Showing posts with label Private Henry Aldrich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Private Henry Aldrich. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Letter from Antietam: 'He fought and fell like a brave man'

Two-page letter to the wife of 16th Connecticut private Henry Aldrich breaking the news
of her husband's death. This letter was spliced together using picmonkey.com.

The letter to Private Henry Aldrich's wife in Bristol, Conn., begins like thousands of others sent home during the Civil War: "It becomes my painful duty to inform you ... " Dated Sept. 21, 1862, 16th Connecticut Lieutenant Julian Pomeroy's two-page note informed Sarah Aldrich of the death of her husband at the Battle of Antietam four days earlier. So many of these poignant letters are waiting to be uncovered in the National Archives or on fold3.com, an excellent premium site. The full letter to Mrs. Aldrich is presented on the blog for the first time. Pomeroy, also from Bristol, survived the Civil War.

X X X

16th Connecticut Private Henry Aldrich's marker
at Antietam National Cemetery.
In camp near battlefield, 
Sharpsburgh, Maryland
Sept. 21, 1862

Mrs. Aldrich:

Dear Madam

It becomes my painful duty to inform you that in the battle 17th Sept when our noble 16th regt. was literally cut to pieces, your husband fell at his post in the fight and was found dead where he fell. He was buried with the rest of those who fell in the battle of that day of our regt. A board with his name cut in it marks the spot, which is on the top of a grassy hill, and his mortal remains will rest as quietly there as in New England.

He was a good soldier and all in the Company liked him. He was always ready to do his duty and in battle he fought & fell like a brave man. None could do more. Many others did the same. I sympathise with you in your severe affliction, as I should wish others to do by my family had I fallen as I might.

Very respectfully,
Julian Pomeroy 1st Lieutenant
Commanding Co. K 16th Regt.Conn. Vol.

P.S. Enclosed is a letter which I received for him last night.


X X X

For more on Aldrich and other Connecticut soldiers who fought at the Battle of Antietam, purchase my book, "Connecticut Yankees at Antietam."

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Antietam: Remembering the fallen

Henry Aldrich, a private in the 16th Connecticut, is buried in 
Antietam National Cemetery.
Henry Aldrich, a 41-year-old blacksmith from Bristol, Conn., was killed at the Battle of Antietam 151 years ago today. He left behind a wife and four children. Aldrich, killed in John Otto's cornfield, is buried in the Connecticut section of Antietam National Cemetery. More than 200 men and boys from the state were killed or died from effects of wounds suffered at Antietam. Here's my downloadable Excel spreadsheet of Connecticut Antietam deaths. It includes regiment, hometown, place of burial, family information and more.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Antietam death: 16th Connecticut Corporal Henry Evans

Henry Evans of Avon, Conn., was killed at the Battle of Antietam. 
This is a previously unpublished photo of the 21-year-old soldier.  
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He's buried under a weather-worn, slate-gray tombstone, No. 1,084, just to the left of Private Henry Aldrich of Bristol, on the peaceful, beautiful grounds of Antietam National Cemetery in Sharpsburg, Md. Like many soldiers in the 16th Connecticut, 21-year-old Henry D. Evans was killed in the infamous 40-acre cornfield during the Battle of Antietam on the afternoon of Sept. 17, 1862. For nearly 150 years, the young corporal has largely been anonymous, just another name on a long list of Connecticut dead from the bloodiest day in American history.

Corporal Henry Evans' gravestone in 
Antietam National Cemetery.
But thanks to a lifelong resident of Avon, Conn., a previously unpublished image of the soldier who marched off to war in the summer of 1862 is now available. And thanks to information gleaned from widow's pension records, the 1860 census and other sources, we can shine a light on Evans' short life.

A laborer from Avon, a small farming community near the Farmington River, Henry married 23-year-old Mary Ann Richards of nearby Wethersfield on Aug. 21, 1861, about four months after the first shots of the Civil War were fired at Fort Sumter. Their union produced a daughter, Florence, on Jan. 31, 1862. As talk of war swirled in New England that summer, Henry pondered an agonizing question: Should he  fight to help save the Union or remain with his family?

Evans chose war, joining at least a dozen other men from his town in the 16th Connecticut. No doubt the offer of a $50 bounty from Avon, equivalent to 40 times the average man's daily wage, was a huge enticement.

Mustering into Company I of the the 16th Connecticut as a corporal on Aug. 24, 1862,  Evans was one of about 100 men from Avon to join the cause. At least 20 men from the town died during the Civil War, including Edgar Woodford, a 38-year-old quartermaster sergeant in the 7th ConnecticutWallace Woodford, a 22-year-old private in the 16th Connecticut; and brothers James and John Willard. It was a horrible toll on a community whose population was slightly more than 1,000 people in 1860.

A memorial marker for Henry Evans in 
West Avon (Conn.) Cemetery is an effigy grave. Henry is 
actually buried at the national cemetery
 in Sharpsburg, Md.
For Evans and the men in his regiment, late summer 1862 was a blur.

After organizing and basic training in a camp near Hartford, the 16th Connecticut received a rousing send-off in the city on Aug. 29 on its way to New York, the first leg of a journey that would take them to the front lines. For Henry and his comrades, the trip down the Connecticut River aboard the steamers City of Hartford and George C Collins must have been thrilling.

"...at every village and hamlet the people line the banks, waving their flags and cheering us on the voyage," Private William Relyea of Company D noted. "The boys forgot their disciplinary troubles in flirting with the girls and answering the greetings of grey-haired sires on the banks, but darkness put the end to this sport, and preparations began to pass the night in quiet sleep. There were a few youngsters who kept up a wild roistering far into the night." (1)

On Aug. 30, the regiment arrived in New York and then traveled by steamer to Elizabeth, N.J. Henry and his comrades took a circuitous route to Washington via train, traveling through Reading, Harrisburg and York in Pennsylvania and to Baltimore before finally arriving in the capital. "We were a very dirty lot when we arrived in Washington, " Relyea noted. (2)

Henry Evans' commander, Company I captain 
John Drake of Hartford, was also killed at 
Antietam. Three other 16th Connecticut captains
 were killed or mortally wounded at Antietam. 
(Connecticut State Library archives)
During a short stay in Washington, perhaps Henry visited the White House grounds or the still-under-construction Washington Monument and Capitol building, as many soldiers in the regiment did. On Sept. 7, the 16th Connecticut was again on the move, leaving Fort Ward outside Washington and joining the Army of the Potomac that was marching into Maryland to stop Robert E. Lee.

On the morning of Sept. 17,  Evans and the 16th Connecticut were positioned in a farm field near Antietam Creek, a couple miles from the village of Sharpsburg. Elements of  the Ninth Corps finally fought their way across a small stone-arch bridge, later famously called Burnside Bridge, and the 16th Connecticut crossed the creek upstream by early afternoon.

"We were marched into a piece of woods and formed a line of battle," Private Wells Bingham of Company H wrote to his father after the battle. "From there we were marched up onto a high hill. All this time the battle was going on only a short distance from us. We had a chance to witness some of the most splendid firing with artillery. We could see the shells and shot strike around the rebbel battery. It took but a short time for our battery to silence theirs." (3)

In a letter published in the Hartford Courant on 
Sept. 30, 1862,16th Connecticut adjutant 
John Burnham noted the location of the 
regiment's dead at Antietam. Henry Evans
was buried with other soldiers from Company I.

As the 16th Connecticut marched into a field of tall corn late that Wednesday afternoon, the untested regiment  was smashed on two sides by veterans of A.P. Hill's division. Company I suffered terribly, with Captain John Drake of Hartford and two sergeants killed. Privates Wallace Woodford, Frank Alford, Charles Parker, Robert Hawley and Newton Evans -- all from Avon -- were wounded. Corporal Henry D. Evans, the father of an 8 1/2-month-old daughter,  was killed.

Because of the remarkable efforts of regiment adjutant John Burnham, an unsung hero of Antietam, the dead of the 16th Connecticut were buried in marked graves on the Otto farm two days after the battle, each soldier's name carved in a wooden headboard. Evans was buried with his comrades from Company I: privates Stephen Twiss, Augustus Truesdell, Stephen Himes, James Grugan and sergeants Orville Campbell and Thomas McCarty. "The collection of the bodies was conducted under my own personal supervision," Burnham noted, "and after the men had reported them all picked up I examined the whole field myself, so that I am confident none were left on the ground." (4)

More than 400 miles away in Avon, Mary Ann Evans soon received word of her husband's death. Although Henry was buried in a well-marked grave, she did not or could not arrange for the return of his remains to Avon,  perhaps because she did not have the financial means. In the years after the battle, Henry's body was disinterred from the field and re-buried in the national cemetery in Sharpsburg.

Six days after Mary Ann Evans' death, her daughter wrote this note to the Board of Pensions. 
Florence Post's mother never remarried after her father was killed at the 
Battle of Antietam 57 years earlier.

On Christmas Eve 1863, more than a year after her husband was killed, Mary Ann applied for a widow's pension from the government. Her application approved, she soon received $8 a month (and $2 a month for Florence) from Uncle Sam. Mary Ann received that widow's pension until Dec. 6, 1919, when she died at 2:30 p.m. in Colorado Springs, Colo. The cause of death was apoplexy and old age. She was 81. (5)

She had never remarried.

(1) "16th Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, Sergeant William H. Relyea," John Michael Priest Editor-in-Chief, Burd Street Press, 2002, Page 8.
(2) Ibid, Page 9.
(3) 16th Connecticut private Wells Bingham letter to his father, Elisha, Sept. 20, 1862, Antietam National Battlefield research library
(4) Hartford Courant, Sept. 30, 1862, Page 7
(5) Widow's pension documents, Henry Evans and Mary Ann Evans

In an undated photo, Henry Evans' wife, Mary Ann, holds
 their only child, Florence.

Thursday, August 02, 2012

Antietam: Old 16th Connecticut monument photo

Damaged photograph, probably taken in 1894,  of the 16th Connecticut monument at Antietam. 
The monument was dedicated on Oct. 11, 1894.  (Connecticut State Library Civil War collection)
Close-up of William Tipton's name on the 
photograph. The reverse of the photo includes 
the address of Tipton's Gettysburg studio.
(Connecticut State Library)
CLICK IMAGE TO ENLARGE.

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Antietam rare photo expert Stephen Recker undoubtedly could tell us more about this damaged oversized photograph of  the 16th Connecticut monument taken by William Tipton. This image, torn at the top, was probably shot by Tipton in October 1894, when 16th Connecticut veterans and their families returned to the battlefield for the monument dedication. (See Page 10 of the "Souvenir of Excursion to Antietam," a recap published in December 1894 of the Connecticut veterans' return to the battlefield.) Tipton was well known for his battlefield photographs of Gettysburg, where he had a studio, but he also took shots at Antietam, only 45 miles south of our most famous Civil War site.

Discovered this morning in a box in the George Whitney Collection at the Connecticut State Library, this photograph is interesting because it shows the field probably much as it looked on Sept. 17, 1862. There's more vegetation today in this scene, which was the farm of John Otto during the battle. I wonder if that tree in the left background is the one that 16th Connecticut adjutant John Burnham described as the "large tree standing alone" where many of the dead of his regiment -- including privates John Bingham and Henry Barnett  and Lieutenant William Horton -- were temporarily buried before their remains were returned to Connecticut. (8th Connecticut private Oliver Case, subject of John Rogers' excellent blog,  also was buried with the dead of the 16th Connecticut.) It certainly merits more research ... or a blog reader setting me straight.

Recker, by the way, has a book coming out soon on rare views of the Antietam battlefield. Don't miss it. It will be spectacular.

Recker responds in comments section: "Thanks for the plug! This is really exciting. I have a number of Tipton 8x10s of Antietam monuments but have not seen this one. They are great for the ability to see clearly in the distance. What is notable here is a section of the Connecticut Park fence. There are remnants of what I think is the original fence, but this would help to confirm that. In my book I have a few pages from Tipton's hand-written catalog of Antietam views and this is in it. It does not have a date, but shows that he offered this view in 8x10, 11x14, and 14x17. Very cool. Thanks for putting this up."

Close-up of the monument photo showing detail in the background. BELOW: A shot of the 
monument taken from near  photogapher William Tipton's location more than 100 years ago.
(Connecticut State Library Civil War collection)

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