<data:blog.pageTitle/>

This Page

has moved to a new address:

https://explorewithliz.com

Sorry for the inconvenience…

Redirection provided by Blogger to WordPress Migration Service
Traveling Through History <data:blog.pageTitle/>

This Page

has moved to a new address:

https://explorewithliz.com

Sorry for the inconvenience…

Redirection provided by Blogger to WordPress Migration Service

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

William Michael McGee - Civil War Service

On May 17, 1847, young William Michael McGee arrived in New York on the ship Pontiac from Belfast, Northern Ireland.  He listed his age as 14 on the ship roster, but if the birth date on his tombstone is correct, he had just turned 13.  

William moved to Wisconsin around 1850 and married Isabel Carney on October 29, 1854, in Fox Lake, Dodge, Wisconsin.  Before the start of the Civil War, Michael and Isabel had three sons, William Henry, James Patrick, and my great-grandfather John Carney McGee.  When Wisconsin started recruitment among the Irish for the 17th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment in early 1862, William’s wife Isabel Carney, was pregnant with their fourth child, Thomas Bernard McGee.  The 17th Wisconsin Regiment set off to serve the Union in the Civil War March 15, 1862, and Thomas was born on April 28, 1862. 

The 17th Wisconsin Regiment’s second tour of duty started January 1864.  William and Isabel’s fourth son, Michael Emmet, was born on November 14, 1863.  Apparently, the timing was now right for William to serve his country, leaving his wife with 5 small children.  So on January 18, 1864, William enlisted in the 17th Wisconsin Regiment and was assigned to Company A as a Private. 

In January, the 17th Wisconsin Regiment was in Vicksburg, Mississippi where they had been performing guard duty.  Seven-eighths of the existing Regiment re-enlisted which gave them the designation of a “veteran” Regiment and earned them a veteran’s furlough.  The 17th left Vicksburg on March 8th and arrived in Madison, Wisconsin on March 18th where they were publically welcomed home.  They were then on break until April 20th.  So was William sent down to Vicksburg and then right back up to Wisconsin, probably but I haven’t found any records that describe what happened to the new recruits. 

The 17th Wisconsin Regiment reassembled at Camp Washburn in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on April 20th, 1864.  Camp Washburn was a Civil War reception center and trading post established in October 1861. The camp was located on the old Cold Spring Racetrack, west of 27th Street.  In 1864 this was still outside the city limits of Milwaukee.

b&w film copy neg. 
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3a18237

They left the next day on a two-day trek to Cairo, Illinois covering over 400 miles, where they rejoined United States 17th Regiment Corps.  The 17th Regiment Corps was on its way to join General Sherman in the Atlanta Campaign. Here they were assigned to the 2nd Brigade, General Gershom.  They headed out to the Tennessee River and shipped on down to Clifton, Tennessee on May 4th, over 100 miles.

On the same day, they marched from Clifton to Huntsville, Alabama (another 100 miles).  When they arrived in Huntsville, the 17th Regiment Corps was reorganized and the 17th Wisconsin Regiment was transferred to the 3rd Brigade, 3rd Division.

On May 5th, they marched to join General Sherman.  They traveled through Warrenton and Rome, Georgia and reached Ackworth on the 8th of June.  General Sherman’s troops were in position in Ackworth.  

Sketch of Keneshaw from Big Shanty
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.17639

On June 10th, the 17th Wisconsin Regiment took a position near Big Shanty, on the front line, on the extreme left.  They fought constantly in heavy skirmishes for 9 days. Then, with the rest of the 3rd Division, they advanced to Brush Mountain.  Two of the men of the 17th Wisconsin  were killed in these 9 days and six were wounded.

This is Brush Mountain from the foot of Kennesaw.  Position of federal batteries against Kennesaw
 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.17652

On June 22nd they were involved in a fight on Confederate’s right.  They were under heavy artillery fire for over 3 hours before returning to Brush Mountain.  They also fought in the Battle of  Kenesaw Mountain, where 2 more of their regiment were killed on June 25th and another 13 wounded on June 27th  with the loss to the Confederacy.  

General Sherman at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.21058

On July 2nd, the 17th Wisconsin accompanied 17th Corps around the right side of Kenesaw Mountain to the Chattahoochie River.  Between July 2nd and July 17th, the 17th Wisconsin had one more soldier killed and three more wounded.

Battle of Bald Hill, Atlanta, Georgia
nps.gov

On July 17th, the 17th Wisconsin Regiment crossed the Chattahoochie River with the rest of the 3rd Division and marched through Decatur, Georgia and by July 20th occupied a position on the extreme left of the line, south of the Augusta Railroad and in front of Bald Hill.  (Marked on the map - BLAIR (XCII CORPS))  In the following battle for control of the Confederate Army position on Bald Hill, the 3rd Division was victorious, but from the 17th to the 28th of July, the 17th Wisconsin lost 4 soldiers and 12 were wounded.

The 17th Wisconsin Regiment then followed the 17th Regiment Corps across the Chattahoochie River in pursuit of General Hood of the Confederacy. After that, they returned to Marietta, Georgia and remained camped there from November 4th to November 13th.  From Marietta they moved to Atlanta.  General Sherman ordered troops to burn Atlanta’s military resources.  The fire got out of control and left Atlanta in ruins.  The 17th Wisconsin does not seem to be involved in the burning of Atlanta.

Ruins of Atlanta Railroad Depot - Stereo card
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/stereo.1s02510

On November 16th, they left Atlanta in the march towards Savannah, called the March to the Sea.  The purpose of the March to the Sea was to frighten the civilian population in Georgia to abandon the Confederate cause. Sherman’s troops stole food and livestock as they traveled and burned the houses and barns of anyone who tried to fight back.

Sherman's March to the Sea
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3c16520

On December 21, 1864, Sherman’s troops arrived in Savannah to find it undefended. Sherman then gave the city of Savannah to President Abraham Lincoln as a Christmas gift.

In January 1865, the 17th Regiment Corps (including the 17th Wisconsin Regiment) left Savannah and camped near Beaufort, South Carolina.  They then joined in the march to Goldsboro, North Carolina.  They reached Goldsboro on March 21st. They were joined by General Sherman’s forces on March 23rd.  They proceeded to march to Raleigh, North Carolina where General Johnston surrendered.  Following that they marched to Richmond and Washington where they participated in General Sherman’s grand review of his troops in May. 

17th Regiment Corps Grand Review - Washington DC
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cwpb.02816

  They then proceeded to Louisville, Kentucky for their official muster out on July 14th.  On the same day they left Louisville headed towards Madison, Wisconsin. On July 17th they reached Madison and received their pay. The 17th Wisconsin Regiment was officially disbanded.


William headed home, but shortly packed up his family and moved to High Forest, Minnesota.  See “Pioneer Life – Minnesota to North Dakota” to follow William’s family to Cando, North Dakota where William died in 1903.

Labels: , , , , ,

Monday, September 23, 2013

Pioneer Life - Minnesota to North Dakota

-After William McGee returned home from duty in the Civil War, he moved his family to High Forest Township, Minnesota, around 1866. High Forest is the township immediately south of Rochester City.

Olmstead County, Minnesota (current map)  High Forest Township south of Rochester (light green)
In 1883, John Carney McGee and two of his brothers left High Forest and went to Rochester.  It seems most likely that the two brothers who traveled with John were James Patrick McGee and Michael Emmett McGee.  From Rochester, they traveled by wagon to Minneapolis, which is about 77 miles if they could go in a straight line.  The US Department of Transportation states that wagons could cover between 8 and 20 miles per day.  So somewhere between 5 and 10 days travel. And although TV shows and movies would lead us to believe that the wagons carried people, that was not the case.  People walked unless they were injured or ill.  Only their possessions were in the wagon.

 In Minneapolis, John and his brothers took the train to Fargo, North Dakota.  (Today that would be about a 4.5 hour trip on the Amtrak "Empire Builder" route.)  From Fargo, they went by wagon again to Cando, North Dakota.  If they could have traveled in a straight line, that would be about 160 miles.  At 8 miles per day, that would have taken about 20 days.  When John was interviewed for a North Dakota pioneer historical project, he said that he spent 36 days traveling by wagon.  John said that he and his brothers arrived in Cando in August of 1883.  They brought with them a team of 3 (horses? oxen?), some farm implements, some kitchen utensils, an iron, and some tins.

Current Mapquest map with Fargo in bottom right and Cando in the top left


By June 11, 1884, John had built a sod house with the help of one of his brothers.  This grand house had two windows and one door.  The full dimension of the house was 10 feet by 12 feet.  So, why a sod house instead of a "normal" house made of wood?  And what was a sod house?

Well, the Library of Congress has some useful information.  In 1880, when pioneers were arriving in the Dakotas, they saw a sea of tall prairie grass -- and no trees!  Actually, there were a few trees along river banks, but none elsewhere. The only thing available to build a shelter with was sod.   They cut squares out of the ground, which included the prairie grass down to the roots.  They used them for the walls and the roof.  The only timber was used for the doors and windows.  The best part of sod was it was very energy-efficient -- houses kept cool in the summer and warm in the winter.  The bad part is that they were porous, so the rain came through the roofs and got everything inside wet.  It sounds like tent-camping.

The sod house below was built in the 1890s, somewhere in the Dakotas.  It looks a lot bigger than 10'x12'.  The grass growing on the roof seems typical of sod houses in that time frame.

 Fred Hultstrand History in Pictures Collection, NDIRS-NDSU, Fargo., Library of Congress


This second picture is somewhere in the Devils Lake area, and its size may look much like John Carney McGee's sod house did.  Can you imagine living there?

 Fred Hultstrand History in Pictures Collection, NDIRS-NDSU, Fargo. Library of Congress

John lived there four years before building a more permanent home.  His table was made of some boards, and the chairs were boxes.  He stored his food in a "hole in the ground."  When John was asked what type of stove he had in the house, he replied, "stone."  Well, that had me puzzled for a while as I was inhibited my idea of what a stove was.  A stone stove (or more frequently called a three-stone stove) consists of three stones arranged around a fire in a way that a pot could sit above the fire, supported by the three rocks.


Traditional Three Stone Stove
Now remember that there weren't enough trees to build a house, so you can imagine that there wasn't enough to use for fire either.  No, John used buffalo chips that he collected out on the prairies.

Water was carried from a stream.  The stream appears to have been at least a mile from John's homestead.  Here are the coordinates 48.4283952, -99.0142001 for the property.  You can plug them into Google Earth to see the land today.  John's homestead was the NW quarter of section 14.  The coordinates appear to put you at the NW corner of his property.  There is water on the farm now, but North Dakota is in its third year of flooding.

He bought food and clothing in Devils Lake, which is about 30 minutes by car but a lot longer by horse.  The prices are surprising.  He paid $4.00 for a hundred pounds of sugar and $5.00 for a hundred pounds of flour.  John said suits cost $4.00 to $15.00.

John's hobbies -- as he listed them -- were Dancing, Hunting, and Fishing.  For work, he recorded farming and stock raising.

Just for fun, here is an old song about sod houses.


Yodeling Slim Clark - Little Old Sod Shanty (1946).Pir

Labels: , ,

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Cando Cemetery Mystery

The Sacred Heart Cemetery in Cando, North Dakota, holds the graves of my great-great-grandparents, William Michael McGee and Isabel/Isabella Carney.  In 2008, my 3rd cousin, Rita Matejka, went to Cando and cleaned up the gravestones and chopped away at the bush that was covering the headstone and took some pictures.  She posted the images on Find A Grave.  So when I went to the cemetery, I was expecting to see what I had seen on Rita's pictures.  But no such thing -- the gravestone looked very new and very, lovely and the bush was covering the stone.  But I didn't have my computer with me so I couldn't really examine the differences. With help from our new friend, Gerald Maurseth, I chopped away at the overgrown bush so my husband could take pictures.  The next day, I contacted Rita's aunt, Betty Teichmann, to see what she might know about a new gravestone.  Betty gave me her brother Gary's name and phone number to see what he knew.  I had a lovely conversation with Gary as we drove across North Dakota.  We didn't solve the question of what appeared to be a new gravestone, but did solve two other family mysteries!
Mystery #1: Who was the McGee that my uncle John met in Minnesota right before he was transferred to Florida?  Well, it was Jerry.  Someone Jerry worked with decided to introduce the two McGees and what a surprise to all of them to find out Jerry and John were cousins (2nd - meaning their grandfathers were brothers).  Before they could meet up again and talk, John was transferred.
Mystery #2:  Why did Aunt Tress visit "strangers" in Minnesota and not her own nephew, John McGee?  Jerry had the answer to this also.  Jerry's parents had gone to Cando for some event, and my grandfather's sister, Theresa Irene McGee Lampman (aka Tress), was there also.  At the family event, Jerry's parents invited Tress to come home with them for a visit.  So Tress made an unplanned visit to Minnesota to spend some more time with her cousin.
Now back to the gravestone.  After looking at the pictures my husband took and comparing them to Rita's images on Find A Grave, I realize that the tombstone is not new but maybe has a new face?  Here is the link to William McGee on Find A Grave - http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=29228651
My new pictures have pushed Rita's pictures off the front page, but if you click on the photo tab, you can see both of our images.  Is it possible to "polish" up granite and bring back that kind of detail?  Or did someone come in a do a more elaborate refinishing? Who is the person who spent the time and money to do this?
Strangely enough, while I was talking to Jerry, he told me that his daughter Rita was in Orlando, Florida, on vacation -- very close to where John McGee and most of his family now live.
Here is the view of the cemetery from the street.  The McGee tombstone is the one on the right with the big bush next to it.  I should have trimmed it down some more.

UPDATE:  Rita looked at the pictures and said the stone looked the same as when she saw it.  Her image was hampered by rain and bad lighting, and we had bright sunlight that made the stone really shine.

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Homestead National Monument & Homestead ACT of 1862

In Beatrice, Nebraska, the National Parks Service has a National Monument dedicated to the Homestead Act of 1862.  The Homestead Act was signed by President Abraham Lincoln on May 20, 1862, after 11 states had seceded from the Union. Passing the act before that point had been delayed by fighting over slavery issues.  Homesteaders were required to sign an oath of allegiance to the United States, and if they violated that oath, they lost the homestead.  This prevented homesteaders from aligning themselves with the southern states that had seceded.  Also, the homesteaders had to build a house and farm the land to "prove" the homestead and get title to the property.  "Proving" a homestead took 5 years.
To prevent boundary disputes, the government surveyed all the public land and divided it all up into square blocks called "townships." These townships consisted of 36 "sections" that were 1 square mile each.  These sections were then subdivided down into square "quarter sections" and then again into square 40 acre lots.  Each homesteader was allowed 4 of these 40 acre lots.  Each lot had to have a common border with another lot in the homestead.  So a homesteader could choose a full quarter section and have a square lot or could choose a lot configuration that looked like a "T" or an "L."  My great-great-grandfather, Enoch Parr, picked a lot configuration that resembles a Tetris shape in the Oak Grove Township in Franklin, Nebraska.
Here is what the land looks like today.  Likely, the original homestead building was back near the trees and the creek that ran through the property.
Enoch & Harriet Fish Parr's Homestead

My great-great-grandfather William Michael McGee and great-grandfather John Carney McGee homesteaded in North Dakota near the town of Cando, in Coolin Township.
Here is what William's homestead looks like today.  His homestead was a standard quarter section.  There is nothing left that would indicate where the house was.
William & Isabella Carney McGee's Homestead
John's homestead was also a standard quarter section. Here is what it looks like today. Trees were not a natural part of the landscape in this part of North Dakota, so someone planted them there -- likely around a house that is no longer here.
John Carney & Margaret Callahan McGee's Homestead
My family homesteaded in the late 1800s, but the Homestead Act was still in effect until 1976 in the lower 48 states and 1986 in Alaska.  The Homestead National Monument of America has exhibits from the original homesteader all the way to the last homesteader.  It is worth a trip to see a piece of history that impacted how this country was settled.

Finding your family's homestead land can be quite tricky.  In North Dakota, the streets in the townships are not labeled.  We were fortunate to get help from Gerald Maurseth from Cando's Pioneer Foundation/Museum, who is also a retired Postman.
In Nebraska, we had help from Gary and Jaynette Keim, who are with the Franklin County Historical Museum.  In Nebraska the streets are labeled but wouldn't have been enough for us to find the boundaries of the homesteads.  Other members of the museum helped us find family records that the museum had stored.


Labels: , , , , , ,