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From our December 14, 2000,
edition.
Civil
War vet honored 132 years later
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
She
didn’t know it until recently, but Opal Evans’ grandfather was a
decorated veteran of the bloodiest war America has ever seen. Well,
belatedly decorated anyway – his family didn’t receive his medal until
1998.
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Opal
Evans displays the medal honoring her grandfather's service in the
West Virginia Infantry from 1861-1865.
Enterprise
Digital Photo |
Evans’
grandfather, William H. Nessmith, was an early pioneer of Callahan County,
Texas, moving there some time after the American Civil War to farm the
land. Evans’ brother and sister were born right there Callahan County.
She was born in Lubbock County and eventually came to live in Hedley.
Not
much was known about Nessmith, however. Evans said no one talked about him
much. His service in the War never really came up, and since he died in
1902, Evans never knew him personally.
“We
just thought he was from Ohio,” Evans said.
But
then a few years back, Evans’ daughter, Jamie Evans Buckner, started
researching the family’s history, when she hit what any amateur
genealogist might consider a gold mine.
It
seems Nessmith was a private in Company F of the West Virginia Infantry
from 1861 to 1865. Buckner found an Internet site which told her Nesssmith
had even earned a medal, but it was never presented. In fact, it was still
gathering dust in the vault of the West Virginia Capitol!
Buckner,
who lives in Georgetown, Texas, went to work to claim the medal for her
great-grandfather.
“We
had to fill out a stack of paperwork this thick,” Evans said, holding
her fingers about 1½ inches apart. “Then we had to wait six months to
see if any other descendants tried to claim it.”
About
a year and a half after Buckner first found the information on her
computer and 132 years late, the State of West Virginia mailed the medal
to the family in Texas – still in its original box. It was cast in 1866
and is inscribed with Nessmith’s name, rank, and company.
Evans
had the medal framed with a short biography and a picture of her
grandfather in what they think is his Civil War uniform.
“I
was real excited about it,” Evans said.
Thanks
to Buckner’s research, the family now knows a great deal about
Nessmith’s life. He was born in 1842 in Washington, DC, and was buried
on what used to be the Nessmith family farm near Cottonwood, Texas, in
1902. In those in between years, he served a long term in the Union Army,
fighting to keep the States united.
How
many friends did he see fall beside him during those four years in the
war? Did he ever know about the award reserved for him? Or did he simply
come to Texas to forget the bloodshed?
Those
questions will probably never be answered. But his family can take pride
in his finally being properly honored.
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