Civil War Medal of Honor Recipient. An 1859 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, he served in cavalry commands on the Western Frontier pre-Civil War. After the start of the conflict, he was promoted to Captain on July 12, 1862 and assigned to the 5th United States Regular Cavalry, a unit he would command for much of the war. He would go on to be awarded the CMOH for his bravery at Davenport Bridge, Virginia on May 19, 1864. His citation reads "By a gallant charge against a superior force of the enemy, extricated his command from a perilous position in which it had been ordered". His Medal was awarded to him on September 1, 1893, twenty-nine years later. Receiving a brevet of Major, US Army for his gallantry at the May 7, 1864 Battle of Todd's Tavern, Virginia, he remained in active service after the war, rising to Major of the 6th United States Regular Cavalry, and to Colonel of the 1st United States Cavalry before his retirement in 1901. His post-Civil War service saw him again on the Western Plains (taking part in the August 30, 1881 Battle of Cibecue, and in the 1887 Expedition against the Crow Indians), and in Cuba during the Spanish-American War, where he served as Brigadier General of Volunteers in command of the VII Corps II Division. He passed away in Cold Springs-on-the-Hudson, New York, only months after his retirement.
Civil War Medal of Honor Recipient. An 1859 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, he served in cavalry commands on the Western Frontier pre-Civil War. After the start of the conflict, he was promoted to Captain on July 12, 1862 and assigned to the 5th United States Regular Cavalry, a unit he would command for much of the war. He would go on to be awarded the CMOH for his bravery at Davenport Bridge, Virginia on May 19, 1864. His citation reads "By a gallant charge against a superior force of the enemy, extricated his command from a perilous position in which it had been ordered". His Medal was awarded to him on September 1, 1893, twenty-nine years later. Receiving a brevet of Major, US Army for his gallantry at the May 7, 1864 Battle of Todd's Tavern, Virginia, he remained in active service after the war, rising to Major of the 6th United States Regular Cavalry, and to Colonel of the 1st United States Cavalry before his retirement in 1901. His post-Civil War service saw him again on the Western Plains (taking part in the August 30, 1881 Battle of Cibecue, and in the 1887 Expedition against the Crow Indians), and in Cuba during the Spanish-American War, where he served as Brigadier General of Volunteers in command of the VII Corps II Division. He passed away in Cold Springs-on-the-Hudson, New York, only months after his retirement.
Bio by: RPD2
Family Members
-
John Arnold
1801–1880
-
Julia M. Walter Arnold
1808–1894
-
Sarah Josephine Benjamin Arnold
1845–1935
-
Walter John Arnold
1832–1912
-
Elizabeth Catherine Arnold
1835–1911
-
Mary B. Arnold
1840–1886
-
Julia Arnold
1842–1907
-
Humphrey Yearsley Arnold
1846–1923
-
Fannie P Arnold Heckerman
1853–1882
-
Samuel Benjamin Arnold
1867–1961
-
Walter Montgomery Arnold
1869–1895
-
Percy Weir Arnold
1874–1919
Flowers
Advertisement
See more Arnold memorials in:
Explore more
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement