Courage and Consequence – The Congressional Medal of Honor and the Geometry of Mercy
A wounded man on the road. The enemy’s uniform on his back. A field of fire no order required anyone to cross. The easy thing, the sanctioned thing, was to leave him where he lay and let the war finish him. On May 2, 1863, in the burning woods of Chancellorsville, Private William Wallace Cranston and three men of the 66th Ohio laid down their rifles, took up two blankets, and walked into the fire to bring him out alive. They went for mercy. The intelligence the grateful man then gave Union commanders was the unasked-for gift on top of it. The medal took thirty years to arrive. The story took longer, and survives mostly because a family refused to let it go. He proved that the rarest courage is spent not on the enemy but for him. William Wallace Cranston needs to be remembered.
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