Confederate Roll of Honor


The Confederate Roll of Honor, officially the Roll of Honor, was an award of the Confederate States Army created by Adjutant and Inspector General Samuel Cooper on October 3, 1863, to recognize "courage and good conduct on the field of battle."

History

The Congress had passed an act on October 13, 1862, which authorized the President to "bestow medals, with proper devices, upon such officers of the armies of the Confederate States as shall be conspicuous for courage and good conduct on the field of battle, and also to confer a badge of distinction upon one private or non-commissioned officer of each company after every signal victory it shall have assisted to achieve." No award for the Confederate navy was authorized. General Lee is said to have opposed the awarding of medals and badges in wartime for fear that they would be distributed inequitably.
Delays in obtaining medals led the Army to creating the roll. Nominations were made by company members after enemy engagements. The soldiers voted after each battle, and the results were listed in battle reports, read aloud to regiments, and published in newspapers across the Confederacy. Bestowing an honor by the vote of common soldiers was virtually unprecedented.

The Roll

General orders Number 131, issued by Adjutant and Inspector General S. Cooper, included the names of hundreds of officers and men who fought in the battles of Murfreesboro, Chancellorsville and Gettysburg. Subsequently new additions to the Roll of Honor were published for engagements after the Gettysburg Campaign, including: