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Charles L. Hudson 72nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry 4th U. S. Cavalry
Army
and Navy Journal
March 7, 1874
Lieutenant Charles L. Hudson was born in Brantford, Canada West, January 17, 1843. In 1859 his parents moved to Ohio, first settling in Huron County, but two years later making their permanent residence near the beautiful village of Clyde. In 1861, Colonel Eaton, recruiting a company for the Seventy-second Ohio, found young Hudson, yet but a boy, at work in a corn field and without any difficulty secured him for his command. "He proved at once a worthy and brave soldier. His intelligent performance of duty and faultless conduct in camp and in the field made him a favorite with officers and men and step by step he ascended in rank from his original position as private. In 1864, he was made adjutant of the regiment which position with the rank of first lieutenant, he held till the end of the war, when he was commissioned a captain.
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Inscribed Sword Presented to Charles L. Hudson by his 72nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry Comrades (privately owned) |
He was in nearly every engagement with his corps,
and wounded at Shiloh in the hip, and a second time very seriously at Tupelo, Mississippi, a musket ball entering below the waist in the abdomen, and after
passing half round the body, lodging near the backbone.
After the war Hudson’s original idea was to
study medicine, but in 1866 he was persuaded to adventure as a cotton planter
in Louisiana. This enterprise proving disastrous, he returned to Clyde, when
the summer of 1867 found him a law student.
National Cemetery San Antonio. Texas
In December of that year, through the influence of
appreciative friends, he was commissioned second lieutenant in the U. S. Army
and assigned to the Fifteenth Infantry, joining his regiment at Mobile in
January, 1868. He was shortly assigned to the Fourth Cavalry, promoted to first
lieutenant and breveted captain. For three years, the headquarters of the
command was at Fort Clark, and it is hardly necessary to suggest that a company
thus located, which accompanied Colonel McKinzie [ Randall McKenzie] in his famous raid ‘over the
border’ and was in the successful expedition of December last, against the Indians
has seen pretty trying and constant service.
On the morning the 4th of January, just
returned from a fight with the Comanches and resting from his fatigue,
Lieutenant Hudson received his death wound from the accidental discharge of a
Winchester carbine, dropping from the hands of Lieutenant Tyler. The ball
entered the body a little below the third rib in the back of the left side, and
passed through the cavity of the abdomen ranging downward and passing out on
the right side of the stomach. He lived
till the 5th, at dark, conscious and suffering very little. He
received every attention from his comrades, officers and men hoping almost
against hope that the wound might not prove fatal, but about noon, it becoming
evident that death must be the result, he was able to give an hour to such partial arrangements of his affairs
as one almost in extremis but
retaining his mental faculties, is capable of.
A friend writes, with true “soldierly pathos” he full realized that he
was dying and went down to the brink of the dark river with the same calm
composure that he had so often shown when death shots were falling thick and
fast. The message which reached his widowed mother in far off Ohio, at noon, of
‘Charley’s’ successful skirmish with the Indians, was followed the same
afternoon by a telegram announcing his death.
The friend to whom we are indebted for the foregoing
details adds: “No words of encomium could ever rate the many excellent
qualities of Captain Hudson. I knew him long and well, and do not believe he
had an enemy. He was brave, generous, and just. As a soldier few equaled him.
It is not too much to say, that in the Army and at home, he was universally
respected and beloved. As an Indian fighter and leader of cavalry, Hudson was
the Bayard of the Border, not more popular with his command than idolized by
the frontiersmen.
General Sherman had
recommended him for promotion shortly previous to his sad taking off. The body of
Hudson was embalmed and laid in the National Cemetery at San Antonio,Texas. Economy and retrenchment just now
do not recognize the value of a soldier’s life, and it is hardly strange that
they refuse to pay the usual respect to his remains. Thus the department was
forced to respond to the request of one of Captain Hudson’s friends, to have
his body forwarded to the little Ohio hamlet, whence some of the States’ best
soldiers went to the war, and where McPherson’s remains were buried, ‘I am
compelled to return a negative answer to your request.’
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