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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

106th Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

Posted By on May 11, 2011

(Part  27 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 106th 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 106th 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 106th 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 106th 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 106th Pennsylvania Infantry :

Thomas William Hoffman

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.

105th Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

Posted By on May 10, 2011

(Part  26 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 105th 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 105th 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 105th 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 105th 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 105th Pennsylvania Infantry :

John Sallada —- William Unger —- John Williard

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.

April 2011 Posts

Posted By on May 9, 2011

A listing of the April 2011 posts on The Civil War Blog with direct links:

Pvt. Sinnary Bohner – 27th Michigan Sharpshooters

National Civil War Museum – 10th Anniversary

8th Pennsylvania Cavalry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

16th Pennsylvania Cavalry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

March 2011 Posts

Schwalm Library & Research Room Opens for Season Today

Elizabethville Veterans Monument

17th Pennsylvania Cavalry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

18th Pennsylvania Cavalry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

Underground Railroad in Pennsylvania – Part 1 of 3

Underground Railroad in Pennsylvania – Part 2 of 3

Fort Sumter – The War Begins

Underground Railroad in Pennsylvania – Part 3 of 3

List of Civil War Veterans from the Lykens Valley Area

102nd Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

150th Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

151st Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

TV News Feature on Gratz Historical Society – Civil War Items Shown

Jewish-American U.S. Civil War Veterans

Pennsylvania Regiments at the Seven Days Battles – Corps & Generals

Starving the South: How the North Won the Civil War

Bloodbath at Shiloh – Armies, Divisions and Generals

Columbia-Wrightsville Bridge – Flames on the Susquehanna

Easter 1861

Pvt. David Brown – 177th Pennsylvania Infantry

96th Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

95th Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

98th Pennsylvania Infantry – Pennsylvania Memorial at Gettysburg

Civil War Descendants of Nathaniel Gist

Gettysburg – The Ted Turner Movie

 

 

 

Mothers who Lost Sons in the Civil War

Posted By on May 8, 2011

On this Mother’s Day 2011, it might be interesting to reflect on what we know about the mothers of Civil War veterans, particularly those who died in the war during the first full year of the conflict.  Using the Veterans List that was recently compiled and posted here, a quick search was made for those veterans with death dates of 1861 and 1862.  The names thus obtained were then checked against the genealogies that are presently in the digital files for each veteran and surprisingly few genealogies identified the name of the mother of the veteran.  A table was constructed to show the names of the veterans who died during the war and the known names of their mothers.

Died 1861

Veteran Mother’s Name
Cary Gratz Maria Cecil [Gist] Gratz
Elias Walborn Susanna [Umholtz] Walborn

Died 1862

Veteran Mother’s Name
Daniel David Bitterman Barbara [Widman] Bitterman
Jonathan Brenner ?
Israel B. Dunkelberger ?
George Durrell ?
John Carson Gratz Ann Ellen [Carson] Gratz
David Heiny ?
Michael Holloran ?
Isaac Kebaugh ?
Josiah Lentz ?
Robert J. Luckenbill ?
Henry Machamer Esther Hette [Fisher] Machamer
Philip Messner ?
Frederick Metzger ?
Benjamin F. Miller Elizabeth B. [Bowerman] Miller
James Miller ?
Samuel Oterbein Nace Barbara [Enders] Nace
Shedrick Reed ?
Henry A. Rickert ?
Samuel A. Spatz ?
William Sponsler ?
John S. Trego Mary [?] Trego
Frank Treon ?
Henry Weaver Hannah [Heim] Weaver

In two prior posts here on this blog, mothers of Civil War veterans were discussed.  (1) Ann [Carson] Gratz and son John C. GratzCorp. John C. Gratz – A Mother’s Application for a Pension.  (2) Maria Cecil [Gist] Gratz and son Cary Gratz, Civil War Descendants of Nathaniel Gist.

 

For mothers who lost sons, it was especially difficult when they also lost husbands during the war, as was shown in the case of Ann [Carson] Gratz.  The above-shown Pension Index Card indicates that Ann Gratz applied for a pension based on her deceased son’s service, but did not get one.

No such holiday as Mother’s Day existed during the American Civil War.  Mother’s Day was not officially recognized in the United States until 1914.  When Mother’s Day was created, it was not specifically created to honor mother’s of fallen soldiers.  The Gold Star Mothers fulfilled that purpose.  According to an article in Wikipedia:

The Gold Star Mothers was founded by Grace Darling Seibold of Washington, D.C.  Her son, First Lieutenant George Vaughn Seibold, was killed in aerial combat over France in August, 1918. Mrs. Seibold was already doing volunteer service in a veteran’s hospitals. After her son’s death, she continued this work, and also began organizing a group of other women who had lost their sons in the war. The mothers did volunteer work together, and served as a support network for one another.

The fact that so little is known of the veterans who died in the first year of the Civil War indicates how much more research needs to be done in the Civil War Research Project.  On this Mother’s Day, we note the names of those veterans for whom we have not yet identified the name of their mothers in the hope that readers will come forward with the missing information.

Dalmatia Civil War Veterans

Posted By on May 7, 2011

Another list of Civil War veterans has been located.  This one is from Dalmatia, Lower Mahanoy Township, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania.  In 1998, Dalmatia celebrated its bicentennial and Richard J. Martz and the Mahanoy and Mahantongo Historical and Preservation Society published a book entitled Dalmatia Pennsylvania:  A Bicentennial History, 1798-1998.

The origin of the name is unknown, except that there is only one other known place on earth with the same name – that of Dalmatia in Croatia on the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea.  Originally this Northumberland County community was called Georgetown and many locals believe that because the post office could not be called Georgetown, there being other Georgetowns in the state, it was somehow named Dalmatia. The name stuck with the locals.  According to an 1898 railroad timetable, Dalmatia (or Georgetown as it was referred to on the timetable), was 10.3 miles north of Millersburg and 4.9 miles south of Herndon.  The above topographical map shows the location of the Northern Central Railroad as it passes through Dalmatia.

The book is arranged chronologically.  For the year 1861, there is a full page list of Dalmatia businesses (insurance agents, blacksmiths, boot and shoe stores, brick dealers and makers, coal dealers, miners, shippers, country stores, engineers, express agents, flour and grist mills, harness makers, hotels and taverns, justices of the peace, lime dealers, millwrights, physicians, tailors, tanners and curriers) followed by a full page list of farmers, all taken from Boyd’s Pennsylvania State Business Directory of 1861.  For 1862, there is a list of persons drafted for Civil War service from Lower Mahanoy Township.  For 1863, a brief story of how the Northern Central Railroad was disrupted by the invasion of Pennsylvania.  Then there is another story telling of the increase in service by the Roman Catholic Mission to Dalmatia.  For 1864, expansion of the Northern Central Railroad to a two-track line is noted (from Dauphin to Sunbury) and the major increase of rail service between Baltimore and Sunbury.  For 1865, the Civil War is no longer mentioned.  Instead there is reference to the establishment of the public school system.

The appendices include a good number of biographical sketches, some of which pertain to the Civil War period.  These are followed by a list of postmasters.  Serving as postmaster during the Civil War were Abraham Rothermel who began his service on 28 February 1857 and who was succeeded by Benneville M. Bubb who began on 29 August 1861 and served throughout the remainder of the war. The war veterans lists conclude the appendices.

The list entitled “Civil War and G.A.R. Post 183” gives the following names, those killed in action being noted with an asterisk:

Elias Bachman —- Martin Bachman —- Augustus Bademan —- Alex Bademan —- William Bingeman —- Isaac Bubb* —- J. William Betttleyon —- William H. Bickel —- Sinnary Bohner —- William Bordner —- Henry Bordner —- Israel Downey —- Henry Enterline —- Jonathan D. Etsweiler —- John feisal —- Martin Harris —- Emanuel Heckert —- Henry Heckert —- William Heckert —- Henry Kambell —- Henry Kerstetter —- James Kohn —- Jacob Lahr —- George Long —- Gabriel Lower —- Elias Meck —- George Neiz —- Elias Peifer —- Nicholas Peifer Jr. —- Nicholas Peifer* —- David Price —- Jonathan Ricker —- Emanuel S. Radle —- Thomas Romberger —- Franklin Sarge —- John Henry Seagrist —- Aaron Seiler —- Abraham Shaffer —- David Shaffer —- Isaac Shaffer —- Aaron Spotts —- Henry Sultzbaugh —- Peter S. Sultzbach —- Joshua A. Wld —- Peter Z. Wald —- William Wald —- Michael Wert —- James M. Wiest —- Cornelius Witmer —- Elias W. Witmer —- Ephraim Witmer —- Gabriel witmer —- Jacob Witmer —- John Witmer —- Andrew Yeager —- George H. Yeager

The above list was compiled by Gladys Nace.  It will be carefully checked against the current list of 2000 plus veterans from the Lykens Valley area to see if there are any names that should be added to the Civil War Research Project as Dalmatia clearly falls within the geographic limits of the study.

Note:  After checking the above list against the existing database of 2000 plus names, it appears that about 35 new names will be added.  It is possible that some of these are duplicates with different spellings.  Digital file folders have been created for the additional names and data are being collected for each individual.  Any person having information on any of the veterans found in the Dalmatia list is urged to contribute it to the Civil War Research Project.