Thursday, September 22, 2022

35 Wyeth and Wythe Men Fought to put down the “Slaveholders' Rebellion"

John Jasper Wyeth
 Private John Jasper Wyeth, 44th Mass. Infantry
On this date, 160 years ago, President Abraham Lincoln issued the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation. It declared all slaves, in states still engaged in rebellion against the Union, would be free on the first day of 1863. The declaration turned the Civil War into a crusade against slavery. Many descendants of Nicholas Wyeth fought and died for America’s democratic ideal that all men are created equal. One of them, John Jasper Wyeth, wrote a memoir called “Leaves from a Diary Written While Serving in Co. E, 44 Mass.” In his book, John did not refer to his service in “The American Civil War” or in “The War Between the States” or “The War of Secession." John unequivocally called the war the “Slaveholders' Rebellion.” The Wyeth and Wythe Families of America book charts on pages 79-83 the names of 35 Wyeth and Wythe men who fought to put down that “slaveholders' rebellion.” Nine of those men died to keep the Union whole, destroy slavery and maintain the Constitution.  Photo of John Jasper Wyeth (1841-1906) is courtesy of his great grandson Keith L. Wyeth.  

Sunday, July 3, 2022

Washington took Command of the Army a Stone's Throw from the Wyeth Farm

Cambridge Common, 3 Jul 1775, Currier and Ives Engraving
One of the days that made this country possible occurred 247 years ago on Cambridge Common.  Our ancestors had a front row seat to that history.  Across the road from the Common was the farm Nicholas Wyeth purchased in 1645 when he first settled in the New World.  On 3 Jul 1775, when George Washington took command of the Continental Army there, the Wyeth house was then occupied by Jonas Wyeth Sr.  Undoubtedly, Jonas’ nephews, Joshua, Jonas, and Ebenezer Wyeth III were stirred by the ceremony, for they soon joined the Continental Army.  The three brothers fought in several losing battles, but they had such respect for General Washington, because of his incomparable character, they served their full enlistment and supported the General's ideals long after many other soldiers dejectedly deserted the Army.  Please see pages 63-72 of the Wyeth/Wythe book for more information on the three brothers’ service.