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Amos Humiston

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Years of service
  
1862–1863

Rank
  
Sergeant

Name
  
Amos Humiston


Amos Humiston A Picture of Three Children American Civil War Forums

Born
  
April 26, 1830Owego, New York (
1830-04-26
)

Buried at
  
Gettysburg National Cemetery, NY Section B, grave 14(now "Section O")

Battles/wars
  
American Civil WarChancellorsville (WIA)Gettysburg †

Relations
  
Spouse: Philinda HumistonChildren: Franklin, Alice, FrederickDescendants: David H. Kelley &     Allan Lawrence Cox

Died
  
July 1, 1863, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, United States

Service/branch
  
United States Army, Union Army

Death of amos humiston


Amos Humiston (April 26, 1830 – July 1, 1863) was a Union soldier who died in the Battle of Gettysburg.

Contents

Amos Humiston Warfare History Network Sergeant Amos Humiston Forever

As the Bark to a Tree


Civil War

Amos Humiston httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Humiston served in the Union Army and was killed in action during the American Civil War on the Gettysburg Battlefield, dying with his children's image that his wife had mailed to him months earlier. A local girl found the image, and Dr. John Francis Bourns saw it at the girl's father's tavern and subsequently publicized the image: "wounded, he had laid himself down to die. In his hands … was an ambrotype containing the portraits of three small children … two boys and a girl ... nine, seven and five years of age, the boys being respectively the oldest and youngest of the three. The youngest boy is sitting in a high chair, and on each side of him are his brother and sister. The eldest boy's jacket is made from the same material as his sister's dress ... [It is] desired that all papers in the country will draw attention [so] the family … may come into possession of it" (The Philadelphia Inquirer, October 19, 1863).

Amos Humiston Monument to Amos Humiston at Gettysburg

Humiston's wife in Portville, New York—who hadn't received a letter from her husband since the Battle of Gettysburg—responded to the photograph's description in the American Presbyterian of October 29. She subsequently confirmed the image after Bourns sent her a carte de visite copy of the image. Bourns took the original image to Humiston's widow.

The family subsequently resided at the "National Homestead at Gettysburg" (opened October 1866) for 3 years until the widow remarried, when they relocated to Massachusetts.

Historiography

Amos Humiston Warfare History Network Sergeant Amos Humiston Forever Symbolized

After numerous postbellum retellings and a 1993 memorial regarding the story at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, historian Mark H. Dunkelman published Humiston's 1999 biography using Humiston's war letters—including a May 1863 poem of how Humiston missed his family.

In the 2012 film Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter, a Federal unit, presumably the 154th New York Volunteer Infantry, is attacked by Confederate vampires and only one member survives. A photograph falls out of a soldier's hand and falls to the ground near the camera. It is the same one that Sergeant Humiston carried.

References

Amos Humiston Wikipedia