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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

Henry A. Higgins – 173rd Pennsylvania Infantry

Posted By on February 15, 2016

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The name Henry A. Higgins appears on the Lykens G.A.R. Monument as a Private who was not a member of the Heilner Post.  Finding information about many of the Civil War soldiers who are named on the Lykens plaque is often difficult owing to common names, spelling variations, and the fact that many died early or moved out of the area many years before the monument was erected.  However, in the case of Henry A. Higgins, he is buried in a section of the Lykens cemetery just a few blocks from the memorial.  That’s a good place to begin!

His gravestone, a “military issue” is pictured below in a photo taken by John “Jack” Richter.

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The marker notes that H. A. Higgens served in Company K of the 173rd Pennsylvania Infantry.  Note the variation of the surname spelling.

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From the database, Headstones Provided for Deceased Union Civil War Veterans (from Ancestry.com), the above card was located noting that Henry A. Higgens died on 19 April 1879, that the stone was contracted on 21 January 1883, and that it was delivered to Lykens – either I.O.O.F. (Odd Fellows) or Union Cemetery.

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Henry A. Higgins did not apply for a Civil War pension, but his widow, Margaret Higgins, did apply on 30 June 1880, and received benefits.  [Above Pension Index Card from Ancestry.com].

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There is no additional information on the Pension Index Card from Fold3 (shown above).

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Information in Bates, was obtained through the reference “4-1211” obtained from the upper right corner of the Pennsylvania Veterans’ Index Card available from the Pennsylvania ArchivesHenry A. Higgins was mustered into the 173rd Pennsylvania Infantry, Company K, as a Private, on 2 November 1862, and served for nine months, and was honorably discharged with his company on 18 August 1863.  This was a drafted militia as noted by the initials “PDM.”

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Click on document to enlarge

Additional information about Henry A. Higgins is found in the Register of Pennsylvania Volunteers, also available from the Pennsylvania Archives.  Note: Click on document above to enlarge.  Henry enrolled and was mustered in at Camp Curtin, and claimed he was 28 years old at the time (born about 1834).

An 1870 census for Wiconisco Township, Dauphin County, has been located that includes Henry A. Higgins, his wife Margaret, and some minor children.  Henry A. Higgins, head of household, age 35 (born about 1835) , a miner, born in New York; Margaret Higgins, age 27 (born about 1843), keeping house; Charles Higgins, age 10 (born about 1860); John Higgins, age 8 (born about 1862); William Higgins, age 4 (about 1866); Matilda Higgins, age 2 (born about 1868); and Edwin S. Higgins, age one month (born 1870).

In 1880, the family was still living in Wiconisco Township, minus Henry who had died in 1879, plus four children who had been born between the censuses.  Margaret Higgins, age 37, keeping house, born in Pennsylvania but both parents born in Ireland; John Higgins, age 18, a laborer; Willie Higgins, age 14, a laborer; Annie Higgins, age 8, afflicted with measles; Mary Higgins, age 6; Harry Higgins, age 4; and Joseph Higgins, age 1.  The pension application records, available from the National Archives in Washington, D.C., should give information about the five minor children (age 16 or under) who were left with the mother when the father died in 1879.  Normally, the applicant widow had to prove the birth of each child – giving certification that the children were hers and the veteran’s – and that she was legally married.  The pension application files, unless available at the time of the writing of these blog posts, were not consulted – but should contain a treasure trove of information about this family!

Margaret Higgins next appears in the 1890 Veterans’ Census for Pottsville, where she is reported as the widow of Henry A. Higgins who served in the 173rd Pennsylvania Infantry.  The actual census for 1890 was lost in a fire, but there is a substitute census for Schuylkill County for 1890, but it is not quite clear which Margaret Higgins is the correct one.  Between 1890 and 1900, a Margaret Higgins appears in several Pottsville city directories.

In 1900, Margaret Higgins, widow, age 55, is living in Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, with her three youngest children.  Margaret indicated that during her lifetime she had 10 children, 5 of whom were still alive.  The children living with her, all unmarried, were:  Harry Higgins, age 23, a day laborer; Joseph Higgins, age 21, also a day laborer; and May Higgins (most likely Mary), age 25, a silk weaver.

In 1910, Margaret Higgins, widow, age 63, was still living in Scranton, with the same three unmarried children.  However, some incorrect information was recorded by the census takers regarding the ages of the children and the total number of children Margaret had during her lifetime – then claiming she had only 5, all of whom were still alive.  Mary Higgins, then said to be 25, was working as a telephone operator; Henry Higgins, then said to be 27, was working as a salesman in a store; and Joseph Higgins, then said to be 22, was working as a laborer in a factory.  This is clearly the same family since other information matches.

It is at this point that the research on this family becomes more difficult.  No death certificate has been located for Margaret, which leads to a possible conclusion that either she re-married or moved to another state.  Also, the same can be said for each of the children who were living with her in 1910 – who when separated from the family unit are difficult to locate in censuses because of their common names.  No doubt, time and patience will produce results – or some one may come forward with some concrete information or clues as to where to look.

What also has not been researched is the following:  (1) Where in New York was Henry A. Higgins born, and where did he live in 1850 and 1860?  (2) Why did Henry move to Lykens?  (3) How did he die?  (4) The military records of Henry A. Higgins are available at the National Archives, and should be consulted.  (5) The pension application of the widow Margaret, is available at the National Archives?  (6) Why did Margaret move to Pottsville, and then to Scranton?  (7) Other than the fact that Henry is buried in a Lykens cemetery, did the family have any connection to Lykens after Margaret moved to Pottsville?  (8) Which two children other than the three in the 1900 and 1910 censuses, were still alive in those years and where were they living and did they have families/descendants?

An additional fact should be considered when researching this soldier.  He was most likely of the Roman Catholic faith.  A Findagrave Memorial has him buried at the Irish Catholic Cemetery in Lykens.  The first Roman Catholic church in the Lykens Valley was established at Lykens because of the large number of Catholics there associated with mining, but the records (birth, baptism, confirmation, death) are not published/available in the same way as the Protestant churches records are available.  However, the original parish, Our Lady Help of Christians, still exists and is adjacent to the cemetery where Henry is buried.  To find out what records are available, the church can be contacted through its web page.

Comments are welcome and can be added to this post or sent by e-mail.

Adam Hand – Tower City Area Veteran Moved to Illinois

Posted By on February 12, 2016

One piece of information, a picture of a grave marker, has led to the solving of a mystery about a name found on the Tower City Veterans’ Memorial.  As a result of finding the picture, much more is now known about Adam Hand, a Civil War veteran from the Tower City area.

In a 28 May 2015 post here and again on 7 August 2012 (picture of plaque below), the name “Adam Hand” was listed among veterans – but he was completely unknown.

The grave marker, shown above from Riverside Cemetery, Sterling, Whiteside County, Illinois, indicates that an Adam Hand, who was born on 31 March 1843 and died on 10 February 1910, served as a 1st Lieutenant in Company B of the 184th Pennsylvania Infantry.  See:  Findagrave Memorial.

Using that information, a search was done on Fold3 to see if the Adam Hand who served in the 184th Pennsylvania Infantry applied for and collected a pension.  The Pension Index Card (shown below) revealed that he did, and that he also served in two other Pennsylvania regiments.

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The Pension Index Card also confirms that Adam Hand died in February 1910 in Sterling, Illinois, that he applied for a pension on 20 January 1891, and that a widow applied after his death.

Researching the regiments in which this Adam Hand served, three Veterans’ Index Cards were located (shown below from the Pennsylvania Archives):

HandAdam-PAVetCardFile-003Adam Hand enrolled in the 10th Pennsylvania Infantry at Pine Grove, Schuylkill County, and was mustered into three months service in Company D on 23 April 1861.  At the time, he was 19 years old, was working as a laborer, and was living in Pine Grove.

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Adam Hand second enrolled in the 173rd Pennsylvania Infantry, Company F, as a Sergeant, and was mustered in on 1 November 1862, and served until 16 August 1863, when he was honorably discharged.

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Adam Hand third enrolled and was mustered into the 184th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company B, as a 1st Sergeant on 4 March 1864.  On 14 December 1864, he was promoted to 1st Lieutenant.  He was discharged with his company on 9 June 1865.

The connection to the geographical area of this Research Project is established through his Pine Grove residence as given on the Pennsylvania card for the 10th Pennsylvania Infantry.

Some additional information that can be found about this soldier/veteran is as follows:

Adam Hand was located in the 1850 Porter Township Census, Schuykill County, living with his parents, Abraham Hand and Polly Hand, and siblings, two of whom also later served in the Civil War: Jesse Hand and Isaac Hand.

On 19 February 1876, Adam Hand married Ellen J. Welker in Ogle County, Illinois.  Ellen J. Welker was the daughter of Moses B. Welker and Hannah Trego.  She was born in Northumberland County, Pennsylvania about 1855.  The Moses Welker family was part of an earlier migration to Ogle County, an area in Illinois that seemed to attract a sizable number of transplants from Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.

In 1880, Adam Hand was living in Lincoln Township, Ogle County, Illinois.  He was living in a farmer’s household as a servant and was working as a farm laborer.  His wife Ellen was also a servant.  The couple had two children:  Charles Hand, age 5; and Hattie Hand, age 2.

On 22 Jan 1891, Adam Hand applied for a pension from Illinois.  As shown on the Pension Index Card from Ancestry.com, after his death in 1910, his widow, Ellen J. Hand applied for benefits on 14 February 1910, also from Illinois.

In 1900, the family had moved to Sterling, Whiteside County, Illinois.  Daughter Hattie was no longer in the household, but Charles, age 24 and single, was.  Both Adam and his son were working as day laborers.

By 1910, Ellen J. Hand was a widow and living with her son Charles in Sterling.

By 1920, Ellen had re-married to Frank Hundatmark and moved to Ogle County, Illinois.  Son Charles was still in her household.  Presumably, as soon as Ellen re-married, she lost the pension she had been receiving through her fist husband’s Civil War service.

The information obtained about Adam Hand is certainly not complete – but does show that one good clue (in this case the grave marker) can quickly lead to many documents.  As with all Civil War veterans researched through this Project, more is sought.  What more can be found about his Civil War service?  Why did Adam Hand move to Illinois?  Are there any pictures of him?  Etc….  Anyone who can add more to this story is urged to do so.  Send via e-mail, or add a comment to this post.

 

 

 

Update on Benjamin Hartzog, alias Walter Davis, of Donaldson

Posted By on February 10, 2016

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A brief description of the service Benjamin Hartzog was given here on this blog on 24 April 2012 when he was added to the Civil War Research Project.

Benjamin Hartzog (1843-xxxx), a resident of Donaldson, Schuylkill County, was a laborer who enlisted in the 50th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company A, as a Private.  After the war he became a member of the Regular Army.  Later in life he resided in a veterans’ home and used the alias “Walter Davis.”

Donaldson is within the Project’s geographical area of study.

Based on current research, additional information about him can now be added to his file.

At the top of this post, Hartzog’s Pennsylvania Veterans’ File Card (from the Pennsylvania Archives) is shown.  That card gives a physical description including age 18, a height of 5 foot-7.5 inches, a florid complexion, light hair and gray eyes.  Also, at the time of his enrollment in the 50th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company A, as a Private, he was employed as a laborer and his residence was Donadlson.  Nearly all the men who served in this company of the 50th Pennsylvania Infantry had a connection to the Lykens Valley area.

Benjamin Hartzog was mustered into service on 9 September 1861 at Harrisburg.  On 1 January 1864, he re-enlisted at Blaine’s Crossroads, Tennessee. And, on 30 July 1865, he was mustered out of the service with his company.

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Benjamin Hartzog died on 6 January 1922 in Bland, Missouri, as shown on the Pension Index Card (above, from Fold3).  The card also names the three regiments and companies in which he served, the first, matching the service record from the Pennsylvania Archives (shown above), followed by the 1st United States Infantry, Company D, and the 3rd United States Cavalry, Company K.

On 25 October 1892, from Missouri, Benjamin Hartzog applied for a Civil War pension, which he received and collected until his death.  No widow survived him.  From current research, no wife has been located.

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Click on document to enlarge. Hartzog appears about halfway down the sheet.

Benjamin Hartzog appears on an 1866 army enlistment sheet (shown above from Ancestry.com).  On 24 October 1866, he joined the 1st United States Infantry, Company D, as a Private.  He was discharged at the expiration of his service on 24 October 1869, at Fort Brady, Michigan.

HartzogBenjamin-Census1870-001In 1870, Benjamin Hartzog appears on the census sheet of the 3rd United States Cavalry regiment stationed in the Arizona Territory near what is now Tuscon.  The document at the left is from Ancestry.com.  Click on thumbnail to enlarge.  Hartzog’s name is at the top of the sheet.

 

 

Two ledger pages from Soldier Home records have been located on Ancestry.com and are shown below.  One is from the home in Leavenworth, Kansas, and the other is from the home in Vermillion, Illinois.  Both documents give his alias as Walter Davis.

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Click on document to enlarge

The home history for Benjamin Hartzog is shown on the right side of the ledger.

 

 

 

 

The home history for Benjamin Hartzog is shown on the right side of the ledger.

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Click on thumbnail to enlarge.

 

 

 

 

 

 

On 11 January 1917, the Leavenworth Times, of Leavenworth, Kansas, which ran a regular Soldiers’ Home news column, reported that Walter Davis, alias Benjamin Hartzog, was discharged from the home at his own request during the month of December [1916].

At this point in the research the following information is not known:

  1. Where is he buried?
  2. Why did he have an alias?
  3. Was he married and did he have descendants?
  4. Other than his Civil War service, which can be documented through his military and the regimental records, where did his post-war service occur?
  5. Other than his 1861 residency in Donaldson, Schuylkill County, what other connections (family, geographic, etc.) did he have to the area?
  6. Are there any known surviving photographs of him?

Help is requested to complete the story of this Donaldson resident.  Contributors can attach information to this post as a “comment” or can e-mail the information.

Jacob Swab & Jacob W. Swab – Two Different Elizabethville Area Veterans

Posted By on February 8, 2016

In the 1967 published list of Civil War veterans from the Elizabethville, Dauphin County, the name of Jacob Swab appears.  In researching this soldier, it is now known that there were actually two persons of this name, one found in the records as Jacob Swab and the other found as Jacob W. Swab.

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JACOB SWAB (1822-1905)

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Jacob Swab was born 7 April 1822 in Mifflin Township, Dauphin County, the son of John Jacob Swab (1792-1867) and Catherine [Metz] Swab (1790-1853).

In the 1890 Veterans’ Census for Elizabethville, he indicated service in the 173rd Pennsylvania Infantry, Company F, as a Private, from 30 October 1862 through 16 August 1863.

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On 26 July 1890, Jacob Swab applied for a pension based on that service, which he received and collected until his death on 13 March 1905.  Although he was survived by a widow who was his second wife, Elizabeth [McColly] Snyder Swab, Mrs. Swab collected the pension of her first husband, George Snyder, as is noted at the bottom of the Pension Index Card shown above from Fold3. George Snyder served in the 210th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company A.  George Snyder died in 1865 and is buried at the St. Jacob’s Cemetery in EndersJacob Swab‘s second marriage took place on 6 October 1881 at Berrysburg.  His first wife, the former Anna “Mary” Matter had died 3 February 1880 and is buried at Maple Grove Cemetery, Elizabethville.  Widows could only collect one pension and since the second Mrs. Swab had apparently been collecting a pension based on Snyders’ service from the year 1865 to her marriage to Swab in 1881, she reverted to re-collecting the Snyder pension following Swab’s death in 1905.  When Civil War widows remarried, it was expected that their new husbands would support them and they lost benefits from any prior marriage.

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The Pension Index Card for George Snyder (from Fold3) is shown above.  It indicates his death as 15 April 1865 and Elizabeth’s application on 20 July 1867. The application and certificate file coordination is noted in the “remarks”.  For those wishing to research this application further, the complete file is available on Fold3 and can be downloaded by those who have a subscription to the Fold3 service.

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On 7 February 1905, two months before his death, the Harrisburg Telegraph reported in its Elizabethville news, that Jacob Swab, who was one of the town’s oldest citizens, was critically ill at his home at the West End, and that “slight hopes are entertained for his recovery.”

Jacob Swab is buried at Maple Grove Cemetery in Elizabethville – next to his first wife.  His grave marker is pictured at the top of this post.

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On the Lykens G.A.R. Monument, the name “Jacob Swab” appears as as a member of Heilner G.A.R. Post No. 232, Lykens, Pennsylvania, who “Joined After Organization.”  It is not known for certain whether this is the Jacob Swab who died in 1905, or the Jacob W. Swab who will next be reported on who died in 1882, but it could be assumed that the one who died earlier may not have been a member of the Lykens G.A.R. and may have been forgotten at the time the monument was erected in the early 20th century.

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JACOB W. SWAB (1826-1882)

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Jacob W. Swab was born on 21 June 1826, the son of William Swab (1800-1869) and Anna Mary [Matter] Swab (1805-1882).

In the 1890 Veterans’ Census for Elizabethville, his widow, Sarah [Linderman] Swab, indicated that he served in the 147th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company G as a Private, from 20 September 1862 through his discharge on 6 June 1865.

In the 1880 Census for Washington Township, Jacob W. Swab gave his occupation as “sewing machine agent.”  In that Elizabethville was rapidly becoming known as a “factory town,” in the late 19th Century, this occupation had to revolve around the growing clothing manufacturing industry developing there.

When Jacob W. Swab died on 19 December 1882, he was buried at Sweitzer’s Cemetery in Berrysburg.  His grave marker is pictured above.

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The Veterans’ File Card (pictured above from the Pennsylvania Archives) notes that at the time of the Civil War, Jacob W. Swab was working as a farmer and living in Snyder County, Pennsylvania, which is where he enrolled in the service at age 37.

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The Pension Index Card (show above from Fold3) indicates that Jacob W. Swab applied for benefits on 8 January 1880, which he received and collected for about three years until his death in late 1882.  His widow followed by applying on 5 January 1884, also receiving benefits which she collected until her death in 1906.  Sarah is buried next to her husband at Sweitzer’s Cemetery in Berrysburg.

It must also be noted that although this blog post has differentiated the two Jacobs by using the middle initial “W” for the one who died in 1882, the military and pension records do not have the two differentiated – referring to both as “Jacob Swab.”  Neither do the grave markers.  Thus it is possible that the records of the two have been confused, at least in some research.

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More information is sought about each of these men – particularly stories about their personal lives, military service, and descendants.  Especially of interest are pictures of the men, if they have survived over time.  In 2017, Elizabethville will celebrate its bicentennial and a display of Civil War soldier pictures is planned.  Anyone willing to contribute a photo should contact the Project by e-mail.

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The news clipping is from Newspapers.com.

January 2016 Posts

Posted By on February 5, 2016

A listing of the January 2016 posts on The Civil War Blog with direct links:

Simon Gratz and the Virginius Affair

Obituary of George W. Geesey of Millersburg

December 2015 Posts

Rev. Thomas Garland – Served in Lykens, Halifax, & Williamstown

The Millersburg Roots of John H. Geist

Obituaries of the Three Geesey Men in the 103rd Pennsylvania Infantry

Charles J. Hartleaf – “Dutch Charlie”

Who Was Henry Garmer of Hebe?

William J. George – New York War Veteran, Carpetbagger & Harrisburg Publisher

John J. Swab – A Record for the Soldier Homes?

John Gemmell, Alias Price – Not Named on Lykens G.A.R. Monument

Jennie Kissinger – Buried in Her Ku Klux Klan Robes

Obituary of a Civil War Widow, Mrs. Joseph W. Knouff