"... according to Confederate records. He fell ill as his regiment marched north toward Gettysburg and remained behind in a Virginia military hospital. He ran away from the hospital, records show, while his unit suffered devastating losses at Gettysburg. Of the 800 men in the 26th North Carolina, 734 were killed, wounded or captured in the battle Pvt. Triplett missed. Now a deserter, he made his way to Tennessee and, in 1864, enlisted in a Union regiment, the 3rd North Carolina Mounted Infantry. Known as Kirk’s Raiders, the 3rd North Carolina carried out a campaign of sabotage against Confederate targets in eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina. After the war, former Kirk’s Raiders were despised in areas of the former Confederacy. Pvt. Triplett, by then a civilian with a reputation for orneriness, kept pet rattlesnakes at his home near Elk Creek, N.C. He often sat on his front porch with a pistol on his lap.... Pvt. Triplett married Elida Hall in 1924. She was 34 when Irene was born in 1930; he was 83."
Their daughter, Irene Triplett, was the last person to receive a Civil War pension (Wall Street Journal). Irene had mental disabilities, so as the "helpless adult child of a veteran," she qualified for government support. She has now died, at the age of 90.
৩৬টি মন্তব্য:
“She was 34 when Irene was born in 1930; he was 83."
Good man!
For some reason that story made me think of George Wallace.
-XC
Every single Robert e Lee statue should be replaced by a statue of Triplet.
He enlisted at 15?
Kudos for starting early and finishing late.
Amazing to think about how few degrees of separation can still stand between us and some historical events.
An amazing story...
One more data point in the 'for' column for old guys hooking up with much younger women- it keeps history alive!
I lived in Triplett, NC for a short while. Many Tripletts in Western NC. My gggrandfather was in NC 28th. Interesting story!
I'm - more or less - from that area of North Carolina having had a family second home in Western North Carolina since the 1950's. It's where North Florida summers to escape the heat. I grew up on the legends. Western NC was by no means a slave owning area and there was much sentiment for the Union throughout the war. The NC 3rd (Union) were held in local esteem as certain bastards for their predations on the local populace. He needed to sit with a gun in his lap well into old age. Memories die hard in the south. As Faulkner said (in paraphrase) "The is never dead. It's not even past."
Another amazing factoid: President John Tyler still has 2 living grandsons, one in VA and one in TN. I think they are both in their 90s.
Since the father was in both armies, did he get two pensions? Confederate veterans weren't eligible for federal pensions, but Southern states did give Confederate veterans and their widows money.
*
By now I guess everybody knows that President John Tyler, born in 1790, has grandchildren who are still alive.
Once you could astound people with that.
Good thing dad switched sides. Losers don’t get pensions.
Interesting to see that the pension apparently wasn’t indexed for inflation. Only $73 to the nursing home.
I see President Tyler’s grandsons are mentioned. They were still alive several months ago.
Not nearly as impressive but my wife’s grandfather was born during the Civil War. Initially it was very hard to sort out her family relations such as her father was younger than his nephew.
To add to Aztec's point about Western NC mountains, the museum in Winchester, VA has an interesting civil war program about how both sides threatened ruin to families and their property if they did not join the battle of whichever side had control of the area.
Too late for a paternity test?
Interestingly, before I came here just now, I've spent the morning looking at the records of the two ancestors (both G-G-G-grandfathers) that I know served in the Civil War.
William Gabriel Knight, born 4 Jan 1833 in Margate, Kent, England, came to the U.S. with his young Scottish wife in 1856 and settled in Delaware, Ohio. He was a private in Co. H, 145th Ohio Infantry Regiment, which was part of the 21st Bn. of the Ohio National Guard, which was called up for 100 days service in 1864. His unit was one of the ones at the Battle of Fort Stevens on July 11-12, when Jubal Early tried to attack Washington, D.C., and was repulsed. His unit was there manning the fortifications but not part of the battle, and the handful of men who died before the unit mustered out in August died of disease.
On the other side, I had William C. Emerson, born 15 Jan 1826 in Jones County, Georgia, who enlisted in 1863 at the age of 37 in Co. A, 57th Alabama Regiment, from Troy, Pike County, Alabama. They fought in the Daulton-Atlanta campaign in 1864, at the Battle of Peachtree Creek outside of Atlanta, then other battles at Franklin and Nashville, Tennessee, and Bentonville, North Carolina. The unit was deactivated in 1865 after the Confederate surrender. I've seen the form he signed promising not to levy war against the United States of America again. There's also a picture of him from about 1869, showing him with his son Frank (my G-G-grandfather) and a couple of younger siblings. They were a stern-looking bunch, but I guess they probably had reason to be.
I found out yesterday that the "touched" old man behind me died a few weeks ago. His family owned this side of town when it was farmland before The War, so he had a trust fund and large, well maintained house. He got to look at the back of our decaying, paintless, 2 story chicken house, built 1931.
"with a reputation for orneriness"
Don't hear much of this condition anymore. I assume we have a vaccine for it.
And here I thought I'd never live to see the day that a federal government entitlement program closed up shop.
On my mom's side, it averages over 40 years a generation since my gggg-gf, born 1714, to my niece, born 2000. There's a 7th son of a 7th son in the middle. He had people come to him to be healed--but he was a lawyer, so it didn't work.
A long lived family. Two generations 173 years. Usually its more like 100 years.
Re: Ralph L:
Were there daughters in between the sons? The magic doesn't work if the sequence is broken by a girl.
There are a couple of pictures of her with her parents over at the Daily Mail. It sounds like Irene led a really difficult life. I hope she found some happiness somewhere among all those care homes.
Are there any known children of slaves still alive? There must be some as you didn't have to be 15 to "enlist" in slavery. If a man born a slave in 1865 had a kid at 80 in 1945, that child would be just a bit older than Bill Clinton..
Were there daughters in between the sons?
That must have been the problem.
Findagrave.com has the gggg gf, James Graham, as a direct ancestor of Rev. Billy Graham. When I'd looked on another site in the other direction after he died, I got to similar names and same NC county as my Grahams, but mismatched generations. Guess the internet isn't always right.
Heartless Aztec said...
The NC 3rd (Union) were held in local esteem as certain bastards for their predations on the local populace.
It was somewhat deserved.
From Wiki:
June 1864 - Raid on Camp Vance
Camp Vance, located near Morganton, North Carolina, and named for Zebulon B. Vance, a North Carolina wartime governor, was a training camp for Confederate conscripts.[5] The 3rd NCMI easily captured the camp, but did not achieve its primary mission to destroy the railroad bridge over the Yadkin River north of Salisbury, North Carolina.[6] They did destroy a nearby train, and inflicted significant damage to the engine. All buildings in the compound were destroyed, except for the hospital. Living up to their name as raiders a newspaper report at the time states the union soldiers robbed everyone present, stole all the horses and mules, and looted and divided the contents of the depot before burning it.[7] It was also reported that many of those captured were able to escape while the Union troops made their retreat crossing the Catawba River.[7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3rd_North_Carolina_Mounted_Infantry
Of course this leaves out the most infamous bit; when the local militia went after Kirk, he used his prisoners and human shields. That was considered monstrous in those days.
My great-great-great-uncle was one of the prisoners who did not manage to escape and was sent to Camp Douglas in Illinois where he died a few months later of measles at the age of 18.
A cousin of ours served with Col Kirk during this period, he died of the shits in eastern Tennessee in 1865.
Well, good to know the Civil War is finally, truly over. We can now get on with creating the next one.
I remember a Jeopardy! final question from sometime in the 1980s or 90s that was along the lines of which was the earliest official war did the present government still pay widow of veterans benefits to at the time. I think all three contestants missed it. I also misguessed, but by saying Mexican-American War. The answer was the Civil War.
“She was 34 when Irene was born in 1930; he was 83."
Good man!
Probably not. The wife most likely had a lover.
Slavery.
A long time ago, my ass.
Howard said...
“Every single Robert e Lee statue should be replaced by a statue of Triplet.“
Why? Because Triplet just wanted to be on the side that was winning? Or because he enslaved rattlesnakes?
Hasn't anyone stepped up to pay Crack for all his cotton picking?
I was born in 1950. My father was born in 1921. He remembered sitting in his father's (born 1874) hardware store with a bunch of men from the neighborhood, shooting the breeze, in the early 1930s. One of them had been born a slave.
Or, IOW, my (white, Jewish, Philadelphian) father knew an ex-slave. And not as a caricature, but as a fully realized man he talked with at length.
In some ways 1865 was a long time ago. In other ways, just the day before yesterday.
Seems like she should have received two pensions, one from the North and one from the South.
How is that phone tax to pay for the Spanish American War going?
@mikee 3:36 pm
That tax was sunset 14 years ago.
https://www.cnet.com/news/telecom-tax-imposed-in-1898-finally-ends/
Hi Ann-I have lurked on your blog for a long time and this is the first time I have felt that I have something to add. My own great-great grandfather was also in the 3rd NC after having deserted his Confederate unit. To add to another point referenced above, I live in Morganton where the 3rd NC made their raid on Camp Vance (they had hoped to hijack a train to Salisbury and free Union prisoners held there). After the war the new Republican Governor of NC, William Woods Holden, called out the militia under Col Kirk to fight the Klan (search for “Kirk Holden war)”. Kirk and the militia beat the Klan but the Republicans lost control of the NC legislature in the next election and Holden became the first governor in U.S. history to be impeached and removed when the Democrats used the events of the KirkHolden war as justification for his impeachment. Tod Caldwell from Morganton, the first Lt. Governor in NC history then became Governor . Holden would be eventually be absolved of the charges that led to his impeachment when Republicans retook control of the NC legislature in 2010.
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