Augustus Forsberg
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Lynchburg, Virginia
Augustus Forsberg | |
|---|---|
Colonel Forsberg as wounded in Lynchburg, Virginia. | |
| Birth name | Ludwig August Forsberg |
| Born | January 13, 1832 Stockholm, Sweden |
| Died | July 15, 1910 (aged 78) Lynchburg, Virginia |
| Allegiance | |
| Service | Royal Swedish Engineers |
| Years of service | Ca 1850-1855 (Sweden) 1861–1865 (CSA) |
| Rank | |
| Commands | Forsberg's Brigade |
| Battles / wars | American Civil War |
| Awards | Cited for bravery at Fort Donelson |
| Spouse(s) | Mary Elizabeth Forsberg |
Augustus Forsberg (1832-1910) was a Swedish military engineer who emigrated to the United States in 1855. First settling in Charleston, South Carolina, he had strong sympathies for the Southern cause. When the Civil War began, he joined the Confederacy and was commissioned to the rank of lieutenant in the regular Confederate army 1861. Attached to the 51st Virginia Volunteer Infantry, he was elected its lieutenant colonel when the regiment was reorganized in the spring of 1862. Subsequently, promoted to its colonel, he commanded a brigade at the end of the war. Wounded at Winchester in 1864, he became a prisoner-of-war at Waynesboro in 1865. Once released, he ventured to Lynchburg, Virginia, to marry the woman he had met while recovering. They settled and made a family in the town, and Forsberg served as Lynchburg's city engineer for over twenty years.
Born in Stockholm, Forsberg graduated from the Royal Institute of Technology, and served as a lieutenant in the Royal Swedish Engineers. In 1855, he moved to the United States, working as an engineer on a government project in Charleston, South Carolina. He later worked as an architect in Baltimore and as a draftsman at the United States Capitol Building in Washington, D.C., at the time still under construction.[1][2][3][4]