Charles L. Thomas (1843-1923)
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- For the World War II Medal of Honor recipient, see Charles L. Thomas.
Charles L. Thomas | |
---|---|
February 12, 1843 - February 24, 1923 | |
Place of birth | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Allegiance | U.S. Army |
Rank | Sergeant |
Battles/wars | Indian campaigns |
Awards | Medal of Honor |
Charles L. Thomas (February 12, 1843 - February 24, 1923) was a U.S. Army soldier who earned the Medal of Honor for heroism on September 17, 1865 during the Indian Campaigns in the Dakota Territory.
Thomas was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is buried in the Dwight-Morris cemetery, in Morris county, Kansas.
[edit] Medal of Honor citation
During the Powder River Indian expedition in Wyoming in the fall of 1865, Captain Humpfervill returned to the camp of General Connor of the 11th Ohio Cavalry after a scout with 300 men, to report that Colonel Cole of the Regiment was surrounded by Indians near the Powder River. General Conner called for a volunteer "to go as a scout and find Cole or perish in the attempt." (C.L. Thomas) Sergeant Charles Thomas volunteered and spent 36 hours traveling about 201 miles alone in hostile territory to find Colonel Cole and deliver a message from General Conner. After leaving Conner's camp at 8 A.M., on his second day, Sergeant Thomas was sighted by hostile Indians in the area as he followed Colonel Cole's trail, and "began to exchange shots - and it was a running fight for the balance of the day." Capturing an Indian pony, Thomas kept it with him in case his own horse was shot. During the day he stumbled across John Hutson of the 2d Missouri, who had become detached from Cole's element and was in hiding. Thomas had Hutson mount the spare pony, delivering him to Colonel Cole's camp after arriving about 6 P.M. to deliver the general's message.