Background
Vifquain was born in Brussels, Belgium on 20 May 1836 to parents of French descent. His father, Jean-Baptiste Joseph Vifquain, was an engineer and served under Napoleon during the Napoleonic Wars.
Vifquain was born in Brussels, Belgium on 20 May 1836 to parents of French descent. His father, Jean-Baptiste Joseph Vifquain, was an engineer and served under Napoleon during the Napoleonic Wars.
He was awarded the Medal of Honor for capturing a Confederate flag during the Following the, Vifquain was appointed as United States consul to Colombia and was inducted into the Order of the Double Dragon for rendering aid to Chinese citizens. Vifquain received military training at the Royal Military Academy in Brussels, and served in the Belgian Army for a year. In 1857, he moved to the United States and settled in Saline County, Nebraska.
Upon the outbreak of the in 1861, Vifquain joined the Fifty-third New York Infantry so he would not have to wait for a Nebraska unit to be created.
The infantry unit was disbanded before it could become involved in the fighting. In 1862, the governor of Illinois appointed Vifquain to be the Ninety-seventh Illinois"s adjutant.
Vifquain commanded the Ninety-Seventh Illinois during the On April 9, he advanced towards and jumped onto the parapet of the Confederate fort. Surviving a barrage of Confederate gun fire without serious injury, Vifquain ordered a general charge of the fort by his unit
During the ensuing fighting, Vifquain used his sword to sever the halliard holding up the fort"s Confederate flag while the flag-bearer of the Ninety-Seventh Illinois planted the Union flag in its place.
The flag-bearer was killed by Confederate gun fire immediately after placing the flag. Vifquain was concealed by the falling Confederate flag during the attack, so he was not targeted. Near the end of the, Vifquain yet again attempted to capture Davis.
He successfully captured a train believed to be carrying Davis near Selma, Alabama.
Davis was not actually a passenger, but Vifquain was able to secure three-thousand heads of cattle and two-thousand horses from the train. He also attended the Nebraska Constitutional Convention.
Vifquain founded the Daily State Democrat in 1879 and was appointed United States consul to Columbia by President Grover Cleveland in 1886. He would later serve as the leader of multiple diplomatic posts in Panama.
During his time in Panama, Vifquain aided multiple Chinese citizens at the United States consul.
As a result of his actions, the Emperor of China inducted Vifquain into the Order of the Double Dragon. In 1891, he was selected to be the adjutant general of his home state of Nebraska. Vifquain returned to active military service during the Spanish–American War.
He served as a regmental commander following the resignation of Colonel William Jennings Bryan.
His regiment remained in Cuba at the end of the war to aid in the occupation of the island. Vifquain died in 1904 at his house in Lincoln, Nebraska.
He wrote a memoir near the end of his life, which was published nearly a century after his death.