There's another Carnegie Hero Medal in the news. Thanks to Pat McBride for sending this item from the site of the Carnegie Hero Fund
Commission. Congratulations to Matt Campbell on a nice eBay purchase. I decided not to bid on this one, and I'm glad it went to a
good home. Thanks! -Editor
Ivah J. Coles of East St. Louis, Ill., gave his life for a friend on June 8, 1904, within two months of the Hero Fund’s founding in April.
He was posthumously awarded a silver Carnegie Medal, which was given to his mother.
The medal surfaced this spring when it was put up for sale on eBay by a jeweler from O’Fallon, Mo., who acquired it through someone
wanting to sell scrap silver. Matthew Campbell of Washington, Pa., a member of the Pennsylvania Association of Numismatists (PAN), put in
the winning bid; it turns out that the Hero Fund was the only other bidder during the anonymous proceedings. The Hero Fund attempts to
re-acquire medals when located on the open market, feeling that they are not to be traded like commodities but to be held by the awardees
or their families for posterity, or kept in a manner befitting their dignity, such as by a museum or historical society.
Campbell had never heard of the Hero Fund, but the medal immediately piqued his interest, as he recognized its quality. An alumnus of
Carnegie Mellon University, he visited the Hero Fund’s offices in mid-April to learn more about the Coles case and do some research for an
article he is considering for The Clarion, PAN’s journal. “In reading Carnegie’s autobiography,” Campbell said, “I was taken with this
line, ‘The heroes of the barbarian past wounded or killed their fellows; the heroes of our civilized day serve or save theirs.’ I plan on
writing about the organization’s mission.”
The Hero Fund provided Campbell with the details of Coles’s heroic act. Coles, 21, a bricklayer, and a friend, Richard E. Crumwell, 20,
a carpenter, were on a swimming outing at a reservoir in Gillespie, Ill. While attempting to climb up the steep, high bank, Crumwell fell
back into the water and began to sink. From the bank, Coles waded into the water toward Crumwell but sank within eight feet of him. The
men’s bodies were found in water 10 to 12 feet deep; the Commission’s report indicated that they were victims of cramps, caused by the
chilliness of the water.
Matt provided the medal photos. Thanks! The Carnegie Hero Fund Commission is alive and well and still operating after over a century.
Kudos to Matt for going straight to the source for information; we'll look forward to his Clarion article. -Editor
To read the complete article, see:
Medal awarded posthumously bought at auction by collector
(www.carnegiehero.org/auction/)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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