Shoulder Bars of Captain Hubert Dilger Medal of Honor Recipient - Inventory Number: IDE 250 / SOLD
Shoulder Bars of Captain Hubert Dilger Medal of Honor Recipient Hubert Anton Casimir Dilger (March 5, 1836 – May 4, 1911) was a Grand Duchy of Baden-born American who became a decorated artillerist in the Union Army during the American Civil War. He was noted as one of the finest artillerists in the Army of the Potomac and received the Medal of Honor for his valiant work at the 1863 Battle of Chancellorsville.
179th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry (Drafted Militia)
Organized at Philadelphia and Harrisburg October 23 to December 6, 1862. Ordered to Fortress Monroe, Va., December, 1862. Attached to Busteed's Independent Brigade, 4th Corps, Dept. of Virginia, to April, 1863. West's Independent Brigade, 4th Corps, to June, 1863. King's Independent Brigade, 4th Corps, to July, 1863. 2nd Brigade, King's Division, 22nd Corps, to July, 1863.
Service
Duty at Yorktown, Va., and on the Peninsula, Va., till July, 1863. Dix's Peninsula Campaign June 24-July 7. Expedition from White House to Bottom's Bridge July 1-7. Skirmish at Baltimore Cross Roads July 2. Ordered to Washington, D. C., July 8; thence to Harrisburg, and mustered out July 27, 1863.
Captain Hubert Dilger Medal of Honor Recipient
Early life and career
Dilger was born in Engen in the Black Forest region of the Grand Duchy of Baden and educated in the Karlsruhe Military Academy. He served as a lieutenant in the Grand Duke's Horse Artillery at military posts in Gottesau, Karlsruhe, and Rastatt. He developed several innovative theories on artillery tactics and drill.
American Civil War
When news came of the outbreak of the American Civil War, Dilger received a leave of absence and sailed to the United States."Battery I, 1st Ohio Light Artillery Chattanooga, Tenn November 1863 After relocating to Cincinnati, Ohio, he became the captain of Battery I, 1st Ohio Light Artillery and fought at several battles of the Army of the Potomac, including under fellow German native Major General Carl Schurz at the Second Battle of Bull Run.On May 2, 1863, Dilger fought in the rearguard of the retreating Union XI Corps during the disastrous Battle of Chancellorsville, for which he eventually was awarded the nation's highest decoration in 1893. He unlimbered his battery of six 12-pounder Napoleon smoothbore cannon as a last-ditch defense against a large portion of Stonewall Jackson's entire corps, which had pushed back XI Corps and was threatening to roll up the Union line.Dilger also received high praise in the Official Records of the Battle of Gettysburg and for his work in the 1864 Atlanta Campaign during which his battery fired the rounds that killed Lt. General Leonidas Polk. Late in the war, he was on garrison duty.
Postwar
From 1869 to 1873, he was Adjutant-General for the State of Illinois. After the war, Dilger prospered in Ohio and eventually purchased a sprawling horse farm in the Shenandoah Valley near Front Royal, Virginia, where he raised his family. After his death, a portion of his farm was purchased by the US Army as part of the creation of the Front Royal Remount Quartermaster Depot.
Medal of Honor Citation
The following citation was issued on August 17, 1893: Fought his guns until the enemy were upon him, then with one gun hauled in the road by hand he formed the rear guard and kept the enemy at bay by the rapidity of his fire and was the last man in the retreat.
Comes housed in 12 x 16 riker display case with black velvet and descriptive card.
Inventory Number: IDE 250 / SOLD