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Joseph Wortick

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Joseph Wortick Famous memorial Veteran

Original Name
Joseph Wartick
Birth
Fayette County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
7 Apr 1910 (aged 72)
Leon, Butler County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Leon, Butler County, Kansas, USA GPS-Latitude: 37.6783, Longitude: -96.7869
Memorial ID
View Source
Civil War Medal of Honor Recipient. On 5 March 1862, at Hannibal, Missouri, he volunteered in Company A, 6th Regiment, Missouri Infantry, Army of the Tennessee, U.S. (Union) Army. He was wounded in the charge at Vicksburg, Mississippi (the Vicksburg campaign). Private Wartick was the first man in his regiment to step to the front when his Colonel (William T. Sherman) asked for 200 men to storm a redoubt at Vicksburg. Thirty of those men carried heavy planks to bridge a ditch outside of the earth works. The group of men were mowed down like grass. Some were able to reach the ditch and many were killed by grenades thrown over the breast works by the Confederates. Wartick and a First Lieutenant were the only ones to cross the ditch (22 May 1863), but they couldn’t stay. Nearly all the storming party was killed or wounded, not a dozen escaped. Later Mr Wartick was asked if he wasn’t afraid to join the forlorn hope. He said, ”I don’t know; I heard what my Colonel said, believed it should be done and wanted to help do it. It was pretty bad business. I don’t know how I escaped death” His heroism there and his surviving comrades earned them a Legion of Honor Medal, voted by Congress in recognition of patriotism and valor. He was hit seven times and still carried lead in his body. He participated in the Battle of Champion Hill (16 May 1863), after recovering from his wounds he "Marched to the Sea" with Major General Sherman in the Savannah Campaign (15 Nov-21Dec 1864), took part in the Grand Review of the Armies in Washington D.C. (23-24 May 1865) and, finally, was Honorably Discharged on May 27, 1865.
Civil War Medal of Honor Recipient. On 5 March 1862, at Hannibal, Missouri, he volunteered in Company A, 6th Regiment, Missouri Infantry, Army of the Tennessee, U.S. (Union) Army. He was wounded in the charge at Vicksburg, Mississippi (the Vicksburg campaign). Private Wartick was the first man in his regiment to step to the front when his Colonel (William T. Sherman) asked for 200 men to storm a redoubt at Vicksburg. Thirty of those men carried heavy planks to bridge a ditch outside of the earth works. The group of men were mowed down like grass. Some were able to reach the ditch and many were killed by grenades thrown over the breast works by the Confederates. Wartick and a First Lieutenant were the only ones to cross the ditch (22 May 1863), but they couldn’t stay. Nearly all the storming party was killed or wounded, not a dozen escaped. Later Mr Wartick was asked if he wasn’t afraid to join the forlorn hope. He said, ”I don’t know; I heard what my Colonel said, believed it should be done and wanted to help do it. It was pretty bad business. I don’t know how I escaped death” His heroism there and his surviving comrades earned them a Legion of Honor Medal, voted by Congress in recognition of patriotism and valor. He was hit seven times and still carried lead in his body. He participated in the Battle of Champion Hill (16 May 1863), after recovering from his wounds he "Marched to the Sea" with Major General Sherman in the Savannah Campaign (15 Nov-21Dec 1864), took part in the Grand Review of the Armies in Washington D.C. (23-24 May 1865) and, finally, was Honorably Discharged on May 27, 1865.

Bio by: Busy Graven



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Bill Walker
  • Added: May 9, 2002
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6403762/joseph-wortick: accessed ), memorial page for Joseph Wortick (20 Nov 1837–7 Apr 1910), Find a Grave Memorial ID 6403762, citing Leon Cemetery, Leon, Butler County, Kansas, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.