Skip to content

Gettysburg Chronicles

History Explained

  • Home
  • Gettysburg
    • History of Adams County
    • Call to Arms
  • Tales to War
    • July 5th: Tillie Pierce Tale
    • 57th Pa.: Letter to Mother
    • 24th Mich.: Abel Peck
    • 24th Mich.: Charles Bellore
    • 1st Rifles: Colonel Taylor
  • Confederate
    • South Carolina
    • Mississippi Monuments
    • Florida’s Involvement
    • Spirit of Alabama
    • Georgia – The Peach State
    • Louisiana Secedes
    • Lonestar State
    • North Carolina
    • Virginia Secedes
    • Arkansas
    • Tennessee – Last to Join
    • Maryland – Border State
  • Union
    • First Shot Marker
    • Michigan Joins
      • 24th Michigan Joins Iron Brigade
      • 24th MI Prior to Fredericksburg
      • March to Gettysburg
      • Farnsworth’s Last Ride
      • “Come On You Wolverines”
  • Artillery
    • Different Ammunition
    • Real vs. Fake Cannons
    • Six Pound Shot Cannon
    • Cannons at Devil’s Den
  • Civil War Locations
    • Crampton’s Gap, Md.
    • Fox’s Gap, Md.
    • Turner’s Gap, Md.
    • Andersonville, Ga.
    • Navy – Hampton Roads, Va.
  • Photographs
  • Abraham Lincoln
    • Lincoln Visits Antietam
    • Emancipation Proclamation
    • John Wilkes Booth
    • The Kidnapping Plan
  • Anniversaries
    • Battlefield Walks
    • 150th Anniversary – 2013
    • 152nd Anniversary – 2015
    • 157th Anniversary – 2020
    • 158th Anniversary – 2021
    • 162nd Anniversary – 2025
  • Buildings
    • Local Churches
      • St. Francis Xavier Church
    • Sach’s Bridge
    • Weikert Family Farms
    • Farnsworth House
    • Soldier’s Orphanage
      • Brickyard Fight
      • 154th New York
      • Amos Humiston
      • Rosa Carmichael
    • Winebrenner History
    • Welty House
    • Cashtown
      • July 1863 in Cashtown
      • Cashtown: Since 1863
  • Families
    • Thorns
      • Evergreen Cemetery: August 1862 to June 1863
      • Gettysburg: June 26, 1863
      • Evergreen Gatehouse
      • Thorn’s Family Tree
      • Descendants of the Thorns
      • Aftermath of Battle
      • Thorn Important Locations
    • Wade Family
      • Thaddeus Filby
      • Rise of the Captain
      • Trouble with the Law
      • Jennie Wade
      • Newspaper Articles
      • Gravesites of Jennie Wade
      • Samuel and Harry Wade
      • James John “Jack” Wade
    • Georgia McClellan
      • Extended McClellan’s
      • Iowa Family – Lewis
      • World War II POW
      • Jennie Wade McClellan
      • Nellie McClellan
      • John McClellan
    • Jim B. McClellan
    • Pierce Lineage
      • McCurdy to Pierce Tree
      • James Shaw Pierce
      • William H. Pierce
    • Tillie Pierce
      • Last Week of June 1863
      • Tillie’s Accounts – July 1st
      • Wounded Everywhere
      • Hospital – Pierce House
    • Garlach Family
      • Soldier Hiding with Pigs
      • Anna Garlach
    • Shriver Family
      • Weikert’s Connection
      • Union Calvary Disaster
      • Father’s Death
      • Henrietta’s New Life
  • Railroads
    • G&H Railroad
    • Western Maryland Railroad
    • Location of the Spur
    • Gettysburg Electric Trolley
    • Trolley South of Town
    • Railroad to Round-Tops
  • Paranormal
    • Paranormal Equipment
    • Spirits at the Cashtown Inn
    • Pictures on the Bridge
    • Live: Sachs Covered Bridge
    • Haunted Orphanage
    • Spirits at the Farnsworth
    • Spirits at Tillie Pierce Inn
  • Questions
  • Toggle search form

Gettysburg: June 26, 1863

Many important factors, pursuits, lives changing, happiness and sorrow all happened a week before the Battle of Gettysburg. Rumblings around town mentioned that the Confederates were approaching and citizens were getting scared and being more alert for soldiers arriving. However, no one knew what was going to occur. In the evening on the 26th, there was death and life being cherished around town.

Elizabeth Thorn and her father were at work within the Evergreen Cemetery. She was taking up the profession as caretaker since her husband was enlisted within the 138th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company B. There was an estimate of five to seven burials per week. On June 26th, she heard a yell from the road and saw soldiers riding past the Cemetery, dressed in gray. This scene that was being portrayed in front of her eyes was two emergency militia soldiers, and they were Private Nathaniel Lightner and Private George Washington

Sadly, the Confederates caught both Union soldiers along Rock Creek that crossed Baltimore Pike south of the Cemetery. Sandoe’s horse wouldn’t run when shot at, and Sandoe was killed. Nathaniel luckily survived with his life, but lost his friend. George Washington Sandoe is now buried within the Mount Joy Lutheran Church Cemetery along Taneytown road. His wife and small son both survived the battle. They moved to Allentown, Pennsylvania after the war.

Diana Anna Caskey Sandoe filed for pension in September 1863, with her application being number 33762. It’s unsure when the pension was approved by the War Department, but the certificate number was #19,944. Diana Sandoe (Sandow) received a monthly pension from her husband’s death of eight dollars a month.

Along with the scary thoughts that ran through Elizabeth’s head with the passing of George Washington Sandoe, she also knew her friend was pregnant down the street. She would later learn that her friend, Georgianna Wade McClellan gave birth to her first son at 548 Baltimore Street. Georgianna named her son, Louis Kenneth McClellan.

@ 2026 Gettysburg Chronicles

Powered by PressBook WordPress theme