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Ole M. Bendixon

15th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry
The Scandinavian Regiment

Database Record Change Request

Name at Enlist

Ole M. Bendixon

Birth Name
Other Names

Ole M. Bendigon, Bendixen, Bendixson

Lived

Apr 1833 – 4 Feb 1904

Birth Country

Norway

Resident of Muster-In

Columbia County, WI

Company at Enlistment

D

Rank at Enlistment

Private

Muster Date

8 Dec 1861

Burial Location

Greenwood Cemetery, Portage, Columbia County, WI

Mother

Anna Maria

Father

Tollif E. Bendickson

Immigration

1861

Spouse

Julia Petersen Scott

Spouse Lived

1841-

Married On

28 Jan 1867

Marriage Location

Lewiston, Columbia County, WI

Ole M. Bendixsen was born in Norway in April 1833 to Tollif E. and Anna Maria Bendickson. He immigrated in 1861.

Ole was enlisted on November 27, 1861 by Captain (Kaptein) Charles Campbell as a Private (Menig) in Company D of the 15th WI. He joined up in Portage, Columbia County, WI for a 3-year term of service. The men of the company called themselves the “Norway Wolf Hunters.” They were also known as the “Waupun Company” because a number of them were residents of that WI town. Private Bendixsen was mustered into the Federal Army at that rank on December 8, 1861 in Camp Randall, Madison, Dane County, WI. At the time he was 28 years old and not married. He listed his residence as Columbia County, WI.

Ole was appointed as a Corporal (Korporal) in Company D on January 1, 1862. On January 14, 1862, the men of the 15th WI were issued Belgian rifled muskets. After 2 months at Camp Randall learning to be a soldier, Corporal Bendixsen left there in early March 1862 with his company and regiment to join the war. He was then absent from the 15th on “detached service” at Birds Point, MO on the Mississippi River with Company D from March 14-31, 1862. From then until October 1862, he was listed as “present” with the 15th. As such he would have participated in the successful siege of Island No. 10 on the Mississippi River in TN, and the surprise raid on Union City, TN, in March and April 1862.

That summer Corporal Bendixsen would have been with the 15th on campaign through TN, MS, and AL. In August and September he would have participated in the grueling 400-mile retreat with General Buell up to Louisville, KY with the last 2 weeks being on half rations and short of water. On October 8, 1862, at the Battle of Perryville, KY, he was sick in a hospital at Perryville and when he heard that D Company was going into action, he got permission from the surgeon to go with his company during the battle. He grabbed his rifle and reported for duty. While this was the first big battle the 15th was in, it emerged without any fatalities.

On December 1, 1862, Corporal Bendixsen was promoted to Sergeant (Sersjant). On December 26, 1862, he would have participated in the 15th’s desperate charge upon a Confederate artillery battery at Knob Gap, TN, just south of Nashville. There the 15th captured a brass cannon. He would have also fought at the long, cold, wet, and bloody Battle of Stone River, TN, also called the Battle of Murfreesboro, on December 30-31, 1862. It is there that the 15th first suffered serious battle casualties, and was cited for bravery. One of those casualties was Sergeant Bendixsen, who was captured on December 31, 1862.

In March 1863, Sergeant Bendixsen was listed as a prisoner of war at Atlanta, GA. On April 7, 1863, he was released by the Confederates at City Point, VA. Sergeant Bendixsen was once again with Company D in time for the September 19-20, 1863, Battle of Chickamauga, GA, — the second bloodiest battle of the war. There he received a “flesh wound left leg” during the fierce afternoon fighting around Viniard’s Farm on the first day. Some 63% of the 15th’s soldiers who were at Chickamauga were killed, wounded, or taken prisoner.

In October 1863, Sergeant Bendixsen was listed as being in a hospital at Nashville, TN. In November and December he was listed as “now in Wis.” There at the Harvey Hospital in Madison it was noted that “hospital gangrene occurred before admission here, which was treated here with nitric acid; wound now granulating.”

It was not until September 1864, that Sergeant Bendixon returned to the regiment. He was then listed as “present” February 1865. After a rest following the capture of Atlanta, the 15th was briefly assigned to Provost (police) duty in Chattanooga in early October. This was followed by several months of guarding a railroad bridge at Whitesides, TN, near Chattanooga. Some of the 15th’s soldiers felt was the easiest duty of their war service.

Sergeant Bendixon was honorably discharged from the Army along with most of the other surviving members of Company D on February 13, 1865, at Chattanooga, upon the expiration of his 3-year term of service. The men of his company were then sent to Madison, WI, paid off, and the company disbanded.

After the war Ole M. Bendixsen received recognition of his actions at Perryville. On 24 Jan 1867, WI Governor Lucius Fairchild, himself a distinguished Civil War veteran, honored Ole with a promotion to Brevet Captain, retroactive to October 8, 1862. His award citation reads as follows:

“In recognition of conspicuous gallantry displayed by him at battle of Perryville, Ky., where though excused from duty by the Surgeon of the Regiment by reason of sickness, upon hearing the battle commence immediately in front of the Hospital and being informed that the Regiment was about to attack the enemy he asked permission to join his company and immediately picked up a gun and reported for duty, and when told that he was too weak to follow in the charge they were about to make replied “let me go as far as I can. I cannot stay here and see my comrades fight the battle alone as long as I am able to point my gun.” Though exhausted he remained with his company during the entire engagement.”

After the war, he was granted a pension of $6 a month because a wound to his left leg resulted in varicose veins. He married Julia Petersen Scott on January 28, 1867 in Lewiston, Columbia County, WI. Julia was born to Peter and Cornelia Scott and she immigrated in 1849. Their children included Amanda (1881), Cora (1883), and Ina (1868).  In 1893, he was living in Lewiston, WI. He died on February 4, 1904 and is buried in Greenwood Cemetery, Portage, Columbia County, WI.

 

Sources: Civil War Compiled Military Service Records, Office of Adjutant General of the United States (Washington, DC); Register of Commissions by Brevet 1864-1870 (Madison, Wisconsin); Regimental Descriptive Rolls, Volume 20, Office of the Adjutant General State of Wisconsin (Madison, WI, 1885); Roster of Wisconsin Volunteers, War of the Rebellion, 1861-1865, Volume I, Office of the Adjutant General State of Wisconsin (Madison, WI, 1886); Civil War Pension Index, roll T288_30; findagrave.com; 1900 Census, Roll: 1781; Page: 8A; Enumeration District: 0014; FHL microfilm: 1241781; WI Marriage Index, Batch # M00339-6, GS Film # 1275882, Ref. ID 01030.