Rank and organization: Boatswain's Mate, U.S. Navy. Accredited to: Pennsylvania. G.O. No.: 45, 31 December 1864.
Deakin's official Medal of Honor citation reads:
As captain of a gun on board the U.S.S. Richmond during action against rebel forts and gunboats and with the ram Tennessee in Mobile Bay, 5 August 1864. Despite damage to his ship and the loss of several men on board as enemy fire raked her decks, Deakin fought his gun with skill and courage throughout a furious 2-hour battle which resulted in the surrender of the rebel ram Tennessee and in the damaging and destruction of batteries at Fort Morgan. He also participated in the actions at Forts Jackson and St. Philip.[3]
Death and burial
Medal of Honor recipient Charles Deakin died October 4, 1865, from a hemorrhage of the lungs. He died at the residence of Margaret Densmore, who was the widow of Medal of Honor recipient Chief Boatswain's Mate William Densmore. Deakin was buried October 6, 1865, at the now defunct Lafayette Cemetery in Philadelphia. In 1947, the interments of Lafayette Cemetery were removed to Evergreen Memorial Park in Bensalem, Pennsylvania.[4] Evergreen Memorial Park went out of business and became part of Rosedale Cemetery in 1960.[5]
Deakin's death notice in the October 6, 1865 Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper read:
DEYKIN - On the 4th instant, CHAS. DEYKIN, late Boatswain's Mate of the United States sloop-of-war Richmond, in the 33rd year of his age. The relatives, friends and shipmates are respectfully invited to attend his funeral, from the residence of Mrs. Margaret Densmore, No. 755 Swanson street, this (Friday) afternoon, at 4 o'clock.