Samuel Wilkeson s Gettysburg Address. Samuel Wilkeson ( )

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Transcription:

Samuel Wilkeson s Gettysburg Address Samuel Wilkeson (1817-1889)

He introduced the era of the inside operator. --Louis Starr, Bohemian Brigade (1954), p. 67 a vigorous character of lusty humor with unusual powers of storytelling and description. --J. Cutler Andrews, The North Reports the Civil War (1955), p. 43

Thurlow Weed Horace Greeley Henry Raymond

2 LT Bayard Wilkeson, age 19

Wednesday morning, July 1 Maj. Thomas W. Osborn, Artillery Brigade, Eleventh Army Corps About 11 a.m. Lieutenant Wilkeson reached the field, and was ordered to report to General Barlow, commanding the First Division, which was engaged about three-fourths of a mile from the town and on the left of the York pike. The battery was assigned position by General Barlow, and when I reached the ground I found it unfortunately near the enemy's line of infantry, with which they were engaged, as well as two of his batteries, the concentrated fire of which no battery could withstand. --Report to Gen. Henry J. Hunt, July 29, 1863

Wednesday morning, July 1

Sketch artist Alfred Waud

Wednesday morning, July 1

Wednesday mid-day, July 1 Brig. Gen. Henry J. Hunt, Chief of Artillery, Army of the Potomac: "About 11 a.m. [on July 1, 1863] Wilkeson's battery (G, Fourth United States, four 12-pounders) came up, and reported to General Barlow, who posted it close to the enemy's line of infantry, with which it immediately became engaged, sustaining at the same time the fire of two of his batteries. In the commencement of this unequal contest, Lieutenant Bayard Wilkeson (Fourth U. S. Artillery), commanding the battery, a young officer of great gallantry, fell, mortally wounded, and was carried from the field. --Report to Gen. Seth Williams, September 27, 1863

Wednesday afternoon, July 1 Adams County Almshouse Image courtesy of Stuart Dempsey, Gettysburg Daily

Thursday afternoon, July 2 Whitelaw Reid, newspaper correspondent: Wilkeson, my original companion from Baltimore, was up at last and very sad. His son, a gallant young lieutenant of regular artillery, had had his leg shot off in Wednesday s disastrous fight, and whether living now or dead, he could not tell; he was a prisoner (or a corpse) in Gettysburg. --Dispatch, Cincinnati Gazette, July 3, 1863

Friday evening, July 3 Louisville Daily Journal: The generous man [Prof. Martin Stoever] encountered Mr. Wilkeson while searching for his son s body, and overcame him wholly with his tender outpouring of sympathy and offers of service. He subsequently sought him out and compelled him to come to his home and take food. -- Meanness of the Gettysburghers, Louisville Daily Journal, July 17, 1863

Friday evening, July 3 Testimonials of the Good Death His conduct, said Gen. Howard, writing to his father, was so marked, that his brigade commander speaks to me of him in the highest terms. A sergeant of his company writes that when the young man was wounded he cried out, Take your men, corporal, and return immediately to your piece. Afterward, when in agonies of thirst, he asked for a drink, and it was brought, he insisted it should first be offered to a wounded man near by before he would drink himself. A brave and noble young man, the pride of his father, the center of a circle of affectionate friends, his death in the morning of his life, in the service of the good cause, is sorrowful but not in vain. --(New York) Independent, Bayard Wilkeson, August 27, 1863

Saturday night, July 4

Saturday night, July 4 the second birth of Freedom in America

Tuesday evening, July 7 How long ago is it? eighty odd years since on the Fourth of July for the first time in the history of the world a nation by its representatives assembled and declared as a self-evident truth that all men are created equal. --Response to a Serenade, New York Times, July 8, 1863 Lincoln in August 1863

Tuesday evening, July 7 I would like to speak in terms of praise due to the many brave officers and soldiers who have fought in the cause of the Union and liberties of the country from the beginning of the war [but] I dislike to mention the name of one single officer lest I might do wrong to those I might forget. Recent events bring up glorious names, and particularly prominent ones, but these I will not mention. --Response to a Serenade, New York Times, July 8, 1863 Lincoln in August 1863

that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain, that this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.