Showing posts with label Medal of Honor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medal of Honor. Show all posts

Monday, September 16, 2024

A Civil War hero and once resident of Fort Lauderdale, Edgar A Bras and his Medal of Honor


Medal of Honor, U.S. Army
Public domain

 

By Jane Feehan

Civil War veteran Edgar A. Bras (1841-1923) made his way to Fort Lauderdale in the 1900s. Approaching their final years, Bras and his wife moved in with their daughter Ethel and her husband, Herbert Otto.

Bras was a carpenter and farmer for most of his life. The Iowa native and his family moved to Kansas, then Nebraska and to Oklahoma. Fort Lauderdale was his final chapter, a quiet one but not far removed from the way he lived his life as a young man.  

No doubt, there were probably a few Civil War vets in Broward County during the 1900s. Bras was not only a vet of that conflict but also recipient of the Medal of Honor for his act of valor during the Battle of Spanish Fort in Mobile, Alabama. The action is listed as “Capture of Flag” On April 8, 1865.  

His military career was nothing if not one of dogged determination. It began when Bras, then 20, signed up with the 8th Iowa Volunteer Infantry, U.S Army in Sept. 1861, about five months after the conflict erupted. He was promoted a few months later to Fifth Corporal.

Bras fought in the Battle of Shiloh, Tennessee (April 6-7, 1862) where he was shot in the upper thigh; the bullet remained there for the rest of his life. He was wounded again during the Battle of Corinth, Mississippi (April 29-May 30, 1862) where a bullet hit him in the head, lodging behind his left eye. He recovered (bullet removed?) and was promoted to Fourth Corporal in September 1862. When his term of service ended, he immediately signed up again, Jan. 11, 1864, with the same regiment and was again promoted, this time to First Sargeant. There were more battles to fight.

Mobile, Alabama was a port critical to Confederate supply lines and a favorite of Southern blockade runners. General R.S. Canby led Union forces into the Battle of Spanish Fort with an eye on capturing Mobile. Edgar Bras bravely charged through a Confederate camp at the fort and was able to capture the Confederate flag from a color bearer on April 8th, 1865. For this action, he was commended and received the Medal of Honor. Mobile was not captured but Spanish Fort was rendered useless by Union forces.

The war ended April 9, 1865, when Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox. President Andrew Johnson declared it officially over Aug. 20, 1866. The Medal of Honor was first available to Marines and those in the Navy in 1861; it was extended to the Army in 1862.

It appears that sense of duty never left Edgar Bras. While in Fort Lauderdale, approaching 80, he served as deacon and superintendent of Sunday school at First Baptist Church. He died in 1923 at 81, a few years after his wife. The final resting place for both is at Evergreen Cemetery. 

 Among the countless others to honor on Memorial Day in Fort Lauderdale are Edgar A. Bras and Alexander R. (Sandy) Nininger, both Medal of Honor recipients and former Fort Lauderdale residents. According to the National Medal of Honor Museum, “of the 40 million Americans who have served in the Armed Forces since the Civil War, only 3,519 have earned the Medal of Honor”

Medal of Honor, U.S. Army
Public domain

 Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan


Sources:

https://mohmuseum.org/the-medal/

ancestry.familysearch.org

https://www.iowasuvcw.org/monuments-in-the-state-of-alabama

IowaHistory.org

https://www.cmohs.org/

https://victoriacrossonline.co.uk/edgar-a-bras-moh/



Tags: Edgar A. Bras, Medal of Honor recipients – Fort Lauderdale, Fort Lauderdale history, Evergreen Cemetery, Sandy Nininger

Sunday, November 8, 2020

First WWII Medal of Honor awarded Fort Lauderdale grad who made the most of his opportunities.





By Jane Feehan

 Lt. Alexander (Sandy) Nininger, Jr., a graduate of Fort Lauderdale High School (1937) and West Point (1941), was killed in action January 12, 1942 on Bataan, a little more than six weeks after the Pearl Harbor attack. 

For his valor in attempting to thwart a Japanese assault, Nininger was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor, the first of World War II. Nininger was laid to rest in a church cemetery at Abucai, Province of Bataan, the Philippines.

Nininger had been an honor student and star football player at Fort Lauderdale High. His father, Alexander R. Nininger, Sr., once manager at the Sunset Theater and later a theater in Lake Worth, said Sandy decided when he was 11 years old that he wanted to attend West Point.

"He never quit anything he started," said Nininger, Sr. while  awaiting the medal to be posthumously awarded in 1942. It was an honor recommended by Gen. Douglas MacArthur.

Sandy was invited to a Rotary Club meeting in Fort Lauderdale months before he died. There, he explained he volunteered for service in the Philippines because it offered "the best opportunity for an officer eager for action and hard work."

He also volunteered for the battle that ended his life. His body was found well within Japanese lines with those of a Japanese officer and two enemy soldiers. He had been wounded three times.

Among many tributes was the naming of a drive off Federal Highway in Fort Lauderdale to the War Memorial Auditorium as “Sandy Nininger Drive,” and the establishment by the Kiwanis Club of the "Sandy Nininger Medal" to honor high school students who have made the most of their opportunities. 

 Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan

Official site of the Congressional Medal of Honorwww.cmohs.org

Read these links about his burial controversy:



Sources:
Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 29, 1942
Fort Lauderdale News, Jan 30, 1942
Gillis, Susan. Fort Lauderdale: The Venice of America. Charleston: Arcadia (2004).
Weidling, Philip J. , Burghard, August. Checkered Sunshine. Gainesville: University of Florida Press (1966).

Tags: Fort Lauderdale history, history of Fort Lauderdale,  Medal of Honor, WWII in Florida, WW2 history, Fort Lauderdale World War II