He dipped his toe into Civil War waters when he responded to a call for emergency troops and enlisted in Columbia September 10, 1862, mustered into state service that day as a private with Co. I, 2nd Pennsylvania Militia, but "left [the] company [at] Chambersburg 9/18/62 and returned home." It is not known if his departure was under honorable or dishonorable circumstances, although the regiment's inclusion on his tombstone suggests it was honorable as veterans generally avoided memorializing regiments from which they had deserted. Nonetheless, it is surprising that his family saw fit to memorialize his six days of uneventful service with a state militia regiment. Indeed, had he completed his term of service, his entire term would have encompassed only two weeks and been no more eventful.
By 1870, he was living with his family in Harrisburg where he died at his home from "uremia following a prostatic abscess [from] chronic interstitial nephritis."
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He dipped his toe into Civil War waters when he responded to a call for emergency troops and enlisted in Columbia September 10, 1862, mustered into state service that day as a private with Co. I, 2nd Pennsylvania Militia, but "left [the] company [at] Chambersburg 9/18/62 and returned home." It is not known if his departure was under honorable or dishonorable circumstances, although the regiment's inclusion on his tombstone suggests it was honorable as veterans generally avoided memorializing regiments from which they had deserted. Nonetheless, it is surprising that his family saw fit to memorialize his six days of uneventful service with a state militia regiment. Indeed, had he completed his term of service, his entire term would have encompassed only two weeks and been no more eventful.
By 1870, he was living with his family in Harrisburg where he died at his home from "uremia following a prostatic abscess [from] chronic interstitial nephritis."
Grandview Lawn 375
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