#7
The Men Who
Fought: Lieutenant Colonel John Fraser
In
our seventh week, we'll get to know a lesser known individual that
was forced into the lime light on July 2nd
in the thickest of the fight. That individual is Lieutenant Colonel
John Fraser.
Fraser was born in
Cromarty, Scotland and spent much of his young life along the inlets
and coves of northern Scotland near Inverness. Fraser was no average
young man though. By 1850 at the age of 23 he had graduated from the
University of Aberdeen in Mathematics. His intelligence was far
above the average and he was awarded for his wits with the coveted
Huttonian Prize in Mathematics (awarded every 10 years).
Shortly
after graduation he began his travels which led him to the West
Indies where he started his career as a life long educator, teaching
in the Bahamas. He then moved to New York City to take ownership of
another difficult academic program before finally moving to
McConnellsville, Pennsylvania where he was offered a professorship in
Mathematics and Astronomy at Jefferson University in Canonsburg, PA.
Professor
Fraser excelled, nurturing "passion and reason in the sciences."
He even tutored after class, not only in his subjects,but in history,
law botany, philosophy and literature. "Oh, to give the young
the eyes to see."
Absence of the southern students in 1861 reflected the national schism of civil war. Amid dissension and enlistments, Professor Fraser waited for a commission. One day in 1862, he locked up the observatory and announced to his class, "Gentlemen, what the stars are up to is now of no interest to us. We will leave Mars to his own business... and become sons of Mars with 'On to Richmond' as our cry. Permit me to introduce to you Captain John Fraser and to announce that the chair of mathematics in this college is now vacant."
Absence of the southern students in 1861 reflected the national schism of civil war. Amid dissension and enlistments, Professor Fraser waited for a commission. One day in 1862, he locked up the observatory and announced to his class, "Gentlemen, what the stars are up to is now of no interest to us. We will leave Mars to his own business... and become sons of Mars with 'On to Richmond' as our cry. Permit me to introduce to you Captain John Fraser and to announce that the chair of mathematics in this college is now vacant."
Captain
Fraser enlisted on August 12, 1862, at age 35, in command of Co. G,
of the 140th Pennsylvania Volunteers. At Harrisburg, he was elected
lieutenant colonel of the regiment. Sent to guard the Northern
Central R.R. in MD, they were ordered in December to Falmouth, VA to
join the Second Corps "on its way to earning its reputation as
the shock troops...transporting the Pennsylvanians to the eternal
fire and back." After winter camp at Falmouth, the regiment
received their baptism of fire at Chancellorsville supporting a
battery near the Chancellor house. Little did they know what awaited
them just up the road at the sleepy Pennsylvania town of Gettysburg.
On
July 2nd
after General Sickles moved his line out to the Peach Orchard, the
2nd
Corps was sent to support his collapsing line. Lt. Colonel Fraser
and the 140th
under the command of Colonel Richard P. Roberts were sent towards the
crest of a place known locally as Stoney Hill. The fighting was
fierce and very deadly. Within a short time the brigade commander
was mortally wounded and the overall command kept passing down the
line with each officer being shot down. After the Colonel of the
140th
was shot down (Colonel Roberts), command of the entire brigade fell
to John Fraser, although by this time in the fight shear chaos rained
and the Confederate troops had his men almost entirely surrounded.
By all accounts Colonel Fraser led the men off the field with the
best that could be expected under the circumstances. The regiment
suffered a fearful number of casualties, but somehow a small remnant
of them, including Colonel Fraser, were able to escape.
The
following is from Colonel Fraser's Official Report after the battle:
“About
4p.m. the brigade was marched rapidly to the left, to assist the
Third Corps, which was then sustaining a fierce attack. When it
arrived nearly opposite the place assigned to it, the brigade was
formed in line of battle, with the One hundred and fortieth
Pennsylvania Volunteers on the extreme right, and was moved rapidly
forward to engage the enemy. As the order was given, the regiment
opened a brisk fire, which it kept up with great firmness and
coolness, steadily driving the enemy before it until we reached the
crest of a small hill. During the advance to this crest, the four
left companies of this regiment, with the regiments to the left,
gradually made a considerable wheel to the right. Shortly after
reaching the crest, I observed a great many to the left of this
brigade moving rapidly to the rear, and the rebels, apparently fresh
troops, in large numbers and in good order marching to outflank us on
the right. Anxious to know what orders General Zook had to give in
the crisis, I sent twice to get instructions from him, but neither
the general nor any of his staff could be found. I did not know at
the time, nor until after the fight was over, that General Zook had
been mortally wounded when leading the brigade into action.
Inferring from the large numbers of men who to the left of my
regiment were continuously rushing to the rear, that a large portion
of our division was actually retreating, I judged it necessary for
the safety of those who had wheeled considerably into the enemy's
ground to maintain my position and keep the enemy at bay as long as
possible. I therefore held my position until I considered it
necessary to order my men to march in retreat, which they did at
first in good order, the four right companies halting several times,
and firing, to check the pursuit of the enemy...
Colonel
Roberts was killed while bravely leading on his men at the
commencement of the action on July 2nd.”
Colonel
Fraser would be the regiment's commander through many more battles
until finally being captured at Spotsylvania after being wounded in
1864. He was released thanks to General Sherman's march through
Georgia in December of 1864 and would survive the remaining months
decorated as a war hero. He was later given a brevet promotion to
Brigadier General for “honorable and faithful” services during
the war.
The
brave Colonel wasn't done yet though. After the war he continued his
pioneering in education, becoming the chancellor of the University of
Kansas as well as the president of what would become Pennsylvania
State University. In 1877 he finally decided to give up on the
politics of education and became a professor at Western University
which became the University of Pittsburgh. Unfortunately he
contracted smallpox only a year later and died on June 5, 1878.
John
Fraser is not only a hero because of his war service, which is
impressive for man with no military background, but also for his
efforts in the realm of education. When we walk the grounds of
Gettysburg, or any other battlefield for that matter, we need to
remember that each one of the people that were willing to sacrifice
their lives here had a story. They were not the drones or columns of
blue/gray robots we imagine being thrown into a caldron, they were
living and breathing people with feelings, emotions and intellectual
aspirations. Let us not forget the fruits of their labor.
Lt. Colonel John Fraser - 140th PA |
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