This past weekend, the decade-long task of disinterring Nathan Bedford Forrest from a park in Memphis and reburying him in Columbia, Tennessee, came to a close. Some people view this as a good thing: placing the famed Confederate cavalry general in a spot where people actually care. Others view this as a dangerous precedent. If one Confederate can be disinterred and moved, then how about the others? While this post does not usually support the idea of moving the remains of old soldiers from their resting spots, it has actually happened several times before.
Forrest, following
the war, returned to Tennessee, became president of a railroad, and then died
in October 1877. He was originally buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis.
Later, the remains of both he and his wife were interred under an equestrian
statue in Forrest Park. In September 2021, their remains were reinterred at
Elm Springs in Columbia, Tennessee.
Stonewall Jackson
was mortally wounded by his own soldiers on the night of May 2, 1863, during
the fighting near Chancellorsville, Virginia. He lingered for several days
before dying at Guinea Station on May 10. His body was transported to
Lexington, Virginia, where he was interred in a family plot in the Presbyterian
Cemetery. Later, his remains and those of his wife were removed to a different
plot in the cemetery and reinterred under a monument bearing his likeness. The
Presbyterian Cemetery was renamed the Stonewall Jackson Cemetery in 1949, and
then the Oak Grove Cemetery in 2020.
Ambrose Powell Hill
must be one of the most well- traveled post-mortem generals. Following his
death near Petersburg, Virginia, on April 2, 1865, Hill was originally interred
in the old Winston Family Cemetery near Coalfield, Chesterfield County. In
1867, Hill’s remains were moved to Hollywood Cemetery. In June 1891, the
remains were again moved, this time to the intersection of Laburnum Avenue and
Hermitage Road. Thanks to a recent ruling by the Richmond City Council, it
appears that Hill is going to be moved once again, possibly to Culpeper,
Virginia.
Patrick Cleburne,
Hiram Granbury, and Otho Strahl were all Confederate generals killed at the
battle of Franklin. All three were originally interred in the potter’s field at
Rose Hill in Columbia, Tennessee. Shortly thereafter, they were removed to St. John’s Episcopal
Church in Ashwood, Tennessee. Many years later, all three were exhumed and
reburied in different cemeteries. Patrick Cleburne was reburied in Helena,
Arkansas. Otho Strahl was reburied in Dyersburg, Tennessee. Hiram Granbury was
reburied in Granbury, Texas.
Albert Sidney
Johnston, killed in April 1862 at the battle of Shiloh, was originally interred
in New Orleans. In January 1867, he was buried in the Texas State Cemetery in
Austin, Texas.
William Barksdale
was mortally wounded in the fighting on July 2, 1863, at Gettysburg. He died
the following day and was buried in the yard of the Hummelbaugh House. In
January 1867, Barksdale was reburied in the Greenwood Cemetery, Jackson,
Mississippi.
Richard Garnett was
killed during killed in a skirmish at Corrick’s Ford, Virginia (now West
Virginia) on July 13, 1861. He was originally interred in Baltimore, Maryland.
He was later reinterred next to his wife and a child in Green-Wood Cemetery,
Brooklyn, New York.
Jefferson Davis reburial in Richmond, 1893. (The Valentine) |
It is not only some generals who have been reburied. Confederate president Jefferson Davis died in New Orleans on December 6, 1889. His body was laid to rest in a vault in Metairie Cemetery. After many requests, his widow agreed to allow his remains to be reinterred in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia. He was reburied there in 1893.
Confederate Senator
Landon Carter Haynes passed away in Memphis on February 17, 1875. He was
originally buried in Elmwood Cemetery, but later (1902) his son had those
remains removed to Jackson Cemetery, Jackson, Tennessee, where he lies in an
unmarked grave.
There are doubtless
many others whose remains have been moved over the years, such as the eight
members of the crew of the C.S.S. Hunley
who were reburied in the Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston, South Carolina, in
2004. It would be nice to know how many of the 425 Confederate generals have
been moved at least once. Of course, there are a handful whose current resting
places are still a mystery anyway. We’ll save that for another post.
J. E. B. STUART has been buried in two places in Richmond Virginia's Hollywood Cemetery.
ReplyDeleteThank you, as a genealogist searching for confederate ancesters final resting places and after finding some and publishing them they were destroyed I now keep the rest I discover as private family only data and even the 2 websites have been taken down to protect the historical data already gathered. A shame that break thru discoveries become easy pickings for criminal anarchists.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this amazing information! I hope to read more of your writings.
ReplyDeleteFascinating post, Michael
ReplyDelete