Pickle, Alonzo (1843–1925)

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Pickle-6-Congressional-Medal-of-Honor-451x840_BCHS_cropped
Alonzo Pickle wearing his US Medal of Honor and First Minnesota Volunteers badge, ca. 1897.

Of the 262 Minnesotans who fought at the Battle of Gettysburg as part of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment in 1863, only forty-seven survived. One of them was Alonzo Pickle, a Canadian-born teenager who’d enlisted a year earlier in Winona. Pickle received the US Medal of Honor for his action at the Battle of Deep Bottom and lived out the rest of his life as a farmer, laborer, and salesman in Minnesota.

Alonzo Huntingdon Pickle was born in 1843 in Farnham, Quebec, a town fifty miles to the east of Montreal. He was the son of Simon and Sarah Taylor Pickle, whose families had emigrated from Boston to Quebec. When Alonzo was fifteen, the family moved to Wisconsin, and then to Dover, Minnesota, outside of Rochester, where they bought a farm.

In 1862, nineteen years old and still a Canadian citizen, Pickle responded to Governor Alexander Ramsey’s call for volunteers to fight in the Civil War by enlisting in the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment. After enlisting at Winona on August 14, 1862, he was sent to Fort Snelling with other volunteers to be mustered in and begin training.

Private Pickle was assigned to Company K of the First Minnesota and marched south. He participated in pivotal battles at Fredericksburg (1862) and Gettysburg (1863), where he was wounded in the leg during Pickett’s Charge, which fell on his twentieth birthday. He was promoted to the rank of corporal on February 1, 1864, and sent back to Fort Snelling for recruiting service. On July 22, after a promotion to the rank of sergeant, he transferred to Company B of the First Infantry Battalion to finish out his three-year enlistment.

On August 14, 1864, while serving with Company B, Pickle was engaged in battle at Deep Bottom, Virginia. The battalion attacked the enemy’s lines but was unable to carry on. When Lieutenant Henry O’Brien was shot in the shoulder and lung, Pickle carried him to safety at great personal risk. He was promoted again—this time to first sergeant. He mustered out of service at Munson’s Hill, Virginia, in 1865, and was present at Appomattox when General Robert E. Lee surrendered.

After the war, Pickle came back to Minnesota to work on his father’s farm in Olmsted County. He married Rhoda Jane Smith in Rochester on October 24, 1867, and the couple moved to Winona. There, Alonzo found two jobs: first, working for a horse dealer named W. S. Nevins, and second, hauling bricks for the construction of Winona’s Normal School. By 1869, he had moved back to Olmsted County and rented a farm. He and Rhoda raised their family of six children there for the next fifteen years.

In the fall of 1888, Pickle bought a parcel of land in the southwest corner of Home Township, a few miles from Sleepy Eye, and made it his new home. After only four years, however, Pickle gave up farming and moved to Sleepy Eye, where he sold real estate and insurance.

In civilian life, Pickle remained loyal to the men with whom he’d served. He was an active member of the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), a national fraternal organization of veterans. He was a charter member of the Wesley Green GAR Post #71 in Sleepy Eye and, at the time of his death, its only surviving member. On June 5, 1897, he received the US Medal of Honor for rescuing Lieutenant O’Brien.

Pickle was an active participant in the GAR and attended reunions, called encampments, around the country. When St. Paul hosted the thirtieth encampment in 1896, nearly 150,000 members (including Pickle) attended the event, and 200,000 visitors came out to watch the parade through the city streets. Pickle also attended encampments held in Minneapolis in 1906 and 1933, as well as a gathering to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg in 1913.

Pickle died on May 24, 1925. Days later, the mayor of Sleepy Eye declared all businesses in town closed from 1:30 until 3:00 pm so that people could attend the funeral. Pickle was buried in Home Cemetery in Home Township.

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Cite
Skold, Lee. "Pickle, Alonzo (1843–1925)." MNopedia, Minnesota Historical Society. https://www3.mnhs.org/mnopedia/search/index/person/pickle-alonzo-1843-1925-mnopedia
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First Published: September 29, 2025
Last Modified: September 29, 2025

Bibliography

Flandrau, Charles E. Minnesota in the Civil and Indian Wars, 1861–1865. Pioneer Press Company, 1889.
https://archive.org/details/minnesotacivil01minnrich/page/n7/mode/2up

Fritsche, L. A. History of Brown County, Minnesota: Its People, Industries and Institutions, vol. 2. B. F. Bowen, 1916.
https://ia600509.us.archive.org/6/items/mn-brown-1915-fritsche-1/mn-brown-1915-fritsche.pdf

Historical Marker Project. http://www.historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1CH3_goldengate_Sleepy-Eye-MN

Keith, Lorraine Hall. “Alonzo Huntingdon Pickle.” Minnesota Medal of Honor Memorial.
https://www.minnesotamedalofhonormemorial.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/Pickle-Alonzo-H.-Bio-Final-16.pdf

Moe, Richard. The Last Full Measure: The Life and Death of the First Minnesota Volunteers. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2001 reprint.

Pickle, Alonzo H. Certificate 1925-MN-001718. Death Certificate Index, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul.
https://www.mnhs.org/search/people/death-records/8e886594-dd6b-49ea-a7b3-42e5801e0433

Pickle, Rhoda Jane. Certificate 1923-MN-001683. Death Certificate Index, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul.
https://www.mnhs.org/search/people/death-records/31fd4035-cf31-4cb7-896f-49822cbc5e05

Related Resources

Primary

Records of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 1861–1865
Minnesota State Archives, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul
Description: From the Office of the Minnesota Adjutant General. Includes a descriptive book, morning reports, orders, a letterbook, post guard reports, proceedings of the regimental council, medical records, and miscellaneous reports of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War.
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/adjg006.pdf

Secondary

Carley, Kenneth. Minnesota in the Civil War: An Illustrated History. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2000.

Hage, Anne A. "The Battle of Gettysburg as Seen by Minnesota Soldiers." Minnesota History 38 no. 6 (June 1963): 245–257
http://collections.mnhs.org/mnhistorymagazine/articles/38/v38i06p245-257.pdf

Leehan, Brian. Pale Horse at Plum Run: The First Minnesota at Gettysburg. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2002.

Wright, James A. No More Gallant a Deed: A Civil War Memoir of the First Minnesota Volunteers, edited by Steven J. Keillor. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2001.

Related Images

Pickle-6-Congressional-Medal-of-Honor-451x840_BCHS_cropped
Alonzo Pickle wearing his US Medal of Honor and First Minnesota Volunteers badge, ca. 1897.
Minnesota Civil War veterans, 1897
Minnesota Civil War veterans gather in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to recognize the thirty-second anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, 1897. Alonzo Pickle is in the back row.
Minnesota Civil War veterans, ca. 1913
Alonzo Pickle (back row, far left) at a reunion of the Minnesotan survivors of the Battle of Gettysburg held at Evergreen Cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Photo by W. H. Tipton, ca. 1913.
Pickle-6-Congressional-Medal-of-Honor-451x840_BCHS_cropped

Alonzo Pickle

Alonzo Pickle wearing his US Medal of Honor and First Minnesota Volunteers badge, ca. 1897.
Minnesota Civil War veterans, 1897

Minnesota Civil War veterans, 1897

Minnesota Civil War veterans gather in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to recognize the thirty-second anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, 1897. Alonzo Pickle is in the back row.

Holding Location

Minnesota Historical Society
Minnesota Civil War veterans, ca. 1913

Minnesota Civil War veterans, ca. 1913

Alonzo Pickle (back row, far left) at a reunion of the Minnesotan survivors of the Battle of Gettysburg held at Evergreen Cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Photo by W. H. Tipton, ca. 1913.

Holding Location

Minnesota Historical Society

Turning Point

On August 14, 1864, during the Second Battle of Deep Bottom near Richmond, Virginia, Pickle risks his own safety to rescue a wounded First Minnesota officer.

Chronology

1843
Alonzo Huntingdon Pickle is born on July 2 in Farnham, Quebec (Canada).
1858
Pickle moves with his family to the United States. They live in Wisconsin before settling in Olmsted County in Minnesota.
1861
The Civil War begins on April 12.
1862
Nineteen-year-old Pickle enlists in the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment.
1863
Private Pickle fights in the Battle of Gettysburg on his birthday and is wounded in his leg.
1864
Pickle is promoted to the rank of sergeant on July 22.
1864
On August 14, during the Second Battle of Deep Bottom in Virginia, Pickle rescues a wounded First Minnesota officer named Henry O’Brien.
1865
On May 1, Pickle is promoted to the rank of first sergeant.
1865
The war ends when Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrenders to Union General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox, Virginia.
1865
Pickle is discharged at Bailey’s Cross Roads, Virginia, on June 7. He returns to his father’s farm in Olmsted County, Minnesota.
1867
Pickle marries Rhoda Jane Smith on October 24.
1875
The Minnesota state census counts Pickle and his family living in Dover Township, Olmsted County. (Similar data appear in the state censuses of 1880 and 1880). 
1867
On June 5, Pickle receives the US Medal of Honor for rescuing O’Brien.
1925
Pickle dies in Sleepy Eye on May 24.

Bibliography

Flandrau, Charles E. Minnesota in the Civil and Indian Wars, 1861–1865. Pioneer Press Company, 1889.
https://archive.org/details/minnesotacivil01minnrich/page/n7/mode/2up

Fritsche, L. A. History of Brown County, Minnesota: Its People, Industries and Institutions, vol. 2. B. F. Bowen, 1916.
https://ia600509.us.archive.org/6/items/mn-brown-1915-fritsche-1/mn-brown-1915-fritsche.pdf

Historical Marker Project. http://www.historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM1CH3_goldengate_Sleepy-Eye-MN

Keith, Lorraine Hall. “Alonzo Huntingdon Pickle.” Minnesota Medal of Honor Memorial.
https://www.minnesotamedalofhonormemorial.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/Pickle-Alonzo-H.-Bio-Final-16.pdf

Moe, Richard. The Last Full Measure: The Life and Death of the First Minnesota Volunteers. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2001 reprint.

Pickle, Alonzo H. Certificate 1925-MN-001718. Death Certificate Index, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul.
https://www.mnhs.org/search/people/death-records/8e886594-dd6b-49ea-a7b3-42e5801e0433

Pickle, Rhoda Jane. Certificate 1923-MN-001683. Death Certificate Index, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul.
https://www.mnhs.org/search/people/death-records/31fd4035-cf31-4cb7-896f-49822cbc5e05

Related Resources

Primary

Records of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, 1861–1865
Minnesota State Archives, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul
Description: From the Office of the Minnesota Adjutant General. Includes a descriptive book, morning reports, orders, a letterbook, post guard reports, proceedings of the regimental council, medical records, and miscellaneous reports of the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War.
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/adjg006.pdf

Secondary

Carley, Kenneth. Minnesota in the Civil War: An Illustrated History. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2000.

Hage, Anne A. "The Battle of Gettysburg as Seen by Minnesota Soldiers." Minnesota History 38 no. 6 (June 1963): 245–257
http://collections.mnhs.org/mnhistorymagazine/articles/38/v38i06p245-257.pdf

Leehan, Brian. Pale Horse at Plum Run: The First Minnesota at Gettysburg. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2002.

Wright, James A. No More Gallant a Deed: A Civil War Memoir of the First Minnesota Volunteers, edited by Steven J. Keillor. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2001.