Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn and The Civil War | Page 22

Did you know...? By Mount Auburn Volunteers Buried at Mount Auburn are: • 893 Civil War veterans. An additional 55 Civil War veterans are buried elsewhere but are memorialized at the Cemetery. • Three Medal of Honor recipients from the Civil War. • Two Confederate Army veterans, including one whose service is noted on his headstone. • Two members of the Secret Six, radical abolitionists who funded John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry, Virginia: Samuel Gridley Howe (1801–1876, Lot 4987 Spruce Avenue) and George Luther Stearns (1809–1867, Lot 1454 Sedge Path). A third co-conspirator, clergyman and author Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1823–1911), is buried nearby at Cambridge Cemetery. • Julia Ward Howe (1819– 1910, Lot 4987 Spruce Avenue), who wrote “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” after visiting Union troops near Wash- ington, D.C., in November 1861. • James and Mary McKinnon Tate, who married in 1858 and went to war together. Mary served as an Army Nurse and died in 1863 at Douglas Hospital in Washington, D.C.; James died shortly after the war in 1865. They are interred side-by- side in unmarked graves in the St. Matthews Lot. 20 | Sweet Auburn • Artist Winslow Homer (1836–1910, Lot 563 Lily Path), whose sketches of Civil War camp and battle scenes appeared in the popular Harper’s Weekly magazine. • Boston candy-maker William F. Schrafft (1846–1928, Lot 7385 Halcyon Avenue), who popularized the jelly bean and urged civilians to send the non-perishable candy to Union troops serving in the Civil War. • Two of Paul Revere’s grandsons who perished in the war (Lot 286 Walnut Avenue). Edward Revere (1827–1862) was killed in action at Antietam; Paul Joseph Revere (1832–1863) died of wounds received at Gettysburg. • Twenty-seven members of the Banks Brigade Bee, who gathered to make shirts, socks, quilts, nightclothes, and bandages for Union troops. The Bee also supported the work of Dorothea Dix (1802–1887, Lot 4731 Spruce Avenue) and Emily Elizabeth Parsons (1824–1880, Lot 608 Greenbrier Path) at the Western Sanitary Commission.