From Library of Congress, sketch showing aspects of region surrounding Gallatin, TN |
Each of their life stories is unique and many are unforgettable. Let me share the story of two brothers who didn't survive the war.
Students Against Slavery
Isaac Larimer Work and John Wright Work were born in Ohio but moved with their pioneering family to Indiana when very young. The brothers were starting their first year of college prep at Hillsdale College in Michigan when the Civil War broke out. Hillsdale College was then quite well-known for its anti-slavery position, and students resolved to do their part in the fight against slavery.
In the spring of 1862, hundreds of students left campus and returned home to enlist for the Union--including Isaac and John, who both joined Company I of the 74th Indiana Infantry. The unit quickly moved into position for the Union, pursuing Confederate General Bragg and his forces through Kentucky. It fought in the Battle of Perryville, which the Union won but which caused heavy losses on both sides. Toward the end of 1862, the 74th Indiana Infantry marched to Gallatin and Castillian, Kentucky, to regroup and care for sick and wounded soldiers.
Dying of Disease, Not Wounds
Alas, Isaac and John both succumbed to chronic diarrhea at Gallatin not long afterward. Isaac was only 24, and his brother John only 22. The brothers had been in the Union Army for less than six months. They were my husband's first cousins, 4 times removed.
Their infantry unit actually lost many more men to disease than to battle: 91 officers and soldiers were killed or fatally wounded during fighting, while 2 officers and 181 soldiers died from illnesses like diarrhea. The prevalence of death by disease was the reality for both North and South throughout the War.
Knowing that these idealistic young men died only weeks apart, not from wounds but from disease that is today very treatable, made their story unforgettable for me.
RIP, Isaac Larimer Work (1838-1862) and Jacob Wright Work (1841-1863).
The #52Ancestors prompt for this week is "Unforgettable."
Wow, 18! I have 4 in my family, all brothers. One died in the war, also of dysentery like Isaac and John. I agree it's sad they died of such an easily preventable and treatable issue today. I've tracked down two of the others, but the last is a mystery. It doesn't help their last name is Jones :)
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