Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth (April 11, 1837 – May…

Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth (April 11, 1837 – May 24, 1861) was a United States Army officer and law clerk who was the first conspicuous casualty and the first Union officer to die in the American Civil War. He was killed while removing a Confederate flag from the roof of the Marshall House inn in Alexandria, Virginia.
Before the war, Ellsworth led a touring military drill team, the “Zouave Cadets of Chicago”. He was a close personal friend of Abraham Lincoln, who as President later eulogized him as “the greatest little man I ever met”. After his death, Ellsworth’s body lay in state at the White House. The phrase, “Remember Ellsworth”, became a rallying cry and call to arms for the Union Army.
In 1857, Ellsworth became drillmaster of the “Rockford Greys”, the local militia company. He studied military science in his spare time. After some success with the Greys, he helped train militia units in Milwaukee and Madison. When he moved to Chicago, he became Colonel of Chicago’s National Guard Cadets.
Ellsworth had studied the Zouave soldiers, French colonial troops in Algeria, and was impressed by their reported fighting quality. He outfitted his men in Zouave-style uniforms, and modeled their drill and training on the Zouaves. Ellsworth’s unit became a nationally famous drill team.
Following the fall of Fort Sumter to Confederate Army troops in mid-April 1861, and Lincoln’s subsequent call for 75,000 volunteers to defend the nation’s capital, Ellsworth raised the 11th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment (the “Fire Zouaves”) from New York City’s volunteer firefighting companies, and was then commissioned as the regiment’s commanding officer.
MILITARY HISTORY SOCIETY OF ROCHESTER
ROCHESTERMILITARY.COM

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