Alfred B. Hilton - Havre de Grace, MD
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member bluesnote
N 39° 33.991 W 076° 09.820
18S E 400043 N 4380293
One of many historical markers in Havre de Grace, Maryland.
Waymark Code: WM15KVR
Location: Maryland, United States
Date Posted: 01/18/2022
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 0

Photos taken on 18 January 2022. The memorial consits of a plastic plaque located next to the playground and the parking lot. It tells the story of Alfred B. Hilton, who served in the civil warin the 4th US Colored Troops. He was from this area, as the sign says.

The plaque says, "After the Emancipation Proclamation was issued in 1863, the U.S. Army recruited both free blacks and slaves. In August 1863, freedman Alfred B. Hilton and his brothers Aaron and Henry enlisted in the 4th U.S. Colored Troops (USCT) in Havre de Grace. Of more than two hundred county men who joined the USCT, twenty-six served in that regiment. Appointed Color Sergeant and described by fellow Medal of Honor recipient Christian Fleetwood as a "magnificent specimen of manhood...splendidly proportioned," Hilton carried the United States flag through several engagements around Richmond and Petersburg, Virginia, in June-September 1864. On September 29, Hilton was mortally wounded at the Battle of New Market Heights east of Richmond. He died on October 21 at the U.S. General Hospital at Fort Monroe and is buried at Hampton National Cemetery. According to the posthumous Medal of Honor citation, "When the regimental color fell, this soldier seized the color and carried it forward, together with the national standard until disabled at the enemy's inner line." Hilton's brothers and many local 4th USCT veterans returned to Harford County after the war.
Alfred R. Hilton, Harford County's sole Civil War Medal of Honor recipient and one of only 16 African American recipients for valor during the war, was born about 1837 and reared here on his father's farm in the free black community of Gravel Hill. He was one of manumitted slaves Isaac and Harriet Hilton's 14 children. Like Havre de Grace, Berkley and Kalmia, Gravel Hill was a post on the Underground Railroad before 1864. In 1860, the county's 3,664 free blacks were double the number of slaves and constituted 16 percent of the total population.
Excerpt from Hilton's Medal of Honor citation in English and French, prepared for "the Negro Exhibit of the American Section at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1900.
Courtesy Library of Congress

Center Photo
4th U.S. Colored Infantry, Co. E.

Bottom Left Drawing
U.S. Colored Troops in action, Harper's Weekly, March 14, 1863

Center Bottom
Medal of Honor

Right Side Document
Copy of Medal of Honor Citation"
Website pertaining to the memorial: [Web Link]

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Type of memorial: Plaque

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