Showing posts with label John Banks' Civil War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Banks' Civil War. Show all posts

Sunday, June 07, 2020

Where Albert Sidney Johnston fell at Battle of Shiloh


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Albert Sidney Johnston
In 1902, Confederate Army commander Albert Sidney Johnston’s wounding site at Shiloh was marked with a large monument that includes pyramids of 8-inch shells and an upright 30-pounder Parrott tube. A bronze plaque on the old cannon notes the time of Johnston’s mortal wounding: “2:30 p.m., April 6, 1862.”

Fifty yards away, in the ravine, a large, red-bordered historical tablet marks the spot and time -- 2:45 p.m – of Johnston’s death. A large crack snakes through the cast iron, slicing between the last two letters in the general’s first name. In raised, red letters, visitors may read details of Johnston’s death.

This video was shot months before a fallen tree (below) narrowly missed severely damaging the old marker.


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Friday, December 01, 2017

Gallery: At Fox's Gap, valor, death and remains of the day

Deep in the woods, a seldom-visited monument honors the North Carolina soldiers who fought 
at Fox's Gap  during the Battle of South Mountain (Md.) on Sept. 14, 1862.
(CLICK ON ALL IMAGES TO ENLARGE.)
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At the end of a leaf-covered trail deep in the woods on South Mountain, a North Carolina color-bearer, veins bulging in his hand, grasps a bullet-riddled battle flag as he lays wounded atop a black-granite pedestal. On this late-autumn day, a lone monument visitor, invigorated by a chill in the air, inspects the nearby remains of the stone wall. On Sept. 14, 1862, during fighting at Fox's Gap, this remote place was valiantly defended by North Carolina soldiers -- a prelude to the much-bloodier Battle of Antietam three days later. Twelve regiments from the Tar Heel State fought here on the old Daniel Wise farm and elsewhere in the vicinity, before they were pushed off the mountain by an overwhelming Union force. Afterward, 58 dead Southern boys were unceremoniously dumped into Wise's well by Union burial parties looking for a quick way out of their onerous task.  Like the long-ago soldiers, the well has vanished into the mists of history.

In apparent agony, a North Carolina soldier grips his bullet-riddled battle flag.
Who placed this replica North Carolina sunburst button in the eye of the soldier?
Veins bulge in the wounded soldier's hand.
An attacking Yankee's view on Sept. 14, 1862.
A close-up of farmer Daniel Wise's old stone wall.
Remains of the war-time stone wall defended by North Carolina troops on Sept. 14, 1862.
Sun primed to set on the old battlefield. The stone wall borders the Daniel Wise field.
(CLICK ON ALL IMAGES TO ENLARGE.)

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Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Battlefield panoramas: Antietam and Gettysburg



An iPhone and dermandar.com allow us to display pretty cool interactive panoramas of Civil War battlefields. The top panorama, of course, is iconic Bloody Lane at Antietam; the second panorama is of Crystal Spring farm, the seldom-visited site of the Union army's IX Corps hospital near the battlefield. In the first Gettysburg pano below, I walked down the slope of Barlow's Knoll to get a Rebel's-eye view of the attack that crushed the 17th Connecticut on July 1, 1863. The bottom image, taken on a cool spring morning near the crest of Culp's Hill, is from the perspective of the Union army, which defended it from July 1-3, 1863. Click on the top right of each image for an enlargement, and check out more interactive panoramas of AntietamGettysburg  and other Civil War battlefields on my blog. (Be warned: Staring intently at these four panos can make you woozy. Make them stop moving!) 


Saturday, May 24, 2014

Then & Now: Memorial Day 1903 in Collinsville, Connecticut

THEN: A crowd gathers at Collinsville's Congregational Church shortly before a nearby
 Civil War memorial was dedicated on Memorial Day, May 30, 1903.
 (Photo courtesy Clifford T. Alderman/scanned by Peg Giles)
NOW: The church has changed little since 1903.
Four decades after more than 250 area men marched off to fight the Civil War, 4,000 people gathered in the village of Collinsville, Conn., to honor 39 of those soldiers whose bodies were believed to be buried in unknown graves in the South. On a Memorial Day afternoon, May 30, 1903, the Collinsville Brass Band performed on the small town green across from the Congregational Church, a clergyman offered a prayer, politicians delivered speeches and a choir sang "Aware, Put On Thy Strength" and "America" before a parade that included many veterans formed and the crowd walked up a steep hill to the town cemetery.

A rare ribbon from the Civil War monument 
dedication on May 30, 1903 in Collinsville, Conn.
(Courtesy Clifford T. Alderman)
In a corner of the terraced Village Cemetery overlooking the factory town where bayonets, axes and picks were made for the Union army during the war, a huge American flag draped a granite Civil War memorial. A large chorus sang "The Star-Spangled Banner" after the grandsons of two of the men listed on the monument removed the flag to reveal a large bronze plaque that included the names as well as the date and site of death of the Connecticut soldiers.

Before the war, many of those men, ranging in age from their late teens to early 40s, were employed as laborers and factory workers in the Collinsville area. George A. Tatro worked as a polisher, perhaps in the town's Collins Co. factory that supplied John Brown with pikes for his ill-fated slave rebellion in 1859 at Harpers Ferry, Va. A 27-year-old private in Company E of the 2nd Connecticut Heavy Artillery, he was killed at Cold Harbor on June 1, 1864. Orrin Case, a 41-year-old 2nd lieutenant in the 31st U.S. Colored Infantry, was a lawyer from Collinsville. He was killed on Aug. 6, 1864 in Petersburg, Va.

Asa L Cook, a stone mason from Canton, was a corporal in Company E of the 16th Connecticut. When the Rebels captured Plymouth, N.C., on April 20, 1864, he was shot in the head and taken prisoner with nearly his entire regiment. Married to a woman named Julia and  father to a 9-year-old son named Walter, he died 19 days later. Another 16th Connecticut soldier, 19-year-old private Miles Shepard, died of pneumonia in a government hospital in  Knoxville, Md., on Nov. 12, 1862. His mother, who lived in nearby Simsbury, relied on Miles' support ever since her husband had died in 1854.

Asa Cook and Julia Gleason were married on Jan. 5, 1851. A corporal in the 16th Connecticut,
Asa died of a head wound at Plymouth, N.C., on May 9, 1864. (fold3.com)

Fittingly, three of the soldiers listed on the monument are grouped together. Apparently close friends, Martin Wadhams, Isaac Tuller and Henry Sexton, privates in their 20s in the 8th Connecticut, wrote and signed a thank-you note on patriotic stationery to a woman from Canton Center on Dec. 16, 1861. A member of a soldiers' aid society, Sophronia Barber had sent the three soldiers a care package that included mittens and socks.

"May the richest of Heavens blessing rest upon the ladies who so kindly remember us," read the letter from a camp in Annapolis, Md., "and we hope that this war soon be over and none of the Stars that now are emblazoned on the Flag of our Country be effaced and we be returned to our homes again and see our friends again in a free & united country, under the same old flag the heroes of the revolution fought under."

Within 10 months, each of the soldiers was dead.

Henry Sexton, Isaac Tuller and Martin Wadhams were comrades in the 8th Connecticut.

Delirious and frothing at the mouth, Sexton, a teacher, died of jaundice aboard a schooner in Annapolis Harbor on Jan. 7, 1862. "It took five of us to hold him and keep him from tearing his face with his hands," wrote his friend, Private Oliver Case of the 8th Connecticut. On May 12, 1862, a captain in the 8th Connecticut relayed the circumstances of the death of Tuller, who succumbed to typhoid fever on April 9, 1862 in New Bern, N.C., to his sister back in Connecticut.  "...You have lost a noble brother," Henry Hoyt wrote of Isaac, who worked as a clerk before he enlisted. "I have lost a man whose loss we all deeply feel. He was noble hearted and generous to a fault." A teamster in the 8th Connecticut, Wadhams was killed at the Battle of Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862.

Lawrence Gleason, a private in  the
1st Connecticut is buried in
Arlington National Cemetery.
Another soldier listed on the bronze plaque, 1st Connecticut Cavalry Private Lawrence Gleason, survived until the hostilities ended only to die of pneumonia in a Washington hospital on June 16, 1865. Before the war, Gleason was employed as a mule spinner in a textile mill in Providence, R.I., and much of his earnings helped support his widowed mother, Bridget, who immigrated to the United States from England with her son after her husband had died in Ireland in 1849. Perhaps enticed by a bounty offered in Connecticut, Gleason enlisted on Aug. 13, 1864.

Unlike his 38 other comrades on the Civil War memorial, Gleason does have a known grave. He's buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Grave No. 12502, under a weathered, pearl-white tombstone.

SOURCES: 

fold3.com, pension records for Lawrence Gleason, Asa Cook and Miles Shephard.

Hartford Courant, June 1, 1903, Page 9

1860 U.S. census

THEN: A chorus sang The Star-Spangled Banner after the flag that draped the memorial 
was removed at the 1903 Memorial Day ceremony.
  (Photo courtesy Clifford T. Alderman/scanned by Peg Giles)
NOW: The Civil War memorial in Collinsville, Conn., attracts little notice today. A bronze plaque
 lists the names of  39 Civil War soldiers from the area who died during the war.
THEN: At the end of the dedication ceremony, Taps was played. 
 (Photo courtesy Clifford T. Alderman/scanned by Peg Giles)
NOW: Collinsville Cemetery is also known as Huckleberry Hill Cemetery or Village Cemetery.

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Interactive panoramas: John Sedgwick's grave, monument

                                    Click on images for full-screen interactive panorama.
John Sedgwick
(Library of Congress collection)

Fondly called "Uncle John" by his soldiers, Union Major General John Sedgwick was wounded in the wrist, leg and shoulder at the Battle of Antietam. He recovered from those wounds at his home in Cornwall Hollow, a speck on the map in rural Connecticut, about an hour northwest of Hartford. (No cell phone service for me in Cornwall Hollow!)

Sedgwick met his demise at Spotsylvania Courthouse, Va., on May 9, 1864, famously telling soldiers that Rebels "couldn't hit an elephant at that distance" moments before a sharpshooter's bullet smashed through the 50-year-old officer's left cheek and killed him instantly. If there's a Civil War Quote Hall of Fame somewhere, that one must be in it. Posts with photos of Sedgwick's grave and memorial also appear here and here on my blog. With the 151st anniversary of Antietam coming Tuesday, I took time out for a short trip this afternoon to Cornwall Hollow to shoot the interactive panoramas above of Sedgwick's grave in Cornwall Hollow Cemetery and at the nearby memorial for the general.

John Sedgwick was buried here on May 15, 1864, six days after he was killed.
VI Corps emblem on Major General John Sedgwick's gravestone in Cornwall Hollow, Conn.
Sedgwick took command of the VI Corps just before the Battle of Chancellorsville in May 1863.
This memorial to Sedgwick, dedicated  on Memorial Day 1900, is across the road from
 the cemetery where the general is buried in Cornwall Hollow, Conn.
(CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE.)

Friday, July 19, 2013

A teenager's death: 8th Connecticut Private Francis Barber

"Through life, you will find many dangers to encounter," Robert Jones wrote in
 1859 in  Francis Barber's autographs album. Jones, from Bethlehem, Pa., was a classmate 
of Barber's  at Fort Edward Collegiate Institute in New York. 
(Litchfield Historical Society)  CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE.

The front cover of teenager Francis E. Barber's tattered autographs album is detached at the spine, but the words inside are still discernible more than 154 years after his schoolmates wrote them.

"Keep thy heart with all dilligence [sic], for out of it are the issues of life," wrote W.W. Moffet of Westfield, N.J.

"When in after days these lines you see, don't forget to think of me," noted Harvey A. Baker of Youngstown, N.Y.

Barber's autographs album from Fort Edward 
Collegiate Institute. 
(Litchfield Historical Society)
In words that proved to be eerily prophetic, N. Tucker of Lakeville, N.Y. wrote: "Walk thoughtfully on the silent, solemn shores of that vast ocean on which we will soon sail."

Another of Barber's classmates at Fort Edward Collegiate Institute -- a boarding school on the east bank of the Hudson River, 200 miles north of New York -- may have had a sense of what their country soon would face.

"Through life, you will find many dangers to encounter, many temptations to brave," Robert W. Jones of Bethlehem, Pa., wrote in pen in neat cursive on June 16, 1859, "but by firmness and divine blessing you will be enabled to overcome them all."

A little more than two years after Barber's friends wrote in his album, the young man from Litchfield, Conn.,  enlisted in the Union army as a private, believing it was his duty to help put down the Great Rebellion. Ethan and Frances Barber weren't keen on the eldest of their two sons joining the army, but they left it up to Francis, who prayed over the decision. On Sept. 25, 1861, the teenager was mustered into Company E of the 8th Connecticut in Hartford. Three weeks later, the regiment left the state bound for Annapolis, Md., where it soon was attached to the Third Brigade of Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside's Expeditionary Corps.

When Barber and the 8th Connecticut first arrived in Annapolis in early November, they were billeted on the campus of St. John's College, a preparatory school that supplied men and boys to both Civil War armies.  Barber remained in camp with his company through November and December, but in early January, he was transferred to a hospital ship although he apparently wasn't very sick. Disease was rampant in the ranks of the Union army in Annapolis, where a lack of hygiene was apparent in camps and aboard hospital ships, and some soldiers died. (Delirious and in a "stupid state," 8th Connecticut Pvt. Henry Sexton of Canton died of jaundice aboard a hospital ship in Annapolis Harbor on Jan. 7, 1862.)

Seth Plumb, a sergeant in Company E from Litchfield, was concerned when Barber, called "Frank" by his friends, left camp.

"Don't forget to think of me," classmate Harvey A. Baker wrote in
 Barber's autographs  album on June 9, 1859. (Litchfield Historical Society)
CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE.
 "I must speak about Frank B. again," Plumb wrote home from Camp Burnside in Annapolis on Jan. 5, 1862. "Last Sunday he had a chance to go with sick aboard the boat or stay with us. He said he guessed they would live better aboard the boat than he could here so he went. We think he was very foolish as he was apparently as well as any of us, and it would cause his people more anxiety by his going there ..." (1)

Barber's obituary is glued to the inside back cover
 of his autographs album. (Litchfield Historical Society)
CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE
On Jan. 7, 1862, the 8th Connecticut set sail as part of Burnside's Expedition, which aimed to close the Rebels' blockade-running ports along the North Carolina coast. Nearly every inch of space on ships was used for supplies and soldiers, who were jammed into the fetid hulls. The expedition sailed along the East Coast through a storm -- a "perfect gale," according to Plumb -- and many aboard the bobbing ships suffered from seasickness. Plumb, in fact, was so sick that for three days he "could not stir without vomiting." In a letter home, he complained about the squalid conditions aboard his ship as it was anchored in Hatteras Inlet off the Carolina coast.

"The quarters here are worse than they would be in your hog pen," he wrote to his parents on Jan. 17, 1862. "The hold is dark and the straw that was put in is used up, and here are 400 men who by great exertion can find room to ly [sic] down if they ly on their sides. It is against the rule to ly on the back as it takes up too much room." (2)

Jammed into the rocking ship with hundreds of other soldiers, it's not hard to imagine how men fell ill.  Sometime in late January, Barber suffered from a case of dropsy, or edema -- an excessive swelling of tissues caused by a buildup of  fluids. Probably also battling a fever, he was transferred to the hospital ship Swanee, where he died on Jan. 30, 1862, as he was bound for home.

"His chaplain and fellow-soldiers all unite in saying that he was a good soldier of Christ and to his country to the day of his death," an obituary glued to the back of Barber's autographs album stated. "He leaves to mourn his loss a deeply afflicted father and mother and one brother. May the Great Comforter be very near them. The Church, the Sabbath school and community 'weep also with those who weep.' "

Barber is buried in a family plot in West Cemetery in Litchfield, not far from the grave of Plumb, who was killed at the Battle of Chaffin's Farm on Sept. 29, 1864.  Near the bottom of Barber's grave are these words:

"Death has no terror for me."

(1) Plumb, Sgt. Seth, Letters written home during Civil War, Litchfield Historical Society collection.
(2) Ibid

 
Francis E. Barber died aboard a hospital ship off the coast of North Carolina 
on Jan. 30, 1862. Barber, 19 when he died, is buried in
 West Cemetery in Litchfield, Conn.
Francis Barber's name appears near the top of the Roll of Honor on the 
Civil War memorial  on the town green in Litchfield,Conn. The names of Litchfield
 men who died during the Civil War are inscribed on three sides of the monument.
(CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENLARGE.)

Monday, February 18, 2013

Antietam death: Private Albert Easterbrook, 34th New York

Private Albert Easterbrook of the 34th New York was only 19 when
 he died at Antietam. (Photo: Courtesy of Dean Nelson)
Like in most wars, the Civil War claimed a disproportionate share of young men. At the Battle of Antietam, Daniel Tarbox, a farmer's son from Brooklyn, Conn., was just 18 when he was killed near Burnside Bridge. From East Haddam, Conn., John Bingham, another farmer's son, was 17 when died in John Otto's cornfield. George Crosby, a student at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn., was 19 when he was mortally wounded on William Roulette's farm. Marvin Wait, the son of a lawyer from Norwich, Conn., was also 19 when he was mortally wounded near Harpers Ferry Road.

During a research trip to the Connecticut State Library last Friday, Dean Nelson, the Museum of Connecticut History administrator, shared with me this terrific carte de visite from his collection. Albert Easterbrook, a private in the 34th New York from Oneida, N.Y., was just 19 when he died at Antietam. His name was among those on this stunningly long list of Antietam dead published in the New York Times on Oct. 12, 1862. Just imagine the outcry today if a death list like this were published today.

Thursday, February 07, 2013

National Archives Day 1: A very painful existence

Only 19, Charles Wood lost his left arm at the Battle of Petersburg.
(Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library)

In 9 1/2 hours of research at the National Archives in Washington today, I mined pension records that will help me tell the stories of Connecticut soldiers who died or suffered battlefield wounds. This line from the pension file of a soldier who survived the amputation of part of his left arm after the Battle of Antietam really struck me: "Any little tap on the under part & end of my stump," he wrote, "pains me ten times as bad as when I was shot."  In many cases, wounded soldiers who survived were so terribly maimed that death was probably preferable.

Accounts by wounded Civil War soldiers of their suffering are often troubling to read. Photographs of wounded Civil War soldiers, such as these digitized images recently posted at the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library site, are especially haunting and difficult to view. (Warning: Some of the photos are very graphic.) Above is a photo of Charles H. Wood. a 19-year-old private in Company D of the 53rd Pennsylvania, whose left arm was amputated after the Battle of Petersburg on March 31, 1865. He survived the operation and the war, but his quality of life was adversely affected in an era well before today's era of high-quality prosthetic limbs and medical care. Civil War surgeons had little experience handling grievous wounds such as those suffered by Wood, who was treated at Harewood Hospital, one of the many Federal hospitals in Washington during the war.

I'll tell the story of the unnamed soldier mentioned above in detail in a forthcoming project. The good news: He went on to live a long and prosperous life. But it was a very painful existence.

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FACES OF THE CIVIL WAR: Stories and photos of common soldiers who served during the war.
16TH CONNECTICUT SOLDIERS: Tales of the men in the hard-luck regiment.
MORE ON ANTIETAM: Read my extensive thread on the battle and the men who fought in it

Tuesday, February 05, 2013

National Archives: Road trip to mecca for researchers

Captain James Moore of the 8th Connecticut survived Antietam but was 
badly wounded later in the Civil War. (Connecticut State Library Archives)
Nelson Bronson, a 1st lieutenant in the 8th Connecticut, 
was wounded at the Battle of Antietam.
(Connecticut State Library Archives)

It's not quite like Christmas Eve when I was a kid, but it's close. I am putting the final touches tonight on preparations for a trip to the mecca for Civil War researchers, the National Archives in Washington. While there for the next 3 1/2 days, I hope to uncover details of the stories of Connecticut soldiers such as Nelson Bronson, a first lieutenant in the 8th Connecticut from Waterbury. Bronson was wounded in the back and arm at the Battle of Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862, and later served in the Veterans Reserve Corps, a unit for disabled soldiers.

Tapping into pension files and searching other musty nooks and crannies at the Archives, I also hope to uncover more about Captain James Moore, who also served in the 8th Connecticut. From Norwich, Moore survived Antietam unscathed but was badly wounded at the Battle of Walthall Junction, near Richmond and Petersburg, on May 7, 1864. (A CDV of Moore is currently up for sale on eBay for $135. And here's another image of him on Flickr.) My aim is to stay intensely focused on researching Connecticut soldiers who fought at Antietam, but there's an outside chance I could be distracted. According to an excellent source, there's a very good Irish bar in my hotel, a short walk from the Archives. Rumor has it that it once was a popular spot for the Irish Republican Army in the '70s. A pint of Guinness versus hours of research in the Archives? Life is always filled with interesting challenges. Wish me luck!

Monday, December 24, 2012

The Soldier's Funeral: A Civil War poem

Glued to the back cover of a  tattered, old photo album of Connecticut soldiers who died during the Civil War, I found this poem, crinkled and yellowed with age, called "The Soldier's Funeral" by Amelia Cooke. I thought it would be nice to post it tonight with two photos of Connecticut soldiers found in the album and two others, a small tribute to the men who made the ultimate sacrifice so long ago.

 Charles Meigs, a private in the 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery,
was mustered out on May 21, 1864, but died of consumption less
than a month after the Civil War ended. He's buried in Hartford's

Spring Grove Cemetery. (Photo: Connecticut State Library archives)

With muffled drums and measured tread And arms reversed, they bore the dead From battle’s din and a world of pain When the thread of his life had been snapped in twain

Miles Shepard, a private in the 16th Connecticut, died of pneumonia
at Weverton Hospital, near Harpers Ferry, W.Va., on Nov. 13, 1862.
The final resting place of the soldier from Simsbury, Conn.,

 is unknown. (Photo: Connecticut State Library archives)
CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE.


His cap, sash, belt, and trusty sword,
(The best beloved of his simple hoard of relics)
Now his coffin crowned: --
They could only be part of the charnel ground.
Though his funeral notes are passing sweet,
From
him they will no rapture meet;
The martial strains may fill the air,
But not disturb the slumberer there.


LEFT: Nathan Hale, a private in the 16th Connecticut, died in Baltimore on
Oct. 12, 1862. He was from Wethersfield. RIGHT: William T. Loomis, a private 

in the 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery from Torrington, died in a railroad 
accident on Jan. 28, 1863. (Photos: Connecticut State Library archives)

Play on, play on – he sleeps too well
To hear the music’s melodious swell
Or the trampling of feet upon the ground;
He’ll not wake till the last trumpet’s sound.

When the prayer was said, and requiem played;
In the bosom of earth the warrior laid,
About the spot the soldier pressed,
Where the bones of their comrade were put to rest,

And eyes grew dim, and tongues were mute,
As they fired their thrice farewell salute,
That meed was his due and
they paid the "brave,"
And then left him alone in his soldier grave


Amasa Norton, a private in the 11th Connecticut from Stafford, died
on Jan. 3, 1863 at Fredericksburg, Va., probably of disease.
He is buried in Stafford Street Cemetery in Stafford, Conn.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

'Saloons and fast women' for old Civil War veterans

Orrin Gaylord, a private in the 16th Connecticut during the Civil War, explained
what old soldiers did with their pension money from Uncle Sam in this 1906 letter.
(Connecticut State Library archives)

You never know what surprises will turn up in the Connecticut State Library archives. Last Saturday, I found an entertaining letter from Orrin N. Gaylord to former 16th Connecticut comrade Ira Forbes. A private from Hartford, Gaylord was discharged from the Union army because of disability on March 17, 1863. In the letter dated Aug. 26, 1906, Gaylord wrote that he got married in 1865, had seven children, moved to Ohio from Hartford in 1866, lived for a brief time in the South and worked in the mercantile business before taking a job with an insurance company. And then, out of the blue, Gaylord threw his fellow Civil War veterans under the bus. "We have 6000 soldiers at the home here who for the next week or two after pension day distribute Uncle Sams money between the saloons and fast women pretty freely," he wrote. (Perhaps the old soldiers wasted the rest of that money. ) Wow. Even 106 years ago, they lived the high life off The Man!

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Captain John Thompson: An old soldier who faded away

Shown in a post-war photo, John Steven Thompson served in the 3rd Vermont.
(Photo courtesy Richard Clem)

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In the fall of 1985, longtime relic hunter Richard Clem of Hagerstown, Md, uncovered a small identification disc that belonged to a Civil War soldier named John Steven Thompson. The rare find was the start of Clem's nine-year journey to discover more about Thompson, who served in the 3rd Vermont until the end of the war. Clem and his brother, Don, have hunted for Civil War relics in Pennsylvania, Virginia and Maryland for four decades. Here's his story on Thompson:


By Richard Clem

Early on the morning of July 22, 1899, a body was discovered floating face down in Plum Creek, Rice County, Kan. A small crowd slowly gathered from nearby Bushton as the bloated, unrecognizable corpse was pulled from the muddy water. A local newspaper reported  that “the body was a horrible sight, having been in the water for a week. Upon examination, a pension voucher was found in one of the pockets which showed it to be the body of an old soldier, once a member of the 3rd Vermont Infantry -- John Thompson.” A coroner rendered a report: “Cause of death -- unknown.” The Civil War veteran was buried in the Bushton Cemetery beneath soil he had farmed for so many years.

Richard Clem told tales of his relic
 hunting exploits 
 at Connecticut Day at
 Antietam in April 2012.
To trace Thompson’s journey from Vermont to Kansas, let’s turn the clock to Oct. 11, 1985. On that beautiful fall afternoon, my brother Don and I were searching for Civil War relics with metal detectors just west of Antietam Creek in Washington County, near Funkstown, Md. The land we were searching was camped on by the Army of the Potomac following the Battle of  Gettysburg. On this line in July 1863, General George G. Meade’s blue-clad soldiers carefully watched General Robert E. Lee’s retreating Army of Northern Virginia at Williamsport. Lee nervously waited for the flooded Potomac River to recede for a safe crossing to Southern soil.

Around 6 inches deep, beside a flat limestone ledge, I dug up a brass disc about the size of a quarter. Although traces of gold lettering appeared, it was determined the strange object was not a U.S. coin. While cleaning the small medallion that evening with a standard household cleaner applied with a toothbrush, I could read “J. S. Thompson, Co. B, 3rd Reg., VT. VoL., Glover.” The front of the Civil War ID tag displayed an American eagle with raised words, “War of 1861 -- United States.” The medal contains approximately 50 percent original gold-plate. These keepsakes were sold by enterprising sutlers who competed for a soldier’s $13-a-month pay. Once purchased, the sutler would stamp the soldier’s name and regiment on the back, driving the letters into the brass, thus preserving the gold inscription as the surface or face wore away.

Who was J. S. Thompson? Did he survive the war? Where was he buried? Extensive research provided answers to these questions far more interesting than ever anticipated.

John Steven Thompson was born on Feb. 29, 1835, to John Thompson Sr. and Sarah Ann Wells near the Canadian border at Wheelock, Vt. At age 15, he had taken up residence in Glover, Vt., where he worked on a farm. The small, peaceful village remains about the same today as in the 1800s.

Vermont is known for producing good fighting men, dating to the “Green Mountain Boys” of the Revolutionary War. When clouds of civil war began to appear, that same patriotic fire was rekindled in the souls of those famed warriors from the Green Mountains; John Thompson would uphold that tradition.

Reverse and front of
 John Thompson's 

Civil War ID disc.
(Photos courtesy Richard Clem)
On May 10 1861, the 26-year-old Thompson enlisted for three years at Coventry, Vt., to serve and preserve the Union. He was described as 5 feet, 9 1/2 inches tall with blue eyes and auburn hair. Receiving the rank of  corporal, he became a member of Company B, 3rd Regiment Vermont Volunteers. The 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th Vermont regiments comprised the Vermont Brigade, attached to the 6th Corps, Army of the Potomac. Early in the war, Corporal Thompson fought in every major engagement of the Army of the Potomac without serious injury; however, in the fall of 1862, near the town of Sharpsburg, Md., he received his first “red badge of courage.”

Fought Sept. 17 1862, the Battle of Antietam (called Sharpsburg in the South) became known as the bloodiest day of the Civil War. A casualty list of more than 23,000 killed or wounded included Corporal John S. Thompson. According to official records, while under heavy fire from sharpshooters and artillery near a sunken farm lane (Bloody Lane), Thompson was struck by a musket ball just below the right shoulder blade. Luckily, the slug had lost most of its force -- otherwise death would have been the result. The wound was serious enough to have the Vermonter admitted to a field hospital near Hagerstown, 10 miles north of Sharpsburg. It was there following Antietam that the Vermont Brigade served as provost guard as recorded in one Federal soldier’s diary: “The duty on picket by no means severe, and the boys found little difficulty in procuring abundant supplies of luxuries, such as soft bread, hoecakes and other articles, from the farmers; and as the enemy was at Winchester, they were not in great alarm from Rebel raids. There was little duty, and the invalids had time for recovering their exhausted strength.” Federal archives records state three months after Antietam, John Thompson fought in the First Battle of Fredericksburg (Dec. 13, 1862), indicating a full recovery from his wound.

On July 4 1863, General Robert E. Lee’s battle-weary Army of Northern Virginia retreated from the bloodstained fields of Gettysburg. During the “exodus of grief,” on July 10, the Vermont Brigade distinguished itself in a costly encounter with enemy troops near the hamlet of Funkstown, Md. In a stretch of woods southeast of Funkstown, the Union battle line was quickly formed. After three consecutive attacks from a larger Confederate force, the Green Mountain Volunteers, including Thompson, stubbornly held their ground. Two days later, while camped in view of Funkstown, Thompson lost the ID disc that was  recovered 122 years later by the author of this article.

In the spring 1864, flowering dogwood and redbud lined the path of the 6th Corps marching into the Wilderness in Virginia. Knowing the reputation of the veteran Vermont Brigade, General John Sedgwick cried aloud, “Keep the columns closed, and put the Vermonters ahead!” Fought in May 1864, the battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Court House proved to be the bloodiest contests of the war for the boys from Vermont. “Uncle John” Sedgwick was among those killed, struck by a sharpshooter's bullet at Spotsylvania Courthouse. 

General John Sedgwick, a Connecticut
 native, admired 
the fighting skills
of his Vermont troops.

(Library of Congress collection)
During the Union slaughter at Cold Harbor on June 3, 1864,Thompson, who had been promoted to sergeant, had the middle finger of his left hand broken by a rifle ball. Thompson's injury wasn’t nearly as painful as the sorrow carried in his heart after he received  news that his older brother, Sam, had  recently been killed at Spotsylvania Court House.

The Federal 6th Corps was ordered to report for duty in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia in the autumn of 1864. The ever-growing list of casualties forced the 3rd Vermont to reorganize. On Aug. 28, Thompson was transferred to Company E and justifiably earned the rank of lieutenant. A battle-scarred Thompson was promoted to captain on March 23, 1865, in command of Company E, 3rd Regiment Vermont Infantry.

After Gettysburg, it was an uphill struggle for the Confederacy. Fighting out of desperation against superior numbers, Southern forces made several gallant stands in the Shenandoah Valley, but the end was near. No one knew this better than General Lee, who surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865. When the war ended, Captain Thompson was mustered out at Bailey’s Crossroads, near Alexandria, Va. A few days later, the veteran campaigner started the long trip north to Vermont.

At this point, my research on Captain Thompson was difficult. No obituary or grave registration for a John S. Thompson could be found in Vermont. A pension file from the National Archives, however, listed a Captain John Thompson from Vermont homesteading near Bushton, Rice County, Kan. Immediately, letters requesting any information on Thompson were mailed to a newspaper in the Bushton area. In a matter of days, I received numerous replies filled with material on the Thompson family along with my first photo of Thompson, taken from a mural hanging in a Rice County museum. Some of the greatest people on Planet Earth living in central Kansas made it possible to continue the Vermont veteran’s story.

His military career over, John lived in Cabot, Vt., where he was employed as a merchant, but it seemed his soul was still bent on planting the soil and raising a family. Being serious on “family matters,” John married a local Cabot girl, Alma Dell Stone, on Nov. 23, 1869. Two years later, on Feb. 14, 1871, Alma gave birth to a son, Johnnie Jr.

The Homestead Act of 1862 provided a man 21 years old could acquire 160 acres of land in some Midwestern states for a modest fee; he was then to occupy and cultivate the land for a period of five years. The generous offer attracted countless settlers to the open plains. Among these early pioneers making the westward journey were John Thompson and traveling companion Frank Shonyo, also from Vermont. Shonyo was a close friend of John’s and a comrade in the army. The plan once the men claimed ownership on their new property and “toughed it out” the first winter was for their wives to make the journey in the spring.

When John and Frank eventually reached Rice County, Kan., they selected adjoining homesteads just south of Bushton. John’s first winter was spent in a hole in the ground appropriately called a dugout, the entrance of which is still visible today. Land records of the Receiver’s Office in Larned, Kan., reveal John S. Thompson paid $8 and received a deed to his homestead. Not a bad price for 160 acres of fertile farm land.
According to old Rice County documents, “Alma Thompson taught school in her sod home until a frame school house was erected in 1880.” During the early days as the first teacher in the “Eldorado District,” Alma also had her hands full raising three children -- Johnnie; Olivia, born 1873, and Pearl in 1877.

On Oct. 7, 1994, nine years after discovering the Thompson ID tag, I received a letter from a Marie Theilken of Black Diamond, Wash. Marie’s great-grandfather was Captain John Steven Thompson; her grandmother was Thompson’s youngest daughter, Pearl Thompson Barner. Theilken's genealogy research revealed her great-grandfather had homesteaded in Kansas. She had sent a letter to Bushton requesting information on the Thompson family. One of the good citizens of the little prairie town mailed her a copy of an article published in the Bushton Centennial based on Thompson’s ID tag that I had found in 1985. After several phone calls and letters, Marie came to Maryland and shared stories handed down through the family with this ever-grateful writer. This new material, including the second post-war photo of Thompson, made it possible for the Vermont veteran’s legacy to be completed.

Like many patriotic Civil War veterans, John refused to accept charity or a government pension. He would bitterly explain to Alma, “I didn’t fight the war for money; I fought it to keep the country together.” When John finally applied for his pension after Alma’s persistence in 1884, he would take his monthly check, slam it on the kitchen table in front of his wife and say, “Woman, there is your damn blood money!”

Relic hunter Richard Clem found Vermont soldier John Thompson's Civil War ID disc at 
this site near  Funkstown, Md., in 1985. The U.S. flag, next to a photo of Thompson,  marks 
the spot of his discovery.  (Photo courtesy Richard Clem)

In a correspondence to his wife’s brother living in Vermont, Thompson wrote about a harsh winter on the plains when the family had absolutely nothing to eat at Christmas. As he returned from the well with a bucket of water early in the morning before the holiday, he spotted a large Canadian goose beside the sod house. There wasn’t a mark on the apparently lost, exhausted bird. It doesn’t take long to guess what the Thompsons gratefully prepared for Christmas that year.

Suffering from wounds received during the war, Thompson turned bitter. The once-proud army captain and his wife slowly drifted apart. John would spend hours wandering aimlessly across the vast Kansas plains.

“Was it suicide?” This question appeared in the Bushton newspaper after Thompson’s body was found in Plum Creek. Edwin Habiger of Bushton wrote me, “It was my father who helped recover the body of Mr. Thompson. There was no determination on what caused the drowning.” The 90-year-old Habiger explained how this story was told to him by his father, who came to Rice County in 1880. This would have put Edwin’s father around 19 years old when Thompson’s body was discovered.

In earlier days on the western plains, farmers would help their neighbors at harvest time; long before the age of modern agricultural machinery, crops had to be harvested by hand. Marie related how her great-grandfather Thompson and several neighbors had finished harvesting one of the farms, and while walking to the next property, John said he would “cut across the fields” and meet them at the next job site. Unfortunately, he never showed. Because of the July heat, some believe the aging farmer may have tried to get a drink from Plum Creek but suffered a stroke or heart attack. Cause of the mysterious death was never determined. One thing was certain: The war was finally over for Captain Thompson.

Richard Clem has a jar
of dirt from 
John Thompson's 
Kansas grave on his bookshelf at home.
(Photo courtesy Richard Clem)
A local newspaper carried the following:
The death of Mr. Thompson has caused sadness over this community. Mr. Thompson was known and loved among his acquaintances as a  faithful friend, and a kind and pleasant associate. Though of a retiring nature, he was a well read man. There were three brothers in the Thompson family, and not one of them died a natural death. One was killed by a falling tree, and another was killed in the Battle of the  Wilderness, and the last one in the way known. Mr. Thompson was 65-years-old. His wife and three children are residents of this place.
Alma placed a beautiful black, granite tombstone, the largest in Bushton Cemetery, on her husband’s grave. Olivia Thompson married George Jefferies and moved “somewhere” in southern Kansas; Pearl (Marie Theilken’s grandmother) married Ira C. Barner and relocated to Oregon Territory in the Northwest. With her daughters and husband gone, Alma and Johnnie moved into a new two-story home in Bushton. Johnnie Thompson Jr. never married and took care of his mother until her passing in 1919.

Sitting on my bookshelf next to Civil War volumes rests a small jar labeled “Soil from grave of Capt. John S. Thompson, 3rd Vermont Regt. -- Buried: Bushton, Kansas.” This sacred ground was taken from  Thompson’s grave years ago by Marie Theilken, who generously shared a handful with me. When I examined this black dirt from the Kansas plains and held Thompson’s personal ID disc, words of General Douglas MacArthur came to mind:

“Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.”

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