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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

Calvary United Methodist Church and Cemetery, Wiconisco (Part 6 of 6)

| August 23, 2011

Civil War veteran burials in the Calvary United Methodist Church Cemetery, Wiconisco, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, concludes today. —————————— Samuel Klinger (1819-1891).  Served in the 173rd Pennsylvania Infantry, Company K, as a Private.  See prior post on Samuel Klinger.  He was married four times:  Rebecca Cooper; Magdalena ?; Belinda Savidge; and Catherine Kissinger.  Samuel was a […]

G.A.R. Heilner Post Activities, 1901

| August 21, 2011

These two articles were found in the Lykens Standard of 24 May, 1901, describing activities of the Lykens-Wiconisco G.A.R. Heilner Post, No. 232, and benefits available to Civil War veterans in the Lykens, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania area: Memorial Day As customary, Heilner Post, No. 232, G.A.R. and Woman’s relief Corps, No. 101, will attend divine […]

Galusha A. Grow – Speaker, U.S. House of Representatives

| August 9, 2011

Galusha Aaron Grow (1822-1907)  was the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives in the 37th Congress and served in that capacity from 1861 through 1863.  He represented the 14th Congressional District of Pennsylvania, of which Gratz and Dauphin County were a part.  At the time of his re-election in 1860, he was a Republican, […]

Sacred Heart of Jesus Church and Cemetery, Williamstown

| August 8, 2011

During the Civil War years, Catholics in Williamstown, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, had to travel to Lykens Borough to attend Mass.  In about 1865, Rev. John Laughlin of Our Lady Help of Christians Catholic Church in Lykens, saw the need to establish a mission in Williamstown and the first Masses were said in a log cabin.  […]

Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: The Opening Battles

| May 22, 2011

(Part 1 of 4).  In 1883, Clarence Clough Buel, the Assistant Editor of The Century Magazine, proposed a series of articles which would present differing points of view on the Civil War.  Buel’s plan included the eventual publication of the articles in book form.  In 1887 and 1888, the four volume work was first published. […]