Douglas MacArthur from Wikipedia |
So, what does MacArthur have to do with a blog that focuses
on Kewaunee County and specifically on Algoma? Actually, quite a bit.
MacArthurs were a Wisconsin family. General Douglas MacArthur’s
father, Arthur MacArthur, distinguished himself in the Civil War, along side
some of the boys from Ahnepee*. Arthur was 17 years old when he went off to war
in 1862 with others of the 24th Wisconsin Voluntary Infantry. MacArthur's regiment lost 40% of its men at Stone's River in the battle from December 31, 1862 to January 2, 1863.
Battle of Missionary Ridge from https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/beyond-battle-arthur-macarthur-jr |
When the General later told his father’s story, he said that although orders were unclear, the flag of the 24th went forward. As the color bearer went down, a corporal was bayoneted just as he grabbed the flag. A shell killed the next man and then MacArthur, the adjutant who got the flag, yelled “On Wisconsin”, and kept going through a sea of gray, followed by a division of blue coats. When the Union army took the hill, it was again, “On Wisconsin,” and Wisconsin’s flag was waving. General Phil Sheridan said young MacArthur was due for a Medal of Honor. He was a hero of Missionary Ridge and, at 19, was made colonel. Douglas MacArthur would later write that his father was congratulated by General Sheridan on a job well done and that Sheridan said that they had not lost a foot of ground.
Over 150 years following the end of the Civil War, the flags
have a place in Wisconsin history. Battle flags of the 9th, 14th,
21st and 24th Wisconsin regiments were there when
veterans of those units and the 27th held a
reunion in Milwaukee during September 1885. For the impressive event, the
Agricultural Society furnished tents, admittance and foods that included hard
tack, pork and beans and coffee. Goodrich steamers carried veterans from the
Peninsula and Manitowoc for half price.
“On Wisconsin” became the rallying cry for the University of
Wisconsin sports’ teams and, in essence, a state song. As a university fight
song, it came into being in 1909. Although the song has since been modified
from the original, just as the Civil War flag bearers pepped up their companies
and regiments, the spirited song has the line, “forward in battle we will win
the stand.”
Arthur McArthur was one of 11 Union colonels who took the
Union army up Kennesaw Mountain in 1864. At Franklin, Tennessee, it was the 24th
Wisconsin that saved the day. After the war, the 24th – which lost
2/3 of its men and officers - marched through Milwaukee, welcomed by cheering
crowds. Ahnepee tinsmith Leopold Meyer served as a corporal in Co. H, 24th
Wisconsin Infantry. He returned to the village and died in 1894. When Algoma
resident Charles Bisch died in February 1918, the Record felt older residents would remember him even
though Bisch had lived in Port Washington for years. Bisch enlisted in the 24th as soon as
the war broke out. Bisch was wounded at the Battle of Stone’s River and taken
prisoner. He was sent to Libbey prison in Richmond and suffered privations
beyond our imagination.
Most Kewaunee County men served in the 14th, 21st
and 27th Wisconsin, and many were in the same battles as MacArthur. One
was Peter Simon who was with the 21st. He was captured several times
and was a Confederate prisoner. Peter apparently had a cat’s nine lives because
he escaped almost that many times.
John McDonald and Charley Ross were two Ahnepee men who
joined the Chicago Board of Trade Regiment which also saw action in the same
battles as MacArthur. McDonald, a hero at Missionary Ridge, lost his right arm
there. He went on to say years later, that he lost his “good” right arm there. Charley
Ross lost his left arm at Stone’s River.
Lieut. General Arthur MacArthur – his rank in 1911 – planned
to become a private citizen after mustering out with the rest of the 24th
on June 10, 1865. Forty-five years later, in June 1910, West Kewaunee’s
(Commander) T.G. Chapman went to the GAR Encampment at Fond du Lac expecting to
meet, Arthur MacArthur, his old colonel. Thomas Chapman was 82 when he died in
1923. Chapman settled in Montpelier where he was a longtime resident before
moving to West Kewaunee. He also lived in Kewaunee for about a dozen years.
Politically prominent for 45 years, Chapman, at the time of his death, was the
county’s oldest Free Mason. He enlisted in Co. K, 24th Wisconsin and
was at Perryville, Stone’s River, Lookout Mountain, Chickamauga, Missionary
Ridge, Kennesaw Mountain and Franklin, Tennessee, where he was involved in
hand-to-hand combat.
Camp MacArthur - photo from wacohistory.org |
World War l Camp MacArthur at Waco, Texas was named for
General Arthur MacArthur, Jr. Algoma men were among the 1,200 from Wisconsin
who trained there, but little did they know that they would have a connection
to the name in years that followed. Carl (Josh) Lidral wrote home about the 16
weeks of training the men would have at Camp MacArthur before going off to lick
the Kaiser. Ernest Haucke, the first Algoma man killed in action on August 20,
1918 trained at the camp. So did Ralph Perry who later died of wounds suffered
in the Argonne Forest. Algoma’s VFW Post was named for Haucke, and
Perry’s family memorialized Ralph in the presentation of Perry Field to the
city. John Culligan, Jerry Jerabek and Augie Wasserbach also were at the camp.
The men were well-respected leaders just as the MacArthurs were, however the
MacArthurs were on a world stage.The MacArthur connection with Kewaunee County continued.
Arthur MacArthur’s son Douglas was first in his class at West Point, won silver stars in World War l and the Medal of Honor in World War ll. MacArthur’s first connection with Algoma came over 40 years earlier when he was a young lieutenant just out of West Point. At the time, it was customary for the graduates to have practical experience and MacArthur was a military assistant, working out of the U.S. engineering office in Milwaukee. He came to town in 1908 to direct the caisson sinking for the rebuilding of the north pier. Caissons sunk in MacArthur’s time were built in Kewaunee, floated to Algoma, sunk in position and filled in. The land connection to the breakwater was rebuilt in 1932, and, in 1935, the breakwater section running north and south was recapped. If anyone with MacArthur’s prominence was associated with it, it has been forgotten.
During the World War
ll, Algoma Plywood and Veneer Co. (U.S. Plywood) was manufacturing plywood and
building plywood hulls, airplane wings and noses that went elsewhere for
finishing. Some of that plywood is associated with General Douglas
MacArthur’s 1942 escape from Bataan.
It was Algoma plywood
that was used in the PT motor torpedo boat that rescued MacArthur, his wife,
their son Arthur and his Chinese nurse, and other military personnel,
taking them to Mindanao. From there they went to Australia. Ironically,
MacArthur’s father, General Arthur MacArthur, Jr., was also on Luzon, but that
was in August 1899, more than 40 years before when President
McKinley sent him there as field commander.
Men from Algoma, and
across Kewaunee County, serving in the Pacific during World War ll, and then
again in Korea in the 1950s, served under Douglas MacArthur.
Whether or not any
Algoma connection can be made with Douglas MacArthur’s son Arthur, it is up for
grabs. To escape the limelight, it is said he changed his name.
History gets lost as the days turn
into years and years turn into decades.
^Ahnepee was the spelling until the place achieved village status in 1873. It was then that the spelling was changed to "Ahnapee."
Sources: An-An-api-sebe: Where is the River?,
c. 2001 Johnson; The
Commercial History of Development in Youngs and Steele Plat and Other Selected
Properties, c. 2006 Johnson, Nell, Wolske; They Were Expendable, c. 1942
White; Women of the
Plywood: The War Years, c. 1998 Johnson. The Plywood photo is from the blogger's collection and the others were found online and sourced..
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