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| The Donnelly House on the Falling Waters (Md.) battlefield. The remains of a battlefield "witness" tree stand at right. |
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| James Pettigrew suffered a mortal wound at Falling Waters. |
Falling Waters paled in comparison to the big battles. The U.S. Army captured about 500 prisoners and killed or wounded dozens of Confederates. The bluecoats lost about a dozen dead and perhaps as many as 40 wounded. Small numbers, by Civil War standards. But not small to the families who received the news.
Sergeant Monroe Livingstone’s father made the nearly 600-mile journey from Michigan to recover his son’s remains from the battlefield. “Pierced by a bayonet,” Livingstone’s local newspaper reported. [1]
Recently promoted, Livingstone fell just outside hasty entrenchments dug by Confederate troops. His hometown paper later charged that his body had been rifled and stripped of clothes, adding, “Such is the chivalry of traitors.”
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| A cropped enlargement of a wartime sketch by Edwin Forbes of fighting at Falling Waters. Forbes depicted the Donnelly House and barn, which no longer stands. (Library of Congress) |
This ugly scene likely unfolded near the Donnelly House — Franks’ home and a makeshift hospital on the Falling Waters battlefield. (He and Melissa Cooperson restored the house from 2003 to 2011.) In a contemporary sketch of the fighting, Civil War artist Edwin Forbes depicted the nearby barn already showing its age, a quiet witness to the chaos around it.
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| George T. Patten (Image courtesy Richard Howell) |
Livingstone was described as a “kind-hearted and dutiful son,” barely 21. His younger brother John, a corporal in the same company, survived the charge.
The death of Capt. David Royce of the 6th Michigan “cast a pall of gloom” over the men in his company. [2]
“He was always cool and collected, of a very even temper,” the Grand Rapids [Mich.] Eagle wrote of the officer, who was approaching 30.
On Christmas Day 1862, Quartermaster Sgt. George T. Patten wrote to his wife Lydia from a camp in Washington. “The people of Michigan know but little about war compared with the inhabitants here,” he observed, “and God grant that they never may.” [3]
Patten, only 28, closed with thoughts of family.
“Don’t forget to kiss little Georgy for me and do not let him forget his papa,” he wrote. “How I would like to see him and kiss him. Teach him to be a good boy and to fear God and obey his mother.”
Seven months later, both he and Lydia were dead. They were buried side by side in a cemetery in Kent County, Michigan. “Consigned to dust,” read the headline over his funeral notice. [4]
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| Charles Bolza (Courtesy Richard Howell) |
Major Peter Weber, a civilian clerk before the war, enlisted in the 3rd Michigan as a private.
“I have commenced at the lowest round,” he reportedly told a friend who spotted him in a private’s uniform, “and, one step at a time, I am going up, up, up.” [6]
After surviving Gettysburg, Weber — who rose rapidly through the army — wrote home of his good fortune, raising his family’s hopes.
“The gleam was but a lightning flash, portending the approaching storm,” wrote a correspondent for the Eagle, perhaps a soldier of the 6th Michigan Cavalry. “The burden was raised from the mother’s heart only to sink back, a dead weight. Twelve short hours of happy musing over the letter which brought good tidings — and then came the telegram.”
Weber was barely 22.
SOURCES
[1] Grand
Rapids (Michigan) Daily Eagle, Aug. 4, 1863
[2] Grand
Rapids (Michigan) Daily Eagle, Aug. 5, 1863
[3] Hamilton,
Richard L., Dearest Lydia: 1856-1864 Courtship & Civil War Letters from
George T. & Lydia Ann Denton-Patten, 2016, Page 31
[4] Grand Rapids (Michigan) Daily Eagle, Aug. 8, 1863
[5] Grand Rapids (Michigan) Daily Eagle, July 27, 1863
[6] Ibid





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