1861 MILITARY APPOINTMENT, SIGNED BY ABRAHAM LINCOLN AS PRESIDENT
LINCOLN, Abraham. Engraved document signed. Washington, August 15, 1861. Single vellum sheet (14 by 17-1/2 inches), partially printed and finished in a secretarial hand, embossed green paper seal.
Splendid Civil War document signed by President Lincoln appointing George W. Crabb as Second Lieutenant in the Fifth Regiment of Artillery during the Peninsular Campaign in Virginia, countersigned by Simon Cameron, Secretary of War, and docketed by Adjutant General Lorenzo Thomas, with fragile paper seal present.
At age 21, George W. Crabb of Pennsylvania was promoted to Second Lieutenant, effective May 14, 1861. In a report by Lieutenant-Colonel George W. Getty of the Second Brigade of engagements in the Seven Days Battles of the Peninsular Campaign, Crabb was commended for “admirable behavior during all these operations, bearing the fatigue and deprivation of sleep, and in many cases of food, without murmur, and was at all times ready and eager for action.” During the Battle of Golding’s Farm, the battery of First Lieutenant Adelbert Ames and his subalterns, James Gillis and George Crabb, “remained on the firing line, in a particularly exposed position on the extreme left, during the entire day, and fired 1392 rounds of ammunition. They received particular mention for gallantry and skill, both at Malvern Hill and Gaines’ Mill.” This commission of George W. Crabb as Second Lieutenant in the Fifth Regiment of Artillery is handsomely engraved with two military vignettes, one of an emblematic eagle and the other an army motif with crossed flags, cannon, and other accoutrements of war. Docketed in red ink in upper left-hand corner.
Fine condition, with faint fold lines. Lincoln’s signature bold and fine.