Category Archives: Cemetery

Soldiers Ground, Lt McCowen July 2, 1863

Note; a long but interesting read;

A few grave sites in Soldiers Ground are now among a line Palms. Most, like below, were well worn and nothing can be read clearly.

However one grave site had a newer stone of the kind used to replace old damaged ones. He was Lt. McCowen of Co K, 53rd Georgia Infantry.

Lt. McCowen, from Josey Road, Swarr, Georgia died on the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg along with 50,000 others. This was the battle that changed the direction of the US Civil War to the Union.

Lt McCowen July 2, 1863
Lt McCowen July 2, 1863

Co. K, 53rd Georgia Infantry, was a Confederate unit in the American Civil War, known as the “Quitman Guard,” primarily from Quitman County, Georgia, serving in the Army of Northern Virginia through major campaigns like Sharpsburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg, eventually surrendering at Appomattox with only a few men.

There were conflicting records on Lt McCowen’s death, however one was a typo on the date of the Gettysburg battle. Also he was thought to have been buried with Unknowns at Rose Farm in Gettysburg, PA. (Rose Farm was the location in the battle of Gettysburg where numerous soldiers from both sides were found)

However 80 Confederate soldiers (known as the “Gettysburg Dead”) were reinterred at Magnolia’s ‘Soldier’s Ground’ area in 1871. Because he had been among South Carolina soldiers at the time of his death he was mistakenly moved with them to Soldiers Ground.

Jere Baxter, of Charlotte, N.C., found his great-great-granduncle’s mistaken grave after years of researching his family genealogy. The new headstone most likely was provided by the Baxter family in 2003.

Note; I’m always amazed at what information can be found on line with some research.

 

Soldiers Ground, A Line Not Perfect

The ‘Soldiers Ground’ was never meant to be a pretty place, it fit a need. It was land taken from a plantation and not part of the nearby cemetery. The Ground is maintained now by a private trust. Many of the aging headstones are repaired, or even replaced. Still, this is not a neat and tidy place. Probably shouldn’t be.

Soldiers Ground, A Line Not Perfect
Soldiers Ground, A Line Not Perfect

Hooded Merganser

The small ‘wild eyed’ fish eating duck. Also they are very shy.

This is a bird  I have a terrible time photographing. They seem to like dark places and dive under water faster than a Grebe.

Best viewed large.

Hooded Merganser
Hooded Merganser

I photographed this male in a big pond at Magnolia Cemetery. It’s the one place I can be sure of getting a chance with one.

These are a strangely beautiful bird.

A Soldiers Ground, Charleston Harbor

These are a few headstones in the Soldiers Ground cemetery. None were in the rows of the organized burials, these were off on the side of the land.

What they seem to have in common was the defense of Charleston harbor. Also in common is they were from different states and areas, but still died and buried here.

Research did find some details, there was also contradictions. Considering the time and place I’m amazed when I find anything. Records were spotty at best.

  1. Pvt Tobin (1864) is the one person here that is a native of South Carolina. Company C was from the Barnwell and Beaufort area. At this time they were on Sullivans Island as part of the harbor defense. Today Sullivans is an expensive coastal community suburb of Charleston. Beach front property.
Pvt Tobin Stallings Batt Res 1864
Pvt Tobin Stallings Batt Res 1864

2.  Pvt Montgomery, (1862) 4th Inf Bn was from Louisiana. Two months before his death the unit was defeated in the Shiloh Tennessee area battle with a USS Grants Federal Army and came down to Charleston. The Union Army failed to capture Charleston from James Island on June 16, 1862. Most like Pvt Montgomery was killed during the fighting there. James Island is also a big beach suburb of Charleston now.

J D Montgomery 4th LA Inf Bn 1862
J D Montgomery 4th LA Inf Bn 1862

3. Major Wampler, Battery Wagner (1863). Battery Wagner was stationed on Morris Island in Charleston Harbor. The  all-Black 54th Massachusetts Regiment led a courageous but ultimately unsuccessful charge, suffering heavy casualties and losing their commander, Colonel Robert Gould Shaw. A major motion picture was made, Matthew Broderick, was made about the 54th and the battle. After the failed attempt Federal gunboats eventually pushed the remaining CSA troops off the island during the time Major Wampler died. Morris Island is now a small patch in the harbor with a closed lighthouse. Water and storms have worn it away until nothing is really there.

Major Wampler Bat Wagner 1863
Major Wampler Bat Wagner 1863

4. James Hegwood(1864) 32nd Georgia Inf. During that summer a second barrier island, James Island, was part of the Federal assaults starting July 3, 1864. Again the Union army was unable to capture Charleston.

James Hegwood C0 D 32nd Georgia Inf 1864

All this information was found on line by searching, and then following a hint here and there while ‘going down the rabbit hole’. The movie about the 54th Massachusetts Regiment is titled ‘Glory’. Not much glory in the real world though. Prisoners from the 54th Massachusetts Regiment were placed in the court yard of the old Charleston jail until the wars end.

Simmons Mausoleum

This is one of the few true mausoleums around here. It has tall columns, all carved marble, just a beautiful work of art.

While I’ve photographed it a number of times I came on it from a direction I rarely walk. Well, photography 101 kicked in. The rule is ‘always shoot from different angles’.

Better late than never.

Simmons Mausoleum
Simmons Mausoleum
Simmons Mausoleum
Simmons Mausoleum
Simmons Mausoleum
Simmons Mausoleum

Cemetery At Old Childsbury Towne

Below was provided by Google AI. Completely accurate.

‘The cemetery at Old Childsbury Towne refers to the burial grounds next to Strawberry Chapel, the only surviving structure from the historic but vanished town of Childsbury in Berkeley County, SC, near Moncks Corner. This private property, managed by descendants for preservation, holds graves of early families like the Ball, Harleston, and Waring, and includes the historic Harrison family vault.’

Cemetery At Old Childsbury Towne
Cemetery At Old Childsbury Towne
Cemetery At Old Childsbury Towne
Cemetery At Old Childsbury Towne
Cemetery At Old Childsbury Towne
Cemetery At Old Childsbury Towne

A Soldiers Ground

In the ‘Soldiers Ground’ there are a few areas that have rows of burials, like a traditional cemetery. From what I have been able to find, mostly by researching dates, the formal side coincided with local engagements or disinterment from a large battle site to be closer to their home.

Scattered around here there are old stones not in any formal places. Typically a date or the unit they fought with is on the marker. No formal abbreviations make for guess work.

  1. This is a stone for a Georgia Battery (assuming artillery). With no other information I guess can Terrell Light Artillery, Maxwell’s Regular Light Battery, Chatham Light Artillery, 22nd Battalion, Georgia Heavy Artillery, and 12th Battalion, Georgia Light Artillery. All were around the harbor protecting Charleston.
A Soldiers Ground
A Soldiers Ground

2. From the 1st Regiment SC Volunteers. Organized in early 1861 and mustered into state service. major engagements like the Battle of South Mountain and Sharpsburg (Antietam). Led by Colonel James R. Hagood who is buried in the old side of Magnolia Cemetery.

A Soldiers Ground
A Soldiers Ground

3. From the 6th Regiment SC Volunteers. A prominent Confederate infantry unit  known for extensive service from Virginia to North Carolina, fighting in major battles like The Wilderness, Cold Harbor, and Petersburg before surrendering at Appomattox.

A Soldiers Ground
A Soldiers Ground

An interesting side note, in CSA volunteer units 40% of the personal were from wealth families, had some type of connection to slavery, better educated, and more politically interested. The average Confederate soldier was drafted and in service for the duration. Union troops had a set time and left service after.

Another side note, I knew none of this until I started to photograph the old cemeteries or meet other local photographers.