Senator William H. Burges (c. 1880)
26 December 2021
Another Sharpsburg veteran who was a post-war Texas state legislator, this is William Henry Burges, Jr. in about 1880, in a photograph shared online in several places by family genealogists.
He’s in this composite photograph of the Texas State Senate of 1881-83 (17th Legislature) from the Texas State Preservation Board, Austin, which is online among other references to Burges’s legislative history thanks to the Texas Legislative Reference Library. Senator Burges is at the bottom left.
Here’s Walter Moses Burton (c. 1829-1913), the man missing from that group photograph.
William C. Steele (1847)
24 December 2021
Here’s the top of a card for William C. Steele from his United States Mexican War Service Records, US National Archives (poke it to see the whole thing). Steele had later service as a Sergeant in the 4th Texas Infantry and was at Sharpsburg in September 1862. He lost a leg at Chickamauga, GA a year later, but went home to a farm in Grimes County.
B.W. Rimes (c. 1873)
23 December 2021
Here’s newly elected Texas State Representative Burlington Wesley Rimes in 1873. His picture, probably from a collective composite of all the members of that legislature, is in the Lawrence T. Jones III Collection, Southern Methodist University.
Rimes was a Private in Maryland in 1862, and was left behind, sick, in Frederick – captured there on 12 September.
Sheriff “Mitt” Livingston (c. 1876)
23 December 2021
Lieutenant Middleton L. Livingston was in action with Company C, 4th Texas Infantry in Maryland in 1862.
He had been a physician in Milam County before the war and was a farmer there for most of the rest of his life. He was elected Sheriff in 1876 and this photograph was probably taken about that time. It’s online from the Milam County Historical Commission.
Courtland Lynn pension case (1883)
23 December 2021
Courtland Lynn, Private, Company C, 4th New Jersey Infantry was wounded at Antietam on 17 September 1862. He and the regiment had been engaged at Crampton’s Gap on South Mountain 3 days earlier, but he came safely out of that action. They were largely in reserve at Antietam, but that’s where Private Lynn was hit.
Just over 20 years later Lynn applied for a veteran’s pension – which is what triggered this correspondence from the War Department to the Commissioner of Pensions.
It’s an excellent summary of his service and helps nail down where he was wounded. It also hints at a casualty list for his Brigade: the First of the 1st Division, 6th Army Corps. Another project for me …
This letter and the initial pointer to Lynn are from his great grandson John Courtland Lynn. The very best kind of source.
Release of Hugh Whitesides, 25 July 1863
21 December 2021
Private Hugh Whitesides of the 4th Texas Infantry “gave himself up” to US troops at Cherry Run, VA (WV) on 19 July 1863 and was sent to Camp Chase, OH, where he swore the oath seen here, made his mark, and was released.
I’m guessing he left his regiment somewhere near Falling Waters on 14 or 15 July as the Army was returning/retreating from Gettysburg, PA.
I don’t know much about Hugh, except that he was probably born in Ireland, was a shepherd in Travis County, Texas before the war, and was 27 years old when he took that oath. I’ve found nothing on what became of him afterward.
Candy the little white dog
20 December 2021
Company B of the 4th Texas Infantry had a little white terrier as a mascot, given them by an Austin confectioner at the start of the war (said Ted Alexander).
Among the soldiers on his roster of the the Company, Val C. Giles listed the dog:
“Candy,” the little white dog, went with the company from Austin and became a great favorite with the regiment. Engraved on his collar was, “Candy, Co. B, 4th Texas Regt.” When George L. Robertson lay wounded in the field hospital at Sharpsburg, he saw a band wagon parading through the camp with the little “Rebel” prisoner. He got lost from his company and regiment in the old cornfield and was captured by the enemy.
In the battle of Gaines’s Mill he got separated from us, and next morning, when the burying detail was sent out from our regiment, they found Candy cuddled up under the arm of poor John Summers, who was killed the evening before. There was not a man in the company, and I doubt if there was one in the regiment, who would not have divided his last piece of hard-tack with Candy.
We never saw him after the battle of Sharpsburg.
I don’t know of a picture of Candy, but here’s a famous white military terrier of a later generation – Willie – from Life magazine of 28 August 1944:
_______________
Giles’ roster is in the Confederate Veteran magazine of January 1918, pages 20-23.
Joe E. Jones (1899)
19 December 2021
Sharpsburg veteran Joe E Jones of the 4th Texas Infantry was a Tennessee native and returned there after the war.
Here he is in later years in his United Confederate Veterans (UCV) jacket, from his obituary in the Confederate Veteran magazine of September 1899.
Isaac Wistar in 1863, 1853, and 1845
18 December 2021
Colonel Isaac J Wistar commanded the California Regiment (designated the 71st Pennsylvania Infantry) at Antietam and was later commissioned Brigadier General of Volunteers.
Here he is wearing some serious epaulettes.
To compare, here are two pictures of him as a much younger man.
He was halfway in age between the two lower views when he took off across the continent from Philadelphia to find gold in California in 1849. Quite an adventure. He only came back 12 years later because of the war …
_____________________
All three pictures are from his posthumously published Autobiography of Isaac Jones Wistar, 1827-1905 (1914). It’s online [Volume 1 | Volume 2] from the Internet Archives. It’s a pretty good read, actually, especially his diary entries from his 1849 trip to California.
____________________
The interesting Wistar artifact below was sold by Heritage Auctions in 2008. The accompanying photograph is very similar to the one at the top of this post, and was probably taken in the same session
[Bullet that Grazed the Head of Brigadier General Isaac J. Wistar]
From the seller: A mushroomed Confederate minié ball is preserved in a inlaid period frame with a CDV of the general and a 5″ x 2″ Autograph Note Signed, reading as follows:
“This flattened bullet passed through the brim & crown of my hat, slightly drawing blood on the scalp & was dug out of the oak tree in front of which I was standing by Capt. Reynolds A.A.G. at the battle in front of Drewry’s Bluff, Va. May 16, 1864. J I Wistar then Brig Genl’ Commdg 2nd Div. 18th A.C.”
R.A. Davidge (1864)
18 December 2021
Robert A. Davidge enlisted as a Private in Company B of the 4th Texas Infantry in July 1861. According to the Confederate muster rolls and US Army records that comprise his Compiled Service Records, these are the highlights of his military service:
- absent without leave when his Company fought at Fox’s Gap on 14 September 1862, but present at Sharpsburg on the 17th
- captured at Chickamauga, GA on 18 September 1863 and in the Federal prison at Louisville, KY
- captured again on 6 December 1863 in Dickson County, TN
- while a prisoner, admitted to a US Army hospital in Nashville on 1 March 1864 with typhoid pneumonia
- died at the hospital on 6 March 1864
A little odd, with those various apparently overlapping captures, but otherwise fairly straightforward, right?
If there’s any truth in the following news piece, his actual experience was far more interesting than the dry records suggest. See what you think …
R. A. Dᴀᴠɪᴅɢᴇ.
—Hon. A. C. Niles received a letter from Judge Searls on Monday evening last, from which he has permitted us to make the following extract in relation to an old Nevadan:“Robert A. Davidge, formerly of Nevada [City], was in Texas at the commencement of the war and enlisted in the [4th] Texas regiment, served a year or so in Virginia and deserted: was arrested by the rebels in Tennessee and got clear through the influence of influential friends. Was arrested by the Federal authorities near Nashville for alleged disloyalty — took the oath and enlisted in the Union army; served a few weeks, deserted and joined a band of guerrillas known as Ray’s band. Was finally captured and thrown into prison at Nashville, and while awaiting his trial for desertion and murder, finally died on the 27th of last February.”
“My informants were a physician from Hopkinsville, Ky., who knew him from boyhood, and a Capt. Moore, now in the Union prison at Donelson, who belonged to the same brigade.”
Davidge came to this city [Nevada City] in 1852 and was appointed Deputy Clerk of this county at that time by Theodore Miller. During the following year Miller returned to the Atlantic States and Dividge acted as County Clerk for the remainder of the term. Davidge was then appointed Postmaster of this city through the influence of old Gwin; and while acting in that capacity was selected as editor of a new paper started at that time called the Young America, to advocate the interests of the chivalry, which had control of all the offices in the county. Having become disgusted with everything and everybody, he left for his home in Kentucky in the year 1855, where he remained up to the time of the breaking out of this rebellion, editing a newspaper. Thus, one by one, the would-be chiefs of this county in early times have received the deserts they merited.
— Nevada Transcript.
___________
That article is from the Marysville (CA) Daily Appeal of 9 June 1864, online from the California Digital Newspaper Collection.
The view above of Nevada City in March 1855 is a copy of a print sold by Barry Lawrence Ruderman Antique Maps Inc.