USCC Home Page
USCC Tours and Programs
Museum
USCC Chapel Services
Gettysburg Tour Groups
Gettysburg Tours - Gettysburg Christian Tours
Speaking Engagements
Reenactment and Living History
History of the USCC
USCC Today
USCC Events
USCC News
USCC Store
Support the USCC
Ministry Partners
Links
Contact the USCC
This website was created by Connelly Design Studio : Visit ConnellyDesignStudio.com to learn more!



There is a group of heroes that served upon the battlefields of the Civil War without rifles or cannons. They came with bibles, bandages and the love of Christ. These were the heroes of the U.S. Christian Commission.

Where was God during this terrible suffering and bloodshed? The answer lies most notably in the stories of heroism exhibited by the United States Christian Commission and the delegates that so fearlessly and faithfully served the soldiers with the gospel. Formed in the fall of 1861 by the Young Men’s Christian Association to “take active measure to promote the spiritual and temporal welfare of the soldiers in the army, and the sailors and marines in the navy, in co-operation with chaplains and others.

During the war, five thousand delegates volunteered and distributed over $6,000,000 worth of goods and supplies (in 1860's valuation) to the soldiers and sailors of the Union army on the battlefields, camps, hospitals and prisons. They also served the soldiers in grey when the opportunity arose. It is estimated that the service rendered by the delegates of the Christian Commission equal the continuous work of one man for 658 years!

The story of the Christian Commission during the Civil War, although relatively unknown, remains one of the greatest stories of heroism and courage in the course of our modern history. This is a story of heroes…heroes of faith!

My Dear Sir:
Your letter of the 11th inst and accompanying plan, both of which are returned as a convenient mode of connecting this with them, have just been received. Your Christian and benevolent undertaking for the benefit of the soldiers is too obviously praiseworthy to admit any difference of opinion. I sincerely hope that your plan may be as successful execution as it is just and generous in conception.
Your obedient servant,
Abraham Lincoln
Dec. 12, 1861

Sign up for the USCC eNewsletter delivered to your inbox

 

Sign up for USCC eNewsPrint Page