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View Full Version : The last soldier to die in the U.S. Civil War


mookiemookie
04-02-12, 06:16 PM
http://1dustytrack.com/archives/1787

I've sometimes given thought to the last person to die in a given war. How sad it is...it never seems to be a meaningful sacrifice. I thought Private Williams' story was sad and interesting.

vienna
04-02-12, 06:31 PM
A good article.

I've also wondered about those who are the last victims of tragic ciustances: the last slave sold or brought to the U.S. when slavery was repealed, the last politcal prisioner to die before the fall of the USSR, the last person to suffer or die before a disease cure is found, etc. I sometimes wish some things were able to be rertoactive by some sort of magic just to spare some who had the unfortunate distinction of being the last victim...

...

Tribesman
04-02-12, 06:36 PM
I've also wondered about those who are the last victims of tragic ciustances: the last slave sold or brought to the U.S. when slavery was repealed
But think of the last poor bugger who spent good money on a slave only to have the evil government rob him of his investment.:03:

vienna
04-02-12, 06:39 PM
But think of the last poor bugger who spent good money on a slave only to have the evil government rob him of his investment.:03:


Evil government does in evil bugger: don't see much of a problem... :DL

Sailor Steve
04-02-12, 09:17 PM
The first soldier's death in the Civil War was just as remarkable. The Confederates shelled Fort Sumter for more than thirty hours. Major Robert Anderson agreed to surrender after General P.G.T. Beauregard promised to honor the US flag and guarantee Anderson and his men safe passage back to Federal territory. Not one man on either side had been killed. Then, when giving a 100-gun salute as the US flag was lowered, some ammunition exploded, killing private Daniel Hough and mortally wounding private Edward Gallway.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Fort_Sumter

Stealhead
04-02-12, 09:33 PM
Those where the first deaths of the official war all though several hundred people had already died in Missouri and Kansas before the war though it was over the exact same reasons that the Civil War began.

Onkel Neal
04-02-12, 10:05 PM
http://1dustytrack.com/archives/1787

I've sometimes given thought to the last person to die in a given war. How sad it is...it never seems to be a meaningful sacrifice. I thought Private Williams' story was sad and interesting.

I've thought about that too. Man, can you imagine what it's like to be on the front lines with daily reports and rumors of a ceasefire or armistice? What stress, on top of everything else!

Sailor Steve
04-02-12, 11:04 PM
Those where the first deaths of the official war all though several hundred people had already died in Missouri and Kansas before the war though it was over the exact same reasons that the Civil War began.
And people continued to die after the war for the same reasons.

Stealhead
04-02-12, 11:13 PM
I was just pointing out that many people are unaware of the violence that occurred in Kansas and Missouri the results and fervor of which lead directly to the Civil War it was the spark no doubt and many people do not know about it.I sat it was the spark because it was the pro anti slavery groups where trying anything to get that given region to vote one way or the other when non violence failed that resorted to terrorizing the opposing side.Which lead many in the North and the South to more or less accept it was "us or them" our way or theirs so to speak.

Tribesman
04-03-12, 02:50 AM
How was it for those that died in New Orleans in a battle that started after the war was already over?
Then again the central issue of that war had already been resolved before the war even started.
Pity they didn't have rapid communication in 1812 isn't it.

Gargamel
04-03-12, 05:40 AM
1812?

Tribesman
04-03-12, 06:33 AM
1812?
Yes when they went to war over an arguement the core of which they had already been resolved but communication of that development was slow, it then had a rather famous battle in 1815 which started after the war had ended but the paperwork was in snailmail, you could add that a month after that they had another battle as they still hadn't got the news the war was over. If you want to go to the full extremes then Warrington in the USS Peacock was still playing silly buggers trying to make a few dollars out of the war 6 months later, even when people were telling him the war was long over he still was killing people "in the war"