Warn, Edward F.
Younger than his brother William, Edward F. Warn
was born on July 27, 1837, in Franklin County,
New York. The sons of Orlin Warn and his first
wife, they moved to Clayton County, Iowa, in 1852
with their father and his second wife (Eusebia)
who had a son, Charles Wilson, from her first
marriage.
Over the next several years, as abolitionist
sentiments increased, most in the North were
convinced the Souths threats of secession
were nothing more than political rhetoric while
those in the South were sure the North would
never go to war and South Carolina Senator James
Hammond bragged, "without firing a gun,
without drawing a sword, should the North make
war on us, we could bring the whole world to our
feet. What would happen if no cotton were
furnished for three years? Cotton, he said,
is King!" Following Abraham
Lincolns election as President, General
Beauregards Confederate cannon fired on
Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, and a war that no
one expected quickly escalated.
In 1862 President Lincoln called for 300,000
volunteers to augment those already in the field.
Iowas quota was five regiments and Governor
Kirkwood assured the President that, despite the
imminent fall harvest, Iowa would answer the
call. Willard Benton, the McGregor postmaster,
was an active recruiter in Clayton County and, on
August 15th at Council Hill, he enrolled
twenty-seven-year-old William as 8th Corporal and
twenty-five-year-old Edward as a Private and, at
McGregor, he enrolled their twenty-seven-year-old
stepbrother Charles, all in Company G of the
states 21st regiment of volunteer infantry.
On the 22nd, the company was mustered into
service at Camp Franklin in Dubuque and on
September 9th ten companies with a total of 985
men (officers and enlisted) were mustered in as a
regiment. On the 16th, they marched through town
and, from the levee at the foot of Jones Street,
boarded the Henry Clay and two barges
tied alongside and started down the Mississippi.
They spent their first night on Rock Island,
resumed their trip the next day, debarked at
Montrose due to low water, traveled by train to
Keokuk, boarded the Hawkeye State and
reached St. Louis about 10:00 a.m. on the 20th.
After debarking at the levee, they stood for an
hour heavily laden with knapsacks, clothes,
blankets, arms and personal accouterments, much
unnecessary and later discarded. For men who had
received minimal drill at Camp Franklin, the four
mile march to Benton Barracks in intensely hot
weather was hard to endure. A good many of
our company gave out, said Maple Moody.
Among them was Edward Warn who said he suffered
from sunstroke that, for the rest of his life,
affected his lungs.
On the 21st they left by rail and on the 22nd
they arrived in Rolla where William was treated
for measles. The brothers continued with their
regiment during its early service in Missouri
but, on January 24, 1863, suffering from chronic
diarrhea and pleurisy, William was one of nine
men discharged from the military. Another was
discharged on the 24th and four more on the 25th.
Edward also was sick and was treated in the post
hospital when the regiment left for West Plains
but by April 10th he had caught up and was with
his comrades at Millikens Bend where
General Grant was organizing a large army to
capture Vicksburg. They crossed the river from
Disharoons Plantation to the Bruinsburg
landing in Mississippi on the 30th and Edward
participated in the next days Battle of
Port Gibson, was present on May 16th when they
were held in reserve during the Battle of
Champion Hill, and participated in assaults on
May 17th at the Big Black River and May 22nd at
Vicksburg. So far, since crossing the river the
regiment had lost thirty killed in action,
another thirty-three who succumbed to wounds and
102 who had sustained less serious wounds.
Another two would die from gunshot wounds before
the city surrendered on July 4th.
On August 17th they were stationed at Carrollton,
Louisiana, when Edward was granted a 30-day
furlough. When he didnt return a month
later, he was noted as a deserter.
Due to the distances involved, transportation
problems and illness at home, late returns were
not uncommon and, on October 8th at Dubuque,
Provost Marshal Shubael Williams signed a request
that Edward (furlough expired, returning to
his Regt.) be given transportation on the
steamer James Means. On November 10th,
at Berwick, Louisiana, Edward was returned to
duty without loss of pay or allowances. For the
rest of his term, Edward was marked
present when bimonthly muster rolls
were taken in Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas and
Tennessee and, in the spring of 1865, he
participated in the successful campaign to occupy
the city of Mobile in Alabama. On July 15, 1865,
he was one of 464 original members of the
regiment mustered out at Baton Rouge. Edward
purchased his musket and accouterments for $6.00
and, on the morning of the 16th, started north on
board the Lady Gay. On July 24th they
were discharged from the military at Clinton.
Edward was listed as unmarried on an
1863 draft registration list (while he was with
his regiment in Mississippi), but on September
23, 1857, he had married Mary Hamilton and they
already had two children, Orlin and Mary. They
were divorced in Elkader on January 24, 1868 and,
on October 5th of that year, Edward married
twenty-eight-year-old Ellen Warner. Edward and
Ellen had three children, Bert E. in 1869, Harley
G. in 1871 and Ethel Irene in 1880 and they made
their home in Luana.
Edwards brother, William (after a divorce
from his first wife) had married Ellens
sister, Caroline, in 1864. He never recovered
from his wartime illness and died on February 20,
1883, at forty-three years of age from bronchitis
and pleurisy. He was buried in Vail Cemetery in
Crawford County.
In 1890 Edward applied for an invalid pension
but, rather than retaining someone locally, he
retained the well-known George M. Van Leuven,
Jr., who was sixty-five miles away in Lime
Springs. With testimonials from Congressman
Thomas Updegraff, U.S. Senator William Allison
and many others, Van Leuven was credited
with being the most successful pension agent in
the state. The application was supported by
affidavits from former comrades Sam Withrow (also
a client of Van Leuven), Francis Henderson (whose
brother had been killed in the war), Willard
Benton (who had enrolled Edward twenty-five years
earlier) and Maple Moody (who had served in
Company G). Dubuques Dr. Charles H.
Hamilton had treated Edward for lung disease for
many years and said he was in bed for weeks
at a time and could get around only
by exercising great care as to exposure or
any over exertion. Edwards
application was approved for sunstroke suffered
in St. Louis and resulting vertigo and lung
disease at $8.00 per month and a certificate was
mailed on February 18, 1891. Three months later
George Van Leuven was arrested. Charged with
pension fraud, bribing doctors and falsifying
affidavits, he was ultimately convicted. Pension
examiners reviewed records of his clients and
conducted numerous special examinations but
theres no indication that any questions
were raised regarding the validity of
Edwards application or the accuracy of the
supporting affidavits.
Although in failing health, fifty-seven-year-old
Edward died unexpectedly on August 21, 1894, and
two days later a funeral was held at his home.
Recognized as a well-known stockbuyer, he had
been a member of the Hervey Dix Post of the GAR
and was buried with military honors in Luana
Cemetery. Ellen was fifty-four years old when she
applied for a widows pension two months
after her husbands death with the
assistance of Elkader attorney T. M. Davidson. At
one time, she had owned several lots in Luana but
in 1896 she sold them for $1,200, paid bills and
hoped to use the balance to buy another house.
Ellens application was approved at $8.00
monthly retroactive to from February 23, 1895,
when the application had been received by the
Bureau of Pensions in Washington. The amount was
slowly increased and she was receiving $30.00
monthly when she died on September 20, 1921,
after a stroke of apoplexy the
previous week. She, like Edward, is buried in
Luana Cemetery.
~*~*~
Warn, William H.
Brothers Edward and William Warn were born in New
York to Orlin Warn and his first wife. They moved
to Clayton County, Iowa, in 1852 with their
father and his second wife (Eusebia) who had a
son, Charles Wilson, from her first marriage.
In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected President
and states in the South fulfilled their
pre-election threat to withdraw from the union.
Confederate guns fired on Fort Sumter in the
harbor at Charleston, South Carolina, on April
12, 1861, and war followed. In 1862, with
casualties mounting, President Lincoln call for
another 300,000 volunteers with Iowa to furnish
five regiments in addition to those already in
the field. Despite the pending fall harvest,
Governor Kirkwood assured the President that Iowa
would meet its quota. Our harvest is just
upon us, and we have now scarcely men enough to
save our crops, he said, but if need
be our women can help.
In northeastern Iowa, McGregor postmaster Willard
Benton was an active recruiter and, on August 15,
1862, at Council Hill, he enrolled
twenty-seven-year-old William and
twenty-five-year-old Edward and, at McGregor,
enrolled their twenty-year-old stepbrother,
Charles, all in what would be Company G of
Iowas 21st regiment of volunteer infantry.
William was described as a 5' 7¾ farmer
with blue eyes, brown hair and a dark complexion.
Their company was ordered into quarters at
Dubuques Camp Franklin and mustered into
service on August 22nd with Willard Benton as
Captain. On September 9th, when all ten companies
were of sufficient strength, they were mustered
in as a regiment with each volunteer receiving
one months pay, a $25.00 deposit on the
$100.00 federal bounty and a $2.00 premium.
Training was brief and relatively ineffective and
on a rainy September 16th on board the 184'
four-year-old sidewheel steamer Henry Clay
and two barges tied alongside, they started down
the Mississippi. They spent their first night on
Rock Island and the next morning learned that one
of their comrades, Thompson Spottswood, who was
left behind under the care of his uncle, had died
from measles. With 100 men in each building at
Camp Franklin others had also been infected but
their symptoms were not yet visible. They
continued south on the 17th, debarked at Montrose
due to low water, traveled by train to Keokuk,
boarded the Hawkeye State and reached
St. Louis on the 20th. After one night at Benton
Barracks, they were inspected on the 21st and
that night left by train for Rolla.
There, on September 24th, William was diagnosed
with measles. Four days later the regiment moved
to a better location, about five miles southwest
of town where they had access to good spring
water and named their new location Camp Dunlap
after the regiments popular lieutenant
colonel. They were still there on October 7th
when Henry Lewis, also of Company G, died of
measles and was buried one quarter mile north of
their camp. On the 17th, William was admitted to
the regimental hospital but he was with the
regiment when they started for Salem on the 18th.
Left behind was John Rankhart, Company F, who
died from measles on November 4th, the same day
his comrades reached Houston.
On arrival, William was again hospitalized. The
weather was cold. He was weak from measles and
was suffering from pleurisy and chronic diarrhea
and had pains in his lungs and bowels. Still in
the hospital on January 24, 1863, he was
discharged from the military.
On August 12th, William was back in Council Hill
where he applied for an invalid pension with
Isaac Hitt of Chicago as his attorney. Dr.
Blanchard, an examining surgeon in Elkader, felt
William was totally disabled from earning his
subsistence by manual labor. Breathing was
difficult he said, in consequence of
pleuritic adhesions when slight exertion made.
There is much irritability of the bronchial mucus
membrane.
William had married before the war and he and his
wife, Sally N. (Scott) Warn, had one child. On
January 22, 1864, with his pension application
still pending, a decree of divorce was granted by
the District Court in Elkader.
In February of that year a certificate was mailed
entitling William to an $8.00 monthly pension,
payable quarterly and retroactive to the date of
his discharge. Despite being approved, William
soon stopped drawing the pension and on July 24th
married twenty-eight-year-old Caroline
Carrie Warner in Grand Meadow
Township. They moved to the town of Vail in
Crawford County and on June 24, 1865, a son,
Charles F. Warn was born. He was followed by
Clarence M. who was born on August 23, 1867
(according to the surgeon who was present at the
birth), Ina M. on May 22, 1869, and Mattie M. on
July 16, 1876. Both girls died young - Ina on
November 22, 1876 at seven years of age and
Mattie on July 18, 1878 at two years of age.
The following year, William reapplied for a
pension. He said he was partially disabled for
reasons stated in his first application and
received supportive affidavits from Dr. Washburn
who said he had treated William in Clayton County
in 1863 and 1864 for pleuritic adhesions and
bronchial problems, from Dr. Hicks who had
treated William in Monona in 1868 or 1869 for a
bad cough and in 1874 for severe pain and
pleurisy, from Dr. Green who treated him from
1866 to 1869 and said I recolect telling
soldier that it would always trouble him more or
less, and from Dr. Sansom who also had
treated William for chronic bronchitis and
pleuritic adhesions. William explained that he
had stopped drawing his earlier pension because
he supposed a soldier should be totally
disabled to be entitled to draw pay.
On March 17, 1880, his application was approved
at a rate of $8.00 monthly from March 4, 1864 but
decreasing to $4.00 effective April 17, 1879. On
April 14, 1880, a son, Arthur M. Warn, was born.
On February 10, 1883, at forty-three years of
age, William died after suffering from
war-related bronchitis and pleurisy for twenty
years. He was buried in Vail Cemetery.
On May 23, 1885, Caroline applied for a
widows pension under an Act of July 14,
1862. To prove her claim she would have to prove
William had been divorced from his first wife,
that he had then married Caroline, that they had
lived as husband and wife and that she had not
remarried after his death. She also requested a
pension for children under sixteen years of age
when William died and mentioned Arthur but
neglected to mention Clarence. Her application
was supported by affidavits from Chester and Mary
Warner who said they were present when William
and Caroline were married, from Orlin and Eusebia
Warn who said they were present when William
married Sally and knew they had divorced and from
Dr. J. S. Green who said he had officiated when
Clarence was born and by a certified copy of the
record of the divorce of William and Sally.
Pensions were calculated on a monthly basis but
were payable quarterly. On June 26, 1886, a
certificate was issued providing for $12.00
monthly as a widows pension and $2.00 for
Arthur both effective May 29, 1885. More than two
years later, $2.00 was approved for Clarence
retroactive to February 11, 1883. Caroline was
also approved for Williams accrued pension
that was unpaid at the time of his death. The
boys pensions would end with their
sixteenth birthdays but Carolines pension
continued and she was receiving $40.00 monthly
when she died at Clarences home on December
9, 1928. She was buried in Ida Grove Cemetery.
~*~*~
Washburn, Francis 'Frank'
Francis 'Frank' Washburn was born in Louisville,
Kentucky, in about 1833. Farther north, Martha
Holmes was born in Wisconsin in 1840, but moved
to Iowa when she was about five years old.
During the 1860 presidential campaigns, many
southern states threatened to secede if Abraham
Lincoln was elected, but most in the north
discounted the threat. As Iowas Clayton
County Journal said, We do not believe
that the people of South Carolina desire a
dissolution of the Union simply because a
Northern man was elected President. There are
only a few hot-heads in our opinion who make all
this disturbance and they cannot effect
anything. The Journal was wrong.
Lincoln was elected and less than two months
later, on January 13,1861, Frank and Martha were
married in Brownsville, Arkansas. When Lincoln
delivered his inaugural address on March 4th,
Arkansas Unionists paid $78.00 for a special copy
transmitted by telegraph. Although well received
by many, especially transplants from the north,
the Arkansian called it an "insulting
message" defended only by "political
bigots" and "hardened political
fossils" supporting "His Satanic
Majesty." On April 12th, General
Beauregards Confederate cannon fired on
Fort Sumter and war followed.
As the war escalated into a second year and
casualties mounted, more soldiers were needed to
fill the ranks. On July 9, 1862, Iowas
governor, Sam Kirkwood, received a telegram
asking him to raise five regiments in addition to
those already in the field. If not raised by
August 15th, a draft was likely. The
harvest is just upon us, said
Governor Kirkwood, but if need be our women
can help.
The 21st Regiment of Iowas volunteer
infantry was mustered into service at
Dubuques Camp Franklin on September 9,
1862, and a week later, on a rainy September
16th, those able for duty boarded the
four-year-old sidewheel steamer Henry Clay
and two barges tied alongside and started south.
From a total enrolment of 1,181 (original and
subsequent recruits), 73 would die from wounds
and another 160 from disease.
After early service in Missouri, the regiment
became part of General Grants army that was
organized at Millikens Bend, Louisiana,
with the goal of capturing the Confederate
stronghold of Vicksburg. By then, Frank and
Martha had left the South, moved north and
settled in Iowa. In April 1863, as Union troops
were starting their march south along the west
side of the Mississippi River, Martha gave birth
to a son, John Wesley Washburn.
On December 7, 1863, the family was living in
Buena Vista when Frank, a thirty-year-old
machinist, signed a three-year Volunteer
Enlistment agreeing to bear true and
faithful allegiance to the United States of
America and to serve them honestly
and faithfully against all their enemies or
opposers. Instead of dog tags
used in later wars, Civil War soldiers were
identified by physical descriptions and Frank was
described as 5' 9½ tall with dark hair and
blue eyes.
Also enlisting as new recruits were John Beavers
and George Robish. All three men were paid $13.00
as an advance on their monthly pay in addition to
a $60.00 advance on their enlistment bounty and a
$2.00 premium. Before long, they started south
where they would serve in Company G of the
regiment.
Company muster rolls were taken bi-monthly and
the roll taken on April 30, 1864, on Matagoda
Island, Texas, showed Frank was present. He was
also present on the June 30th roll at Terrebone
Station in Louisiana. On July 8th, the regiment
moved to Algiers where they arrived about 9:00
p.m. While there, many took the opportunity (some
without permission) to cross the river to New
Orleans where the good times rolled
but, about midnight on the July 26th, they broke
camp and at 8:00 a.m. on the 27th, on board the Laurel
Hill, started upstream while the sick were
left behind in the care of Dr. Hunt and Joseph
Lundbeck. William Crooke stayed in Algiers to
serve on the court martial of Private W. W. Kerr
(who would be acquitted) and Tim Hayes stayed
behind as Crooke's cook. Also left behind were
John Carpenter still suffering from a gunshot
wound received during the Vicksburg Campaign,
John Conant who was sick and Linus McKinnie who
was at division headquarters working as a clerk
for General McGinnis.
On their way upstream, soldiers saw the steamer Henry
Choteau moving downstream with a load of
cattle, passed the Jennie Rogers, and
were passed by the Nebraska when the Laurel
Hill broke one of the arms on the paddle
wheel. Despite losing the lead, they enjoyed the
trip and the cheering of Negroes along the river
banks, passed Plaquemine, saw the remains of the
Anglo-American burned more than a year earlier
after contesting rebel batteries at Port Hudson,
and continued in darkness. They reached Port
Hudson about 1:00 a.m. on the 27th, paused
briefly to receive dispatches, resumed their trip
and tied up at the Morganza landing about
daylight. The rest of the morning was spent
unloading boats, making camp and, said Mathew
King, admiring a fine fort commanded with
eight guns.
They were still camped at Morganza when Frank
became ill on the 16th of August. For more than
two weeks he received daily medical care, but on
September 3rd he died. The regiment had been
ordered to embark at 1:00 a.m., but its departure
was delayed due to Franks death and, said
Matthew King, we buried him hurriedly as
the troops were called to go on board. The
precise location of the burial is unknown.
Frank death was caused by the debilitating
effects of chronic diarrhea, an illness that
claimed the lives of sixty-four members of the
regiment. He was survived by twenty-four-year-old
Martha and their one-year-old son.
On February 19, 1866, Martha was living in Buena
Vista when she signed an application seeking a
pension for herself and an additional amount for
John. Archibald Stuart, formerly a 1st Lieutenant
in Company G, wrote a supportive letter, the
Adjutant Generals office confirmed
Franks service and, on May 23rd, a pension
certificate was issued and mailed to her
attorney, Samuel Burns.
On July 15th of that year, Congress adopted a new
pension act and two months later Martha signed an
application for an increase pursuant to the terms
of the new act, but theres no record of any
action being taken. On October 20, 1868, she gave
her address as Colesburg when she applied again.
Witnesses confirmed the date of her sons
birth and in November a new certificate was
issued for Martha to receive $8.00 monthly plus
an additional $2.00 for John, both payable
quarterly.
On March 26, 1869, Martha was married to Moses
Batterton by Justice of the Peace W. W. Smith in
Dubuque. During her marriage to Moses, Martha
gave birth to four more children (Lee, Charles,
Ed and Melvin) but, having remarried, she was no
longer entitled to her widows pension.
Moses died on May 8, 1910, and a year later
Martha wrote to the Commissioner. At seventy-one
years of age, she said she was unable to earn a
living by her own labor and I humbly ask to
have my pension renewed if I was young I would
not ask it. For the next three months, her
claim was investigated as she said she had no
real property of her own and was living on a farm
with her sons. Moses had no life insurance, he
had not served in the army or navy, the county
auditor confirmed there was no real estate in his
name, and Franks service was again
examined. Finally, on November 21, 1911, a
certificate was issued entitling her to $12.00
monthly.
By 1915, Martha had moved to Dyersville where she
lived alone in a rented house not far from Ed who
was also living in Dyersville. The Manchester
Democrat reported that, on September 6th of
that year, Martha became ill with heart trouble.
Four days later she died and on the 12th a
funeral was held at Earlville with
interment being made in the cemetery at
that place. Although she was not a
religious lady, she was, it said,
a very kind lady and did many deeds of
charity.
~*~*~
Watkins, David L.
David Watkins was born in Warren County,
Pennsylvania, on July 24, 1823. On May 7, 1846,
twenty-two-year-old David married Julia A.
Carpenter. Julia died in Epworth, Iowa, on
September 15, 1857. Her grave has not been
located and its unknown if they had any
children.
David had been living in Strawberry Point for
three years when, still a widower, he was
enrolled on July 25, 1865, by local dentist,
Charles Heath, as a Private in Company B of the
21st Iowa Infantry. He was described as being 5'
9½ tall with blue eyes, a dark complexion
and brown hair. They were ordered into quarters
at Camp Franklin in Dubuque on August 16th and
mustered in as a company on August 18th. On
September 9, 1862, with a total of 985 members,
officers and enlisted, ten companies were
mustered in as the 21st Regiment of Iowa
Volunteer Infantry.
They left for war on September 16, 1862, and
spent the next six and one-half months in
Missouri with David working much of the time as a
company cook. After a month in Rolla, they
started for Salem on October 18th and arrived on
the 19th. On the muster roll dated at Salem on
October 31st, David was present but sick in
quarters. Rolls were taken every two months
and David was still present on
December 31st at Houston and February 28th at
Iron Mountain. On March 11, 1863, they walked
into the Mississippi River town of Ste. Genevieve
and camped on a ridge to the north. Starting on
the 1st of April, they were transported
down-river to Millikens Bend, Louisiana,
where General Grant was organizing a large army
to capture the Confederate stronghold at
Vicksburg.
On April 12th, in a corps led by General John
McClernand, they started walking south along the
west side of the Mississippi. On the 14th they
camped along Roundaway Bayou near Richmond and,
on the 15th, several furloughs were granted.
David Drummond and John Carpenter left for
McGregor while David Watkins left for Strawberry
Point on a thirty-day furlough pursuant to a
Surgeons Certificate. With him, David
carried a letter that Myron Knight was sending
home to his family. David, returning with letters
and newspapers, rejoined the regiment at the rear
of Vicksburg on June 7th and, on June 30th, was
marked present but sick.
During his absence the regiment had participated
in the May 1st Battle of Port Gibson, May 17th
assault at the Big Black River, May 22nd assault
at Vicksburg and the first part of the siege.
Vicksburg surrendered on July 4th. The next day,
the able-bodied members of the regiment joined
General Sherman in a pursuit of Confederate
General Joe Johnston. David, however, was still
sick and remained in Vicksburg to recuperate. He
was able to regain his health and was present on
bimonthly muster rolls at Carrollton, Louisiana,
on August 31st, and Vermillion Bayou, Louisiana,
on October 31st. In late November they left New
Orleans, were transported westward across the
Gulf of Mexico, and went ashore on St.
Josephs Island, Texas. For more than six
months they performed service along the Gulf
Coast at Matagorda Island and Indianola before
returning to Louisiana.
David was still present but, in August, was
treated for rheumatic pains and chronic
diarrhoea. On September 10, 1864, at the mouth of
the White River, he was granted a forty-day
furlough to go north on a Surgeons
Certificate. On September 16th he was in Dubuque
when he secured a requisition to go from Dubuque
to Earlville on the Dubuque & Sioux City
Railroad. He was late returning to the regiment
but, on December 1st, reported voluntarily to the
Provost Marshal at Camp McClellan in Dubuque and
was placed under arrest as a
straggler. On the 12th he started
south and on the 16th he reached the regiment
then at Memphis. By order of Brigadier General
Big Mike Lawler, David was restored
to duty without loss of pay or allowances.
David then participated with his regiment in the
Mobile Campaign in the spring of 1865. From New
Orleans, they were transported to Dauphin Island
at the entrance to Mobile Bay, crossed the
entrance to Mobile Point on March17th, and then
walked north along the east side of the bay. When
the Confederates abandoned the city, the regiment
camped at Spring Hill west of town before
returning to Louisiana, performing garrison duty
and accepting surrenders along the Red River, and
being mustered out on July 15, 1865, at Baton
Rouge. On the 24th, they were discharged from the
military at Clinton, Iowa, and free to return to
their homes.
David said he stayed in Strawberry Point for
about two weeks, but then followed other family
members to western Iowa and lived briefly in
Sioux City before moving in January 1866 to Onawa
where he went into the brick
business. He was still living there on
September 4, 1867, when he married Sarah Cole
forty-five miles away in Denison. David and Sarah
lived in Onawa until February, 1871, when they
moved to Kansas and settled in Mound City in Linn
County. A son, Myron Watkins, was born on July
13, 1871, and another, Frank Watkins, was born on
May 2, 1873. On March 17, 1875, they were living
in Marion County when George Washington Watkins
was born. The family of five then moved to
Republic County in November 1875 and to Rooks
County in March 1878. Thats where their
final child, John A. Watkins, was born on May 17,
1881, the same year the county courthouse was
erected in nearby Stockton.
On August 16, 1887, sixty-five-year-old David
gave his residence as the town of Motor when he
applied for an invalid pension and indicated he
was taken sick with jaundice followed by
rheumatism contracted twenty-five years
earlier when the regiment was in Salem. William
Bromley, a doctor in Motor, signed an affidavit
saying he had treated David for rheumatism in
1878. David, he said, seemed to be in pain
all the time and was not able to doe but little
work. Other witnesses submitted similar
affidavits and a board of pension surgeons found
his shoulder and knee joints on both sides
extremely tender. There was stiffness
and limitation of motion of knee joints.
They suggested an 8/18 rating.
William Warner, James Hicks and Charlie Robbins
had served with David in Company B and agreed
that David had a difficult time that first
winter. William recalled that David was off
duty for considerable time and James said
David had been disabled by contracting
rheumatism caused by exposure.
Charlies testimony was similar. We
had been doing some hard campaigning, he
said, and David was subjected to extremely
severe and constant exposure mud rain snow sleet
and fording streams of water. Since they
had done very little up to that time, Charlie may
have been referring to their more difficult
service in November when a wagon train was
attacked at Beaver Creek and men in Hartville
raced to the scene of the attack and to January
when many participated in a battle at Hartville
and a difficult return, often wading across icy
streams, to their base then in Houston.
Davids claim was approved and, on June 21,
1889, a certificate was issued entitling him to
$8.00 monthly, payable quarterly through the
pension agency in Topeka.
As was normal with most pensioners once a pension
was granted, David applied for increases. More
affidavits were submitted and David, living in
Cordell, was again examined by pension surgeons,
this time in Stockton. An increase was approved
and a new certificate was mailed on November 19,
1890, with a monthly rate of $16.00.
A month earlier David had moved to Beaty,
Arkansas, and on December 4th he applied for
another increase. On July 15, 1891, he said he
was a resident of Southwest City, Missouri, where
he was examined by another board of surgeons. His
application was still pending when he submitted
another one. Now seventy years old, he said his
health was deteriorating. Dr. Baker of Maysville,
Arkansas, said David was suffering from partial
blindness and deafness.
On October 16, 1892, he moved back to Codell and
the following year was examined by surgeons in
Stockton. For the next several years there were
more examinations, more applications and more
supportive affidavits until, on June 21, 1897, a
certificate was issued raising Davids
pension to $24.00 monthly.
On May 13, 1899, Sarah died. David was eighty-six
years old when he died on March 15, 1907.
Theyre buried in Conger Cemetery,
Plainville, Kansas. Of their four boys, Myron
died in 1939, Frank in 1951 and George in 1954.
Myron and George are in Plainville Cemetery,
while Frank is buried in Fern Hill Cemetery,
Aberdeen, Washington.
~*~*~
Weeks, Bradford T. 'Brad'
Massachusetts residents Samuel and Ruhamah
Ruamy (Hall) Weeks had at least three
children: Eliza in 1836, Ralph in 1841 and Brad
who was born in Norwich on June 5, 1845. From
there they moved to Iowa where, in 1860, Eliza
married Rodney Tirrill. They made their home in
Delaware County where Rodney practiced law in
Manchester.
Confederate guns fired on Fort Sumter in South
Carolina on April 12, 1861, but it was nothing to
worry about said the Clayton County Journal,
there are men enough in Pennsylvania alone
to subdue South Carolina without the aid of Iowa
volunteers. The Journal was wrong
and the ensuing war escalated quickly. In 1862,
President Lincoln called for 300,000 more
volunteers with Iowa to raise five regiments in
addition to those already in the field. It was in
response to this call that the 21st regiment of
Iowas volunteer infantry was organized.
Mustered into service on September 9, 1862, with
a total of 985 men, officers and enlisted, they
saw early service in Missouri, sustained heavy
losses during the Vicksburg Campaign,
participated in an expedition to Jackson and were
then transported farther south to Carollton, a
suburb of New Orleans. From there they left on
September 4, 1863, served in southwestern
Louisiana (Berwick, Vermilion Bayou, Brashear
City) before returning and camping in Algiers on
November 22nd and being immediately ordered to
the gulf coast of Texas.
By then, despite new recruits, the ranks had
thinned considerably. There were only 642 on the
muster rolls and many were sick, detached or
otherwise not fit for duty. More men were needed
and recruiting efforts in Iowa intensified.
Fifteen enlisted in December, eleven in January
and fifty-one in February. Among them were Brad
Weeks who enlisted from Clayton County on
February 13th and his brother Ralph who enlisted
on the 29th.
As a new recruit, Brad went first to Dubuque
where he signed a Volunteer Enlistment before
Shubael P. Adams who was a recruiting officer,
Captain and Provost Marshall for the 3rd
Congressional District. At eighteen years of age,
Brad was old enough to volunteer with a
parents consent and his father signed the
enlistment saying, I freely give my Consent
to his volunteering. Brad was described as
being 5' 3½ tall with a dark complexion,
grey eyes and brown hair. From Dubuque he was
sent to the depot at Camp McClellan in Davenport
where he joined other recruits (Abel Allen,
Joseph Allen, Ira Blanchard, and Osbra Patterson)
as they started south to join their regiment. It
was a long trip down the Mississippi and across
the Gulf of Mexico to Matagorda Island, Texas,
where they arrived on March 28, 1864.
Only four days later Brad was hard at work with
other soldiers building and reinforcing forts.
These works were built of sand and were
only kept in place by being sodded after they
were built, as the sand was very fine and drifted
like snow. The next morning, said Brad,
I had considerable blood pass me attended
with a good deal of pain. Ralph arrived on
April 11th and they remained on the island until
mid-June when the regiment was finally able to
leave the sacred drifting sands of
Texas (as Colonel Sam Merrill called them)
and was transported to Algiers, Louisiana.
Arriving on July 8th, they left for Morganza Bend
on the 26th, but Ralph was ill and left behind.
On August 10th he died. Ralph is buried in
Chalmette National Cemetery.
At Morganza Bend, Brad also was not well and was
treated for diarrhea. A common ailment that led
to the death of at least sixty-three of his
comrades, the illness (also referred to by
soldiers as the bloody flux, the screamers, the
Virginia quickstep, the Tennessee trots and other
colorful names) often became chronic and led to
malnutrition, anemia and increased susceptibility
to other diseases resulting in extreme
dehydration, as much as fifty percent weight loss
and an estimated 50,000 deaths in the Union army.
Brad stayed with the regiment at Morganza Bend
and traveled with it to the mouth of the White
River and up the river to St. Charles where they
arrived on September 11, 1864. Although receiving
constant treatment, his condition did not
improve. On October 21st he was detached and on
the 23rd was admitted to the Washington U. S.
Army Hospital in Memphis where he could receive
better care than in regimental facilities. He was
granted a furlough from the hospital a month
later and returned to Iowa where he received more
treatment. His furlough expired but, on January
6, 1865, a Deputy Provost Marshal sent a notice
to Provost Marshal Adams indicating that Brad
wishes me to report to you for him that he
is unable to return without endangering his
health. He is now confined to his room &
probably will not be able to return for a long
time yet. Far away in the South, the
regiments records indicated he was still
being treated in Memphis, but Brad apparently
never returned to Memphis or rejoined his
regiment. Instead, he continued to receive
treatment for chronic diarrhea during May and
June and, on June 27, 1865, at a general hospital
in Davenport he was discharged from the military.
Thirty-five days later, giving his address as
York in Delaware County, he applied for an
invalid pension with Rodney Tirrill, his
brother-in-law, as his attorney. Brad had
suffered from diarrhea for almost a full year and
a surgeon in Independence felt he was
three-fourths incapacitated from earning a living
by manual labor but, surprisingly, also thought
the disability was probably temporary
and the application stalled.
In 1870 the Adjutant Generals Office noted
that Brad had been discharged due to
chronic diarrhoea of long duration incurred
since his enlistment. Affidavits by 2nd
Lieutenant Gilbert Cooley (who said Brad
could not do the slightest duty without
great irritation of the bowels and in fact was
confined to his cot or bed for a considerable
time), Dr. H. C. Chase (who confirmed that
a temperate Brad had diarrhea during the war and
had not recovered) and Brad (confirming he had no
other military service) were filed.
Manchesters Dr. J. M. Lanning, who examined
Brad in 1871, 1873, 1874 and twice in 1875, said
exercise brought on a return of the diarrhea.
While his health problems continued, Brad married
Anna C. Ludy in Putnam Township, Delaware co. IA
on June 8, 1876. His father died on August 22,
1880, and was buried in Manchesters Oakland
Cemetery. On November 1, 1883, Anna gave birth to
their only known child, Lewis Wilbur Weeks. On
February 20, 1890, Brads
eighty-two-year-old mother died. She, like her
husband, was buried in Oakland Cemetery.
Meanwhile, Brads efforts to obtain a
pension had finally been rewarded when he was
granted $4.00 monthly retroactive to the day
after his discharge. On July 15, 1885, with a
post office address of Strawberry Point, he
requested an increase that was denied so, on May
20, 1889, again from Strawberry Point, he
reapplied. This time he was re-rated to $12.00
monthly. The next time he applied he was ordered
to appear before a board of surgeons in Dubuque.
At the suggestion of another brother-in-law,
Charles Albright who worked for Lime
Springs pension attorney George Van Leuven,
Brad asked if, instead of Dubuque, he could be
examined by a board in Decorah. Van Leuven was
credited with being the most successful
pension agent in the state as testimonials which
he has received, from the best of authority,
would go to prove. References, Hons. Wm. B.
Allison, U. S. Senator; Thos. Updegraff, N. C.
Deering, C. C. Carpenter, members of congress;
John McHugh, S. S. Lambert, and Kimball &
Farnsworth.
The request was granted and on January 5, 1892,
Brad took a morning train from Strawberry Point
and reached Decorah in the afternoon so he would
be there in time for the examination scheduled
for the next morning. He wandered around, talked
to a few other veterans and learned they could be
examined that night. After supper, he went to the
doctors office where about 27 or 30
soldiers were waiting to be examined by the
surgeons each of whom would be paid $2.00 by the
government for every soldier examined. When
called, he went into the examining room where
there were two other soldiers, three surgeons
and, seated at a table, George Van Leuven who
said something like this. Comrades I want
you to contribute as much as you can for these
doctors because they get small pay and it will be
a benefit to your claim. . . I understood him to
say that the doctors were friends to the soldiers
and that they were going to give them all they
deserved and that the soldiers should be as
liberal as they could. None of the money
was for himself, Van Leuven said; it was all for
the doctors. Brad and other soldiers went
up and laid our money on the table. Brad
paid $20 and thought $200 or $300 was paid that
night. While the doctors said nothing, they could
easily see who was putting money on the table.
On May 22, 1893, Van Leuven was arrested for
pension fraud. Allegations included falsifying
affidavits for soldiers and their comrades to
sign, bribing pension surgeons to submit
favorable reports, and having soldiers pay
pension surgeons as Brad had done. While Brad
didnt feel he had done anything wrong, the
government examiner called it bribery, was
convinced that Brad had learned of the
liberality of the Decorah Board and wanted to get
before them, and noted that as a
result of the examination Brads
pension had been increased from $12 to $17. Brad
later was one of many who presented testimony to
a grand jury and, on December 15, 1894, after a
trial widely reported by the New York Times, the
Chicago Tribune, the San Francisco Call and other
newspapers, Van Leuven was convicted on
thirty-seven counts and sentenced to the prison
in Anamosa.
Brads next application for an increase of
his invalid pension was denied. He was already
receiving more than a 1907 age-based act would
have allowed, but increases were granted under
subsequent acts. By 1923 Brad said he was
confined to his bed part of the time and got
around only with the aid of crutches. Pension
surgeons said he is kept under surveillance
in order to aid him if he falls or faints
and while not requiring constant attention
does require regular care and
attendance. Brad was receiving $72 monthly
when he died at home on April 9, 1924, at
seventy-eight years of age. He is buried in
Strawberry Point Cemetery.
On April 15th, Anna applied for a widows
pension. Two months later she was awarded
Brads accrued but unpaid pension and her
own $30 widows pension. Anna died on July
25, 1929, and their son, Lewis, on May 22, 1947.
Like Brad, theyre buried in Strawberry
Point Cemetery.
~*~*~
Welch, William
Co. G, aged 24, born in England, residence
Millville, Clayton County
08/15/62 enlisted
08/22/62 muster in CompanyG
09/09/62 muster in Regiment
08/01/64 promoted to 5th Corporal
02/01/65 promoted to 4th Corporal
07/15/65 muster out Baton Rouge
The above is from the R&R. I have not
verified the information.
~*~*~
Whipple, Darwin
Darwin Whipple was born on December 20, 1824, in
Croydon, New Hampshire. About fifty miles to the
north, Eliza H. Sargent was born on June 26,
1826, in Corinth, Vermont. On March 6, 1845,
twenty-year-old Darwin and eighteen-year-old
Eliza were married in Newport, New Hampshire.
Their first three children were born in Croydon:
Joseph Nettleton Whipple on June 26, 1847,
Cordelia K. Whipple on October 26, 1848, and
James Danforth Whipple on October 28, 1850.
In 1854 or 1855 (records differ), the family of
five moved to Clayton County where Darwin worked
as a farmer and two more children were born.
Olive Electra Whipple was born on January 30,
1858, and on June 3, 1861, Edgar J. Whipple was
born into a troubled country. Only fifty days
earlier, Confederate cannon had fired on Fort
Sumter and with a voice that shook the
land, the guns of Sumter spoke.
As the war progressed through a second year,
President Lincoln called for more volunteers and,
despite an imminent fall harvest, the volunteers
came. Charles Heath, a Strawberry Point dentist,
was an active recruiter in the county and, on
August 11, 1862, he enrolled at least fifteen men
including thirty-seven-year-old Darwin Whipple
who enlisted at Cox Creek. Darwin was described
as being 5' 10¼ tall with grey eyes, brown
hair and a dark complexion. He and Eliza were
possibly unaware that Eliza was pregnant with
their sixth child.
At Dubuques Camp Franklin on August 18,
1862, they were mustered in as Company B and, on
September 9th, ten companies were mustered in as
the 21st Regiment of Iowas Volunteer
Infantry. On September 16th, they left for war.
Crowded on board the sidewheel steamer Henry
Clay and two barges lashed alongside, they
started down the Mississippi, changed to the Hawkeye
State after encountering low water at
Montrose, and arrived in St. Louis on the 20th.
The next night, about midnight, they boarded cars
of the Southwest Branch of the Pacific Railroad
and on the 22nd reached the railhead at Rolla.
Darwin was present during their month in Rolla
and was again marked present on the
October 31st Company Muster Roll dated at Salem.
Two months later, still in Missouri, he was with
the regiment in Houston but detailed as a
pioneer, a laborious duty often
involving construction of roads, bridges, levees
and other structures, work many thought was
unworthy of soldiers. He continued with the
regiment as they walked south to West Plains and,
from there, northeast to Thomasville, Ironton,
Iron Mountain and, on March 11, 1863, into the
old French town of Ste. Genevieve. On April 1,
1863, Darwin was promoted from Private to 8th
Corporal as the regiment boarded the Ocean
Wave and went downstream. They debarked at
Millikens Bend where General Grant was
organizing a large army with the intent of
capturing the Confederate stronghold at
Vicksburg.
On April 9th, Eliza gave birth to their sixth
child, a boy named Darwin Whipple in honor of his
absent father. On the 10th, at Millikens
Bend, a special muster was taken and Darwin was
present. He was sick in quarters but,
on the 12th, was well enough to continue with the
regiment as it started a march south along roads,
over bayous and through swamps of northwestern
Louisiana.
On April 30th, they crossed to the Bruinsburg
landing on the east bank and, on May 1, 1863,
engaged in the Battle of Port Gibson. On May 16th
they were present but held out of action at the
Battle of Champions Hill and on the 17th
they and the 23rd Iowa led a successful assault
on Confederates entrenched along the Big Black
River. Several days later, they joined other
regiments encircling the rear of Vicksburg and,
on May 22d, participated in an all-out, but
unsuccessful, assault on the enemy lines. A
soldiers Descriptive Book usually, but not
always, indicates actions in which the soldier
participated, but Darwins book mentions no
such actions.
During the ensuing siege of Vicksburg, 4th
Corporal William Perkins died of disease on June
14th, 5th Corporal Abe Treadwell was promoted to
take his place, 6th Corporal John Farrand was
promoted to take Treadwells place, 7th
Corporal James Adams was promoted to take
Farrands place, and 8th Corporal Darwin
Whipple was promoted to take Adams place -
but Darwin was not well.
On the June 30th Company Muster Roll, Darwin was
marked Absent sick in Hospital. On
August 3, 1863, he was a patient in St.
Louis small pox hospital when he died. Due
to the infectious nature of the disease, all of
his personal effects were burned and he was
likely buried in the cemetery on Quarantine
Island, also known as Arsenal Island. In
April, 1876, the island was flooded, wooden
markers were destroyed, and the remains of those
who could be located were reburied in the
national cemetery at Jefferson Barracks. His name
appears with that of his wife on a monument in
Elkader Cemetery but, for Darwin, its
likely a cenotaph erected when Eliza died.
Eliza was thirty-seven years old and the mother
of six children, aged sixteen to four months,
when Darwin died. To secure a badly needed
pension, Eliza had to prove she had married
Darwin and that they were still married when he
died. The town of Croydon found no record of the
marriage but, on September 4, 1863, the clerk of
Sullivan County issued a certificate confirming
the marriage. A month later, still living in
Clayton County, Eliza signed an application for a
widows pension. Witnesses signed affidavits
and the claim was submitted. With the pension
office inundated by applications, it was the
following March before the government verified
Darwins service and not until July 17,
1865, almost two years after Darwins death,
that Eliza was finally admitted to the pension
rolls at a rate of $8.00 per month retroactive to
the date of his death.
Pensions were also paid for a soldiers
children until their 16th birthdays. On September
5, 1866, with the countys well known
attorney, Realto Price, as her representative,
Eliza applied on behalf of her four youngest
children. Supporting her application were Mary
Sargent who had assisted with the births of James
and Olive and Relief Robbins who had assisted
with the births of Olive, Edgar and Darwin and
both of whom had helped Eliza when she was
confined. The pensions were approved at
$2.00 per month for each of the four children,
but Elizas pension was terminated when she
married a widower, Lester Wallace, on May 21,
1868, in Boardman Township.
On July 1, 1866, Cordelia married William Scovel.
On March 31, 1872, James married Sada Smith. On
February 23, 1873, Joseph married Alice Smith. On
April 13, 1875, Olive married John M. Carpenter.
On February 22, 1888, Darwin Whipple married
Jennie McKinnis. By then, only
twenty-six-year-old Edgar was unmarried.
Eliza died on October 28, 1888. The Elkader
Weekly Register reported that she had been
keeping house for her son, Ed Whipple, at
his Cox Creek creamery near Osborne.
Edward [sic] was assisting J. M. Carpenter
[his brother-in-law] during the day, and on going
home about seven oclock found his
mother, dead from heart disease. She was buried
in Elkader Cemetery with a monument erroneously
indicating she died in November.
Cordelia died on January 15, 1918, and is buried
in Dell Rapids Cemetery, South Dakota. James died
on March 16, 1919, and is buried in Edgewood
Cemetery. Joseph died on December 11, 1927, and
is buried in Mount Hope Cemetery, Chicago. Olive
died on August 24, 1929, and is buried in
Strawberry Point Cemetery. Edgar died on June 21,
1943, and is buried in Chester Hill Cemetery.
Only the locations of the graves of Darwin
Whipple, both father and son, are unknown
although Darwin (Sr.) may be among
those buried in the National Cemetery at
Jefferson Barracks. Darwin (Jr.) and
his family were living in Lincoln Township, Linn
County, Kansas, as late as 1930. His two sons,
Garland Garl Whipple and Reade Darwin
Whipple, are buried in the countys Oaklawn
Cemetery in La Cygne, but neither Darwin nor his
wife was found.
~*~*~
White, John M.
Co. D, age 18, residence Volga City, Clayton
County
08/14/62 enlisted
08/22/62 muster in Company D
09/09/62 muster in Regiment
05/10/65 muster out Prairie du Chien, WI
The above is from the R&R. I have not
verified the information.
~*~*~
Wick,
Andrew
Wicks, Andrew
Andrew Wick was born in Heppenheim, Germany, on
January 26, 1830; Nancy Ann Brandenberg in
Indiana on May 8, 1840. On November 13, 1858,
they were married in Patch Grove, Wisconsin, and
on August 2, 1861, four months after Confederate
guns fired on Fort Sumter, Jacob Jake
Wick, the first of their seven children, was
born.
By the fall of 1862, with casualties having
mounted and armies, both North and South, in need
of reinforcements, President Lincoln called for
another 300,000 volunteers. Iowa was asked to
supply five regiments in addition to those
already in the field. Governor Kirkwood assured
the president the State of Iowa in the
future as in the past, will be prompt and ready
to do her duty to the country in the time of sore
trial. Our harvest is just upon us, and we have
now scarcely men enough to save our crops, but if
need be our women can help." All eligible
men aged 18 to 45 were listed for a possible
draft.
One of the new regiments was to be raised in the
third congressional district, consisting of
Dubuque, Delaware, Clayton, Fayette, Bremer,
Chickasaw, Floyd, Cerro Gordo, Worth, Mitchell,
Howard, Winneshiek, and Alamakee counties.
Soldiers' Aid Societies were formed, fund-raising
fairs were held and residents donated money and
furniture, lightning rods, real property,
equipment, silver and other items for sale. Iowa
paid no state bounties, but cities and counties
levied taxes to raise funds for volunteers and
their families.
On August 12, 1862, Andrew Wick was enrolled by
McGregor postmaster Willard Benton at North Buena
Vista and ten days later he was one of 87 men
mustered in as Company G of the 21st Iowa
Infantry. With his age erroneously listed as
twenty-two on the Company Muster-in Roll (an
error corrected in his Descriptive Book), 5'
7" Andrew was described as having gray eyes,
brown hair and a dark complexion; occupation
farmer. The regiment was mustered into service at
Dubuques Camp Franklin on September 9th
and, after brief and largely ineffective
training, left for war. On a rainy September
16th, crowded on board the four-year-old
sidewheel steamer Henry Clay and two
barges lashed alongside, they started down the
Mississippi. After one night at Rock Island
(where they learned that one of their comrades,
left behind due to measles contracted during
training, had become the first to die), they
continued south, debarked at Montrose due to low
water, traveled by rail to Keokuk, boarded the Hawkeye
State and continued to St. Louis where they
arrived on September 20th and, in suffocating
heat, walked to Benton Barracks. On the 21st,
following an afternoon inspection, they walked to
the rail depot and, about midnight, boarded rail
cars usually used for freight and livestock and
left for Rolla.
The first seven months of their service were
spent in Missouri and Andrew was marked
present on bi-monthly company muster
rolls at Salem on October 31st, Houston on
December 31st and Iron Mountain on February 28th.
On March 11th, after a sixteen mile walk, they
arrived in the old French town of St. Genevieve
about 3:00 p.m. and made camp on a ridge north of
town. They were then transported to
Millikens Bend where General Grant was
organizing a three-corps army with Generals
McPherson, McClernand and Sherman as corps
leaders. On a rainy April 12th, 1863, while
serving under General McClernand, the regiment
started a slow movement south along dirt roads,
over abandoned plantations and through swamps
west of the river.
On April 29th, with several others from the
regiment, Andrew was left sick at Ashwood
Landing on Hurricane Bend (also known as
Davis Bend) while others moved on. On the 30th,
the army began crossing from Disharoons
Plantation to the Bruinsburg landing in
Mississippi. The first regiment to cross was
assigned to high ground above the landing so they
could give a warning if the enemy appeared. The
second regiment, the 21st Iowa, was ordered to
proceed inland as the armys point regiment
and to keep going until they met the enemy. About
midnight near the Abram Shaifer house they were
fired on by Confederate pickets but, after a
brief exchange of gunfire, both sides rested on
their arms. The next day, May 1st, they
participated in the Battle of Port Gibson.
William Comstock was seriously wounded and died
on the 2nd. Charles Roehl sustained a leg wound.
The leg was amputated but on the 18th he died.
John Van Kuran was wounded in his right arm and
the arm was amputated, but on June 18th he too
would die. Another fourteen had less serious
wounds
The regiment continued inland and, on May 15th,
Andrew and several others who had been left
behind caught up and rejoined their comrades. On
May 16th the regiment was held in reserve and did
not participate in the Battle of Champion Hill,
but they were then rotated to the front of the
army and on the 17th, with the 23d Iowa, led an
assault on Confederates entrenched along the east
side of the Big Black River. This time regimental
casualties were heavy - 7 killed in action, 18
fatally wounded and at least 38 with less severe
wounds. Among the wounded were the
regiments colonel, Sam Merrill, who led his
regiment until being seriously wounded early in
the assault and Andrew Wick. While charging
across an open field, Andrew was shot in his left
thigh, a through-and-through wound that caused
significant damage as it splintered his femur.
After initial treatment in the field, he was sent
to the armys general hospital at Benton
Barracks. He was still there in August when,
pursuant to a General Order of the War
Department, Andrew and two of his comrades were
among many transferred to the Invalid Corps
(renamed Veterans Reserve Corps the following
year) for duties consistent with their health.
Andrew was discharged from the military at
Burnside Barracks, Indianapolis, on July 5, 1865.
On February 19, 1866, giving his residence as
North Buena Vista, Iowa, he applied for an
invalid pension saying his wound caused lameness
that hindered his ability to earn a living by
manual labor. Ten months later it was approved at
$2.67 monthly, payable quarterly.
Andrew and Nancy had six more children after the
war; children he said were Sarah Adeline born in
1866, Rosanna in 1868, George Andrew in 1870
(erroneously given as 1890), Jonathan in 1872,
James Calvin in 1874 and Joseph Allen in 1881
(although birth dates on their gravestones
sometimes differ from dates given by their
father).
Having once received a pension, Andrew applied
for periodic increases. Supported by affidavits
from doctors, friends and former comrades, he
said some of the splinters had worked their way
out of his leg but his disability was getting
steadily worse as the leg atrophied. Initial
applications were from his home in North Buena
Vista, but in 1877 he was living in Memphis,
Scotland County, Missouri, where a local doctor
said the leg was in a semi paralytic
condition and two inches less in
circumference than his healthy leg. Andrews
pension was gradually increased - to $8, $14 and
the $18 he was receiving when he returned to
North Buena Vista and almost 161 acres he owned
on a timbered bluff overlooking the Mississippi.
A board of pension surgeons in McGregor said his
injury was equivalent to the total loss of a hand
or foot and he used a heavy cane in walking
and apparently walks with some difficulty.
On October 12, 1900, seventy-year-old Andrew and
his forty-year-old son Jake went fishing on the
Mississippi River. As they were hauling in their
heavy nets, the boat swamped and capsized. Jake
made it to shore but Andrew, with an atrophied
and paralytic left leg, was unable to swim and
drowned.
The following month, with T. J. Paisley as her
attorney, sixty-year-old Nancy applied for a
widows pension. Her sole assets, she said,
were personal property valued at no more than $25
and a one-third dower interest in what was now
105 acres with only 30 under cultivation.
Supportive affidavits were submitted by Jake who
had been with his father, E. P. Sawyer who
witnessed the drowning while standing on the
bank, Jonathan and Clarissa Foster who testified
to Nancys marriage to Andrew, and the
County Auditor who testified to the size of the
farm. Nancys application was still pending
on June 5, 1901, when the Elkader Argus
reported that the body of Andrew Wick, the
old soldier who was drowned near Buena Vista Oct.
12th, was discovered Friday. Though eight months
had passed the remains though badly decomposed
were still recognizable. The Guttenberg
Press said the body had been found by
Andrews son-in-law who, while rowing on the
river, noticed the body of a man in the
bushes. Andrew was buried in North Buena
Vista Cemetery where his stone erroneously says
he died on October 13th.
Nancys pension request was granted and she
was receiving quarterly payments of $60 when, at
seventy-six years of age, she died in Guttenberg
on Thursday, April 26, 1917, at the home of her
daughter, Rosanna (Wick) Erie, with whom she had
been living. Nancys body was taken to
North Buena Vista for burial on Saturday morning,
where funeral services were conducted by Rev.
Baldwin, of Colesburg, on Saturday afternoon.
Interment was in the cemetery in North Buena
Vista.
~*~*~
Wilson, Charles W.
Charles Wilson was born in Massachusetts. His
father, Jubel M. Wilson, died when Charles was
four years old and, on November 27, 1847, his
mother, Eusebia (nee Puffer) Wilson, married
Orlin Warn. In 1862 they were living in Giard
with a post office address in Council Hill. On
August 15th of that year, Charles was enrolled as
a private by McGregor postmaster Willard Benton
for three years or the end of the war. Charles
was described as having blue eyes, brown hair and
a light complexion and being 5 feet 7½ inches
tall.
On August 22, 1862, he was mustered into Benton's
Company G of the 21st Regiment of Iowa Volunteer
Infantry, a regiment being organized in the
state's northeastern counties, its 3rd
Congressional District. On September 9, 1862,
with ten companies of sufficient strength, they
were mustered in as a regiment with a total
complement, officers and enlisted, of 985 men, 87
of whom were in Company G.
Earlier in the war, the law provided for a
$100.00 federal bounty to be paid when soldiers
completed their enlistments, but, with
enlistments lagging, Congress agreed, at
Secretary of State Seward's request, that $25.00
could be paid in advance, the balance on
discharge. A $2.00 premium would be paid to
anyone who secured a recruit or to the recruit
himself if he appeared in person. When mustered
in, Privates were paid the $25.00, the $2.00
premium and a $13.00 advance on their monthly
pay, most of which they left with their
dependents.
Like Charles, most of the enlisted men in Iowa
regiments were farmers with no prior military
experience. Minimal training was received at Camp
Franklin (previously known as Camp Union) located
"on a sandy plateau on the bank of the
Mississippi" just south of Eagle Point on
the north side of Dubuque. Its buildings, one per
company, were each twenty by sixty feet and
"arranged to accommodate one hundred men
each." The camp, including the drill and
parade grounds, was enclosed by a line or path
where a sentry walked his beat day and night,
allowing no one to pass either in or out without
permission. That said, one author said the camp
was so near the mens homes, that
their fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, wives,
sweethearts, and friends, were too often present
to allow either drill or discipline to any great
extent.
September 16th was rainy and miserable as the
regiment left camp and marched through town,
while families, friends and local residents
watched. Women sent cakes and cheese and others
tossed apples. From the levee at the foot of
Jones Street most of the men boarded a densely
crowded steamer, the Henry Clay, and two
open barges lashed alongside and left for war.
Bimonthly company muster rolls indicated the
presence or absence of the soldier as of the last
day of the period and Charles was marked
''present" through the end of the year as
they performed early service in Missouri with
Charles spending part of the time as a cook. On
February 8, 1863, they were in West Plains when
they started a march to the northeast, walking
much of the time in rain and snow. By the end of
the month many were suffering from colds,
pneumonia, chronic diarrhoea and other ailments.
On February 27, 1863, they were in Iron Mountain
when Charles wrote to his parents, enclosed
$10.00, and said, "i have a very bad
cold." His throat was hoarse, but he bought
a bottle of Dr. Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry
and thought he would soon be well. "[I]t
snowed like fury," he said, "& we
had to scrape the snow away make our bed right in
the mud." They were still in Iron Mountain
on March 8th when he wrote again. "I sit
down here in my lonely tent to write a few lines
to you to let you know how I am well I am not
very well I have a Very bad cold but still i
guess I shall be better in a few days." He
closed;
"From Charley to All that
take pains to enquire after him
THE END"
Three days later they reached the
old French town of Ste. Genevieve on the
Mississippi River where they waited for further
orders. Charles' company and two others left on
board the Ocean Wave on April 1st. After
traveling about twenty miles downstream, they
tied up for the night. On the 2nd, they left at
daybreak, reached Cairo about 2:00pm, and stopped
for two or three hours. While there, Charles was
admitted to Cairo's general hospital.
His health did not improve and, on April 10,
1863, the hospital Chaplain wrote to Eusebia to
let her know that Charles was
"sinking." That same night, about
midnight, Charles died. The next day the Chaplain
wrote again and let Eusebia know that her only
child had died, "as far as I can judge in
peace with God through Jesus Christ, so he
expressed himself to me so you will not mourn as
one without hope. I conducted his funeral service
to day." Charles' Final Statement, his
Descriptive Book and other military records
confirmed that his death was caused by
"typhoid pneumonia." He is buried in
the Mound City National Cemetery, Mound City,
Illinois, where a military stone reads:
4713
C. W. Wilson
Iowa
Life was difficult for Eusebia
and Orlin. Orlins health was bad and, in a
labor intensive economy, he had been unable to do
more than one-third or one-half of the work of an
able-bodied man for many years. Some said Orlin
could now do no work. He hired others to assist
him but, after paying them, sometimes had only
$100 a year for other expenses. Eusebia found
work outside their home, but was able to generate
only minimal additional income. In September 1865
her brother, Thomas, visited from Massachusetts,
moved in with them, and helped as much as
possible but, in April 1867, he returned home
while Eusebia and Orlin moved to Monona.
With Orlin's health not improving, Eusebia
applied for a pension in 1881. To prove her
entitlement as a dependent mother, she secured
affidavits from friends, her husband and her
brother. Several attested to her credibility. She
was, said one, a "credible and highly worthy
person of good morals and entitled to credit for
integrity under all circumstances." Doctors
attested to Orlin's poor health and his inability
to provide sufficient income for him and his
wife. Men who had worked with Orlin said he was
unable to do a full day's work and was often
bedridden for several days at a time.
Eusebia's original application was deemed
abandoned by the Pension Office after she or her
attorney apparently failed to submit necessary
documentation. She applied again in 1883, hired
attorney George Lemon to assist her, and
submitted eighteen supportive affidavits. Lemon,
a Civil War veteran from New York, was well known
and possibly the most effective and reputable of
the pension attorneys based in Washington, D.C.
This time Eusebias application was granted
and on January 27, 1886, a certificate was mailed
entitling her to $8.00 per month retroactive to
January 17, 1883 when the second application was
filed. Orlin died in 1887 and was buried in
Monona Cemetery. Eusebia's pension was paid to
July 4, 1891 and, on June 30, 1893 she was
dropped from the pension rolls.
~*~*~
Wiltse, George Washington
Co. D, 21st Regiment, Iowa Volunteer Infantry
Born 02/17/1845 Clayton County, Iowa
Enlisted 08/15/1862 Elkader, Iowa
Mustered Out 07/15/1864 Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Died 07/15/1930 Montezuma, Iowa
The son of Leonard and Jane (Smith) Wiltse,
George Washington Wiltse, was born in Clayton
County on February 17, 1845. During the Civil
War, infantry regiments were to consist of
approximately 1,000 men, each taking an oath of
loyalty to the United States. No man under the
rank of commissioned officer was to be younger
than eighteen nor older than forty-five although
age requirements were not always honored and some
men stretched to permit (or prevent) their
enlistment. Later in the war, requirements were
often eased with minors openly accepted on the
signature of a parent who would "freely give
my consent to his volunteering as a
soldier.
When George enlisted at Elkader on August 15,
1862 he was only seventeen, but he may have made
a patriotic fib since his age was
listed as eighteen on his Company Muster-in-Roll,
in his Descriptive Book, in the Adjutant
Generals Report (1863), and in the
states Roster and Record of Iowa Soldiers
(1910). When the company was mustered in a week
later at Dubuque, he was described as being 5'
7¾ tall with blue eyes, dark hair, and a
dark complexion.
He was ill and treated in the post hospital at
Millikens Bend, Louisiana in April 1863 and
in the division hospital in June of the 1863, but
the hospitalizations were short, he maintained
his health better than most, and he was present
and able for duty during most of his service.
On May 22, 1863, General Grant ordered an assault
on Confederate lines at Vicksburg. During the
assault, the regiment had twenty-three killed in
action, another twelve mortally wounded, and
forty-eight non-fatally wounded. George was among
the wounded but, fortunately, it was relative
minor. After Vicksburg capitulated on July 4,
1863, George was marked present on
all bi-monthly muster rolls for the balance of
his service. During that time he saw service in
Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and
Alabama. The regiment was mustered out of service
on July 15, 1865 at Baton Rouge, and, like many
others, George elected to pay the government
$6.00 so he could retain his musket and
accouterments.
Leaving about 7:00am on the 16th, they started
up-river past memories of three years of combat,
scenes of battle and graves of friends. They
reached Cairo, Illinois, about 8:00 a.m. on July
20th debarked and "went to the soldiers rest
where a dinner was waiting. They left Cairo
by rail that same afternoon and reached Clinton
about midnight the next day. On the 24th they
were discharged and George, still only twenty
years old, returned to his home in Clayton County
where he continued his prewar work as a farmer.
Five years later, in July 1870, he married Emily
J. Twombly. They reportedly had five children, D.
O. Wiltse who died at four years of age, Frank,
Lottie born in 1873, Maude, and William who was
born on July 20, 1880. In 1877 the family moved
to Montezuma and, in 1883 George began working in
the dray and coal business.
Emily died on May 5, 1885 and was buried in
Montezumas Masonic IOOF (International
Order of Odd Fellows) Cemetery. On May 12, 1889,
George married Matilda F. Tillie
Myers. To them a daughter, Lois Eva Wiltse, was
born on November 22, 1893. Well-respected, George
was appointed as Montezumas Postmaster in
1903, a position he held for many years.
On July 15, 1930 - sixty-five years to the day
from when he was mustered out at Baton Rouge -
eighty-five year old George Wiltse died in
Montezuma. He was buried in the towns
Masonic IOOF Cemetery. His wife died in 1943 and
was buried with him.
~*~*~
Withrow, James Paul
James Paul Withrow, son of Daniel C. and Sarah
DeVore Withrow, was born on December 10, 1839, in
Uniontown, Pennsylvania. The family moved to
McGregor in about 1842 and settled on the
Gass farm in Mendon Township. A year
later, they moved to a new home in Section 7. The
1860 census for Mendon Township listed Daniel C.
(a 52-year old farmer) and Sarah (age 45)
Withrow. They reportedly had nine children, but
only five were listed in the census. Not listed
were Isabella (born March 27, 1832), William S.
(born June 22, 1834) and possibly living in Ohio
at the time of the census, and Fannie J. (born in
1837). The five who were listed were James Paul
(born December 11, 1839), Samuel (born April 18,
1842), John McCoy (born in 1847) and Hellen V.
aka Ellen (born in 1850), all in Pennsylvania,
and Daniel M. (born in Iowa in 1852). The
identity of the ninth child has not been
determined.
During the Civil War, William served with the 1st
Ohio Infantry while James and Samuel enlisted
together on August 14, 1862, in an infantry
company being raised in Iowas northeastern
counties. Twenty-two-year old James was enrolled
as a 4th Corporal by McGregor postmaster Willard
Benton. On August 22nd, in Dubuque, they were
mustered into service as Company G with a total
of eighty-six men, including company officers.
When ten companies were of sufficient strength,
they were mustered in as the 21st Regiment, Iowa
Volunteer Infantry. Like other volunteers, James
was paid $25.00 of the $100.00 bounty (the
balance being due on completion of his service)
and a $2.00 premium. In lieu of the latter day
dog tags, Civil War soldiers had a
written Descriptive List. James was
described as being a 5' 8¾ farmer with
brown eyes, dark hair and a dark complexion.
On a rainy September 16th, 1862, after brief, and
relatively ineffective, training at Camp
Franklin, those able to travel boarded the
tightly packed Henry Clay and two barges
tied alongside and left for war.
James initial service went well and Company
Muster Rolls showed he was present
through June 30, 1863. After one night at Benton
Barracks in St. Louis, they saw several months of
service in the Ozarks of southern Missouri -
Rolla, Salem, Houston, Hartville and back to
Houston. The Descriptive List indicates that
James was one of the volunteers from Company G
who participated in a one-day battle at Hartville
on January 11, 1863, when three men were killed
in action, another was fatally wounded, and
thirteen had non-fatal wounds.
From Houston they went south to West Plains and
then walked to the northeast. On February 24,
1863, at Ironton, James was promoted to 1st
Corporal. From Ironton they went to Ste.
Genevieve and then, by river steamers, to
Millikens Bend where General Grant was
organizing a massive army intent on capturing the
Confederate stronghold at Vicksburg.
During the Vicksburg Campaign, James participated
in the May 1, 1863, Battle of Port Gibson and was
present at the May 16, 1863 Battle of
Champions Hill when his regiment was held
in reserve and forced to wait as men in other
regiments died. For this they were highly
critical of their Corps leader, John
McClernand. The next day, James participated in
the May 17, 1863, assault at the Big Black River
Bridge during which the regiment had seven killed
in action, eighteen mortally wounded, and another
thirty-eight who were wounded less seriously.
After treating their wounded, the regiment moved
on to Vicksburg where James was with the regiment
as it participated in the May 22, 1863 assault on
Confederate lines and had another twenty-three
men killed in action, twelve wounded fatally, and
forty-eight who had non-fatal wounds.
After the siege of Vicksburg and the subsequent
siege of Jackson, Mississippi, James became ill
and was transported north on a hospital boat. On
August 21, 1863 he was admitted to a general
hospital in Keokuk where he was treated for
several months before rejoining his regiment at
New Orleans on June 18, 1864.
On August 1, 1864, while the regiment was at
Morganza Bend, James was promoted to 5th
Sergeant. He then continued with the regiment
during its activities in Arkansas and Tennessee,
but there his career took a turn. From Memphis,
the regiment was ordered to try to intercept
Confederate General Hood on his southern
withdrawal from Nashville. It performed as
ordered, but Hood was able to make his escape.
While the exhausted northern soldiers were
returning to Memphis through water, mud and
slush, they camped at Whites Station and
there, on December 29, 1864, James Withrow was
reduced to the ranks for using unbecoming
language to his commanding officer,
Lieutenant Colonel Salue G. Van Anda.
Subsequently, James participated in actions that
led to the occupation of Mobile, Alabama, and in
the regiments final activities in Louisiana
before being mustered out with the rest of the
regiment at Baton Rouge on July 15, 1865. Like
many others, James purchased his musket and
accouterments from the government for $6.00 and
then went north by river transport and rail, was
discharged at Clinton on July 24th, and returned
to the family homestead.
On September 16, 1872, veterans of the regiment
convened in Dubuque on the tenth anniversary of
the day they had left for war. James Withrow was
still living in McGregor and was one of
seventy-four men who attended the two-day
reunion.
After the death of his father in 1876 and mother
in 1890, and their burial in McGregors
Pleasant Grove Cemetery, James continued to work
the family farm before moving to Oronco,
Minnesota. While there, on April 19, 1896, at age
fifty-six, he married thirty-eight-year-old Ada
Schramm in Milwaukee. It was a first marriage for
each of them. James and Ada later moved to
Pasadena, California. They were living at 61
North Parkwood, Pasadena, when James died on
November 16, 1921, at eighty-one years of age. He
was buried in Mountain View Cemetery, Altadena,
California and, the following April, Ada applied
for a widows pension.
To obtain a pension, Ada had to convince the
federal Pension Office, that she and James had
been married, that if previously married they had
been divorced from their prior spouses or their
spouses had died, that she and James were living
as husband and wife at the time of his death, and
that she had not remarried. Unlike most veterans,
James had never applied for a pension, so the
Pension Office had no record of his marriage. Ada
secured affidavits from two Pasadena residents
who attested to the marriage and said neither
James nor Ada had been married previously but, at
ages forty-two and fifty-three, the Pension
Office said they were too young to know if either
James or Ada had been married to other spouses
prior to their 1896 marriage. Ada then contacted
two McGregor residents, seventy-nine-year-old
Eugenia Davies and eighty-year-old Lawrence
Jennings, both of whom signed affidavits swearing
that neither James nor Ada had been married prior
to their marriage to each other. On June 15,
1923, Ada was granted a $30.00 monthly pension,
an amount later increased to $40.00. Ada died on
August 6, 1937 at age seventy-nine. She was
buried next to her husband in Mountain View
Cemetery.
~*~*~
Withrow, Samuel T.
Samuel T. Withrow, born April 18, 1842, in
Uniontown, Pennsylvania, was the son of Daniel C.
and Sarah (Devore) Withrow. The family, including
Samuel and his brothers and sisters, moved to
Iowa in 1852 and settled on the Gass farm
in Mendon township. The following year they
moved out on the ridge to what would
be the familys longtime homestead
consisting of 440 acres in Section 7. (see James
Withrow bio above for the 1860 census data on
this family)
During the Civil War, William served with the 1st
Ohio Infantry while James and Samuel enlisted
together on August 14, 1862, in an infantry
company being raised in Iowas northeastern
counties. On August 22nd it was mustered into
service as Company G with eighty-six men,
including McGregor postmaster, Willard Benton, as
Captain. Like other volunteers, twenty-year-old
Samuel was paid $25.00 of the $100.00 federal
enlistment bounty (the balance due on completion
of his service) and a $2.00 premium. He was
described in the Company Descriptive Book as
being a 5'11" farmer with brown eyes, dark
hair and a dark complexion.
When all ten companies were organized and of
sufficient strength, they were mustered in on
September 9, 1862, as the 21st Regiment of
Iowas volunteer infantry. On September
16th, they left Dubuque and, on a very hot
September 20th, arrived by steamer at St. Louis.
There, heavily encumbered by knapsacks,
haversacks, clothes, blankets, heavy muskets,
canteens and personal accouterments, much
unnecessary and later discarded, they stood on
the levee for an hour. Then, according to Benton,
Lt. Col. Dunlap: marched the men to Benton
Barracks at an unreasonable speed and Samuel T.
Withrow & several other men were overheat and
gave out. . . . I halted the company contrary to
orders & my company got to barracks a good
while after the balance of the regiment got
there.
A healthy young man before the march, Sam Withrow
was exhausted, but continued on duty and was with
the regiment when it moved by rail to Rolla and
then marched south He was present on
the October 31st muster roll at Salem, but was
left behind when the regiment moved to Houston.
He caught up and was with the regiment during
subsequent service in Houston, West Plains and
Ironton but, on February 28th, at Iron Mountain,
he was sick in quarters. He then
continued with the regiment when it moved to Ste.
Genevieve and then by steamer down the
Mississippi where General Grant was organizing a
massive army to capture the Confederate
stronghold at Vicksburg.
The upcoming march south through swamps and
bayous west of the Mississippi would be difficult
and many would be left behind, sent to hospitals,
or granted leave to go north. Samuel was granted
a thirty-day furlough on April 12th so he could
go home to recuperate. He returned to McGregor,
over-stayed his furlough, and consulted a
military surgeon in Prairie du Chien. On June
27th, Dr. Darius Mason wrote that, in his
opinion, Samuel was suffering from the
effects of recent pneumonia and it would be
at least another thirty days before he would be
ready for duty. Samuel was admitted to an army
hospital in Davenport where, on August 10, 1863,
John Adler, a U. S. Army Surgeon, found him
incapable of performing the duties of a soldier
because of valvular disease of the heart.
The post commandant agreed that Samuel was too
incapacitated even for transfer into the
Invalid Corps and, on August 11, 1863,
Samuel was discharged.
His brother, John, died the following year, his
sister Fannie died in 1871 and his sister Hellen
in 1874. Samuels parents also died, his
father in 1876 and his mother in 1890. All were
buried McGregors Pleasant Grove Cemetery.
Meanwhile, on October 16, 1870,
twenty-eight-year-old Samuel married
twenty-year-old Alpina Kent in West Union. Their
children would include Sarah born August 17,
1871, Reuben born October 9, 1881, Fredrick born
July 26, 1883, Frances born August 14, 1886, and
Nellie born January 9, 1889. By then the family
had moved to Dexter, Minnesota. With Ormanzo
Allen, an Austin physician as his attorney,
Samuel applied for a federal invalid pension on
May 6, 1886, claiming that, during the march to
Benton Barracks, he received a sun stroke
and also had a bleeding or hemorheage of the
lungs and had also a disease of the heart.
On September 29th, in Austin, he was examined by
a board of pension surgeons.
He was originally pensioned at $6.00 per month
from May 11, 1886 (when his application was
filed) for heart disease. The certificate
evidencing the pension was, inexplicably, later
reissued at $10.00 from May 11, 1886.
In November 1886, he secured affidavits from
Willard Benton and Maple Moody with whom he had
served and from seven others who knew him and
could testify regarding his health before and
after the military. On July 11, 1888, he applied
for an increase and named George M. Van Leuven,
Jr., of Lime Springs, Iowa, as his new attorney.
During the war Van Leuven had served with the 3rd
Iowa Infantry and the 52nd U.S. Colored Infantry.
After serving four and one-half years, he
returned to Lime Springs, worked as a dry goods
clerk and in the pharmaceutical business before
concentrating on work as an agent helping
veterans secure pensions, something at which he
apparently excelled. He had long been recognized
for operating a very successful pension
agency. He was credited with being
the most successful pension agent in the
state with references from a U.S. Senator,
members of Congress, attorney Thomas Updegraff of
McGregor, and many others. On December 28, 1889,
Samuel wrote to the Commissioner and said:
I want Mr. Van Leuven to be my Attorney or
the Agent as he has done all my work, procured
all the testimony without any postage stamps to
assist him and I want him to have the legal fee
of $25.00 and I trust that you will recognize him
as the Attorney of Record in my claim because the
first attorney has done nothing for me, never has
furnished me with any blank, nor assisted me in
securing a single Affidavit.
In addition to testimony in the nine affidavits
already filed (and apparently
procured by Van Leuven), another
fourteen witnesses, including five veterans of
the 21st Infantry, signed affidavits, all on
printed forms provided by Van Leuven. Samuel also
filed his own affidavit indicating he had been
unable to secure evidence from any of the
regiments commissioned officers or its
surgeons as to the origin of his
disabilities or from doctors who had treated him
after his discharge.
In October, 1892, his latest affidavit was
received by the pension office. The following
March, Grover Cleveland started his second term
as President. In April, he appointed William
Lochren as Commissioner of Pensions. In May,
George Van Leuven was arrested. It was alleged
that he had drafted falsified affidavits that
witnesses then copied in their own hand-writing,
that he bribed surgeons who conducted medical
examinations, and that he engaged in other
conduct contrary to pension laws. In 1894 he was
convicted and sentenced to prison. Meanwhile, the
pension office began an investigation of more
than 1,000 cases in which Van Leuven had
represented the claimants. Samuel Withrows
claim was among them. Samuel retained Charles
Nash of St. Paul, Minnesota, as his new attorney
while the Pension Office referred his case for
special examination with a note that
Samuels claim had been: filed by
Attorney Van Leuven, and the testimony in support
thereof was prepared by him and appears to have
been gotten up in accordance with his well known
methods.
Special Examiners in Iowa, Minnesota, Arkansas
and Nebraska took depositions, twenty-four in
all, some from those who had previously submitted
affidavits on Samuels behalf and some who
had not, and Samuel was required to submit to
another medical exam, this one by an entirely new
Board of Surgeons in Rochester, Minnesota. Like
the doctors before them, they found disease
of heart probably due to rheumatism and
that the lung trouble complained of no
doubt is due to heart disease. Special
Examiner Bates said Samuel was regarded as
a man of good standing and appeared
honest when giving his deposition. The
legitimacy of his claim was further shown by the
letters written by military doctors before he was
discharged.
Ultimately, while some of the affidavits seemed
questionable, there was no finding of any
wrongdoing by Samuel and, in 1899, his pension
was increased to $17.00. The following year,
during the December two-week term of a District
Court in Iowa, a civil judgment was entered
against Samuel for $862.22 plus attorney fees of
$45.80. A $200.00 judgment was entered against
Alpina.
On October 29, 1902, still receiving his $17.00
monthly pension, Samuel died. He was buried in
Oronoco Cemetery, Mower County, Minnesota.
Ten days after her husbands death, Alpina
applied for a widows pension. Supported by
affidavits from friends and relatives who
attested to her marriage of thirty-two years and
who confirmed that she and Samuel were still
married and living together as husband and wife
when he died, her application was approved at
$12.00 for her and $2.00 for Nellie who was only
thirteen when her father died. On September 6,
1913, Alpina sold a quarter-section of land in
Mower County for a reported $8,000. Three years
later, on September 12, 1916, Alpina died. She
was buried next to Samuel in the Oronoco
Cemetery.
Sadly, it was another twenty-five years before
Nellie, in going through some old
papers, first learned that her father had
served in the Civil War.
~*~*~
Wooldridge, John Archer
John Archer Wooldridge, son of Samuel and Rebecca
(Walthol) Wooldridge, was born in Todd County,
Kentucky, on August 28, 1830. His mother died in
1837 and was buried a few miles to the south in
Clarksville, Tennessee. His father died in 1845
and is buried in Carlinville, Illinois.
By 1856, John was in Iowa working as a farmer and
cooper. On July 3rd of that year, he and Mary
Ellen Burdine were married by Justice of the
Peace D. K. Wooster in Elk Township, Delaware
County. After wild and giddy
speculation from 1856 to 1857, hard
times began to settle down and by October
of 1857, the North Iowa Times was
reporting on bank, railroad and individual
failures. It was during these hard
times that John and Mary had their first
child, Melissa Jane Wooldridge, who was born on
April 27, 1857. Melissa was followed by John
Archer Jr. in 1858, and Francis Irvin in 1860.
They lived near Volga City until October, 1859,
but then moved to the Edgewood area for a year,
then to Elkport for another year and finally back
to a farm near Edgewood in November 1861, the
same month Mary gave birth to their fourth child,
Charles Finley. Confederate guns had fired on
Fort Sumter seven months earlier and the war
escalated beyond comprehension. In the summer of
1862, President Lincoln called for 300,000 more
volunteers with Iowa to furnish five regiments in
addition to those already in the field. If its
quota wasnt raised by August 15th a draft
was likely.
It was in response to this call that the
states 21st infantry regiment was raised
with most of its members coming from the
northeastern counties. It was mustered into
service on September 9, 1862, left for war on the
16th and saw many months of service in Missouri
before participating in the successful Vicksburg
Campaign that ended with the citys
surrender on July 4, 1863. Three months later,
Charles died shortly before his second birthday
and in November another son, Willis Sheldon, was
born.
On February 25, 1864, the regiment was serving
along the gulf coast of Texas when John signed a
three-year enlistment credited to Lodomillo
Township in Clayton County. Twenty-nine-year-old
Mary and the four children - Melissa 6, John Jr.
5, Francis 3 and Willis almost 3 months - would
cope with Johns absence the best they
could. On March 23rd, John, Joseph Houston,
Newton Green and other recruits left Davenport on
a river transport. At thirty-three years of age,
John was a strong, healthy man when he left for
war, but not long after passing Cairo he became
ill. Newton said John was exposed all one
night to severe storm of rain, being on the upper
deck of the boat. Joseph agreed and said
John was left behind in Memphis while the others
continued their trip.
On March 26th, only three days after leaving
Davenport, John was suffering from double
pneumonia when he was admitted to Memphis
Adams U.S.A. General Hospital. He would remain
hospitalized for more than eight months until
being released on December 11th so he could join
the regiment then camped nearby. He remained on
active duty during the next springs Mobile
Campaign and the two weeks the regiment spent at
Camp Salubrity near Natchitoches before going to
Baton Rouge. On July 12th, with his three-year
commitment not having expired, John and other
recruits were transferred to a 34th/38th Iowa
consolidated regiment. Others were mustered out
at Baton Rouge on July 15th while, with the war
at an end, John was mustered out at Houston,
Texas, on August 15th and returned to his family
near Edgewood.
John and Mary had three more children after the
war - Otis Thomas in 1866, Ellen Rebecca in 1868
and Jesse Edward in 1876 - and John resumed work
as a cooper and farmer. Like most veterans who
had war-related disabilities, John requested an
invalid pension. To sustain the claim, he would
have to convince the Bureau of Pensions that he
had been disabled in the war, had served at least
ninety days, had been honorably discharged and
was unable, at least partially, to perform manual
labor due to the disability. John applied on
December 2, 1879, and government records
confirmed his illness, hospitalization and
honorable discharge. To prove his postwar ability
to do manual labor was impaired due to the
service-related illness, he secured sworn
affidavits from people who knew him before his
enlistment, from comrades who were with him in
the service, and from neighbors and others aware
of his condition.
Sears Richards said John was healthy before
enlisting and worked for my father on the
farm a great deal especially through haying and
harvest. Joseph Lacour testified that John
was a strong healthy able-bodied man inured
to constant hard manual labor before
enlisting. After the war it was different.
William Bacon worked with John a great
number of times Have been on the road teaming to
market a distance of 14 miles and had seen
him at least twice a week, often every day. John,
he said, always sustained a good reputation
for truth and veracity, was a man of good moral
character, but was no longer able to
perform as much labor as an ordinary able-bodied
man. George Elliot had also worked with
John on the roads teaming and, due to
Johns Pleuratic adhesion and heart
disease, knew John could not do as much
work as healthy men. Another neighbor, William
Rosecrans, had also worked with John on the
road teaming and knew John was not well.
Newell Bixby, an Edgewood minister who had
preached at the 1863 funeral of one-year-old
Charles Wooldridge, said he worked for me
in chopping fire wood and said one of the
now-deceased neighbors had told him that John
was the best man that he ever had work for
him, but that was before the war. After the
war, Henry Joys had seen John at various
times in apparent trrible suffering, complaining
of distress in breathing. at the same time
placing his hand to his side and complain of
terrible agony. Nelson Firman and Abel
Allen were also neighbors. Nelson said John
was obliged to labor, having a large family
to support and being very ambitious
he would labor when he appeared unfit. Abel
thought Johns voice had changed since his
sickness and he suffered with pains in his
lungs and could not rest at night. Newton
Green, Joseph Houston, Aaron Conner, Sears
Richards and Eber Golder had all served with John
and also signed affidavits on his behalf. On
April 13, 1882, almost two and one-half years
after he applied, a certificate was mailed
entitling John to $6.00 per month, payable
quarterly through the Des Moines pension agency.
Having once secured a pension, veterans usually
sought to increase the amounts awarded. John was
pensioned for disease of the heart and lungs and
nine times, always giving his address as Edgewood
or near Edgewood, he applied for
increases saying, in printed form affidavits,
that those conditions had worsened and he thought
the rate he was then receiving was unjustly
and unreasonably low and disproportionate to the
rate drawn by other pensioners for similar or
equivalent disabilities. Sometimes
increases were granted; sometimes they
werent. By 1898 the amount had increased to
$30.00 monthly and, in 1903, still in Edgewood,
he applied again although no apparent action was
taken.
John and Mary moved to Oelwein in Fayette County
and were living there in 1915 when he answered a
government questionnaire giving his address as
217 Fifth Avenue East and in 1916 when he applied
for an increase under the general
law. W. E. Robinson, the familys
Olewein doctor, said eighty-five-year-old John
had heart problems and dropsy, has often to
sit up in bed to get his breath, and
requires the regular aid and attendance of
another person and will probably until death
which may come at any time.
John Wooldridge died at home in Olewein on
October 14, 1917, and was buried in Green Hill
Cemetery a few miles north of Edgewood. Mary
applied for and received a $25.00 monthly
widows pension that she received until her
death at Melissas home on May 24, 1938, at
age 102. Her funeral was held at Edgewoods
Methodist Episcopal Church and she was buried
next to John in Green Hill Cemetery.
~*~*~
Wood,
William O.
The son of William and Nellie
Rebecca (Talcott) Wood, William Orval (sometimes
shown as Orvil) Wood was born on December 10,
1829 (elsewhere 1830), in Madison Township, Lake
County, Ohio. He was about twelve years old when
he moved with his parents to Michigan and then,
in 1851, to Delaware County, Iowa.
Jane Ann Bay was born in May Township, Lee
County, Illinois. Her father, Joseph Bay, had
arrived in the area in the 1830s and was credited
with being the first settler in the township.
Jane said she was born on August 13, 1837. On
November 23, 1856, William and Jane were married
by Justice of the Peace E. L. Gardner in
Strawberry Point. On January 30, 1858, a daughter
(Mary Almedia Wood) was born in
Fayette County and on June 8, 1861, a son (Ervin
Bird Wood) was born in Clayton County.
The children were four and one when William
enlisted in the Union army on August 11, 1862, at
Strawberry Point. He was described as being 5'
7" tall with blue eyes, auburn hair, and a
sandy complexion. Enlisting with him was Brad
Talcott, a near neighbor who had also been born
in Lake County, Ohio. William and Brad would be
tent mates during the war.
They were mustered into Company B on August 18th
at Dubuques Camp Franklin and, on September
9th, ten companies were mustered in as the 21st
regiment of Iowas volunteer infantry. On
board the paddlewheel steamer Henry Clay
and two barges tied alongside, the regiment left
for war on September 16, 1862. After one night in
St. Louis, they traveled by rail to Rolla,
Missouri. A month later they walked south to
Salem and, from there, moved to Houston and then
Hartville.
While stationed at Hartville, they were dependent
on supplies brought by wagon trains traveling
under guard from the railhead in Rolla, through
Salem and Houston, to Hartville. On November 22,
Chaplain Sloan wrote to his McGregor Sunday
School class that he thought they were
going to Rolla as soon as the train
returns and Colonel Merrill advised
Adjutant General Baker that we move to
Houston Mo. Monday (the 24th). On the 23d,
Chaplain Sloan wrote that the wagon train had
been gone for a week, but we expect them
certainly tomorrow.
Despite the expectations of men in the regiment,
the wagon train was still fifteen miles from
Hartville on the 24th and, that night, the
teamsters and guards made camp in Hog Holler
along Beaver Creek. About 7:00 p.m. some of the
men were cooking, some were resting, some were
helping with the horses, others were on picket,
and the more fortunate were searching for forage
when the camp was attacked. Their attackers, with
estimates ranging from 400 to 1,500, were mounted
and within forty yards when first noticed as they
came down the road with yells & shrieks
firing as they came, said Henry Dyer, and
quickly overwhelmed the Federals. In the 21st
Infantry, George Chapman was killed instantly,
two more were fatally wounded, at least three
suffered less serious wounds, and thirteen were
captured. Among the captured was William Wood.
The prisoners were stripped of their clothes and,
said Gilbert Cooley, forced to take the
oath not to take up arms until regularly
exchanged or be shot on the spot. They were drawn
up in a line & allowed to take their choice
of course they took the oath and were then
paroled.
William remained with the regiment through its
remaining service in Missouri - Houston, West
Plains, Ironton, Iron Mountain and Ste. Genevieve
- and he was with it when they went down the
Mississippi to Millikens Bend where General
Grant organized a large, three-corps, army intent
on capturing Vicksburg, a city that President
Lincoln said was the keyto winning
the war. During the Vicksburg Campaign, William
Wood participated in the May 1, 1863, Battle of
Port Gibson, was present when the regiment was
held in reserve during the May 16th Battle of
Champions Hill, participated in the May
17th assault at the Big Black River when their
Colonel was severely wounded, participated in a
May 22nd assault at Vicksburg when their
Lieutenant Colonel was killed, and participated
in the ensuing siege. William suffered no
injuries during the campaign, but the regiment
had 31 men killed in action, 34 with fatal
wounds, at least 102 with non-fatal wounds (some
serious enough to cause their discharge), and
eight men captured.
After an expedition to and siege of Jackson, the
regiment spent time in southwestern Louisiana and
then moved to the Gulf Coast of Texas for eight
months before engaging in light activities in
Louisiana, Arkansas and Tennessee. Its final
campaign was in the spring of 1865 when it served
under General Canby, was transported to Dauphin
Island at the entrance to Mobile Bay, moved up
the east coast of the bay with young Arnold Allen
as the only fatality, and occupied the city of
Mobile.
They were mustered out at Baton Rouge on July
15th, discharged at Clinton on July 24th, and
free to return to their homes, wives and, in many
instances, children who would not recognize their
fathers. William later recalled that, carrying
the 1862 Springfield musket he had purchased from
the government, he walked down a dirt road and
past several young girls who asked, Are you
my daddy?
By April 1866, William and his family were living
in Dow City in Crawford County. That was the same
year the main line of the Northwestern Railroad
was expanding westward to Denison, Arion and Dow
City. They lived initially in the section house
where they boarded railroad workers and Jane
cooked meals for the workers until the family
moved onto a farm.
Four more children were born in Crawford County -
Effie Jane Wood (September 27, 1869), Nellie
Rebecca Wood (June 7, 1873), Florence Elvira Wood
(June 27, 1877) and Anna Pearl Wood (December 11,
1880). Two other children died young.
In 1887, although living in Dow City, William
joined the John A. Logan Post, Post 58, of the
Grand Army of the Republic in Denison. Two years
later, on August 13, 1889, the Bud Smith Post,
Post 464, was chartered in Dow City with William
as one of its twenty-one charter members.
The following year, at sixty years of age, he
applied for an invalid pension. Laws
in effect at the time required that he convince
the government that he was suffering from a
war-related wound, injury or illness. William
said that he, like many others, had contracted
camp diarrhoea while in Missouri,
that led to other problems, and his vision was
deteriorating due to actions in Mississippi and
Louisiana. Supportive affidavi ts were signed by
three of his former comrades (Christian Maxson,
Brad Talcott and William Appleton), by friends
who now lived near him, and by his family doctor.
Initially, his claim was rejected but, on May 10,
1892, a certificate was issued at $8.00 monthly
for disease of the eyes and digestive organs.
William and Jane lived on their farm about five
miles south of town for many years but, about
1890, bought a hotel in Dow City and moved into
town. They and their daughters ran the hotel
until 1895 when the building was destroyed by
fire, something that was a shock to his
nerves and general health. The hotel was
next to a newspaper business and some thought a
disgruntled employee had set fire to newspapers.
Williams insurance carrier denied coverage
and William never recovered from the financial
loss.
He died on March 24, 1900. Funeral services were
held at the Methodist church two days later and
William was buried in Dow City Cemetery with the
G.A.R. conducting graveside services. Obituaries
remembered him as one of the old
settlers of the township and an
honest, upright old man, of kindly nature.
The following month, Jane applied for a
widows pension. To sustain her claim, she
had to prove that she and William had married,
they were still married and living as husband and
wife when he died, and she had not remarried. She
secured a certified copy of the record of their
marriage and affidavits from friends who were
present at the wedding and from others who could
attest to their subsequent life as husband and
wife. The only property I own, she
said, is an undivided interest as the widow
of William O. Wood in a store building situated
in Dow City. It was worth about $1,000, but
her interest, if the building were sold, would
only be one third. I am allowed the income
from the property by the other heirs, my
children, on condition that I keep up repairs
insurance etc. She was doing her best but,
after paying expenses, had only a $57.45
balance for my own living and rent.
She was approved for a pension of $8.00 monthly,
an amount subsequently increased.
Jane died on March 8, 1926, in Omaha, Nebraska,
at age eighty-seven. She was buried with William
in Dow City. On obituary said she had first
arrived in Dow City in a covered
wagon and had been a member of the United
Brethren Church, the Rebekah Lodge, and the
Womens Christian Temperance Union.
~*~*~
Wright, Richard 'Dick'
Richard Wright was born in Malone, New York. A
1900 federal census said he was born in April
1837, but other records said he was born in 1834,
1835, 1836 or 1838. From New York he moved to
Wisconsin and, from there, to Clayton County
where an extensive system of stage lines had been
developed by 1853. With more and more settlements
being established, the demand for better mail
delivery and more stage lines grew and Richard
found ready work as a stagecoach driver.
He was working in that capacity when, on August
11, 1862, he was enrolled at McGregor by William
Crooke as a Private for a company the being
raised in the states northeastern counties.
On August 16th they were ordered into quarters at
Camp Franklin in Dubuque and, on the 18th were
mustered in as Company B.
Infantry regiments had ten companies and, when
all were of sufficient strength, they were
mustered in as the states 21st regiment of
volunteer infantry by Captain George S. Pierce,
U.S. Mustering Officer. A big man, possibly the
tallest in the regiment at 6 '4½", Richard
was described as having a dark complexion, blue
eyes and black hair. Like others in the regiment,
he was paid $25.00 of the $100.00 federal
enlistment bounty, plus a $2.00 premium. The
balance of the bounty would be paid if honorably
discharged.
They left for war on September 16th, spent one
night in St. Louis and then traveled by train to
the railhead in Rolla. On arrival on September
22nd, in possible recognition of his experience
with horses, Richard was assigned to duty as a
Company teamster. He continued in that role
through the end of the year even though he became
ill and, for a while in February, was sick in
quarters.
On March 2, 1863, they were in Iron Mountain,
Missouri, when Jim Bethard, also a private in
Company B, wrote to his wife, Caroline:
Dick Wright's wife has not been with us
since we left Dubuque she is living in Wisconsin
with some of her friends Dick is still with us as
full of the old harry as ever."
From Iron Mountain they walked to the old French
town of Ste. Genevieve on the Mississippi River.
There, on April 1, 1863, they boarded the Ocean
Wave and were transported downstream to
Millikens Bend where General Grant was
organizing a large three-corps army for the
purpose of occupying the Confederate stronghold
at Vicksburg. In a corps led by General John
McClernand, the regiment started south, with
soldiers frequently having to make their way
through bayous and swamps. Along the way, Richard
Wright, Jim Bethard and many others became ill
and were left behind as their regiment moved on.
Richard was left at Joshua James Ione
plantation, but was later moved to Judge
Perkins Somerset and, from there, to the U.
S. Army General Hospital at Jefferson Barracks in
St. Louis.
Vicksburg surrendered to federal forces on July
4, 1863, and, in early September, Richard
rejoined the regiment while it was stationed
along Bayou Boeuf in Louisiana. On the 27th, Jim
told Caroline, Dick Wright is here with us
as full of the old Harry as ever.
For the next year Richard maintained his health
and spent ten more months working as a regimental
teamster during its service in Louisiana, Texas
and Arkansas. He had a bout of dysentery in early
December but was still, said Jim, as full
of fun as ever. Continuing with the
regiment, he participated in the Mobile Campaign
in the spring of 1865. When the Confederates
abandoned Mobile, the regiment moved in and
camped nearby at Spring Hill. They returned to
Louisiana and were mustered out on July 15, 1865
at Baton Rouge.
After the war, Richard moved to the Dakota
Territory where, in 1874, gold was discovered on
the Sioux Reservation and this led to a heavy
influx of white settlers. Richard was continuing
his pre-war work as a stagecoach driver and, for
a while, he worked the line between Pierre and
Deadwood. The line was supplied by stations at
distances from fourteen to sixteen miles apart
with no inhabitants along the line and only the
drivers, a cook and sometimes one or two others
at each station.
This was an interesting and dangerous time in the
territory. In 1877 the Sioux relinquished their
land starting a great "Dakota Boom"
that was followed by an Indian uprising in 1880.
Meanwhile, Richard continued to drive a stage
until, in late February, 1887, he was caught in a
blizzard between the Mitchell and Plum Creek
stations. John Heckinger, traveling by foot to
Deadwood, was at the Plum Creek station when, he
said, Richard Wright Drove up to the
station and was helped off the stage coach
Because he was so badly frozen that he could not
help him self. Richards feet were
frozen, he was crippled for life, and he was
forced to give up his work as a stage driver.
On November 2, 1889 North Dakota as the 39th and
South Dakota as the 40th were admitted as the
countrys newest states.
Richard lost his military discharge papers and
was living in Deadwood when he had John Swift
write to the Iowa Adjutant General on March 22,
1890, asking for a certificate of
enlistment & c. He enlisted at
McGregors Landing, Iowa, was discharged at
Clinton Iowa. Nine months later, about 100
miles to the southeast, federal soldiers
massacred Indian families at Wounded Knee. An
estimated 220 Indians and 31 U.S. Cavalry
soldiers died.
On February 6, 1893, on the stationary of
Soldiers Home, State of South Dakota,
Soldiers Home P.O., Fall River
County, the Adjutant wrote to the Iowa
Adjutant General, Will you please send to
this Home a Certificate of service for Richard
Wright Pri. Co B 21st Ia Inft. He is an applicant
for ad. to this Home and without original
disch. For the last four or five years,
Richard had been unable to do any manual labor
due to the effects of his frozen feet,
rheumatism, kidney problems and a "general
breaking up of his constitution" and had
been cared for by friends and the public.
Richard was admitted to the Soldiers Home
and applied for a pension. He explained how his
feet had been frozen, but it was hard to get
affidavits from witnesses since the cooks and
drivers along the line often only used nicknames
and he had no way to find them. Thomas Bentley, a
Deadwood resident, did support the claim and said
he had known Richard for eighteen years and knew
he was now unable to do any work.
Also supporting the claim was John Heckinger who
had helped Richard get down from the stage many
years earlier. John had served in the 68th
Indiana during the war and, like Richard, had
become a resident of the Soldiers Home.
Richard, he said, had no intoxicants when
he was frozen it was a Blizard that day, his feet
are permantly Cripled and he is suported by So.
Dak, a member of the soldiers home.
In response to a government questionnaire,
Richard said he was not married. He had married
once, in 1857, but said his wife and only child
died in Wisconsin in 1858. (Jim Bethard had
referred to Richards wife being with them
in Dubuque in 1862 and then going to Wisconsin.
Its possible Richard meant to say she died
in 1868, rather than 1858).
A pension was granted and Richard was receiving
$15.00 per month, payable quarterly, when he died
on April 10, 1909. He is buried in the State
Veterans Home Cemetery in Hot Springs, SD, as is
John Heckinger who died in 1897.
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