgar Mary et al in U S Census Wells District Marshall County Kansas 1880 Washington D C U S National Archives and Records Administration Edgar A Bras in Pensions Wichita Kansas The Wichita Daily Eagle May 23 1891 Bras Gertrude E A Bras Stephen Jester et al in Marriage Records Marshall County Kansas Office of the County Clerk Bras E A Mary et al in U S Census Stillwater Payne County Oklahoma 1910 Washington D C U S National Archives and Records Administration Bras Edgar A Mary Ethel Otto et al in U S Census Fort Lauderdale Broward County Florida 1920 First Sgt Edgar Bras in Biography in Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes Des Moines Iowa State Historical Society of Iowa Edgar A Bras Memorial Service Carson Iowa Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Department of Iowa retrieved online August 10 2018 Civil War Medal of Honor Recipients Where Are They Now in The Dispatch The Quarterly Newsletter of the Department of Florida S U V C W Autumn 2012 p 5 Land O Lakes Florida Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Department of Florida retrieved online August 27 2018 Medal of Honor Recipient Edgar A Bras in Iowa Civil War Monuments Sons of Veterans of the Civil War Edgar A Bras Death Certificates Florida Bureau of Vital Statistics Edgar A Bras Memorial Service Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Medal of Honor Recipients U S Army Center of Military History Bras Edgar A Congressional Medal of Honor Society Official Citation in Iowa Medal of Honor Heroes State Historical Society of Iowa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edgar A Bras amp oldid 1209980942, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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