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Louis Sader

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Louis Sader Veteran

Birth
Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
24 Nov 1923 (aged 82)
Wabasha County, Minnesota, USA
Burial
Minneiska Township, Wabasha County, Minnesota, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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"Louis Sader, now living retired in the Village of Minneiska, after a long and successful career in agriculture, was born in Harrisburg, Pa., January 1, 1843, son of Barney and Mary Sader, who were both natives of that state. The family name is of German derivation and was originally spelled Soeder, the simpler spelling having been adopted to prevent mispronunciation ... The removal of the family to Baltimore, Md., occurred at an early date, as it was there that the subject of this sketch attended school. Soon after he had reached his eighteenth birthday, the Civil War, long threatening, broke out. Baltimore was one of the hotbeds of secession, but young Louis Sader had no intention of aiding the cause of the Southern slaveholders. Instead, he enlisted in the First Maryland regiment of the Federal army, as private, and soon he found himself amid flying shot and shell on the field of the first battle of Bull Run. From a private he became a teamster, and at Nashville, Tenn., to which place he went from Washington with his regiment, he was promoted to the position of wagon-master, and so continued until the end of his service ... The year of Mr. Sader's marriage was 1867, and his bride was Angeline Cuvener, who was born in Prussia, Germany, January 1, 1842, or just one year to the day before her husband ..."
"Louis Sader, now living retired in the Village of Minneiska, after a long and successful career in agriculture, was born in Harrisburg, Pa., January 1, 1843, son of Barney and Mary Sader, who were both natives of that state. The family name is of German derivation and was originally spelled Soeder, the simpler spelling having been adopted to prevent mispronunciation ... The removal of the family to Baltimore, Md., occurred at an early date, as it was there that the subject of this sketch attended school. Soon after he had reached his eighteenth birthday, the Civil War, long threatening, broke out. Baltimore was one of the hotbeds of secession, but young Louis Sader had no intention of aiding the cause of the Southern slaveholders. Instead, he enlisted in the First Maryland regiment of the Federal army, as private, and soon he found himself amid flying shot and shell on the field of the first battle of Bull Run. From a private he became a teamster, and at Nashville, Tenn., to which place he went from Washington with his regiment, he was promoted to the position of wagon-master, and so continued until the end of his service ... The year of Mr. Sader's marriage was 1867, and his bride was Angeline Cuvener, who was born in Prussia, Germany, January 1, 1842, or just one year to the day before her husband ..."


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