This is another walk featuring veterans, a continuation of the previous walk, offered here in remembrance of Veterans Day. This walk will be a good workout, since it takes you from an area down fairly near the chapel up the hill and toward the back of the property. It still shouldn't take much more than an hour, if you have a map. Find a map at the end of this post, or get one from the cemetery office 10 A.M - 2 P.M. Monday through Friday.
1. Nellie Gregg Williams (block 52) Find Nellie Willams' grave by going north on Main Dr. The small flat stone is on your left on the hillside. While Nellie was never a solder, her service to veterans deserves to be noticed and remembered. Nellie was the wife of Louis Williams, who was ten years older than she was and who left her a widow in 1915 when she was in her forties. They couple never had children. At that time World War I had already begun, though the USA had not joined the conflict. But as local young men in Company M were heading off to Europe, Nellie decided to do her part. She wrote the soldiers letters, sent them homemade cookies and candy, and then kept in touch with them when they returned home. She did the same thing during World War II. After World War I she faithfully worked the local Armistice Day events, which involved community-wide dinners, speeches, music and patriotic readings. Most remarkably, she was concerned about the lack of burial space for military veterans at Oak Hill. She purchased and donated19 lots of block 311, and intended them for the use of World War and other military veterans who had not family lot. The military section can be found in the area adjacent to Mt. Olivet. This area has been the site of Memorial Day observations ever since.
2. Edmund Kearny Tice (block 112) If you go up Center Ave., up the hill, there is a faint unpaved road on the left that cuts across to the road that runs parallel to the chain link fence at the edge of the cemetery property. He is remembered as a captain during the War of 1812. Block 112 is in about the middle. Tice's' headstone is a small flat red granite one. By occupation Tice was a carpenter and builder, born in New Jersey in 1791. He and his wife Jane moved here in 1850. For a time he was City Marshall.
3. James Bintliff (block 125) Follow the same faint path further along toward the road that runs parallel to the chain link fence. Block 125 can be found on the right side of the path near the paved road. The monument is tall and square, topped with a finial shaped like an urn; unfortunately a tree fell on it this past summer and the tall family monument was knocked over. James Bintliff's small headstone is still undamaged. Bintliff was an English born newspaper editor from Monroe who rose from company captain to brigadier general during the Civil War. According to the State Historical Society, in 1862 he recruited a company of Monroe soldiers as Company G., 22nd Wisconsin Infantry, He was elected captain and over the following months they fought from Kentucky and into Tennessee. He was captured in Brentwood, TN, and was imprisoned at Libby prison. Bintliff continued to fight after his release, accepting several promotions. By 1865 he was a brigadier general, leading men in the Siege of Petersburg. After the war he lived in Janesville and for a time was editor of the Janesville Gazette.
4. Edward Osgood Wright (block 99) Wright's grave is in block 99, not too far from the G.A.R. memorial section, on the left side of Center Ave, top of the hill where it is more flat. I'm sorry to say that this historic stone fell over years ago and still is flat on the ground, with a good sized crack in it. Edward Wright was originally from New York state, though his family was living in Janesville at the beginning of the Civil War. He enlisted in the 71st Regiment, New York State Militia in 1861. Wright fought bravely and rose through the ranks. In 1862 he was killed in battle.
This is what the New York Times wrote in his obituary:
Edward O. Wright, Second Lieutenant in Company H. Fifth Regiment
New-York State Volunteers, died in the Fairfax
Seminary Hospital, near Alexandria, on Sept. 26, of a wound received in
the second battle of Bull Run, Aug. 30. Lieut. Wright enlisted as a
private in the Seventy-first Regiment, N.Y.S.M., on April 20, 1861, but
as he was among those whom that corps was obliged to reject, because it
was so full when it left this City for the seat of war, he enlisted, on
April 22, in Duryea's Zouaves, which was then forming. During the stay
of the regiment at Fort Schuyler, its encampment in the vicinity of
Fortress Monroe, and at Fort Federal Hill, Baltimore, he discharged his
duties with zeal and fidelity. In the battle of Big Bethel, on June 10,
1861, he bore himself with great bravery and coolness. Although he was
always foremost in the succession of battles and skirmishes before
Richmond in which the Zouaves won such distinction. Sgt. Wright, for
his services in the ranks had been rewarded with promotion, escaped
without a scratch, and for bravery displayed in the battle of Gaines'
Mills he was made a Second Lieutenant. In the battle of Groveton, or Bull Run No. 2, which was fought on Aug. 30, he was wounded by a mini ball, which struck his left arm near the socket, passed through his
lung and finally lodged between his shoulder blades. Could he have
received immediate attention his life might have been spared, but he lay
on the field until the afternoon of the next day, when the ball was
extracted. After submitting to this operation he dragged himself to
Centreville, where he was paroled, and thence was sent within the
National lines. He was promptly taken to Fairfax Seminary Hospital, but
the excellent care which he there received came too late to revive his
failing energies, and he died as we have already stated, on Sept. 26.
During all his sufferings, which were at times intense, he gave a
striking example of patience to those around him. His company, which had
become attached to him as few companies are to their commanders, will
miss him in camp and on the battle-field,and a wide circle of friends in
this City, who knew and appreciated his worth, mourn his loss.
6. William Harrison Ash (block 277) You are headed west up Center Ave., way toward the wooded back edge of the property. You'll turn right on Chestnut St., and block 277 will be on your right. Ash has a modern stone, low and flat. William Ash was originally from Champaign, Illinois. In 1862 he enlisted in the 81st Illinois Infantry . He served almost four years, and during that time spent secen months in the notorious prison camp, Andersonville. After the war he married Mary Jane O'Dell and raided a family of five children. When they were older they moved to Janesville to live with their son Harry. Ash died in 1926.
7. William Pearl (block 281) To find this block go as far west on Center Ave. as you can, toward the wooded back edge of the property. Turn right, and William Pearl's stone is in that wooded area. Similar to William Ash's stone, this is a modern headstone, low and flat. Pearl was eighteen years old in 1862 when he joined the army as a musician, a drummer, of Company M, 22nd Wisconsin Volunteers. His unit fought in battles at Unionville, Nashville, and Brentwood, Tennessee. Later the unit fought under General Joseph Hooker in Atlanta. After the war he married Mary Jane Clough and raised five children in the Town of Harmony.
5. Rev. George Ward Dunbar (block 268) This large gray granite monument is located on Summit Ave., the highest part of the cemetery. Going north on Summit, you will find the Dunbar plot on your left, and the woods is behind this block. Dunbar was a priest of the Episcopal church, born in New York state. He served i a number of parishes back east before coming to Christ Church in Janesville. He married twice, his first wife dying fairly young. His second wife was Adelaide Ruger. Adelaide's father was a military man, so perhaps he influenced Dunbar to become a chaplain in the army. At any rate, Dunbar had several interesting posts, where he usually went to postings to act as chaplain, but also functioned as postmaster, librarian and teacher. His first post was to Fort Concho, Texas, later he was sent to Fort Yates in Dakota territory, and the Presidio in San Francisco. . Finally he was posted to Alcatraz, then a military fortification in San Francisco Bay. He retired in 1897 and he and his wife returned to Janesville. After his wife's death he moved to Washington D.C. where he died in 1914.
You can click on this map to enlarge it, and then print one for yourself. I am sorry this one doesn't have all the streets labeled. I'll work on this later this winter. Be aware that none of the street named in the cemetery are marked either - I wish I knew why not.
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