Skip to content

Gettysburg Chronicles

History Explained

  • Home
  • Gettysburg
    • History of Adams County
    • Samuel Gettys
    • Call to Arms
    • Days Before The Battle
  • 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
    • 24th Joins Iron Brigade
      • 24th Before Fredericksburg
      • 24th Mich. to Gettysburg
      • 24th Michigan – July 1st
      • 24th Michigan Losses
    • Farnsworth’s Cavalry
    • Michigan Cavalry
  • Artillery
    • Different Ammunition
    • Real vs. Fake Cannons
    • Six Pound Shot Cannon
    • Cannons at Devil’s Den
    • Rochester Union Grays
      • Fallen Rochester Grays
  • 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
    • November 1863
    • Gettysburg Address
    • John Wilkes Booth
    • The Kidnapping Plan
    • Ford’s Theatre
    • Death of Abraham Lincoln
    • Death of an Actor
    • Tribunal Results
  • Lost Commanders
    • Stonewall Jackson
      • Spring of 1862
      • Fall of 1862
      • Winter of 1862
      • Family
      • Life After Stonewall
      • Descendants of Jackson
      • Stonewall’s Grandson Tree
    • John F. Reynolds
      • California Love
      • Reynolds Arrives
      • Morning of July 1st
      • July 1st to July 3rd
      • Ms. Mary “Kate” Hewitt
      • Daughters of Charity
  • Anniversaries
    • Battlefield Walks
    • 150th Anniversary – 2013
    • 152nd Anniversary – 2015
    • 157th Anniversary – 2020
    • 158th Anniversary – 2021
    • 162nd Anniversary – 2025
    • 163rd Anniversary – 2026
      • 163rd Anniversary
  • Buildings
    • Cashtown
      • July 1863 in Cashtown
      • Cashtown: Since 1863
    • Sach’s Bridge
    • The House on the Hill
      • Louisiana Tigers
    • Weikert Family Farms
    • Houses of the Wades
    • Soldier’s Orphanage
      • Brickyard Fight
      • 154th New York
      • Amos Humiston
      • Rosa Carmichael
    • Welty House
    • Farnsworth House
    • Winebrenner History
  • Field Hospitals
    • St. Francis Xavier Church
    • St. James Lutheran Church
  • 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
    • McClellan’s Duplex Kitchen
    • Spirits at the Farnsworth
    • Spirits at Tillie Pierce Inn
  • 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
  • Georgeanna McClellan
    • Extended McClellan’s
    • Iowa Family – Lewis
    • World War II POW
    • Jennie Wade McClellan
    • Nellie McClellan
    • John McClellan
  • Jim B. McClellan
    • Georgia W. McClellan
      • Dallas Schwarzenbach
        • Children of Dallas
        • Donald Schwarzenbach
    • Nellie Glady McClellan
    • Mary Wade McClellan
    • Martha B. McClellan
      • Sarah Isobel Holland
      • Martha’s Other Children
      • Glady Elizabeth Holland
    • Beese Everyln McClellan
    • Sons of Jim Britton
    • Military Ancestors
  • 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
    • 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
          • Alleman’s Family
    • Garlach Family
      • Soldier Hiding with Pigs
      • Anna Garlach
    • Shriver Family
      • Weikert’s Connection
      • Union Calvary Disaster
      • Father’s Death
      • Henrietta’s New Life
    • Study Family Origins
      • Lydia Study Leister
  • Questions
  • Toggle search form

Tag: Prayers

Death of the General

Posted on May 10, 2026May 13, 2026 By BD No Comments on Death of the General

After the amputation of his left arm on the early morning of Mary 3rd, he was moved to the Chancellor’s House on May4th. Mary Ann Jackson was alerted of her husband’s amputation and made arrangements to come to see her husband and nurse him. Reverend Lacy arrived on May 5th and read bible versus to Stonewall Jackson. Mrs. Jackson arrived on May 7th to help around the small house and talk to her husband as he rested after his surgery.

On Friday, May 8th, Stonewall Jackson’s health took a turn for the worse as he fell into pneumonia. Reverend Lacy continued to spend time in vigil while the staff that served Jackson for the last two years helps Mrs. Jackson. On Sunday, May 10th, Dr. McGuire informs everyone that Stonewall will pass away sometime today. Mrs. Jackson spends time with Thomas Jackson as he opens his eyes and slowly takes and whispers with his wife. Stonewall mentions that he’d like to be buried in his family plot in Lexington, Virginia.

Courtesy of the Author at Arlington National Cemetery in 2013

Around 1 p.m., Stonewall slowly whispers the following statement: ” It is the Lord’s day, my wish is fulfilled and have always desired to die on his day.” A few hours later around 3:15 p.m., he opens his eyes wide and starts talking in phrases: “Let us cross over the river, and rest under the shade of the trees”. Thomas Stonewall Jackson peacefully closes his eyes and dies on the bed with his wife and staff surrounding the bed.

This picture above is from Arlington National Cemetery in 2013 when I visited it. It shows a small river in the “shade of the trees” within the cemetery. It shows thousands of graves of soldiers that crossed over the river to heaven. It is a fitting tribute to a great general that served his soldiers, his family, and his faith.

Confederate, Gettysburg
  • Battlefield Map
  • Gettysburg Museums & Hotels
  • Union History
  • Confederate History
  • Author's History
  • July 2026
  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026

Recent Posts

  • Gettysburg Streets
  • Fourth of July
  • Heat Wave 1863 & 2026
  • June 29th, 1863
  • June 27, 1863

Recent Comments

  1. ExoWatts on Fourth of July

@ 2026 Gettysburg Chronicles

Powered by PressBook WordPress theme