Norman Gasbarro | March 10, 2011
On the third day of the Battle of Gettsyburg, 3 July 1863, Mary Virginia “Jennie” Wade was killed inside a home by a stray bullet while she was baking bread for hungry Union troops and thus became the only civilian casualty of the battle. Prior to this domestic exercise, she had faithful done her morning […]
Category: Research, Resources, Stories |
1 Comment »
Tags: Abraham Lincoln, Lykens Township, Pennsylvania Dutch, Regiments, Rickert family, Riegle family, Schwalm family, Specktown, Women, Yerges family
Norman Gasbarro | March 3, 2011
In the first post about the Find A Grave site, a statement was made about those contributors to the site who are very proactive about warning people who use the site about theft of their photographs. The understanding of these individual is that any one who uses a photograph of theirs, under any conditions and […]
Category: Queries, Reflections, Research, Resources |
2 Comments »
Tags: Cemetery, Lykens Township, Riegle family
Norman Gasbarro | February 17, 2011
Jonas Swab, son of Daniel Swab and Sally [Heller] Swab, was born 18 Mar 1843 in Washington Township, Dauphin County. He attended the schools in the township and worked on the farm of his father, whom he assisted in clearing the land of six or seven acres of timber. When he was eighteen years old […]
Category: Research, Stories |
4 Comments »
Tags: Elizabethville, Emerich family, G.A.R., Halifax, Heller family, Margerum family, Pillow, Regiments, Riegle family, Schreffler family, Swab family, Washington Township
Norman Gasbarro | December 22, 2010
In a box of pictures kept by Hannah [Rickert] Riegle of Specktown Road in Lykens Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, was the above picture of an unknown person, possibly a member of a military band, holding an instrument that is not often seen today. Hannah was the wife of Harrison Riegle (1840-1899) who served in the […]
Category: Museums, Queries, Research |
2 Comments »
Tags: Hegins, Loyalton, Regiments, Riegle family, Specktown
Norman Gasbarro | November 23, 2010
Go back to the year 1924 when the Hoffman Monument was erected. If 10% of the Civil War veterans from the Lykens V alley area were still alive at that time, they would have numbered about 200, and surely, as senior members of any family, would have been sought after to tell their stories of […]
Category: Queries, Reflections, Research |
13 Comments »
Tags: Buffington family, Hoffman family, Klinger family, Riegle family, Schoffstall family