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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

Poisoned By Lead, Veteran Runs Naked in Boarding House, 1896

Ephraim F. Knipe was born in Pine Grove, Schuylkill County, about 1839.  He was a painter at the time of the Civil War, and according to military records, he served in three different regiments, one of which was an 1863 emergency militia.  He was married to the former Elizabeth Zimmerman.  In 1890, at the time […]

Jesse Ditty’s Recollections of Lovejoy Station

The National Tribune, 8 June 1899, posted a letter to the editor from Jesse Ditty, a Civil War veteran who is buried at Oak Hill Cemetery, Millersburg, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.  The National Tribune, published at Washington, D.C., was the official newspaper of the Grand Army of the Republic (G.A.R.). The Fight at Morris Ravine EDITOR […]

Thomas B. Evans – Cavalryman – Died at Williamstown, 1907

On 13 November 1907, Thomas B. Evans, a widower and a Civil War veteran, died of a stroke of paralysis at Williamstown, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.  His death certificate indicates his occupation as blacksmith and his father as Jacob Evans, and his mother as Priscilla [Clase] Evans.  Thomas B. Evans was born in Pennsylvania on 13 […]

4 Lykens Printers Went to War – Only 1 Returned

In the Lykens Standard of 25 April 1902, the editors began in serial form a lengthy article that had appeared in 1865 in the Lykens Valley Miner, which was then published by Samuel B. Coles and G. Washington Fenn.  The article was entitled, Recollections of 40 Years: Regarding the LykensValley Coal Mines and Vicinity Adjacent, […]

George Washington Enders – Militia Man of Enders

The information below is edited/adapted from Captain Enders’ Legion, pages 56-58. George Washington Enders was born 20 March 1837 in Jackson Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.  He was the son of George Enders and Susan Fetterhoff who were parents of sixteen children.  George W. Enders married Sarah Witman, daughter of John Witman and grand-daughter of Bartholomew […]