Back to top

Twenty-eighth Virginia Infantry Regimental Battle Flag

Creator: 
  • Cite
  • Share
  • Correct
  • Print
Battle flag of the Twenty-eighth Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment

The Army of Northern Virginia Confederate battle flag of the Twenty-eighth Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment. Captured by Private Marshall Sherman of St. Paul while serving with the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Company C, during Pickett's Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg on July 3, 1863.

The battle flag of the Twenty-eighth Virginia Infantry Regiment was captured by the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment in the Battle of Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. The storied Confederate banner has remained in St. Paul continuously since 1886, despite numerous requests to return it to its state of origin.

The flag is roughly square, measuring forty-four and a half inches tall and forty-eight inches wide, and is made entirely of wool, except for the white cotton stars and filets (bands). The design features thirteen white stars (representing the eleven Confederate states, plus Kentucky and Missouri) inside a white-edged blue diagonal cross, or saltire, upon a red field. The creator of its general pattern, Confederate States Representative William Porcher Miles of South Carolina, chose a diagonal cross to avoid religious associations and used red, white, and blue because they “are the true republican colors,” representing “valor, purity, and truth.”

The battle flag of the Army of Northern Virginia was a practical tool of warfare that standard-bearers carried at the front line of battle to lead their military unit. Its visibility provided a clear reference point for soldiers during the heat of combat, but also made the bearer a crucial target for the enemy. Capturing the opponent’s flag practically guaranteed victory.

Pvt. Marshall Sherman of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment captured the flag during the Battle of Gettysburg in July 1863. On the second day of the battle, over three-fourths of the regiment’s men were killed or wounded after Maj. Gen. Winfield S. Hancock ordered them to charge at the advancing Confederates, who outnumbered the Minnesotans five to one. The next day, the survivors participated in Pickett’s Charge, during which Private Sherman captured the battle flag of the Twenty-eighth Virginia Infantry Regiment by threatening its bearer (Lt. John Lee) with his bayonet. “Throw down that flag,” newspapers reported him saying, “or I’ll run you through.” The bravery of Sherman and the First Minnesota helped secure the Union’s pivotal victory at Gettysburg, which historians later recognized as the “high-water mark of the Confederacy.”

After the war, Sherman took the flag with him back to Minnesota. In 1867 the flag was sent to Washington, DC, to be inventoried by the War Department (note the “58” they stenciled on its top left corner), but the banner quietly returned to Minnesota in the late 1880s. Over the next few decades, it was displayed with other battle flags in the second and third Minnesota state capitols, and in Civil War commemoration events. Although a 1905 congressional resolution authorized the secretary of war to return captured Civil War flags in the War Department's custody to their state of origin, this flag remained in Minnesota. It was formally accessioned by the Minnesota Historical Society (MNHS) in 1923.

On the occasion of the Civil War centennial in 1961, MNHS deaccessioned from its collection a Mississippi regimental flag captured by the Fourth Minnesota in the Battle of Allatoona in 1864, transferring it to the state of Georgia. This gesture prompted the Virginia Historical Society to request the return of the Twenty-eighth Virginia battle flag one week later. MNHS denied the request “because it has been so well documented in its relationship to the First Minnesota…that it has greater historical value if it remains in Minnesota than if it is returned to Virginia.” A Twenty-eighth Virginia reenactment group appealed again in 1998, asserting legal ownership of the flag. While the Minnesota attorney general disproved this claim, the controversy spurred much public comment and subsequent return requests from Virginia in 2000, 2002, 2003, and 2013. Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura notoriously responded to the 2000 request, “Why? I mean, we won. [...] We took it, that makes it our heritage.”

In 2007, MNHS became the new steward of the state’s historic military flag collection, previously cared for by the Minnesota adjutant general. MNHS conservators cleaned and mounted battle flags for a rotating annual display in the first-floor rotunda of the state capitol. Around this time, the Twenty-eighth Virginia flag received a custom mount. Originally, the flag had been made with triangular shapes cut larger than necessary, which created excess fabric. Consequently, the textile conservator made a mount with four raised pillows to provide support for the flag overall. A plexiglass display case provided another layer of protection, while a dark cloth shielded it from light exposure. The flag continues to be cared for by MNHS.

  • Cite
  • Share
  • Correct
  • Print
  • Bibliography
  • Related Resources

Accession file #6421
3D Objects Collection, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul
Description: Articles, reports, correspondence, and internal documentation related to the Twenty-eighth Virginia battle flag, spanning roughly from 1895 to the present.

“Amid Flying Shot and Shell.” St. Paul Pioneer Press, July 21, 1895.

“A Banner Year.” St. Paul Pioneer Press, June 19, 1998.

“Battle Flags Moved to the New Capitol.” Minneapolis Tribune, June 15, 1905.
https://www.mnhs.org/newspapers/lccn/sn83016771/1905-06-15/ed-1/seq-7

“The Battle Flags of Minnesota” (archived). Minnesota Historical Society, 2008.
https://mnhs.gitlab.io/archive/the-battle-flags-of-minnesota-collections/collections.mnhs.org/battleflags/10001562.html

Carley, Kenneth. Minnesota in the Civil War: An Illustrated History. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2000.

Coski, John M. The Confederate Battle Flag: America’s Most Embattled Emblem. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2005.

Hill, Patrick M. “Colors of Valor: The 28th Virginia Regiment’s Flag in Minnesota.” Minnesota History, 57, no. 2 (Summer 2000): 58–73.
https://storage.googleapis.com/mnhs-org-support/mn_history_articles/57/v57i02p058-073.pdf

“Minnesota’s Battle Flags.” St. Paul Globe, May 17, 1896.
https://newspapers.mnhs.org/jsp/viewer.jsp?doc_id=mnhi0031/1HMADF59/96051701&page_name=9

“Panorama of the Great Battle to be on Exhibition To-day—Actual Portraits Shown.” St. Paul Daily Globe, December 20, 1886.
https://www.mnhs.org/newspapers/lccn/sn90059522/1886-12-20/ed-1/seq-2

US Congress, House. Joint Resolution to return to the proper authorities certain Union and Confederate battle flags. H. J. R. 217. 58th Cong., 3rd sess. Approved February 28, 1905.
https://www.loc.gov/resource/llsalvol.llsal_033/?sp=1371&r=-0.204,0.113,1.634,0.76,0

US Congress, Senate. An act relating to the repair, restoration, and preservation of regimental battle flags, standards, and guidons of military organizations of the state- of Minnesota and the United States of America. S. F. 1097. 88th Cong., 1st sess. Approved May 13, 1963.
https://www.revisor.mn.gov/laws/1963/0/Session+Law/Chapter/665/pdf

“Ventura Won't Give Flag Back To Virginia.” Chicago Tribune, February 29, 2000. https://archive.ph/20211230152505/https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2000-02-29-0002290214-story.html

Related Images

Battle flag of the Twenty-eighth Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Battle flag of the Twenty-eighth Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Battle of Gettysburg oil painting by Rufus Zogbaum
Battle of Gettysburg oil painting by Rufus Zogbaum
Marshall Sherman standing with the Twenty-eighth Virginia battle flag
Marshall Sherman standing with the Twenty-eighth Virginia battle flag
Color-bearer holding tattered First Minnesota flag after Gettysburg
Color-bearer holding tattered First Minnesota flag after Gettysburg
Battle flag of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Battle flag of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Staffs of the First Minnesota and Twenty-eighth Virginia flags
Staffs of the First Minnesota and Twenty-eighth Virginia flags
1886 catalogue for the Gettysburg Panorama in St. Paul
1886 catalogue for the Gettysburg Panorama in St. Paul
Painting detail from the 1886 Gettysburg Panorama in St. Paul
Painting detail from the 1886 Gettysburg Panorama in St. Paul
1905 flag procession to the Minnesota State Capitol
1905 flag procession to the Minnesota State Capitol
Survivors of the First Minnesota at Gettysburg
Survivors of the First Minnesota at Gettysburg
Rolled battle flags
Rolled battle flags
Battle flags in the Capitol Rotunda
Battle flags in the Capitol Rotunda

Turning Point

In 1886, the Twenty-eighth Virginia battle flag is displayed in St. Paul as part of a Battle of Gettysburg panorama. It has remained in Minnesota ever since.

Chronology

1863

On the last day of the Battle of Gettysburg (July 3), the flag is captured by Pvt. Marshall Sherman of Company C of the First Minnesota Infantry Regiment. Sherman later receives a Medal of Honor for this act.

1864

The flag returns to Minnesota with Sherman on February 16. Joel E. Whitney photographs Sherman with the flag in his St. Paul studio.

1867

The US War Department in Washington, DC, counts the Virginia flag in a full inventory of captured Civil War banners and marks it with “No. 58” in the upper left corner.

1886

The flag is stored with other captured battle flags in a display case in St. Paul at the state capitol.

1905

On February 28, the US Congress passes a joint resolution authorizing the secretary of war to return captured Civil War battle flags “now in the custody of the War Department” to their states of origin.

1923

The flag is accessioned by the Minnesota Historical Society (MNHS).

1961

On April 20, John Melville Jennings, director of the Virginia Historical Society, writes to Russell Fridley, director of MNHS, requesting the flag’s return. Fridley refuses, citing the importance of the flag to Minnesota’s history.

1963

MNHS displays the flag during a centennial exhibition about the Battle of Gettysburg.

1998

After a reenactment group in Roanoke, Virginia, requests the flag’s return in May, MNHS seeks legal counsel from Attorney General Skip Humphrey’s office. The office concludes that “MHS is not legally required to return the flag."

2000

On February 11, the Virginia General Assembly passes a resolution requesting the flag’s return. Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura responds, “Absolutely not. Why? I mean, we won.”

2003

Virginia Governor Mark Warner requests the flag’s return, to which Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty responds, “We believe it's rightfully ours, and we're not giving it back to Virginia.”

2007

MNHS becomes the official conservator of the state’s collection of historic battle flags, which previously were cared for by the Office of the Minnesota Adjutant General.

2008

With support from the Minnesota Legislature and a federal Save America’s Treasures grant, MNHS undertakes a major restoration of its historic battle flag collection. The Virginia battle flag receives a custom mount and protective display case.

2013

In April, Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell asks Minnesota to loan the flag for the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg. Tina Smith, chief of staff for Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton, declines.