Rank and organization: Private, Company B,
47th Ohio Infantry. Place and date: At Vicksburg, MS., May 3, 1863
Citation:
Was one of a party which volunteered and attempted to run the enemy's batteries with a steam tug and 2 barges loaded with subsistence stores.[4][5][6]
Post War
Hack returned to Ohio and married Delphina Cooley (1845–1921). They had three children: Dora Delphina Hack Ripper (1865–1918), William Dunhain Hack (1869–1948), and Lenora Grace Hack Chastene (1875–1910). At his death, only his son and daughter-in-law survived him.[7]
Brown, Theodore F. (1909). Marching Through Georgia with Sherman from Atlanta to the Sea: Address Delivered at the Twenty-Third Annual Reunion of the Forty-Seventh Ohio Veteran Volunteer Infantry at Geo. H. Thomas Post Hall, Cincinnati September 28, 1909. West Alexandria, OH: Louis Mund.
hdl:
2027/mdp.39015065336573.
OCLC301205250.
Foraker, J. B.; Axline, H. A.; Robinson, J. S. (1886). Official Roster of the Soldiers of the State of Ohio in the War on the Rebellion, 1861–1865;. Three Year's Service - 37th-53rd Regiments-Infantry. Vol. IV. Akron, OH: Werner Co.
OCLC1744402.
Mitchell, Joseph B.; Otis, James (1968). The Badge of Gallantry; Recollections of Civil War Congressional Medal of Honor winners. New York: Macmillan. p. 194.
hdl:
2027/mdp.39015005683266.
OCLC560289389.
Subcommittee on Veterans' Affairs, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Labor and Public Welfare (1968). Edward M Kennedy, Chairman (ed.).
Medal of Honor, 1863-1968 : "In the Name of the Congress of the United States". Committee print (United States. Congress), 90th Congress, 2nd session. Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 1087.
OCLC1049691780.
"MOHs - victoriacross". THE COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE TO THE VICTORIA & GEORGE CROSS. VCOnline. 2020. Archived from
the original on 3 May 2020. Retrieved 2 May 2020.