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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

Sarah Klinger – Civil War Widow Bludgeoned to Death in 1906 (Part 6)

| October 19, 2016

Part 6 of this murder story will be told in today’s blog post.  It begins with the incarceration of Henry Fisher in Eastern Penitentiary in Philadelphia following his sentencing and ends with the years after his release – with a few surprising twists in-between.  The photo above of Eastern Penitentiary was taken in March 2009.  […]

Some Pine Grove Area Veterans – Surnames Beginning with “N”

| October 17, 2016

George Nagle, born about 1824, enrolled in the 96th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company B, as a Private at Pottsville, on 23 September 1861.  He died at Washington, D.C., on 9 January 1864 of typho-malarial fever.  His widow, Lucinda [Martz] Nagle applied for pension benefits based on his service, which she received.  Fold3 has posted 27 pages […]

Nathaniel Lehman of Lykens – A Tribute from His Church

| October 14, 2016

In the Memorial Book of the Otterbein Church of the United Brethren of Christ, Lykens Borough, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, the following tribute is recorded: Brother Nathaniel Charles Lehman was born 12 September 1844 at Berrysburg, Pennsylvania, and died in Lykens, Pennsylvania, 5 March 1918, age 73 years, 5 months and 23 days. He was married […]

Sarah Klinger – Civil War Widow Bludgeoned to Death in 1906 (Part 5)

| October 12, 2016

Part 5 of this murder story will be told in today’s blog post.  It includes the appeal of the second trial and the third trial and conviction of Henry Fisher, this time for second degree murder. Sarah Ann [Reed] Klinger, a widow of a Civil War veteran and a pensioner, was brutally murdered in her home […]

James Ferguson – An Army Surgeon’s Story to Save His Life

| October 10, 2016

On 29 January 1863, according to the U.S. Register of Deaths of Volunteers, James Ferguson, a Sergeant of the 142nd Pennsylvania Infantry, Company D, died at the Stanton General Hospital, Washington, D.C., of “vulnus sclopet,” an abbreviation of the Latin term, vulnus sclopeticum, for “gunshot wound.”  The treating surgeon who verified the death was John […]