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COL Samuel Russell
to remember
Clarke, Powhatan Henry (MOH), 1LT.
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Contact Info
Home Town Alexandria
Date of Passing Jul 21, 1893
Location of Interment Calvary Cemetery and Mausoleum - St. Louis, Missouri
Born in Alexandria, Louisiana, and graduated West Point in 1884. Commissioned a second lieutenant, in the 10th Cavalry(Buffalo Soldiers) at Fort Davis, Texas. Clarke was awarded the MOH, for rescuing one of his wounded troopers, Corporal Edward Scott, while under heavy fire from Apache hostiles. He also won a brevet, for action, against the Apache Kid band, on the Salt River in Arizona.
He commanded Apache scouts until 1891, when he became a 1st Lt. and transferred to the 9th Cavalry. In 1892 he was again assigned, to the 10th Cavalry, and was stationed at Fort Custer, Montana, until his death in 1893. Clarke was drowned in the Little Bighorn River, Montana, when he struck his head on a rock, after diving into the river, to rescue a soldier, from the flooding river.
He was married to Elizabeth Clemens and had a son.
The President of the United States of America, in the name of Congress, takes pleasure in presenting the Medal of Honor to Second Lieutenant Powhatan Henry Clarke, United States Army, for extraordinary heroism on 3 May 1886, while serving with 10th U.S. Cavalry, in action at Pinito Mountains, Sonora, Mexico. Second Lieutenant Clarke rushed forward to the rescue of a soldier who was severely wounded and lay, disabled, exposed to the enemy's fire, and carried him to a place of safety.
"A correspondent writes to Harper's Weekly concerning an act of bravery which, he says, 'under any nation under the sun but the United States would be fitly rewarded.' He says: 'Troop K, of the United States Cavalry, a regiment of colored men, but with white officers, while scouting in the Sierra Pinitas or Little Pines Mountains, in Sonora, Mexico, came upon a band of hostile Apaches, strongly posted upon an open plateau. In the resulting skirmish one man was killed and another seriously wounded. As Corporal Scott, the wounded man, fell to the ground, Lieut. Powhatan H. Clarke, the second in command, rushed forward through a heavy fire, took the corporal in his arms and carried him out of the line of battle to a place of comparative safety. Germany, France, England or any other foreign nation rewards its heroes with crosses, ribbons and stars, but our republic, in its Puritan simplicity, thinks an honorable mention in orders ample sufficient, and seldom grants that. I have not the slightest desire to see any order of nobility instituted in the United States, but so long as war lasts and brave deeds are told in song and story, so long will such decorations as are mentioned above improve the morale and increase the esprit of an army, whether that army belongs to a foreign power or our own republic.' This exploit of a Southern soldier risking his own life to save that of a colored comrade, apart from its merit as an act of bravery, is a conspicuous illustration of a phase of Southern character which some Northern people have not yet learned to appreciate."