Let the past speak for itself.

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Transcription:

In 1872, seven years after the end of the Civil War, E. B. Morgan commissioned a bronze tablet engraved with the names of the thirty-seven Ledyard soldiers who died in battle or in the hospital. This tablet was mounted on the north interior wall of the Aurora Presbyterian Church, now known as the United Ministry, where it still remains. The Dedication Address was given by Francis M. Finch, Esq., Trustee of Cornell University. Let the past speak for itself.

John Waite, 75th NY Volunteers Fought in the fierce battle at Port Hudson LA, near Vicksburg on the Mississippi. He survived the war. Ithiel Winters, 1st NY Independent Battery. First known as Kennedy s the battery was later reorganized as Cowan s. The unit saw action at Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Petersburg and many other battles in VA. Ithiel survived the war.

John S. Winters, 111th NY Volunteers. Wounded at Gettysburg, July 1863; returned to his regiment and to battle. He died in hospital in 1864. Elisha Winters, 19th Reg t, NY Infantry; 3rd NY Light Artillery. Survived the war, as did brother Ithiel; brother John did not. I am going to my regiment now...i can t stand much yet but I dont feel right laying around idle & I shall do the best I can. John S. Winters to E. B. Morgan, August 1863.

Henry Vaughn, Schoolteacher. 1st Independent Battery. Survived the war. Henry Gifford, a student at Cayuga Lake Academy; 111th NY Vols. Spotted a snipers nest at Gettysburg, thus saving many in his unit. Taken prisoner at New Berne, NC, and died in Andersonville Prison.

Thomas Peckham, 19th Reg t NY Volunteers. Survived the war. John Vanderip, 1st NY Indep. Battery, Kennedy s. Re-enlisted in 1st NY Battery. Killed in the battle of Cedar Creek, 1864.

Richard Tierney, born in Ireland, was at age 44 one of the oldest volunteers in the 19th NY Vols. He wrote to E. B. Morgan, Mr. Morgan, sir, it seems they arnt a going to pay the County bounty here...otherwise I wont go. Morgan took care of the difficulty; Richard was wounded at Drewry s Bluff VA and died after a month in hospital. Henry Steele, 1st NY Indep. Battery. Survived the war. Alexander Rapp, 111th NY Vols. [?]. Brother also served; both survived the war. James Benedict of the 75th Reg t wrote to E. B. Morgan that his family had not received the bounty because his name had been omitted from the list of volunteers: I am the boy formerly living at John DeShong s. You no doubt remember seeing me...please pay the money to my mother. He was killed near Port Hudson LA. His mother, a widow with three small children, wrote to Morgan, He was my whole dependence.

George W. Salisbury and George S. Bentley, both 111th NY Vols. Both survived the war. Salisbury later kept a store in Aurora. Sgt. Johnson McDowell, 111th NY Vols., enlisted as a student at Cayuga Lake Academy. He lost a leg at Gettysburg but survived the war. After the war he worked as a druggist in Salisbury s store; he died in a farm accident.

Sgt. Marvin Waite 75th Reg t. NY Vols. Sergeant of Co. D Survived the war. Among the freedmen who served was David A. Baker. He enlisted in 1863, but tuberculosis prevented him from seeing action. He returned home to die. Sgt. Richard Reamer, 75th Reg t. NY Vols. Survived the war. John C. Griger, also African- American, served on the gunboat USS Kanawha. He survived the war.

1st Lt. George Smith, a cousin of E. B. Morgan, was second in command of Co. K of the 111th NY Vols. His men thought very highly of him. Survived the war. Horace Smith was George Smith s younger brother. Like several others in his unit, the 111th NY Vols., he enlisted as a student at Cayuga Lake Academy. He was the namesake of another cousin who was a plantation owner in Louisiana. He died five weeks after Gettysburg.

Theodore Eager, 111th NY Vols. He survived the war. The West brothers, James, 19, and George, 17, enlisted in the 3rd NY Artillery. Serving together, they were captured together near New Berne NC. Both brothers died in Andersonville Prison. Thomas Sherman, 1st NY Indep. Battery. He survived the war.

Peter Quackenbush, Jr, who enlisted along with his father in the 111th, left a $300 bond with E. B. Morgan, payable to his mother in the event of his death. Peter Jr. died in Andersonville, Peter Sr. in hospital. George Chidester, 1st NY Indep. Battery. He survived the war. Thomas Gray, 111th NY Vols. He survived the war.

Many of the veterans of the 111th returned to Gettysburg in 1891 for the dedication of the regimental monument (right), and returned, fewer each time, for successive anniversaries of the battle, especially the fiftieth in 1913. The hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg is this year, July 1-3. Francis Finch is remembered today as the author of The Blue and the Gray, which concludes with the familiar lines Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment-day, Love and tears for the Blue, Tears and love for the Gray. Please take a few minutes around Memorial Day to visit Oak Glen, St. Patrick s and the rural cemeteries. The Village Historian, Linda Schwab, thanks Town Historian Judy Furness for very helpful discussions and credits Ed Rossman for the photo of the memorial tablet. You can see Judy s fascinating Civil War display at this year s Aurorafest, July 13th; watch the Southern Cayuga Tribune for the next in the series on local African-Americans in the Civil War.