Christopher Columbus Bland - Ayden NC
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Don.Morfe
N 35° 29.088 W 077° 22.531
18S E 284496 N 3929401
This Civil War Trail Marker commemorates a hero of the fight for Fort Fisher, Pvt. Christopher Columbus Bland, who is buried here (Hancock's Primitive Baptist Church, Ayden, NC).
Waymark Code: WM17VRM
Location: North Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 04/09/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member silverquill
Views: 0

This Civil War Trail Marker commemorates a hero of the fight for Fort Fisher, Pvt. Christopher Columbus Bland. The marker base is metal with a frame painted dark gray. The base of the marker is fiberglass with a blue top and the rest is a white base with black print. It stands about 3 feet from the ground with legs made of metal.

TEXT ON THE HISTORICAL MARKER
Fort Fisher Hero-Christopher Columbus Bland
A hero of the fight for Fort Fisher is buried here in the churchyard. Pvt. Christopher C. “Kit” Bland, Battery K, 2nd North Carolina Artillery, was serving at the fort, the “Gibraltar of the Confederacy,” when Federal forces began their bombardment on December 24, 1864. The Union fleet concentrated its fire on the garrison flag flying over Battery Pulpit, headquarters of Col. William Lamb, the fort’s commander. Lamb, hoping to refocus the bombardment to a point less essential to the post’s defense, ordered Mound Battery, at the southern end of the fort, to raise the flag. When Capt. Daniel Munn, commanding there, asked for a volunteer, Bland stepped forward. He climbed the bare flagpole amid the shelling and tied the flag to the top. As Lamb had hoped, much of the Federal fire shifted to Mound Battery, eventually tearing the flag loose. Once again, to the admiration of all who saw it, Bland climbed the pole and secured the flag using his neckerchief. On his way down, a shell passed so close to him that it brushed his hair.

Bland survived the day unscathed but suffered a wound in the ankle from shell fragment during the second major Union attack on Fort Fisher on January 13, 1865. He was captured five days later. His ankle, badly cut and broken, became infected while he was confined, and his leg was amputated below the knee. Again, he had survived and became the pastor here in his later years. In January 1995, Sons of Confederate Veterans awarded Bland the “Confederate Medal of Honor.”

The funding for this project was provided by the North Carolina Department of Transportation through the Transportation Enhancement Program of the Federal Transportation Efficiency Act for the 21st Century.

(captions)
(upper left) Christopher C. Bland Courtesy Bill Bland
(upper right) Mound Battery, Fort Fisher, with flagpole - Courtesy Library of Congress
Website pertaining to the memorial: [Web Link]

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Type of memorial: Sign

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Don.Morfe visited Christopher Columbus Bland - Ayden NC 04/09/2023 Don.Morfe visited it