[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 84 (Thursday, May 18, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1717-S1718]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                              Memorial Day

  Mr. YOUNG. Mr. President, Boston is perhaps a surprising place to 
begin a tribute to Indiana's veterans on the occasion of Memorial Day, 
but there, on Augustus Saint-Gaudens' magnificent memorial to the 54th 
Massachusetts Regiment, their names are etched.
  Maybe the coast of South Carolina is no less unexpected a place to 
continue that tribute, but there, on the shore, they fell, the men who 
helped save our Union, who forever ended its greatest scourge, who 
fought for the Declaration of Independence, though they had been denied 
the unalienable rights it promised.
  Seldom have American soldiers taken up arms and laid down their lives 
with such selflessness and yet so much at stake. Many Hoosiers were 
among their ranks. Their names should be known, their stories told. As 
Proverbs 10:7 says, ``the memory of the just is blessed.''
  Abraham Lincoln described the Emancipation Proclamation as ``an act 
of Justice.'' One of the greatest instruments of that justice was 
embedded at the end of the document. It read ``that such persons of 
suitable condition will be received into the armed service of the 
United States.'' ``Such persons'' were Black Americans.
  Lincoln's words spread far and fast and wide. In my capital city of 
Indianapolis, Pastor Willis Revels petitioned Governor Oliver Morton to 
raise a fighting force, and when the request was denied, rebels 
encouraged Hoosiers to join the first all-Black regiment forming near 
Boston.
  Unable to fulfill its recruitment goals at home, the Massachusetts 
54th Infantry sought and welcomed volunteers from across the Union, and 
Hoosiers answered the call. There were men--men like George Broady, 
George Charles, Alfred Lewis, George McGowan. They came from across the 
great State of Indiana, from places like Newport, Richmond, Louisville, 
and Centerville. They were farmers, blacksmiths, barbers, laborers, 
and, soon enough, they were soldiers for the Republic.
  There was no doubt of that when the 54th appeared on the dunes of 
Morris Island, before the twilight on July 18, 1863. They were in South 
Carolina to take Battery Wagner, a seemingly insurmountable obstacle 
between the Union Army and the port of Charleston.
  When the 54th had marched to within 300 yards of the fort, shots 
streaked overhead. They were ordered to the ground until the fire had 
passed. Then they rose. They charged forward, through sand and marshy 
water, as the sun sank in the western sky.
  As they reached the fort, Battery Wagner exploded with fire. The 54th 
was razed, ``like grass before the mower's scythe,'' one Hoosier 
survivor wrote afterward.
  In the end, the regiment lost nearly 300 men that night--over 40 
percent of its ranks. Fort Wagner remained in Confederate hands. Among 
the dead were Hoosiers Thomas Ampey and John Wilson.
  They didn't simply fall for a good cause. Their bravery at Battery 
Wagner turned a tide. You see, it shattered prejudices about the 
supposed inferiority of Black soldiers and debunked foolish notions 
about their ability or willingness to fight.

[[Page S1718]]

  Indeed, inspired by their example, additional Black regiments formed 
across the North. And by the end of 1863, Indiana had authorized the 
formation of the 28th U.S. Colored Troops.
  Old Willis Revels, he was at work recruiting Hoosiers to fill its 
ranks. ``Your country calls you,'' he declared--``your country.''
  Initially, over 500 men enrolled, forming 6 companies. The gallant 
28th fought during the siege of Petersburg in Virginia. Its men fell at 
the Battle of the Crater.
  When the Union Army marched into the fallen Confederate capital of 
Richmond, in the spring of 1865, the 28th was there. They helped bring 
the rebellion to its knees and slavery to its end.
  And they were present in Galveston, TX, too, when General Order No. 3 
was issued on June 19, 1865, ending legalized slavery, an event we now 
celebrate as Juneteenth.
  Over 1,500 Black Hoosiers served in the Civil War in the 
Massachusetts 54th and 55th, the Indiana 28th, and across the Union 
Army. As President Lincoln acknowledged, the bravery of Black soldiers 
from Indiana and across the Union helped preserve the Union.
  Offering an appropriate tribute to the fallen on Memorial Day can be 
a very difficult task. How can we, after all, express sufficient thanks 
to those who died for us?
  To paraphrase President Lincoln, ``the world will little note, nor 
long remember what we say here,'' but it will never forget the 
sacrifice of the men who fought in the 54th Massachusetts or the 28th 
Indiana.
  It took great courage for these Black Americans to believe in the 
goodness of this country, its people, and the promise of its founding. 
The reason we build monuments and memorials to those fighting dead is 
so their examples live, so that we might draw inspiration from these 
heroes who did incredible things and fought for a more perfect Union 
and a world at peace.
  So I close where I began, in Boston, because there, on the memorial 
to the 54th, the names of fallen Hoosiers Thomas Anthony and Elisha 
Burkett can be found. Their legacy lives on.
  We remember these men and all who paid the ultimate price for our 
freedom on this Memorial Day.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority whip.