Welcome to talk with history.
Scott:I am your host, Scott, here with my wife and historian,
Scott:Jen.
Jenn:Hello.
Scott:On this podcast, we give you insights to our history inspired world
Scott:travels, YouTube channel journey, history through deeper conversations with the
Scott:curious, the explorers, and the Now, Jen, before we get into our main topic I want
Scott:to put in a plug for some podcast reviews.
Scott:We have, I haven't asked for any podcast reviews for a while, and
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Jenn:Oh, they have a podcast?
Jenn:Oh,
Scott:got like a history this week.
Scott:They've got about 3, 700 reviews.
Scott:So we're only, you know, Not too far behind, only a couple
Scott:thousand.
Scott:Do
Jenn:they actually talk about history?
Jenn:I have no idea.
Jenn:I just
Scott:I have no clue.
Scott:I just looked it up because I think they have about 3, 700.
Scott:If you're listening, even if you're listening , for
Scott:the first leave us a review.
Scott:It really helps us Today, we're venturing to the hallowed grounds of Gettysburg,
Scott:Pennsylvania in July of 1863, the heart of the brutal battle But we're not focusing
Scott:on the generals and the grand maneuvers.
Scott:In this episode, we delve into the lives of remarkable women who were caught in
Scott:the maelstrom of the Battle of Gettysburg.
Scott:We'll meet Elizabeth Thorne, a local resident who housed generals, buried many
Scott:dead and all while six months pregnant.
Scott:And there was Jenny Wade, the only civilian casualty at Gettysburg.
Scott:Yes, the only one.
Scott:Her story serving as a stark reminder of the war's human cost.
Scott:But these are just two names.
Scott:Many women played Crucial yet often overlooked roles during the Civil War
Scott:from tending to the injured to gathering intelligence They shouldered enormous
Scott:burdens and displayed immense courage So join us as we explore the experience
Scott:of these extraordinary women and discovered how they shaped The course
Scott:of history at Gettysburg and All right,
Scott:Jen So
Scott:we did a trip up to
Scott:Gettysburg in a gorgeous time of the year in
Scott:October.
Scott:It was beautiful
Scott:Group best time to go is like right around
Scott:Halloween is packed ton of people there But we focus on something
Scott:a little different this time
Jenn:Yeah, I wanted to talk about the women of Gettysburg.
Jenn:So I want people to, for me I like to kind of, how do I remember things?
Jenn:Gettysburg, always think of the middle of the Civil War.
Jenn:It happens 1863.
Jenn:So smack in the middle between 1861 and 1865 and happens in July.
Jenn:So it's the middle of the year.
Jenn:So middle, it's really like the middle battle.
Scott:So everybody kind of knows what's going on.
Scott:Nobody really knows where the end, if the end is in sight.
Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:So this is really, really, the South has a lot of momentum.
Jenn:They're pushing North, right?
Jenn:No one, realizes that this is going to be the turning point, but it will
Jenn:be because this is the South is coming really into Northern Territory now,
Jenn:getting close to DC, getting close to coming into the Northern Territory.
Jenn:And Elizabeth Thorne is an immigrant.
Jenn:She, she was born in December of 1832 in, I'm sure I'm saying this
Jenn:wrong, but it's kind of funny.
Jenn:Grand Duchy of Hesse, Germany.
Jenn:And so her parents are both immigrants.
Jenn:She's, she's immigrated.
Jenn:Little is known about her early life, but they settle in Gettysburg, and she marries
Jenn:another German immigrant, Peter Thorn.
Jenn:In, her husband becomes caretaker of Evergreen Cemetery.
Jenn:Evergreen Cemetery has just started.
Jenn:It's established in 1855.
Jenn:This is February of 1856
Jenn:that he becomes caretaker.
Scott:And we know Evergreen Cemetery today because it's
Scott:near the National Cemetery out
Jenn:It's right beside it.
Jenn:It shares, it shares a What is that?
Jenn:Like a wall?
Jenn:Not even.
Jenn:It's just a
Scott:I got, like a fence line, but it's, it's right there
Scott:across from battlegrounds, it's right smack in the middle of
Jenn:Yeah, Cemetery Hill.
Jenn:When you hear Cemetery Hill at Gettysburg, they're talking about Evergreen Cemetery.
Scott:we show actually on our video, we're standing at the
Scott:sign for Evergreen Cemetery.
Scott:We look across the street and.
Scott:Literally across the street is Cemetery
Jenn:Yes, and Significantly, we'll talk about it, but this is where Lincoln will
Jenn:actually stand in Evergreen Cemetery when he delivers the Gettysburg Address.
Jenn:So because he's dedicating that National Cemetery, which they share
Jenn:a fence, they border each other.
Jenn:That was not there then.
Jenn:So you can imagine that was just all.
Jenn:She marries Peter Thorne, 1855, 1856 he becomes caretaker of Evergreen
Jenn:Cemetery, what's a caretaker?
Jenn:It's a grave digger, basically, it's a person who you bring the body
Jenn:to, they, they find the plot, you know, they take care of the graves
Jenn:there, they're basically, it's just like a, a maintenance person.
Jenn:person for the cemetery.
Jenn:But he lives there with Elizabeth, her parents who speak German, and they
Jenn:have three boys, they're young boys, and she's pregnant with her fourth.
Jenn:When Peter joins the 138th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment, and he leaves
Jenn:her in charge of the cemetery.
Jenn:And so when the Union troops start to come into Gettysburg, that's when
Jenn:she gets the knock on the door from General Howard asking her What roads
Jenn:lead into or he has to talk to the man of the house because this is 1863 and
Jenn:he figures a man's gonna know the roads and a woman won't know much at all
Jenn:But the man of the house doesn't speak
Scott:right, because you said her, her father
Scott:lived there and he only speaks German.
Scott:Only speaks
Jenn:only speaks German So she takes him out six months pregnant up
Jenn:on the hill And shows him the three main roads coming into Gettysburg.
Jenn:And if he wants to get troops, these are the main roads that
Jenn:come into this little town.
Jenn:It's a little town of people.
Jenn:And he says, okay, thank you.
Jenn:You should probably leave.
Jenn:There, we know that there's a lot of southern troops here.
Jenn:We're bringing in a lot of northern troops here.
Jenn:And there's going to be a fight.
Jenn:And because I see you have elderly parents, three young boys, and you're
Jenn:pregnant, you should probably leave.
Jenn:And they have a farm on the outskirts of town.
Jenn:So they, they leave.
Jenn:And.
Jenn:They don't come back until July
Scott:7th
Scott:After the
Jenn:the battle, I would say four days after the battle.
Jenn:And by the time they get back to their house, the caretaker house, which we
Jenn:show in the video, it's ransacked.
Jenn:Because you can imagine these men are looking for food, looking
Jenn:for anything they can use.
Jenn:And it was used as a makeshift hospital because it's right there.
Jenn:It's a, it's a brick and mortar home right there by where a lot of fighting took
Scott:It's a brick and mortar home right there by where a
Scott:lot of fighting took place.
Jenn:Yeah, it's right between the city and the visitor center.
Jenn:So it's very easy to find.
Jenn:And so by the time she gets back, it's okay, now what do I do?
Jenn:I have to You know take care of these young boys.
Jenn:I have to get my parents settled I have to kind of find food and oh, by the
Jenn:way, she gets another knock at the door.
Jenn:There's thousands of dead men out in fields just laying there
Jenn:and we need to bury these men.
Jenn:So the statue depicted of her in Evergreen Cemetery is her kind of wiping her
Jenn:brow six months pregnant with a shovel.
Jenn:She digs over a hundred graves by herself.
Jenn:And you'd think graves, I'm talking six feet graves.
Jenn:Like she's digging graves.
Scott:it was interesting being there, right?
Scott:One being in Gettysburg in the fall, the leaves changing.
Scott:It was, it was just gorgeous.
Scott:Weather was amazing, but the statue itself is so unique
Scott:because she is pregnant, right?
Scott:They show her like they're displaying her, you know, six months pregnant.
Scott:So she looks like she's ready to give birth and here she is wiping her
Scott:brow, holding a shovel in her hand.
Scott:It was just.
Scott:It's such a unique statue.
Scott:It was really neat to just go there and be in this beautiful location
Scott:and see what this amazing woman did.
Jenn:Yeah, and there's no true number.
Jenn:Estimates are as low as 91 to 100, as high as 105.
Jenn:So I would say about a hundred graves she, she dug on her own and I'm sure she helped
Scott:More
Jenn:and planned.
Jenn:I'm sure she helped plan.
Jenn:I'm hope she, I'm sure she helped this is where we should put these people.
Jenn:These boys, we should put these people.
Jenn:This is, and then with the national cemetery starting at first, they
Jenn:buried men out on the battlefield.
Jenn:Where they lay.
Jenn:And then when they started to start the National Cemetery, they
Jenn:dug them up and started to bring them into the National Cemetery.
Jenn:And then they also repatriated Confederates back to where they should
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:And I think you, you would even mention that even in Evergreen Cemetery,
Scott:there was families that would come
Jenn:Mm hmm.
Scott:the buried bodies, you know, of their family member and bring it
Jenn:And I think there's still some Confederates in the National Cemetery.
Jenn:Because they they weren't sure if they got everybody but when we went to Hollywood
Jenn:Cemetery in Richmond, that's where I think most of the Gettysburg Confederates
Scott:Because there's that big kind of
Scott:monument
Jenn:hmm.
Jenn:And so She helped plan all of that, right?
Jenn:And so you really think this woman is Again, knowing the language,
Jenn:big battle, dead men, and what she did too was she gave each man
Jenn:dignity and respect in their burial.
Jenn:She helped, you know, lay them to rest in a peaceful manner,
Jenn:knowing that they were someone's husband or brother or son or uncle.
Jenn:Like she was just very respectful of them as a caretaker's wife.
Jenn:She already understands the process, helping to identify these men.
Jenn:Most of them are traveling with pictures or something on them.
Jenn:Pulling those items from them and then probably serializing them, identifying
Scott:Well, and she's doing this in the heat of
Jenn:July in
Scott:know, it's so depending on the kind of summer it was, I mean,
Scott:she's sweating her, her, her butt off.
Scott:And I think you even mentioned in the video, and again, the, the link
Scott:to this video, if you guys want to see the location, we'll, we'll be
Scott:in the show notes of this podcast.
Scott:But you mentioned that she wore the same dress for was it six weeks or something?
Scott:It was, it was quite a
Scott:while,
Jenn:a while.
Jenn:We'll go,
Scott:maybe not six have probably been be giving that time, but
Jenn:Yeah, she wore the same dress the entire time because
Jenn:she just didn't have the time to a probably make a bigger dress.
Scott:she didn't want Use other dresses for all this dirty work.
Jenn:you probably wear your pregnancy dress when you think about it.
Jenn:On November 1st, she'll give birth to a daughter.
Jenn:So after having three sons, she has a daughter named Rose Mead Thorne in honor
Jenn:of General George Mead, who commanded.
Jenn:the army of the Potomac there at Gettysburg.
Jenn:She remained caretaker until her husband returned safely from war in 1865.
Jenn:So it's not like he came right back either.
Jenn:She was doing this for another year and a half until he came home giving birth.
Jenn:It's just amazing to me.
Jenn:They remain on and he resigns as caretaker in 1874.
Jenn:So nine years later.
Jenn:So you can imagine she gives birth in November.
Jenn:Lincoln comes out.
Jenn:Mid November to give the Gettysburg Address.
Scott:it that
Jenn:Same year, 1863.
Jenn:So she's probably helping, she's caretaker of the cemetery, set up the
Jenn:stage, set up the podium in my cemetery.
Scott:setting all that
Jenn:Because it, he stood in Evergreen Cemetery and looked over into what
Jenn:was now the new National Cemetery.
Jenn:And so she's caretaker, so she knows all of these logistics, so she's probably
Jenn:with a newborn planning all of this.
Jenn:So this woman is just she's the unsung hero of Gettysburg.
Jenn:I just wanted to give her some credit
Jenn:She'll die October 17th 1907 at age 74 her her and her husband
Jenn:are both buried at Evergreen
Scott:Yeah,
Jenn:So we visit their graves in the video as well
Scott:And then from there so she's kind of, She's a, she's kind of a I'll say a
Scott:historical character at the beginning, the very, before the battle ever starts.
Scott:And then obviously afterwards, right?
Scott:The, the, the death afterwards, kind of what I put on the thumbnail.
Scott:But Jenny Wade is someone who, who's significant kind of for
Scott:what happened during the battle.
Jenn:so Jenny Wade is, most people will know that name.
Jenn:The Jenny Wade house is a very tourist location for
Scott:And if I remember right, her, her real, her full name is Virginia Wade.
Jenn:Mary Virginia Wade.
Jenn:She's born May 21st, 1843.
Jenn:She's 20 years old.
Jenn:But she is the only direct civilian casualty of the battle.
Jenn:So there are people who will die.
Jenn:battle from injuries they sustained during the battle who were civilians,
Jenn:but she's the only direct civilian casualty during the battle.
Scott:of mind boggling when, you know, Gettysburg is famous for a reason, right?
Scott:Turning point of the Civil War, but also There's a lot that happened
Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:All the men that died.
Jenn:It's a lot.
Jenn:I think it's 40, 000 men died.
Scott:and only one, to think that only one civilian died
Scott:during the battle and it was
Jenn:Yeah, 50, 000 men died, 23, 000 Union, 28, 000 Confederates, and only
Jenn:one civilian died and it was a woman.
Jenn:That's insane.
Jenn:And especially if you go to Gettysburg and you like, but you
Jenn:should go, it's fantastic and go in the fall cause it's so much fun.
Jenn:In the center of the city where the Jenny Wade house is, is really where there's
Jenn:crossroads of battle was taking place as again, you're kind of cemetery hills
Jenn:behind you, what we just talked about.
Jenn:Elizabeth.
Jenn:Thorn is behind you and in front of you would be the
Jenn:Confederates in Jenny Wade's house.
Jenn:which is really her sister's
Scott:right smack in the
Jenn:It's right in the back of the middle.
Jenn:So they're taking gunfire at home as they're, as they're going
Jenn:about their business in the house.
Jenn:And this is happening to a lot of families in the area because
Jenn:the battle doesn't happen there.
Jenn:That's the first day.
Jenn:But as you move around the next two days, it moves around the city of Gettysburg.
Jenn:And other houses Get in the crossfire and other barns and other people.
Jenn:So this there's bullet holes even today in the buildings of Gettysburg.
Jenn:There's cannonballs in the buildings of Gettysburg.
Jenn:So for her to be the only casualty is really crazy.
Scott:the only casualty is really crazy.
Scott:Yeah, and so they
Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:And So they say 150 bullets hit that house.
Jenn:So what's going on is Jenny Wade, again, is 20 years old.
Jenn:Her sister lives at that house.
Jenn:It's 548 Baltimore Street.
Jenn:And her sister, George Anna, known as Georgie, had became engaged before the
Jenn:war, married her sweetheart in 1862.
Jenn:They moved into that two story brick house 548 Baltimore Street.
Jenn:And her husband had joined the Union Army in was not in
Jenn:Gettysburg during the battle.
Jenn:And he was also absent of the birth of their firstborn.
Jenn:And the boy was born June 26th, 1863.
Jenn:And so four days after the birth is when people are riding into
Jenn:Gettysburg and the war is starting.
Jenn:And so Jenny's mother, Wade's mother decides we should go and stay with
Jenn:your sister to help her out since she just had a baby because they lived in
Jenn:the center of Gettysburg, which they probably would have been behind the fire
Scott:further away from the battle.
Scott:Further
Jenn:away from the battle.
Jenn:So they go to the house and they help.
Jenn:And at the time she's making bread, she's kneading dough for loaves of bread.
Jenn:And that's.
Jenn:Again, why people think of the chivalry
Jenn:of what she's
Scott:it for the soldiers
Jenn:doing that for the soldiers, which is what women in their
Jenn:capacity really did at the time.
Jenn:Because again, these soldiers are traveling bare bones, what they can
Jenn:carry on them and food is scarce and they really scavenger for food.
Jenn:And so when they are able to find a place where people are providing
Jenn:sustenance for them, women, really take it as their duty to perform that.
Scott:Yeah, and you hear about the rare occasions, the Clara Barton's, you know,
Scott:that started the Red Cross and was kind of one of the first kind of nurses on the
Scott:battlefield, you this kind of setting.
Scott:But like you said, the vast majority of what women did and knew how to do
Scott:and actively did throughout the war was provide whatever sustenance they
Scott:could for the men who were fighting.
Jenn:And she, from what I read, that doe that she was needing when the bullet
Jenn:went through the door, went through another door, hit her through shoulder
Jenn:into her heart and killed her instantly.
Jenn:Her mother, 14 loaves of bread with that dough and still made
Jenn:that dough for the soldiers because that's what she would have wanted.
Scott:would have
Jenn:A
Jenn:bullet flew through the window of the house and hit a bedpost while Georgiana
Jenn:was in bed lying with her baby.
Jenn:And that's why they moved into the basement.
Jenn:She woke early that day.
Jenn:This happened the morning of July
Scott:3rd.
Scott:Kind of like towards the end of the
Jenn:Yes.
Jenn:So 8am, July 3rd, the first day it was when 150 bullets hit the house, 8am,
Jenn:July 3rd, she was kneading the bread.
Jenn:And that's when.
Jenn:A bullet through the two closed doors hit her in the shoulder, lodged
Jenn:itself in her heart, and got trapped in her body by the corset she was
Jenn:wearing, and she died instantly.
Jenn:And the dough that she was kneading at the time of her death was baked into
Jenn:bread by her mother and made 15 loaves.
Jenn:Union soldiers helped wrapped her body in a quilt and either
Jenn:brought her to the cellar or buried her in the backyard immediately.
Jenn:So we show the backyard in the video.
Jenn:She was moved to the town's German church in November of 1865.
Jenn:Her body was eventually moved to Evergreen cemetery, the same cemetery that
Jenn:Elizabeth Thorne is the caretaker for.
Scott:and that was one of the ones that had, you know, quite a
Scott:unique kind of distinction at her, her little monument memorial that
Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:In 1900 with tireless efforts from her family and the women in the
Jenn:area, they were able to get a large.
Jenn:Gravestone and they have the perpetual American flag and I talk about it's
Jenn:one of the only two sites in America besides the Betty Ross, Betsy Ross
Jenn:house that perpetually flies an American flag in honor of a woman.
Scott:I thought that was really neat because
Scott:We see the American flag flying grave sites, but when you have that
Scott:kind of distinction recognized for something, is doing couldn't and
Scott:didn't really serve in battle, but they did serve in whatever capacity
Scott:they could, seeing that recognized
Jenn:Yeah, and she had a sweetheart at the time who was also fighting
Jenn:in the, in the cause for the union.
Jenn:She was carrying his picture.
Jenn:His name was Jack Skelly, and he dies from wounds.
Jenn:He's sustained in the battle.
Jenn:In june of 1863 and he dies nine days after she dies They're buried close
Jenn:to each other in evergreen cemetery so you can find jack shelley's grave as
Jenn:well And if you go to the jenny wade house There's artifacts of the letters.
Jenn:They wrote each other and stuff and things along that nature with their courtship.
Jenn:there's other women at the time who are doing, who are making
Jenn:bread and being very brave.
Jenn:I want to recognize like Elizabeth Thorne and Jenny Wade are the two big stories
Jenn:that we know of women at Gettysburg, but know that there were fighters.
Jenn:There were seven women who were wounded in Gettysburg as, as soldiers.
Jenn:And
Jenn:they were only found out later that their sex was revealed later.
Jenn:And when they were given treatment, there were seven
Jenn:POWs who were women.
Jenn:And again, only found out later Nine died on the battlefield as soldiers.
Jenn:So when you think about it, there's about 20 women who are disguising
Jenn:themselves as soldiers fighting.
Jenn:And people will ask, well, why did women do that at the time?
Jenn:And I'm not sure of all, you know, what each individual was
Jenn:thinking, but really it was a really
Jenn:duty and money.
Scott:and money.
Scott:Yes.
Scott:Sometimes you needed
Jenn:And sometimes you needed the money for your family.
Jenn:Sometimes there were no boys, and your family needed something to survive.
Jenn:And we always talk about when immigrants came off the boats to
Jenn:America, they were signing them up for the Civil War right there.
Jenn:Yeah.
Jenn:Come sign up.
Jenn:Go fight for your country.
Jenn:And they were handing them uniforms and rifles right then and guaranteeing them a
Jenn:paycheck, which was huge coming to America with no understanding of even maybe the
Jenn:language or how the commerce is working.
Jenn:So that is huge.
Jenn:So as a woman to be able to pay make that money disguised as a man, that's
Jenn:one of the reasons why women did it.
Jenn:Again, duty was another and some were fighting beside their husbands.
Jenn:Some took up arms when their husbands, you know, got hurt or but it's just
Jenn:interesting to know that there, there are women who are participating
Jenn:in the Battle of Gettysburg in pretty much every capacity.
Jenn:We just want to honor Elizabeth Thorne and Jenny Wade in all of those women's memory.
Scott:Yeah.
Scott:And women who were kind of playing, playing that, that It
Scott:was, it was really incredible.
Scott:And if you can ever go to Gettysburg in October, do it
Scott:because it is, it's beautiful.
Scott:Well, that brings us to the end of this episode of talk with We've explored
Scott:the remarkable stories of women like Elizabeth Thorne and Jenny Wade, but their
Scott:experiences represent countless others who played vital roles during the civil war.
Scott:These women served as nurses, cooks, spies, and so much more.
Scott:Their bravery, resilience, and unwavering determination in the face
Scott:of wartime hardship deserve our Thank you for listening to Talk With History
Scott:podcast, and please reach out to us at our website, talkwithhistory.
Scott:com.
Scott:But more importantly, if you know someone else that might enjoy this Podcasts.
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Scott:We rely on you, our community to grow, and we appreciate you all every day.
Scott:We'll talk to you next time.
Jenn:Thank you.