Camp Point colonel proved to be brave and gallant soldier

Camp Point merchant William Hanna answered Lincoln's call for more men to suppress the rebellion of Southern states in August 1861.
At Quincy's Camp Wood, six companies from Adams County with a company each from Brown, Fulton, Hancock and Warren counties were mustered into federal service on Sept. 12, 1861, as the 50th Illinois Volunteer Infantry. Hanna was elected captain of Co. E.
Nearly four years later with the war coming to an end, the Lincoln administration awarded a brevet or increase in rank to approximately 1,700 officers who had stayed the course in putting down the rebellion. The promotions were honorary and a highlight to a man's military career. Such was the case for Lt. Col. William Hanna. In an order dated March 13, 1865, he was commissioned brevet brigadier general, United States volunteers "for gallant and meritorious services in the battle of Allatoona, Ga."
The 50th Illinois marched into Missouri on Oct. 9, 1861. In January 1862, Grant organized the Union forces in Missouri to take on the Confederate army in Kentucky and Tennessee and changed the face of the war in the west. Thus began Hanna's and the 50th's three-year campaign to defeat secession.
Grant wasted no time, and with the navy transporting the troops and supplying gunboats, the northern Tennessee forts Henry and Donelson were captured in February 1862.
In a letter to The Quincy Daily Herald, the 50th's Col. Moses Bane of Payson wrote that the regiment came "under a terrific fire of grape and shell from the enemy." "By falling behind logs and trees ... our men were in a great measure protected," Bane explained. "Much credit," he added, "is due Capt. Gaines and Capt. Hanna, who were acting in the capacity of Lieu't. Colonel and Major." ... The army continued south along the Tennessee River stopping at Pittsburg Landing and camping in the fields and woods around Shiloh Church. Here they waited for reinforcements before moving on to their objective, Corinth, Miss. The entire Union force was caught napping when Confederates struck at dawn on Sunday, April 6. Bane was severely wounded, losing an arm. Lt. Col. William Swarthout of Quincy was wounded and captured. In the two-day battle, the 50th suffered 12 enlisted men killed and 66 wounded.
After the battle, Union soldiers resumed their march to Corinth and the city was taken on June 10. The Confederate's attempted to recapture Corinth in October. In this fight the 50th stood out, capturing 151 rebels and a battle flag. In his after-action report, the brigade commander singled out Hanna, stating that he wished to call attention to the captain's "gallantry and soldiership (sic)." A second officer also reported that "Captain Hanna, as usual, showed himself to be a brave and gallant man and worthy of promotion. ..."
The promotion came March 27, 1863, when Hanna was commissioned the 50th's major. Sixteen months later, July 18, 1864, he became the regiment's lieutenant colonel.
On May 1, 1864, Union Gen. William T. Sherman set out to capture Atlanta. Sherman's effort was part of Grant's plan to unleash Union forces on all fronts and to never let up until the rebellious states were crushed -- no piecemeal fighting and no retreating. It would be total war to the end.
Though still a major when the Atlanta Campaign kicked off, Hanna commanded the 50th Illinois Infantry. But after three years of service, the 50th was a whittled-down regiment better suited for garrison duty. It was sent to occupy Rome, Ga., in the rear of the Union advance.
When Atlanta fell Sept. 1, Hanna and the 50th Illinois shared little of the hardship or glory of the campaign. This would soon change.
Even though they had evacuated Atlanta, the Confederates were far from beaten and moved north to attack Sherman's communication and supply line, the Western & Atlantic Railroad, hoping to force him to abandon Atlanta. Beginning Oct. 1, a series of "hit-and run" attacks were launched on the railroad. The rebels now eyed the federal supply base at Allatoona Pass, Ga., whose ration-filled warehouse was needed to feed Confederate troops.
Sherman, shadowing the Confederates, foresaw their next move would be to capture the supplies at Allatoona and ordered the garrison immediately reinforced. The assisting troops came from the force at Rome, boarding a 20-car train that left at 7 p.m. Oct. 4, arriving at 1 a.m. Oct. 5. Among the regiments coming to the rescue was the 50th Illinois.
When the sun rose, the 2,000 federal troops found they were outnumbered and surrounded. Offered the chance to surrender and "to avoid a needless effusion of blood," the blue-coated commander answered, "We are prepared for the 'needless effusion of blood' whenever it is agreeable to you." The fighting was fierce and continued through mid-afternoon when the Confederates thought Union help was arriving and withdrew.
Back from Georgia and the recent fight, Capt. John M. Cyrus told The Whig: "This battle, if not the hardest, is one of the hardest fought battles of the war for the number engaged." The 50th began the day with 267 officers and men. Eighty-six were killed or wounded.
At 12:30 p.m., Hanna was wounded. "The ball entering in the left thigh at which time I fell off the fort," he wrote. Fortunately, he added that he was caught by a fellow soldier who was "at the same time shot in the shoulder."
Cyrus told The Whig that afterward, Hanna was asked who took command when he was wounded. He replied: "No one. There was no need for a commander. All had to fight."
Cyrus told The Whig that "the officers and soldiers of the soldiers of the 50th were feeling that they had not shared much of the glory of Sherman's grand campaign." He pointed out that "no troops now share more largely the gratitude of the great commander than the 3d brigade," of which the 50th was a part.
The reason for the gratitude is what some historians have concluded; that had Allatoona and its valuable warehouse been captured, Sherman's go-ahead from Grant and President Abraham Lincoln for his march to the sea may never have been given.
Phil Reyburn is a retired field representative for the Social Security Administration. He authored "Clear the Track: A History of the Eighty-ninth Illinois Volunteer Infantry, The Railroad Regiment" and co-edited " 'Jottings from Dixie:' The Civil War Dispatches of Sergeant Major Stephen F. Fleharty, U.S.A."
Sources:
"Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol. IV (reprint). Secaucus, N.J.: Castle, a division of Book Sales Inc.
Boatner III, Mark Mayo, "The Civil War Dictionary." New York: David McKay Co. Inc., 1959.
Emery, Tom, Moline Dispatch-Argus, "Illinois soldiers save Sherman's march at Allatoona," March 7, 2013.
Hicken, Victor, "Illinois In The Civil War." Urbana and Chicago: The University of Illinois Press, 1991.
Hunt, Roger D. and Brown, Jack R., "Brevet Brigadier Generals in Blue." Gaithersburg, Md.: Olde Soldier Books Inc., 1990.
Hunt, Roger D. "Colonels in Blue: Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin." Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co. Inc. Publisher, 2017.
Kennedy, Frances H., ed., "The Civil War Battlefield Guide." New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998.
Slater, Dr. R.C., ed., "The Civil War Diary and Military Papers of Colonel William Hanna of Golden, Ill., Together With Some Notes And History of the 50th Regiment Illinois Volunteers." La Salle, Ill., 1960.
The Quincy Daily Whig, "Col. Hanna Is No More" and "The Death of Col. Hanna," Aug. 6, 1907.
The Quincy Daily Herald, "Col. Hanna Summoned," Aug. 5, 1907.
The Quincy Daily Journal, "Taps For Col. Hanna," Aug. 6, 1907.
The Quincy Whig, "Casualties In The 50 Regiment," Nov. 12, 1864.
The Quincy Whig, Aug. 31, 1861; Aug, 27, 1864; April 15, 1865; and Oct. 21, 1897.
"The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies." Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1880-1901. Series I, Vol. 39, Chapter 51, Part 1 Reports pp. 761-766, 774-775 and 779-781.





