Category Archives: Civil War

Battle of Gettysburg (2)

Dead Confederates near the Rose Farm and Peach Orchard (courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, DC)

Dead Confederates near the Rose Farm and Peach Orchard (courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, DC)

(Excerpt from the 1863 Provincial Annals published with permission of the Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

As this year’s re-enactment activities draw to a close, we offer one final reflection on the Daughters of Charity and their work in Gettysburg. As soon as the gunfire ceased (and several Confederates stopped at St. Joseph’s Central House in Emmitsburg as they fled to the south), Fr. Francis Burlando took a group of Daughters of Charity to Gettysburg, just a few miles to the north. There, they would aid as nurses, a task they had accepted in both the North and the South since the very beginnings of the war. The following painful description came from Sr. Matilda Coskery, one of the sisters who went with Fr. Burlando on this ride across the corpse-strewn fields: “But on reaching the Battle grounds, awful to see the men lying dead on the road some by the side of their horses. O, it was beyond description, hundreds of both armies lying dead…. O! This picture of human beings being slaughtered down by their fellow men in a cruel civil war was perfectly awful.” When we first posted this image in July of 2012, Battlefield Guide Guillermo L. Bosch told us that these were in fact dead Georgians who had been felled by the Rose farmhouse, east of the Emmitsburg Road and south of the peach orchard. From their route into town, the Sisters would surely have seen just this sight.

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Battle of Gettysburg

Sister Camilla O'Keefe

Sister Camilla O’Keefe (used with permission of Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

This week we mark the anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, fought a mere 11 miles from our campus in Emmitsburg, Maryland.

Shortly after midnight on July 2, 1863, the last two remaining brigades, both attached to the Union Army’s Third Corps, left their brief encampment on the grounds of St. Joseph’s Central House to march north to join in the Battle of Gettysburg. The men had been ordered to stay behind lest the fighting, which had commenced the day before, move to the south. It would be only four short days before Fr. Francis Burlando accompanied the first Daughters of Charity into the war-ravaged town. Pictured is Sr. Camilla O’Keefe, one of the sisters who traversed the body-strewn battlefield to begin the task of caring for the wounded and dying in Gettysburg’s makeshift hospitals.

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Lincoln Assassination, April 14, 1865

List of Sisters at Lincoln General Hospital April 1865

List of Sisters serving at Lincoln General Hospital in April of 1865 (used with permission of Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

On April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln was assassinated at Ford’s Theater in Washington. We have no first-hand accounts of Lincoln’s death, but two items in our collection do relate to it in an indirect way.

The first, seen above, is a list of the Daughters of Charity who were on mission at Lincoln General Hospital in Washington in April of 1865.

Lincoln General Hospital

Lincoln General Hospital, Washington, D.C. Lithograph by Chas. Magnus, ca. 1864. (Courtesy of Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division,
Washington, D.C.)

Lincoln General was the largest of the military hospitals in the area built by the Army to take care of the Civil War casualties. Lincoln General was not located near either the White House or Ford’s Theater. It was located on Capitol Hill, 15 blocks east of the Capitol building, in an area known today as Lincoln Park. The hospital complex included 20 pavilions and 25 tent wards, which provided altogether a bed capacity of 2,575. The hospital also included a kitchen and dining rooms, officers quarters, quarters for Sisters who provided nursing service, barracks, guard house, separate quarters for contrabands, and service facilities such as water tank, laundry, barber shop, carpenter shop, stables and a morgue (“Dead House”). Lincoln General was taken down shortly after the Civil War. Nothing remains of Lincoln General Hospital; the area once occupied by the hospital is now a residental district.

The hospital opened in December 1862; the first Daughters of Charity were sent there in January of 1863. By the end of the war 25 Sisters were serving in the hospital. None of the Sisters left any accounts or recollections concerning Lincoln’s death, nor it is recorded in our Provincial Annals.

For more information on Lincoln General Hospital see the National Library of Medicine’s website: Historic Medical Sites in the Washington DC area

See also: Civil War Washington

 
 

Southern Almanac 1865

The Southern Almanac, 1865 (used with permission of the Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

The seond item is The Southern Almanac for 1865. This slim volume contains basic information concerning the Confederate government and official tallies of Confederate losses during the Civil War through the year 1864. In relation to Lincoln, the most interesting aspect of this volume is the seal found on the cover, in particular the words SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS, or “Thus ever to tyrants”, the motto of the state of Virginia. John Wilkes Booth is said to have uttered the words “Sic Semper Tyrannis” as he leaped from the presidential box to the stage of Ford’s Theater after he shot President Lincoln.

Today, Ford’s Theater is a National Historic Site and museum, as well as a working theater. See the
Ford’s Theater website for more about Lincoln and the history of the theater.

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