21st Pennsylvania Cavalry
Kephart was born in Decatur Township, Clearfield County, Pennsylvania on December 10, 1832. He was the fourth of thirteen children born to Henry Kephart Jr., a reverend of Swiss-English ancestry and Sarah Goss, a skilled weaver of German-Irish ancestry.
Dr. Kephart was educated at log cabin schoolhouses that were designed and built by the settlers of the Clearfield County community. During his teen years, Dr. Kephart worked as a lumberman, teamster, raftsman, and river pilot, acquiring enough money to pursue his passion for entering the ministry. Along with his younger brother, Ezekiel Boring Kephart (who eventually became a bishop of the United Brethren Church), Dr. Kephart attended Mount Pleasant University in 1857, and then transferred to Otterbein University (now Otterbein University) in Westerville, Ohio in the fall of 1857 after Mount Pleasant University closed.
Dr. Kephart continued in the active ministry until June, 1863, when he enlisted in the Union army and was mustered as Chaplain of the Twenty-First Pennsylvania Cavalry. In February, 1864, Dr. Kephart's regiment was reorganized for three years' service, at Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, and joined the Army of the Potomac on June 1, 1864. The Twenty-First Pennsylvania Cavalry served in the first division of the Fifth Army Corps, dismounted until October 6, 1864, and was then remounted and served until the close of the war. From June 2, 1864 until April 19, 1865, the regiment participated in nineteen engagements, losing 417 men in killed and wounded, and approximately 200 being captured. As chaplain of the regiment, Dr. Kephart was present and under fire in every one of these nineteen battles, which included the Second Battle of Cold Harbor and the Battle of Petersburg. Dr. Kephart survived the Civil War, and was neither wounded nor captured.
Following his military career, Dr. Kephart traveled throughout the United States, serving in various posts as an educator and editor. He served as a Professor of Natural Science in Western University, Iowa from 1871-1876 and as a Professor of Mental and Moral Science at San Joaquin University in Woodbridge, California from 1883-1885. Otterbein University awarded him with an A.M. (Master of Arts) degree in June, 1872 and Western University honored him with a D.D. (Doctor of Divinity) degree in June, 1884. Dr. Kephart served as editor of The Religious Telescope until 1889 and wrote many books, including the renowned manuscript, The Holy Spirit of the Devout Life in 1904. Dr. Kephart died on October 28, 1908 and is buried at Woodland Cemetary in Dayton, Ohio.
Source:
http://www.otterbein.edu/civilwarsoldiers/ikephart.asp
21st Pennsylvania Cavalry
Kephart was born in Decatur Township, Clearfield County, Pennsylvania on December 10, 1832. He was the fourth of thirteen children born to Henry Kephart Jr., a reverend of Swiss-English ancestry and Sarah Goss, a skilled weaver of German-Irish ancestry.
Dr. Kephart was educated at log cabin schoolhouses that were designed and built by the settlers of the Clearfield County community. During his teen years, Dr. Kephart worked as a lumberman, teamster, raftsman, and river pilot, acquiring enough money to pursue his passion for entering the ministry. Along with his younger brother, Ezekiel Boring Kephart (who eventually became a bishop of the United Brethren Church), Dr. Kephart attended Mount Pleasant University in 1857, and then transferred to Otterbein University (now Otterbein University) in Westerville, Ohio in the fall of 1857 after Mount Pleasant University closed.
Dr. Kephart continued in the active ministry until June, 1863, when he enlisted in the Union army and was mustered as Chaplain of the Twenty-First Pennsylvania Cavalry. In February, 1864, Dr. Kephart's regiment was reorganized for three years' service, at Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, and joined the Army of the Potomac on June 1, 1864. The Twenty-First Pennsylvania Cavalry served in the first division of the Fifth Army Corps, dismounted until October 6, 1864, and was then remounted and served until the close of the war. From June 2, 1864 until April 19, 1865, the regiment participated in nineteen engagements, losing 417 men in killed and wounded, and approximately 200 being captured. As chaplain of the regiment, Dr. Kephart was present and under fire in every one of these nineteen battles, which included the Second Battle of Cold Harbor and the Battle of Petersburg. Dr. Kephart survived the Civil War, and was neither wounded nor captured.
Following his military career, Dr. Kephart traveled throughout the United States, serving in various posts as an educator and editor. He served as a Professor of Natural Science in Western University, Iowa from 1871-1876 and as a Professor of Mental and Moral Science at San Joaquin University in Woodbridge, California from 1883-1885. Otterbein University awarded him with an A.M. (Master of Arts) degree in June, 1872 and Western University honored him with a D.D. (Doctor of Divinity) degree in June, 1884. Dr. Kephart served as editor of The Religious Telescope until 1889 and wrote many books, including the renowned manuscript, The Holy Spirit of the Devout Life in 1904. Dr. Kephart died on October 28, 1908 and is buried at Woodland Cemetary in Dayton, Ohio.
Source:
http://www.otterbein.edu/civilwarsoldiers/ikephart.asp
Inscription
Blessed Are The Dead Who Die In The Lord
Family Members
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Elizabeth Kephart
1826–1830
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Barbara Kephart Albert
1828–1911
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Mary "Polly" Kephart Crowell
1831–1905
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Ezekiel Boring Kephart
1834–1906
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Abraham Kephart
1836–1860
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Isabelle Jane "Belle" Kephart Jeffries
1840–1907
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John Henry Kephart
1844–1920
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Sarah Ann Kephart McClintock
1847–1895
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Hiram Kephart
1848–1851
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Cyrus Jeffries Kephart
1852–1932
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