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George W Corliss

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Rank
  
Captain

Awards
  
Medal of Honor


Died
  
May 15, 1903

Name
  
George Corliss

Buried at
  
Maple Grove Cemetery, New York

Allegiance
  
United States of America

Battles/wars
  
Battle of Cedar Mountain

Place of burial
  
Maple Grove Cemetery, New York City, New York, United States

Unit
  
5th Connecticut Infantry Regiment

Battles and wars
  
Battle of Cedar Mountain

Service/branch
  
United States Army

Captain George W. Corliss (1834 to May 15, 1903) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Corliss received the country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor, for his action during the Battle of Cedar Mountain in Virginia on 9 August 1862. He was honored with the award on 10 September 1897.

Contents

Biography

Corliss was born in Connecticut in 1834. He enlisted into the 5th Connecticut Infantry at New Haven in Connecticut. During his act of bravery for which he earned a Medal of Honor, Corliss was injured in his right leg and was therefore captured by Confederates. He was held at Libby Prison until he was exchanged around January 1863. He soon resigned from active service due to his disability but rejoined as a commissioned 1st Lieutenant and Regimental Adjutant with the 3rd Veterans Reserve Corps. He was brevetted major in 1865.

Corliss was married to Catherine Bounce and they resided in Mississippi where he was assistant Sub-Commissioner of the District of Vicksburg within the Bureau of Refugees. After leaving this post in 1869 he resided in New Haven, Connecticut and then Manhattan, where he was an insurance broker. He was married again to Mary Harriet Munson, after the death of his first wife. His second marriage produced two children.

Corliss died on 15 May 1903 and his remains are interred at the Maple Grove Cemetery in New York.

Medal of Honor citation

Seized a fallen flag of the regiment, the color bearer having been killed, carried it forward in the face of a severe fire, and though himself shot down and permanently disabled, planted the staff in the earth and kept the flag flying.

References

George W. Corliss Wikipedia