"The Regiment Bore a Conspicuous Part": A Brief History of the Eight Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Gibraltar Brigade, Army of the Potomac
Volume 6
Article 5
2007
"The Regiment Bore a Conspicuous Part": A Brief
History of the Eight Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
Gibraltar Brigade, Army of the Potomac
Brian Matthew Jordan
Gettysburg College
Class of 2009
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Jordan, Brian Matthew (2007) ""The Regiment Bore a Conspicuous Part": A Brief History of the Eight Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
Gibraltar Brigade, Army of the Potomac," The Gettysburg Historical Journal: Vol. 6 , Article 5.
Available at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/ghj/vol6/iss1/5
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"The Regiment Bore a Conspicuous Part": A Brief History of the Eight
Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Gibraltar Brigade, Army of the Potomac
Abstract
On April 10, 1850, a sixteen year-old from Xenia, Ohio named Samuel Sexton copied a stanza of Epes
Sargent’s poem, “A Life on the Ocean Wave,” into his notebook:
A life on the ocean wave! A home on the rolling deep!
Where the scattered waters rave, and the winds their revels keep!
Like an eagle caged I pine, on this dull unchanging shore.
Oh give me the flashing brine! The spray and the tempest roar!
Before his death in New York City, July 11, 1896, Sexton would serve as the Assistant Surgeon of the Eighth
Ohio Volunteers, his entire service in the field so strenuous that he was obliged to rest after the second year of
combat. Arduously contending with the wounds and emotions of the wounded and dying from Romney to
Winchester, Fredericksburg to the Peninsula, and South Mountain to Antietam, Sexton acquired an emotional
connection to the regiment. This would generate a lifelong correspondence with Lt. Col. Franklin Sawyer,
who would command the unit from May 1862 and pen its regimental history. The Civil War would
metamorphose Sexton’s mundane Ohio shore, the “flashing brine” of the trials of the Eighth his vessel.
Keywords
Eighth Ohio Volunteers, Civil War, infantry
This article is available in The Gettysburg Historical Journal: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/ghj/vol6/iss1/5
“The Regiment Bore a Conspicuous Part”1:
A Brief History of the Eight Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
Gibraltar Brigade, Army of the Potomac
Brian Matthew Jordan
On April 10, 1850, a sixteen year-old from Xenia, Ohio named Samuel Sexton copied
a stanza of Epes Sargent’s poem, “A Life on the Ocean Wave,” into his notebook:
A life on the ocean wave! A home on the rolling deep!
Where the scattered waters rave, and the winds their revels keep!
Like an eagle caged I pine, on this dull unchanging shore.
Oh give me the flashing brine! The spray and the tempest roar!2
Before his death in New York City, July 11, 1896, Sexton would serve as the Assistant Surgeon
of the Eighth Ohio Volunteers, his entire service in the field so strenuous that he was obliged
to rest after the second year of combat.3 Arduously contending with the wounds and emotions
of the wounded and dying from Romney to Winchester, Fredericksburg to the Peninsula, and
South Mountain to Antietam, Sexton acquired an emotional connection to the regiment. This
would generate a lifelong correspondence with Lt. Col. Franklin Sawyer, who would command
the unit from May 1862 and pen its regimental history.4 The Civil War would metamorphose
Sexton’s mundane Ohio shore, the “flashing brine” of the trials of the Eighth his vessel.
The trials of the American nation had begun much earlier; exactly one week after
Sexton reproduced Sargent’s work, Vice-President Fillmore excoriated Missouri Senator Thomas
Benton on the floor of the Senate as the debates which would eventually frame the Compromise
of 1850 heated. The compromise would include the Fugitive Slave Act. This legislation was
greeted with a Northern acerbity that only increased the intensity of sectional strife. The
tortuous litany of key events to follow—the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Bleeding Kansas, Dred Scott,
1
2
3
4
Whitelaw Reid, Ohio in the War: Her Statesmen, Generals and Soldiers, vol. 2, The History of Her Regiments and other Military Organizations
(Cincinnati: Moore, Wilstach & Baldwin, 1868), 68. The author wishes to acknowledge the advice and support of Dr. Allen Carl Guelzo,
friend and mentor. This work is dedicated to Samuel Sexton and his comrades in the “Bloody Eighth,” and, of course, to Allison.
Samuel Sexton, loose notebook page, 10 April 1850, Samuel Sexton Papers, MSS 185, Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio.
MOLLUS Memorial Circular for Samuel Sexton, November 10, 1896, in Sexton Papers, MSS 185, Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio.
See Franklin Sawyer, A Military History of the 8th Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry: Its Battles, Marches, and Army Movements (Cleveland:
Fairbanks and Company, 1881), reprinted as Franklin Sawyer, 8th Ohio Volunteer Infantry: Gibraltar Brigade Army of the Potomac
(Huntington, West Virginia: Blue Acorn Press, 2005). In addition to this regimental history and other Sawyer articles and speeches cited
within this paper, Sawyer published a six page history of the regiment in the Firelands Pioneer, vol. XII (Norwalk, Ohio: Norwalk Historical
Society, 1876), 77-83. This abstract of the more formal Military History of the 8th was proffered by Sawyer for the Norwalk Historical
Society, which since 1858 had been coalescing articles of local interest into a historical journal.
25
the fraudulent Lecompton Constitution, and John Brown’s raid—would for the South be sealed
by the election of Lincoln in 1860. This apparent loss for slaveholders in the balance of power
led South Carolina to take the lead in forming the Confederacy.
On the morning of April 12, 1861, a bloodless bombardment at Ft. Sumter in
Charleston Harbor effectively marked the commencement of hostilities. Three days later,
President Lincoln called for 75,000 militiamen to respond to the rebellion; Ohio demonstrated
no timidity in responding to Lincoln’s supplication. Between April 18 and April 29, 1861,
inspirational meetings were held and companies from across northern Ohio were coalesced
into a regiment for three months of service.5 “On the twenty-third, a rousing Union meeting
was held at Medina village,” wrote Lorenzo Vanderhoef, Company K. “I am now a Soldier!
The United States now claims my services. Who would have thought, two months ago, that
Lorenzo Vanderhoef would ever be a volunteer soldier[?] But such is the fact. The actions of
the people in the Southern portion of our Republic was of such a nature as to endanger the
existence of our present form of government.”6
On May 2, the regiment was transported to Camp Dennison near Columbus for
organizational purposes and the mundane, yet necessary drills.7 As these activities transformed
the enl (...truncated)