Christian Steiner MOH

b. 1843 Wurttemberg, Germany. d. 05/08/1880 Hot Springs, Arkansas.

DATE OF MOH ACTION: 20/10/1869 Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona Territory.

Christian Steiner was born in Württemberg, Germany in 1843. He later emigrated to the United States and settled in St. Louis, Missouri, amid a growing German-American population, joining the United States Army from that city in May 1868. As a saddler in Company G of the 8th U.S. Cavalry Regiment, he was assigned to frontier duty and took part in the southwest military campaigns against the Plains Indians.

Steiner was stationed in the Arizona Territory during the Apache Wars. He was among the sixty-one cavalry troopers from the 1st and 8th Cavalry Regiment who, on October 5, 1868, pursued an Apache raiding party under Cochise following attacks on a stage coach en route to Tucson and a group of cowboys in the Sulphur Springs Valley. Leaving Fort Bowie, he followed Lt. William H. Winters and Captain Reuben F. Bernard in a fifteen-day pursuit of Cochise’s band, who had fled to the Apache stronghold in the Chiricahua Mountains (between Red Rock and Turtle Mountain), before finally catching up to them on October 20. In what was one of the major battles of the Apache campaign, famously called the “Campaign of the Rocky Mesa”, Steiner was among the thirty-two soldiers cited for “gallantry in action” and officially awarded the Medal of Honor on February 14, 1870. He was discharged in May 1873, and re-enlisted in August of the following year.

 

MOH CITATION:

Gallantry in action.

 

BURIAL LOCATION: HOLLYWOOD CEMETERY, HOT SPRINGS, ARKANSAS.

SECTION 18.

LOCATION OF MEDAL: UNKNOWN.