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  1. Robert Gould Shaw' (October 10, 1837 – July 18, 1863) was an American officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Born into a Boston upper class abolitionist family, he accepted command of the first all- black regiment (the 54th Massachusetts ) in the Northeast.

  2. May 3, 2024 · Robert Gould Shaw, Union army officer who commanded a prominent regiment of African American troops during the American Civil War, the 54th Massachusetts. He died fighting alongside the regiment while assaulting Fort Wagner, South Carolina, in 1863.

  3. Despite his image in the 1989 film Glory, Robert Gould Shaw was a reluctant leader of the famous 54th Massachusetts Infantry, one of the first African American regiments in the Civil War.

  4. Robert Gould Shaw served as colonel of the 54 th Massachusetts, one of the first Black regiments to fight in the Civil War. Born in Boston, Shaw grew up in the city’s elite social and political circles before the Civil War.

  5. During the Civil War, many abolitionists in the North advocated for the immediate freedom of all enslaved persons. Yet some members of abolitionist families were more reluctant advocates, such as Col. Robert Gould Shaw.

  6. Robert Gould Shaw was the white commander of the all-black 54th Massachusetts Regiment, which entered battle in mid-1863. Shaw was killed soon after at Fort Wagner and buried with his...

  7. May 22, 2018 · During the Civil War, Robert Gould Shaw commanded the 54th Massachusetts, the first Union regiment composed entirely of Black soldiers.

  8. This chapter looks at the ongoing attempts in and around Port Royal to reconstruct one of the oldest slaveholding regions of the country in the midst of civil war. For Shaw and the vast majority of the men under his command this was their first extended exposure to formerly enslaved men and women.

  9. Nov 13, 2009 · Union Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and 272 of his troops are killed in an assault on Fort Wagner, near Charleston, South Carolina. Shaw was commander of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry, perhaps...

  10. R obert Gould Shaw became a hero as commanding officer of the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Regiment—the first all-black regiment to be organized in the North. Black men were not allowed to join the Union Army in the early days of the Civil War.

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