Sunday, June 05, 2011

Faces of the Civil War: Justus Wellington

Justus Collins Wellington, a private in the 15th Massachusetts
 Infantry, was killed  at Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862. This is
a 1/9-plate  ruby ambrotype in my Civil War collection.

Like many men his age, 23-year-old Justus Collins Wellington faced an agonizing decision in 1861:

Should he continue to work for his family, which depended on his labor as a shoemaker?

Or should he go fight for his country, which was in the grips of the Civil War?

A haunting view of Wellington's
ruby ambrotype image.

He chose to serve the Union, and it cost him his life.

From West Brookfield, Mass., a small town about 80 miles west of  Boston, Wellington came from a large family. In 1860, his parents, Apollos, 48, and Charlotte, 44, had five other children: Nancy, 24;  John, 22; Marsha, 17; Julia, 15; and Charles, 12. Nancy and her husband, Oliver Woodbridge, also lived in the Wellington household with their son, Theo, and an unnamed 3 1/2-month-old girl. (1) Although certainly of age to serve, John did not join his brother in the Union army, perhaps because of poor health.

One can imagine the strain put on the family when Justus decided to travel to Worcester, about 20 miles east of  West Brookfield, to join the 15th Massachusetts Infantry on July 12, 1861. The Wellingtons were not well off, and Justus' father, who made about $200 a year as a shoemaker, was not in good health during the Civil War.

"In 1862, I remember Apollos Wellington as a weak, nervous man with constant pain in the side and back and trouble with his kidneys," Apollos' longtime physician, George Forbes, wrote after the war. "From above causes, he was unable at that time to perform manual labor and was supported by his son, Justus C., prior to and during the war.


After being routed by the Rebels at Ball's Bluff near Leesburg, Va., on Oct. 21, 1861, Wellington and
 other Union soldiers swam across the Potomac River to Harrison's Island. Some drowned.

"I have seen and known, personally and professionally, Apollos Wellington, and have prescribed for the above troubles several times each year since 1862 and know he has been unable each year since 1862 to perform manual labor sufficiently to maintain himself and has been obliged to subsist upon charity." (2)
Inside this battered thermoplastic case for the
Wellington photo, someone -- a relative, perhaps? --
wrote Justus' name and place of death.

Nearly 100 men from West Brookfield served the Union during the Civil War. (3) They included 23 men who listed their occupation as shoemaker, carpenters, laborers, farmers, teamsters, a clerk, a teacher and even a minister. Sharply dressed for a photo (above) probably taken shortly before or shortly after the war began, Justus undoubtedly knew little of the rigors army life before he enlisted. And like most Civil War soldiers, he probably never had traveled far from his hometown.

The private in Co. F. would soon know all about the horrors of the Civil War.

Three months after being mustered into service, the 15th Massachusetts fought at Ball's Bluff, near Leesburg, Va., about 35 miles upriver from Washington. The Union army suffered about 1,000 casualties during the battle   the Rebels won decisively along the bluffs of the Potomac River. Wellington survived unscathed, but not without consequences for his family. According to his sister, Nancy, Justus "had some money ready to send before the battle but lost everything (as he) swam the Potomac to save his life." (4)

Wellington's casualty sheet offers no
clue where he might be buried.

The 15th Massachusetts fought in all the major battles in the Eastern theater during the war, including the 1862 Peninsula Campaign at the gates of Richmond. But it was in a woodlot on the outskirts of a small farming town in western Maryland that the boys from Massachusetts suffered more than any other regiment on both sides during the Civil War.

"In less time than it takes to tell it, the ground was strewn with the bodies of the dead and wounded," Private Roland Bowen of the 15th Massachusetts wrote of the fighting in the West Woods at Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862.  "In a moment all was confusion, it was every man for himself. We all run like a flock of sheep. The rebs ... mowed us down."

In about 20 minutes during the bloodiest day in American history, 70 men in 15th Massashusetts were killed and 255 were wounded. Among the dead was a shoemaker from Massachusetts named Justus Collins Wellington. He was 24 years, 8 months and 4 days old.

Ever since I purchased the ambrotype of Wellington from a New Hampshire antiques dealer in 2004, I've wondered about his final resting place. After the battle, many of the 15th Massachusetts dead were buried in a trench on the west side of the Mary Locher cabin, near where they fell in the West Woods. After the war, most of the Union dead were disinterred and re-buried in hometown cemeteries or in the national cemetery in Sharpsburg. I haven't found a marked grave for Wellington, who most likely is buried under a gravestone marked "Unknown" in the national cemetery. 

Wellington's name appears on this war memorial in his hometown of
West Brookfield, Mass.,  four spots above  his brother-in-law,
Oliver Woodbridge. Oliver was a prisoner of war.
The awful effects of the Civil War hit home for the Wellington family again in 1864 when Justus' brother-in-law, Oliver Woodbridge, became a prisoner of war. A private in the 27th Massachusetts Infantry, he joined the army after Justus' death and was captured at Southwest Creek, N.C.. He was later exchanged.

Tragedy struck the Wellington family again on July 11, 1866, when Justus' brother, John, died of "consumption" at age 24. After John's death, Justus' mother became ill the next day and was "bed-ridden 10 years and sick until her death in 1876." (5) Seventeen years later, Justus' father died in Monson, Mass., at age 81. Charlotte and Apollos Wellington are buried in West Brookfield at Pine Grove Cemetery, a rolling plot of land dotted with pines a short distance from the village green.

Justus Wellington's name appears on a monument to war veterans of West Brookfield, four spots above brother-in-law Oliver Woodbridge. Wellington's name is also on the bottom left corner of a large plaque on the beautiful 15th Massachusetts monument at Antietam -- the most impressive monument on the field. To honor Wellington, I took the ambrotype of him from my collection of Civil War photos back to Antietam five years ago, placed it next to his name on the monument and took the picture below.

(1) 1860 U.S. Census
(2) Physician's affidavit in pension applicaiton, April 1887, National Archives
(3) American Civil War Research Database
(4) Pension affidavit, National Archives
(5) General affidavit in pension application, Feb. 25, 1887, National Archives


Wellington's name is listed on the bottom left corner of the 15th Massachusetts
monument at Antietam. I took the ambrotype of Wellington from my collection there
five years ago and photographed it next to his name on the monument.





1 comment:

  1. Excellent narrative, John. I really enjoyed reading it! The pension application background regarding his father is especially interesting. Thanks! for the post.

    ReplyDelete