| Old
Abe the War Eagle
Hwy 178

In
the spring of 1861 a band of hungry Chippewa came to the
McCann farm and traded a young eagle for corn. The eagle
became a family pet. When Company C, Eighth Wisconsin was
organized at Eau Claire for Civil War duty, the crippled
Dan McCann offered his eagle's services as mascot, feeling
that "someone from the family ought to go."
On October
12, 1861, the Eagle Regiment started for the front. In action
Old Abe spread his wings and screamed encouragement to his
men. The louder the noise in battle, the louder and fiercer
were his screams.
The
eagle served with the regiment in 42 skirmishes and battles
and lost only a few feathers.
After
three years of service, Old Abe was formally presented to
the State of Wisconsin on September 26, 1864. A room was
equipped for him in the Capitol and a man employed to care
for him. His last public appearance occurred at the National
Encampment of the G.A.R. in Milwaukee in 1880, where he
and General U.S. Grant were honored guests. After a brief
illness, Old Abe died March 28 1881.
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