Showing posts with label 2nd Vermont. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2nd Vermont. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

A storyteller returns to site of his remarkable Antietam find

Richard Clem at the O.J. Smith farm, site of a U.S. Army hospital.
Cropped enlargement of Alexander Gardner image of the O.J. Smith farm hospital in fall 1862.
(Library of Congress
)

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On a beautiful fall day in 1991, my friend Richard Clem—the "Babe Ruth of Storytellers"—unearthed a brass identification disc on the O.J. Smith farm, a U.S. Army hospital site in the aftermath of the Battle of Antietam. The rare find turned into an obsession for Clem, a longtime Washington County (Md.) resident who has unearthed three other soldier ID discs
Corporal William Secor,
2nd Vermont

The Smith farm disc belonged to 2nd Vermont Corporal William Secor, a color bearer and the only soldier in his regiment to die at Antietam. Dog tags weren't carried by Civil War soldiers; instead, some soldiers bought discs from sutlers on which they had their names and units stamped. No soldier wanted to be forgotten if he fell in battle or from disease. Letters, diaries, photographs and "tags" often aided burial crews in the identification of soldier remains. 

For his 2006 Washington Times story on Secor, Clem—a retired woodworker—dived into National Archives records and tracked down descendants. He discovered this condolence note sent from a 2nd Vermont officer to Secor's stepfather:

Camp near Hagerstown, Md
Sept. 28th 1862

Mr. Ketcham 
Dear Sir:

It becomes my painful duty to inform you of the death of Corporal William Secor, Co. A. Vt. Vols. He was wounded in the battle of Antietam on the 17th and died on the 18th day of September. He was buried on the Smith farm near Sharpsburg. At the time he was wounded he was carrying the Colors of his Regt. Which position he had occupied for some time.

Morning at O.J. Smith farm, site of U.S. Army hospital.
He had many friends in his Regt. I saw the Chaplain that was with him in his last hours, and he said that it might be of consolation to his friends to know that he lived with a hope in Christ and was resigned to his fate. As a soldier, there was none better. He was always ready and willing. He had some personal property by him at the time of his death, a Testament, money and a diary, besides the things he had in his knapsack. They are at your disposal.

Most Respt. E.O. Cole, 2nd Lieut.

In October 2021, Clem, John Davidson (JWD Relic Recovery on Facebook) and I returned to the site of this remarkable disc discovery. Steps from where we stood in the farm field, Alexander Gardner set up his bulky camera in fall 1862 for an image of the Smith farm hospital. When sunlight hit this field just right, Clem told me about relic hunts here, he spotted glass glittering in the field—the remains of medicine bottles from the long-ago hospital.

The front of the brass disc includes William Secor's name.
 The reverse of the ID disc.
                                2018 video: Richard Clem talks about O.J. Smith farm.

 Have something to add (or correct) in this post? E-mail me here.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Antietam: He aimed to 'save this land from misery and woe'

Corporal William Secor of the 2nd Vermont was mortally wounded at the 
Battle of Antietam. Buried in Clifton Park Village Cemetery in Halfmoon, N.Y., 
he died on Sept. 18, 1862.  The death date on the marker is incorrect. 
(Photo: David Whitaker)

William Secor and his identification disc.
(Photos courtesy Richard Clem)
Twenty-two years ago, longtime relic hunter Richard Clem of Hagerstown, Md., unearthed a small, brass identification disc about the thickness of a quarter in the shadow of a huge tree just north of Antietam battlefield. The rare Civil War relic turned into an obsession for Clem, who spent years researching the story of its original owner, Corporal William Secor of the 2nd Vermont. Mortally wounded near Bloody Lane, Secor died a day after the battle, on Sept. 18, 1862. He was the only member of his regiment to die at Antietam. Ten days after 21-year-old William's death, Lieutenant E.O. Cole of the 2nd Vermont broke the awful news to William's stepfather back in New York:
Dear Sir
It becomes my painful duty to inform you of the death of Corporal William Secor, Co. A. Vt. Vols. He was wounded in the battle of Antietam on the 17th and died on the 18th day of September. He was buried on the Smith farm near Sharpsburg. At the time he was wounded he was carrying the Colors of his Regt. Which position he had occupied for some time. He had many friends in his Regt. I saw the Chaplain that was with him in his last hours, and he said that it might be of consolation to his friends to know that he lived with a hope in Christ and was resigned to his fate. As a soldier, there was none better. He was always ready and willing. He had some personal property by him at the time of his death, a Testament, money and a diary, besides the things he had in his knapsack. They are at your disposal.
Secor's remains were returned to New York, where today he lies buried in Clifton Park Village Cemetery in rural Halfmoon, N.Y., about 40 miles west of Bennington, Vt. William, an apprentice to a carriage maker according to the 1860 U.S. census, had enlisted there on May 7, 1861. "I left my home and friends to battle with the foe," the words on his gravestone read, "to save this land from misery and woe." My thanks to friend of the blog Dave Whitaker, who helped complete this story for me by sharing the image above of Secor's final resting place.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Faces of the Civil War: Corporal William Secor

Corporal William Heath Secor was the only soldier in the 2nd Vermont
killed at Antietam. 
(Photo courtesy of Richard Clem)

During my terrific visit to Antietam three weeks ago, Richard Clem shared relic hunting tales with a group of Connecticut Civil War roundtable members and blogger John Rogers outside the Visitors' Center.

Like a charismatic Southern preacher ministering to his flock, the longtime Hagerstown, Md. resident kept us entranced.

Front and reverse (below)
of brass soldier identification

 tag of Corporal William Secor.
In four decades of relic hunting in Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia, Clem and his brother have dug 30,000 bullets -- or approximately 29,999 more than I have -- and enough other Civil War treasure to fill a small museum or two. (Clem sold 15,000 of those bullets for a buck apiece to a New York man, who may have had a lot of explaining to do to his wife.)

Clem's greatest find is this thin silver identification badge, a little bigger than a quarter, that belonged to Consider Heath Willett. A sergeant in the 44th New York, Willett helped rescue Confederate soldiers caught in a crossfire near Little Round Top during the Battle of Gettysburg. Clem uncovered the once-in-a-lifetime find while relic hunting near Lappans Crossroads, several miles from the Antietam battlefield, the day after Thanksgiving 1986.

Many of Clem's finds have come at Antietam or the immediate vicinity, before much of the battlefield became National Park Service property. He once eyeballed a Union eagle button and unearthed 90 bullets in "The Cornfield" and found shoulder scales near the Philip Pry Farm, which was General George McClellan's headquarters. ("I heard the officers took them off because they made good targets for sharpshooters," Clem told me.)  Most of the bigger items, Clem said, were dug up from the battlefield in the 1920s.

Part historian,  part detective and part bulldog, Clem documents many of his finds and writes about some of them for newspapers, magazines or whatever publication is interested in a really good Civil War story.

And Clem, a 72-year-old retired woodworker, certainly knows how to craft a good tale. (Check out his Antietam stories on a "hospital of horrors" and farmer William Roulette.)

Five years after the Willett discovery, Clem found another identification badge while relic hunting -- this one with a direct connection to the Battle of Antietam. The brass tag, about the size and thickness of a quarter, belonged to a 21-year-old soldier from New York who served in the 2nd Vermont. That young soldier, William Heath Secor,  became a research project-turned-obsession for Clem for nearly a year.

In an excellent article he wrote for the Washington Times in 2006, Clem recounted the day of discovery:
"On a beautiful autumn afternoon -- Oct. 18, 1991-- my brother Don and I were pushing our metal detectors over a cedar-covered ridge just north of the Antietam Battlefield. In the shadow of a huge tree, the detector sounded the first good signal of the day. Digging to a depth of 5 inches, I removed a small round piece of brass about the size of a quarter. Rubbing off some of the dirt, I saw a hole on the edge of the token.
Richard Clem
"After the new find soaked all night in a strong solution of household cleaner to remove some of the corrosion, faint gold letters slowly came into focus: “Corp. Wm Secor / Halfmoon, N.Y. / Co. A / 2nd Reg. / Vt. Vol.” The reverse bore an eagle emblem with the legend: “War of 1861 / United States.
"During the Civil War years, before official Army dog tags, these patriotic keepsakes were sold to soldiers by enterprising sutlers. The sutler, using a small hammer and a series of lettered dies, would stamp the soldier’s name, regiment, hometown, etc., into the gold-plated brass disc. Normally paying about 25 cents per pair, the soldier would retain one tag and send the other home to family or a loved one. As any veteran relic hunter will confirm, when it comes to metal-detecting for Civil War artifacts, anything personally ID’d is the ultimate discovery."
Secor was mortally wounded during the Second Corps' attack near Bloody Lane and transported about two miles north of the battlefield, to the O.J. Smith farm. Barns and houses on many farms in the area were used as field hospitals during and after the battle. According to a letter Clem discovered, Secor died the day after the battle and was buried on Smith's property, near the barn.

"It becomes my painful duty to inform you of the death of Corporal William Secor, Co. A. Vt. Vols," Lieutenant E.O. Cole wrote to Secor's stepfather in a letter dated Sept. 28, 1862. "He was wounded in the battle of Antietam on the 17th and died on the 18th day of September. He was buried on the Smith farm near Sharpsburg. At the time he was wounded he was carrying the Colors of his Regt. Which position he had occupied for some time. He had many friends in his Regt. I saw the Chaplain that was with him in his last hours, and he said that it might be of consolation to his friends to know that he lived with a hope in Christ and was resigned to his fate.

"As a soldier, there was none better."

Sometime after the battle, Secor's body was disinterred and shipped back to New York, where his remains were laid to rest in Baptist Church Cemetery in Halfmoon. Nearly 130 years later, a relic hunter discovered his brass ID near the site of what once was an old barn and amazingly pieced together his tale.

TOP: O.J. Smith barn in photo taken by famed Civil War photographer Alexander Gardner after
the Battle of Antietam. William Secor died in or near the barn. BELOW: Union surgeon
Anson Hurd (standing) tends to Confederate wounded on the Smith farm.
(Photos: Library of Congress collection.)