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Showing posts with label Des Moines Iowa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Des Moines Iowa. Show all posts
Monday, May 25, 2020
War of 1812 Graves Marked in Iowa-- Part 2: Black Veterans and a Man With Two Names and Many Spouses
The men whose graves are now marked include Albert Lytle, Robert Dickens and William Early. All three of these men were Blacks.
Also, William Buzick, a War of 1812 veteran
Grandison Able who was both a veteran of the Mexican War and the Civil War. Even so, however, he had to get the help of a Congressman to get him a $12-a-month pension.
Benjamin Brown spent the last seventeen years of his life at the Old Soldiers Home in Marshalltown.
Dr. John Granville Kimball, who had several spouses and for some reason was known as John Granville and John Kimball. This has the makings of an interesting story.
Henry Moreland was born in England but rose to the rank of captain during the Civil War.
Jacob Lee Englebert wrote many recollections for the Des Moines Register.
I Am So Glad These Men Are Having Their Graves Finally Marked. --Brock-Perry
War of 1812 Graves Marked in Iowa-- Part 1: Expanded to 19th-Century Wars
From the May 24, 2020, Des Moines (Iowa) Register "New honors at Woodland Cemetery for Iowans who fought 19th-century wars" by Mike Rowley.
Located in near downtown Des Moines, Woodland Cemetery has nearly 70 acres, cobblestone streets and marks the final resting place of over 80,000 souls.
And, now, new gravestones are popping up all over the place as 100 to 150-year-old graves that were not marked weeks and months before now have 240-pound veteran stones.
Much of this is the result of work by three generations of men. Retired firefighter Robert Niffinegger, Mike Rowley (who wrote the article) and Tim Rowley. They have received assistance from Des Moines cemetery officials Genesh Ganpat and John Woolson. They have been researching, documenting and seeing that previously unmarked veteran graves are now marked.
What started in 2020 as a one-year goal of marking at least five War of 1812 veterans' graves has in only a few months grown to nearly thirty graves of War of 1812, Mexican War, Civil War and Spanish-American War now having been marked or approved for marking.
We Can't Honor These Men Too Much, Especially Here On Memorial Day 2020. --Brock-Perry
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