Year: 2022

  • Application for headstone for R.L. Leggett (1929)

    Private Redding Louis Leggett of the 4th North Carolina Infantry survived being captured at Sharpsburg in September 1862 but was killed at Spotsylvania, VA in May 1864.

    65 years later, thanks to this application by Mrs. C.R. Andrews, the US War Department provided a fine new headstone for him in the Spotsylvania Confederate Cemetery.

    Roberta K “Bertie” Harris Andrews (1868-1951, obit) had chaired the committee of the Ladies Memorial Association of Spotsylvania [see a historic marker about them] which helped fund a monument to Confederate soldiers in the cemetery, erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) in 1913.

    In 1951 she was buried with her ‘boys’ in Spotsylvania Confederate Cemetery.

    _______________

    October 2022: I’ve just come upon another of Mrs Andrews’ boys. This application is for James J Paul of the 13th Georgia, another Sharpsburg veteran killed at Spotsylvania. You’ll note she wrote it the same day as the one for Sergeant Leggett.

    Here’s the back of that application form, FYI:

    _______________

    Notes

    These applications are from United States Headstone Applications for U.S. Military Veterans, 1925-1949; NARA microfilm publication M1916; Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. They are online and searchable in the FamilySearch database.

    The photograph of Leggett’s stone is by Big French, who shared it on Find-a-grave.

  • Nelson A Eller Family (c. 1890)

    Here are the Ellers in about 1890 in a photograph probably taken near their home in Hurricane Township, Fayette County, Illinois. Nelson Alexander Eller was a Private in Company K, 4th North Carolina Infantry when he was captured in the battle at Sharpsburg, MD on 17 September 1862.

    He survived a gunshot and two additional stints as a prisoner of war and sometime later went to Montgomery County, IL where he married Nancy Caroline McLain in December 1875. Their 5 children are all here.

    Thanks to great-grandson Scott Leas for sharing this picture to the FamilySearch database.

  • William J Dillon (c. 1880)

    Private William Jasper Dillon, Company H, 4th North Carolina Infantry had just turned 17 when he was captured at Sharpsburg in September 1862. He was badly wounded at Cold Harbor in May 1864 but survived the war, and he’s seen here at about age 35 in a photograph shared by Jan Dillon to the Family Search database.

  • Sgt William C Smith (c. 1863)

    William Crawford Smith was a Private in Company B of the 12 Virginia Infantry and was wounded at Crampton’s Gap on South Mountain on 14 September 1862, and captured nearby. He was Color Sergeant of the regiment by late 1863 and was wounded again, in the Wilderness, VA in 1864, but survived to be surrendered at Appomattox Court House in April 1865.

    After the War he was a builder and architect in Nashville, TN. His most visible legacy is the re-created Parthenon in Nashville. It’s quite a sight.


    [2011 photo by the author]

  • George W Cox (c. 1860)

    This well-dressed young man is George Washington Cox who was mortally wounded at Sharpsburg on 17 September 1862 while a Private in the 23rd Georgia Infantry. He died in a US Army field hospital on the Line Farm near the battlefield before the end of September.

    This photograph is courtesy of Roy Queen, from his collection.