03/25/2026
National Medal of Honor Day is observed today, March 25, 2026. On this day, the WBA honors Sergeant Major Edward Ratcliff for his heroism under fire at the Battle of New Market Heights near Richmond, VA on September 29, 1864.
Seargeant Major Ratcliff rests in Cheesecake Cemetery on the grounds of Naval Weapons Station Yorktown.
Edward Ratcliff (family name later changed to Radcliffe) was born into slavery in James
City County, Virginia on February 8, 1835. In early 1864 he left the James City County farm
where he lived with his wife Grace and daughter Hannah, walked to Yorktown, and joined
the Union Army. He began his army service as a private in Company “C” of the 38th
Regiment of the U.S. Colored Troops. By September 1864 he had risen to the rank of First
Sergeant and was one of thousands of African American Union troops facing action at the
Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia. During September 29, 1864 Battle of
Chaffin’s Farm in the New Market Heights area of Richmond, Ratcliff led the men of his
company into the Confederate works after his company commander was shot down. He
was the first enlisted man to enter the city’s Confederate fortifications during the battle.
For his heroism during the engagement, he was promoted to Sergeant Major and awarded
the Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest military decoration. He was one of only sixteen
African American soldiers to be awarded the Medal of Honor during the Civil War.
After the war, Ratcliff, as a free man, returned to his family and settled in York County on
land that is now part of U.S. Naval Weapons Station Yorktown (NWSY). He died in 1915 at
the age of 80 and his family buried him in Cheesecake Cemetery under a simple wooden
marker. The Navy acquired the property in 1918, and the gravesite marker disappeared
over time. But Sergeant Major Ratcliff was not to be forgotten. In 2006 it came to the attention of the Public Affairs Office that Cheesecake Cemetery contained the unmarked grave of a Medal of Honor recipient. A Veterans Affairs grave marker was obtained, and on August 5, 2006, a ceremony was held at the cemetery to honor Sergeant Major
Ratcliff and unveil his marker. The ceremony was attended by Ratcliff’s 84-year-old grandson Edward Radcliffe and 91-year-old granddaughter Marion Parker. Mr. Radcliffe was presented
an American flag by his grandson, Marine Corps Cpl. Edward Radcliffe, and re-enactors of the 38th Regiment of U.S. Colored Troops fired three volleys in salute to the soldier. His marker
will ensure that Ratcliff’s legacy as a Civil War hero will continue into time.