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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

Was Uncle John Keiper a Civil War Veteran?

Posted By on May 31, 2011

Uncle John M. Keiper (1842-1887) is buried in the Old Stone Church Cemetery in Elizabethville, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.  He is one of many persons of whom it is believed that they served in the Civil War, but there is no formal recognition of their service at their graveside.

John M. Keiper was born 17 February 1842 in Washington Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, the son of John Keiper and Catherine [Runk] Keiper of that same place.  His early years were spent on the farm of his parents and he attended school in the township.  In the early 1850s, the family moved to Elizabethville and John Jr. began learning the merchandising business which he converted to practice by operating his own general store at the west end of town until about 1868.  In the 1860 census, he is listed as a carpenter and is living in the household of an Elizabeth Runk, a widow aged 58, his grandmother.  Also in the household in 1860 is an older brother Michael Keiper, aged 20, a farm hand.  Cemetery records show that John’s mother died in 1845.  John’s father would marry Lucianna Buffington some time after 1845, a marriage that produced a half-brother for John in 1851, William Henry KeiperJohn Keiper Sr. died in 1854 and is buried alongside his first wife Catherine [Runk] Keiper in the Old Stone Church Cemetery.

In June 1863, John Keiper Jr. was elected Secretary of the Lykens Mutual Fire Insurance Company, a position he held for one year.  In June 1868, he was again elected Secretary, but on 31 March 1869, he appeared at a company meeting and resigned because “owing to his mercantile pursuits he could not longer attend to the business of the company.”  In January 1869, John Keiper had re-located to Philadelphia and in partnership with a Mr. Young, a traveling salesman who he met in the Lykens Valley, began a successful business as wholesalers of Queensware.  This business in Philadelphia, “Young and Keiper,” occupied John Keiper‘s time until his death in Philadelphia on 4 July 1887.  Owing to the fact that Mr. Keiper never married, the Salem Reformed Church in Elizabethville became the recipient of his estate.

Click on picture to enlarge.

At the time of the Civil War Draft in 1863, John’s brother Michael Keiper registered for the draft as “married” and working as a farmer.  The same page of the draft registration shows John Keiper Jr. as “unmarried” and working as a surveyor.  Their residence was Washington Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.

In checking the Civil War Veterans’ Card File at the Pennsylvania Archives, there are three persons named John Keiper who are found.  Only one of these has the has name “John Keiper Jr.” and his service is indicated as Company E, Independent Battery of the Militia of 1864.  According to information in Bates, this independent group was mustered in between 16 July and 12 August 1864 and was discharged between 10 November and 14 November 1864.  It was under the command of Lt. Col. Charles Stewart and Maj. Jacob Szink – and was otherwise known as Stewart’s Independent Militia.  Not much is known about this group and more information is sought.  No Pennsylvania Veterans’ Burial card has been located for this John Keiper Jr.

Of the two other persons named John Keiper who served in the Civil War, one John H. Keiper (about 1842-1872) served in the 12th Pennsylvania Cavalry, Company D, as a Sergeant, from 29 November 1862 to 20 July 1865.  This John H. Keiper is buried in the Easton Cemetery, Easton, Northampton County, Pennsylvania, as confirmed by the Pennsylvania Archives.  He was married to a woman named Ebeniza or Elizana.  In 1870, he was living in Easton and working as a police officer.  The other John Keiper (about 1838-about 1909) served in the 129th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company G from 11 August 1862 to 18 May 1863. He enlisted at Ashland, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania.   He is buried in the Odd Fellows Cemetery, Shenandoah, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania.  He married a woman named Sarah, and for a good part of his life he worked as a clerk or foreman in a colliery.  In some of the war records he is referred to as John Kreiper.

Several indicators point to the John Keiper Jr. from Washington Township/Elizabethville as the same person who served in Stewart’s Independent Militia.  First, the same name, “John Keiper Jr.,” is used in the militia records and the 1863 draft records.  No other person found in the Pennsylvania Veterans’ Card File is so named.  Second, the time frame would have suited this John Keiper Jr. in that his service to the Lykens Valley Mutual Fire Insurance Company concluded in July 1864 and the time of service in the militia would have begun at about the same time – July 1864.  Finally, to date, no other person named John Keiper Jr. has been found in any other records – census, vital statistics, or church records – who would have been of the right age to serve in the Civil War.  Since John Keiper Jr. did not survive to the 1890 Census, and was not married, the veterans’ enumeration cannot be used to confirm that he is the same person who served in the 1864 militia.  Likewise, there has been no pension application found.  It would be unlikely that there would have been a pension application anyway since the rules and conditions for obtaining a pension were not significantly relaxed until 1890.  For the other two persons named John Keiper, there were either pension applications or burial cards found – neither mentioning service in the independent militia of 1864.

What led to this research?  In the records of Lillian [Keiper] Blanning there was a carefully researched genealogy with references to her Uncle John Keiper as having served in the Civil War.  Lillian’s “Uncle John” was the half-brother of Lillian’s father, William Henry Keiper (1851-1913).  The genealogy was prepared so that Lillian could secure admission to the Daughters of the American Revolution.  Her application, which is on file at the D.A.R. Headquarters in Washington, D.C., traced her ancestry back through her mother to two Buffington ancestors who were Revolutionary War soldiers – George Buffington (1759-1830) and Benjamin Buffington (1730-1814).  Three of Lillian’s sons served in the military:  (1) son William Franklyn Blanning was a graduate of Philadelphia Textile School and served in World War I with the U.S. Marine Corps and was seriously injured during battles in France.  He had an outstanding service record.  (2) son Edwin Joseph Blanning Jr. was a 1930 graduate of the United States Naval Academy and served in World War II.  (3) son James Chester Blanning was a graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point and died as a prisoner of the Japanese in a camp in the Philippines in 1945.  Lillian carefully noted all these military connections in her genealogy – but she failed to mention the name of the regiment in which her Uncle John served.  Lillian was born in 1872, and would have been about 15 years old when Uncle John died.  It is not known whether she knew him since about three years before her birth, Uncle John moved to Philadelphia where he operated his wholesale business until his death. Lillian [Keiper] Blanning was born in Dauphin County but died in New Castle, Lawrence Co., Pennsylvania.

While it cannot be said with 100% certainty that Uncle John Keiper was a Civil War veteran, the information at hand seems to point strongly to the conclusion that he did serve and that he served in Stewart’s Independent Militia in 1864.  Much more information is needed on the life of John Keiper, particularly after he moved to Philadelphia and partnered with Young in the Queensware business.  Contributions and suggestions are welcome!

Basic information on John Keiper Jr. (including his portrait) was found in Through the Years, 100th Anniversary of the Lykens Valley Mutual Insurance Company, a copy of which is available in the Gratz Historical Society Library.  Lillian [Keiper] Blanning‘s genealogy is also found at the Gratz Historical Society Library; her portrait is in the author’s private collection.  Genealogical information on the other persons named John Keiper was found on Ancestry.com.  The Pennsylvania Veterans’ Index Card is from the Pennsylvania Archives.

 

 

 

Memorial Day in Gratz, 2011

Posted By on May 30, 2011

In the front of Section 1- North, of Gratz Union Cemetery, Gratz, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, is the final resting place for three unnamed Civil War soldiers.  Over time, the cemetery records have been lost as to the names of the veterans who are are buried in this plot.   It was here that the G.A.R. marched on Memorial Day and paid tribute to the Civil War veterans who had passed away in the years before.

The cover of Memories Book Volume 2 is show above.  The cover photo shows members of the G.A.R. parading up Center Street after the Memorial Day tribute at the Gratz Union Cemetery, 30 May 1910.   Articles of note in this volume are:

  • Military Encampments in Gratz
  • After the Civil War
  • The Reunions
  • The Oldest Living Dauphin County Veteran
  • Gratz in 1918

From Wikipedia:

Memorial Day is a United States federal holiday that honors American service members and is observed on the last Monday of May (May 30 in 2011). Formerly known as Decoration Day, it commemorates U.S. citizens who died while on military service. First enacted to honor Union and Confederate soldiers following the American Civil War, it was extended after World War I to honor Americans who have died in all wars….

Begun as a ritual of remembrance and reconciliation after the civil war, by the early 20th century, Memorial Day was an occasion for more general expressions of memory, as ordinary people visited the graves of their deceased relatives, whether they had served in the military or not.

It has long been the custom of veterans groups, to mark the graves of known veterans on Memorial with the bronze flag holders and fresh, new American flags.  Such is the current case in all the cemeteries in the area of this Civil War Research Project.  Unfortunately, it has been discovered that that many more served than are being honored.  It is hoped that by the end of the Civil War Sesquicentennial, all who served will be recognized.  The bronze G.A.R. star-flag holder should be placed at the grave markers of all veterans who honorably participated in the war – whether or not they were members of G.A.R. posts.

The picture at the top of this post, as previously stated is from the Gratz Union Cemetery and was taken just after the new flags were placed for this current Memorial Day weekend.  The pictures below are of selected graves in the Gratz Union Cemetery, aso with their newly placed flags.

Jeremiah Buffington (1836-1891)

Abraham Dreibelbis (1843-1921)

Harrison Riegle (1840-1899)

John W. Hoffman (1843-1926)

A previous post told the history of this cemetery and Simeon’s Church:  Gratz Union Cemetery and Simeon’s Church.

Gratz Area Veterans Monument – East Side

Posted By on May 29, 2011


A previous post entitled Gratz Area Veterans Monument, was presented here in November 2010 and discussed the memorial that is located in front of the Gratz Community Center on Center Street in Gratz, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.  One face of that monument, the side that looks east, was not mentioned.  The east side is the face that pertains most directly to the Civil War and features a quote from a letter written by President Abraham Lincoln to the mother of five soldiers who supposedly lost their lives in the Civil War.  That letter is considered to be a model personal response of a president to a family because of their wartime sacrifice to save the nation.

The text reads:

The White House,
Washington, Nov. 21, 1864.

Dear Madam,

I have been shown in the files of the War Department a statement of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts that you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any word of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save. I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.

Yours, very sincerely and respectfully,

A. Lincoln

A dramatic reading of the letter was part of the feature film Saving Private Ryan.

http://youtu.be/Nx5HwlkHo1c

All that exists today is a facsimile of the original letter to Mrs. Bixby.

The story of how the letter came about is fairly clear.  Gov. John A. Andrew of Massachusetts received a report from his Adjutant General, William Shouler that Mrs. Lydia Bixby had five sons who died in battle fighting on the Union side.  Andrew sent the report to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton with a recommendation that President Abraham Lincoln send the woman a personal letter of honor and condolence.  Stanton obliged by having the War Department send the official records of the five men to Lincoln along with the request for the letter.

Gov. John A. Andrew (1818-1867).

Unfortunately, there was little fact checking and it subsequently came out that the War Department had not supplied the president with correct information.  Only two of Mrs. Bixby’s sons actually died in battle – still a tragic loss.  However, Lydia Bixby’s motives were questioned in presenting the original information that became part of the Adjutant General’s report.  Stories were circulated that after she received the letter, she angrily destroyed it, because she did not have any sympathies with the Union cause or with Lincoln.  In any event, the original letter no longer exists.  In her defense, she may have believed that all her sons had died when she lost touch with them and they did not return home.

Eventually, the truth about her sons came out.

According to Wikipedia, the  actual fate of Mrs. Bixby’s sons was as follows:

  1. Pvt. Arthur Edward Bixby, Company C, Massachusetts 1st Heavy Artillery (served 24 June 1861 – 28 May 1862).  Absent without official leave. Mrs. Bixby claimed that he had joined underage and without permission, which led to a discharge order. He had already absented himself by the time the order arrived.
  2. Sgt. Charles N. Bixby, Company D, 20th Massachusetts (18 July 1861 – 3 May 1863).  Killed near Fredericksburg, Virginia.
  3. Cpl. Henry C. Bixby, Company K, 32nd Massachusetts (1862 – 1864)
    Captured in 1864, paroled, and honorably discharged that December. (Listed as killed at Gettysburg in Schouler’s records.)
  4. Pvt. Oliver C. Bixby, Jr., Company E, 58th Massachusetts (26 February 1864 – 30 July 1864).  Killed near Petersburg.
  5. Cpl. George A. Bixby, Company H, 25th Massachusetts (17 September 1861 – 7 July 1864).  Captured at Petersburg. Later army pension records showed that he was held prisoner and may have deserted to the enemy. He presumably enlisted under the name “George Way”, however this and his final fate are not clear.

Despite any controversies surrounding the history and sending of the “Bixby Letter,” it remains one of the classic documents of American history.  Written in wartime by a president with full command of language, it captured the feeling and emotion of the moment – a nation at war, sons lost in battle, and a people that was grateful and thankful for sacrifices to save the Republic.  The expression is timeless and it is a fitting complement to the Gratz Area Veterans Monument!

Some of the information for this post was taken from Wikipedia, including the portrait of Gov. Andrew and the facsimile of the letter.

 

The east face of the Gratz Area Veterans Monument. Looking west toward Gratz Union Cemetery and Simeon Lutheran Church.

 

149th Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

Posted By on May 28, 2011

(Part  34 of an ongoing series on the Battle of Gettysburg).  Around the base of the Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg are a series of plaques which, by regiment and company, note the names of every soldier who was present at the Battle of Gettysburg.  This post will present the plaque recognizing the men who served in the 149th Pennsylvania Infantry.  By clicking on the plaque it should enlarge so the names can be more clearly read.  Following the plaque is a list of the men who have thus far been identified as eligible for inclusion in this Civil War Research Project who, it is believed, served for a time in the 149th Pennsylvania Infantry .  Not all the names may appear on the Pennsylvania Memorial plaques.  If a name does not appear, it could be that the soldier did serve in the 149th Pennsylvania Infantry, but was not part of the regiment during its days at Gettysburg – or it could mean that the soldier was erroneous included in the 149th Pennsylvania Infantry list.  There could also be errors on the plaque.  Readers are invited to submit comments about any names appearing below, or on the plaque, especially if they believe the soldier was from the Lykens Valley area and should be included in this study.

Click on picture to enlarge.

Men from the Lykens Valley area who probably served in the 149th Pennsylvania Infantry :

John Sallada

Some of the information for this post was taken from the files of the Civil War Research Project.  A separate digital file is kept on each of the above-named men.  Information is sought on any men from the Lykens Valley area who were soldiers or sailors during the Civil War.

63rd Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

Posted By on May 27, 2011

(Part  33 of an ongoing series on the Battle of Gettysburg).  Around the base of the Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg are a series of plaques which, by regiment and company, note the names of every soldier who was present at the Battle of Gettysburg.  This post will present the plaque recognizing the men who served in the 63rd Pennsylvania Infantry.  By clicking on the plaque it should enlarge so the names can be more clearly read.  Following the plaque is a list of the men who have thus far been identified as eligible for inclusion in this Civil War Research Project who, it is believed, served for a time in the 63rd Pennsylvania Infantry .  Not all the names may appear on the Pennsylvania Memorial plaques.  If a name does not appear, it could be that the soldier did serve in the 63rd Pennsylvania Infantry, but was not part of the regiment during its days at Gettysburg – or it could mean that the soldier was erroneous included in the 63rd Pennsylvania Infantry list.  There could also be errors on the plaque.  Readers are invited to submit comments about any names appearing below, or on the plaque, especially if they believe the soldier was from the Lykens Valley area and should be included in this study.

Click on picture to enlarge.

Men from the Lykens Valley area who probably served in the 63rd Pennsylvania Infantry :

John Sallada

Information for this post was taken from the files of the Civil War Research Project.  A separate digital file is kept on each of the above-named men.  Information is sought on any men from the Lykens Valley area who were soldiers or sailors during the Civil War.