Overview Edward Lyon Buchwalter, at the age of 21, left college early and voluntarily enlisted into Western Army or the
Union Army of
American Civil War on August 15, 1862, as a sergeant and he
mustered into Co. A,
114th Ohio Infantry on September 8, 1862. He was assigned to the 3rd
Mississippi Volunteers on July 12, 1863. On July 25, 1863, transferred out commissioned as 1st Lieutenant of Co. H., 53rd U.S. Colored Infantry. He was promoted to Captain on June 22, 1864. On March 8, 1866, following the end of the war, Buchwalter mustered out with an honorable discharge and became head of the
Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands of eight eastern counties in Mississippi for approximately six months.
As rank of sergeant In August 1862, Edward Lyon Buchwalter, was promoted a sergeant in Company A, 114th Ohio Infantry and led forces in the
Vicksburg Campaign. His first engagement, he took part under Union Major General
William T. Sherman to forward through the swamps toward the Walnut Hills (Confederate front of the Northern forts of
Vicksburg, Mississippi) later known as the
Battle of Chickasaw Bayou (Dec.26-29, 1862). The Confederates won the battle and Buchwalter was one among 1,005 men wounded. Thereafter he participated in a spirited engagement at
Fort Hindman, Arkansas,
Battle of Fort Hindman (Jan.9-11, 1863) aka,
Battle of Arkansas Post. He was actively identified with the continuous military movement of the Union forces commanded by Maj. General
Ulysses S. Grant leading up to the subjugation of the so-called "Gibraltar of the West." On July 4, 1863, he assisted in the digging of the historic canal designed to isolate Vicksburg, and in the command of the division of
U.S. Army General
Peter Joseph Osterhaus, and of the corps of
Union General
John Alexander McClernand, he aided in the building of pontoon bridges.
His Engagement in the Vicksburg Campaign of U.S Civil War Edward Lyon Buchwalter took part in the engagements between Union and Confederate forces during the
Vicksburg Campaign at the Battle of Thompson's Hill, the
Battle of Port Gibson (May 1, 1863, near Port Gibson, Miss.),
Battle of Raymond (May 12, 1863, near Raymond, Miss.),
Battle of Champion Hill (May 15, 1863, on Barker's Creek, Hinds Co., Miss.),
Battle of Big Black River Bridge (May 17, 1863, Hinds County, Miss) and the assaults at the
Battle of Vicksburg (at
Vicksburg, Mississippi), and thus had his full share of intensive warfare.
Vicksburg was the site of the
Siege of Vicksburg (May 18 – July 4, 1863), an important battle in which the Union forces gained control of the entire
Mississippi River. The battle consisted of a long siege, which was necessary because the town was on high ground, well fortified, and difficult to attack directly. The capture of Vicksburg and the simultaneous defeat of General
Robert E. Lee at
Gettysburg marked the turning point in the Civil War. Buchwalter's executive ability and soldierly qualities led to his being commissioned first lieutenant in the 53rd United States Mississippi Colored Infantry Volunteers on July 25, 1863. Following the Union victory of Vicksburg, Buckwalter's company and regiment located to Goodrich Landing where
Battle of Goodrich's Landing (June 29 and June 30, 1863), between Union and Confederate forces. The Confederates attacked several Union
Black Regiments that were protecting several captured plantations. Though the
Confederates were able to destroy a number of plantations, the attacks did little real damage to the Union war effort in the region. Next, they were ordered to Milliken's Bend, Louisiana
Battle of Milliken's Bend (June 7, 1863) and stationed till January 1864 when they were ordered back to Vicksburg.
3rd Mississippi Colored Infantry Volunteers 53rd Mississippi (Colored) Infantry Servicemen Dr. B.S. Chase (died 1878) was surgeon, formerly assistant surgeon of the 14th O.V.I.
Rank of Captain He was promoted to captain on June 22, 1864. From Vicksburg, during the month of October 1864, he led union forces up and along
White River, a tributary of the Mississippi River, to
St. Charles, Arkansas. While on this journey they were many times under fire. In the spring of 1865 Captain Buchwalter returned to Vicksburg, whence he was sent to
Jackson, Mississippi. He was mustered out of service on March 8, 1866, and received an
honorable discharge. Later accounts indicate that he viewed his military service positively and expressed respect for former adversaries on both sides of the American Civil War. His continued interest in his old comrades in arms has been vitalized by his appreciative affiliation with the
Grand Army of the Republic and the military order known as the Loyal Legion. He was Commander of Ohio Commandery of the
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS).
His Sword Upon achieving the rank of Lieutenant, Mr. Buchwalter was presented a sword that carried throughout the war and inscribed on it: "''Presented to Lieu.' Edward L. Buchwalter/3rd Miss. Colored Vols./by his Mother''". These swords were imported by military outfitters like Schuyler, Hartley & Graham of New York, who sold them to officers who were required to furnish their own artillery, uniforms and equipment. Capt. E.L. Buchwalter's sword was a non-regulation US officer's sword known as the Peterson 75, due to its inclusion as figure 75 in Harold Peterson's seminal work The American Sword 1775–1945. This class of swords is typically an iron-mounted officer's sword and is invariably a sword imported from the Prussian cutlery center at
Solingen with a maker's mark "W. Walscheid" (Wilhelm Walscheid) of Solingen,
Prussia, who made a limited number of swords exclusively for export to the American market during the American Civil War and went out of business immediately after the war. His sword was marked W. WALSHEID/SOLINGEN in two lines on side of the longer than standard ricasso, and had a small brass disk impressed on the other side of the ricasso that read in an arc "PROVED". The blade featured a panoply of arms with a spread-winged eagle, along with a banner reading
E PLURIBUS UNUM and embellished with etched floral and patriotic banners and motifs such as a drum on one side of the blade. The other side featured a similar foliate banner, with a large U.S. in the center. The wooden grip was wrapped with sharkskin and secured with seven turns of gilded copper wire that has a twisted center strand and two single flanking strands. The pierced iron guard featured the usual spread winged eagle with E PLURIBUS UNUM above it and "U S" below. == His marital life and residence ==