Montgomery County PA Archives Biographies.....Bisbing, Capt. George W, May 28, 1823 - June 5, 1864
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Source: Biographical Annals of Montgomery County Pennsylvania, T. S. Benham & Company and the Lewis Publishing Company, 1904
Author: Ellwood Roberts, Editor

CAPTAIN GEORGE W. BISBING, participant in two wars, after 
gallantly battling for his country on many a hard-fought 
field gave his life's blood in proof of his devotion to his 
flag.

He was of German descent, his earliest ancestor in America 
being his great-grandfather, Barnard Bisbing who came from 
Germany. Barnard Bisbing was the father of seven sons and 
three daughters. George, the youngest of his children, 
settled at Fountain Inn, Barren Hill. He married Catherine 
Bilger. Their son, William, was a farmer on the Crawford 
farm in Plymouth township, and also lived on the Carver 
property on the Gulf road in Upper Merion township. He 
married Maria Streeper, daughter of Daniel and Elizabeth 
Streeper, and to them was born one child, George W. Bisbing.

George W. Bisbing was born at Barren Hill, May 28, 1823. His 
career was one most notable, and such as must be inspiring 
to all who knew him or of him.He was educated at the 
Norristown Academy, where he had for school companions two 
men whose names are famous in history-that superb soldier, 
General Winfield S. Hancock, and General George F. 
Hartranft, who after splendid service in the Civil war twice 
became governor of Pennsylvania. George W. Bisbing was a 
young man of twenty-three when the war with Mexico occurred, 
and during the two years of that brilliant conflict he was 
in the employ of the United States government on a vessel 
carrying supplies from New Orleans to the army in Mexico, 
and he was present at that stirring scene, the surrender of 
Vera Cruz to General Winfield Scott. After the restoration 
of peace Captain Bisbing returned to his home. While an 
academy student he had learned civil and mechanical 
engineering, but he did not follow the occupation and 
settled upon a farm.

He was so engaged when the Civil war broke out. As soon as 
he could arrange his affairs, he left his little family, 
consisting of his wife and two children, the one of eleven 
and the other of two years, and on September 28, 1861, went 
to the front with Company I, Fifty-first Regiment 
Pennsylvania Volunteers. This company was recruited through 
his own effort, and he encamped his men upon his own farm, 
his wife cooking for them. At the organization of the 
company Mr. Bisbing was elected first lieutenant, and he was 
promoted to the captaincy on June 23, of the following year. 
His regiment was assigned to the brigade commanded by 
General Hartranft, who had been his former school companion. 
Captain Bisbing participated in some of the most arduous 
campaigns and bloody battles of the war, in both the south 
and west, acquitting himself with unsurpassable courage and 
displaying officer-like conduct of the highest degree. His 
active service began with General Burnsides' expedition to 
North Carolina, with the tempestuous voyage in midwinter, 
followed by the capture of Roanoke Island and the battle of 
Newberne. His command was then conveyed to Virginia, where 
it operated under General Pope and afterward under General 
McClellan, and fought in the battles of Kelley's Ford, 
Rappahannock River, Sulphur Springs, Warrenton, Groverton, 
Gainesville, the second Bull Run, Chantilly, Frederick, 
South Mountain, Antietam and Upperville. At Antietam, 
Captain Bisbing's sword was broken by a Rebel rifle ball, 
after it had passed through the body of a man by his side, 
who fell dead on the instant. Sent west to aid General 
Grant, Captain Bisbing's regiment came under the immediate 
notice of the writer of this narrative, taking part in the 
siege of Vicksburg, and after witnessing the surrender of 
that city, participating in the battle of Big Black River, 
and the several days' battles at Jackson, Mississippi, in 
the latter of which, on July 16, 1863, he was wounded in the 
shoulder. Captain Bisbing's regiment was now sent to the 
relief of General Burnside, who was in state of siege and at 
the point of starvation, at Knoxville, Tennessee. En route, 
Captain Bisbing was engaged in the battles of Loudon, Lewis 
Farm, and Campbell's Station, and finally fought General 
Bragg's army, at Knoxville, raising the siege, and admitting 
supplies to the famished garrison. The regiment was now 
transported again to Virginia, and took a noble part in the 
series of battles in the Wilderness, and at Spottsylvania 
Courthouse. In the last named engagement, May 12, 1864, 
about ten o'clock, while gallantly leading his men, Captain 
Bisbing was wounded in the hand. Refusing to leave the 
field, he applied a bandage and continued in action with his 
men until two o'clock in the afternoon, when he was shot 
down, a rifle ball entering his right side and penetrating 
to the left, and remaining there. The injured man was 
removed to Seminary Hospital, at Georgetown, D. C., where he 
lingered until June 5, when he died.
 
Thus passed away a splendid type of the volunteer soldier of 
the Civil war. "Proving his truth by his endeavor," he and 
such as he gave in their life and death the heroic example 
which inspired the great Lincoln, at Gettysburg, to voice 
the most pathetic and eloquent tribute to patriotism that 
ever fell from human lips. While a matchless soldier Captain 
Bisbing was also a model citizen, cultivating, even amidst 
the horrors of war, the gentle manners of peace, and the 
virtues of a devout Christian life. The esteem in which he 
was held at his home was evidenced in the presentation to 
him, by the citizens, of a beautiful sword, a sacred relic 
now cherished with a glowing yet sorrowful pride by his 
daughter, Anna, who also has in her possession the sword 
broken in battle, as previously mentioned, with numerous 
relics sent home by her father from many of the most notable 
battle-fields of the war. Captain Bisbing was a member of 
the Lutheran church, and the lodge of Odd Fellows at Barren 
Hill, and was a Republican in politics.

Captain Bisbing married, December 13, 1849, Miss Elizabeth 
Shainline, daughter of Andrew and Ann S. (Holstein) 
Shainline, of Upper Merion township. Her father was a farmer 
and lime burner in Upper Merion township. He was a Whig in 
politics and captain of a company of state militia prior to 
war times, commissioned by the governor. In religious faith 
he was a member of the old Swedish church of Upper Merion. 
He was the son of Jacob and Rebecca (Yocum) Shainline, who 
owned a tract of four hundred acres along the King of 
Prussia turnpike in Upper Merion. He married Ann Sophia 
Holstein, May 17, 1826. The couple had nine children, as 
follows: Elizabeth, who married George W. Bisbing; DeWitt 
Clinton, who married Catherine Davis; George Holstein, 
deceased, who married Sarah Forsythe; William Holstein, who 
married Mary Emily Potter; James Yocum, unmarried; Rebecca 
Emily, deceased; Mary Louisa, deceased; Henry Harris[on], 
who married Abbie [Abigail] S. DeHaven ; and Ann Sophia, 
deceased.

Captain and Mrs. Bisbing were the parents or four children: 
William Holstein, born October 6, 1850, married Emma Styer, 
of Plymouth, and has one child, Martha; Winfield Scott, born 
September 21, 1852, died May 23, 1858; Maria Streeper, born 
December 25, 1854, died May 19, 1858; and Anna Holstein, 
born March 10, 1859.

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