Personal Reflections This Memorial Day
Through my work at the 91色情片, I am reminded every day about the military men and women who passed away while serving in our nation鈥檚 conflicts. As a descendent of a veteran who survived the Civil War, the past never feels too far away. I am deeply cognizant of the fact that I would not be alive today if my great-great-great-great-grandfather had suffered a different fate, like so many of his fellow service members. This Memorial Day, I feel grateful to reflect on his history, and remember the hundreds of thousands of others just like him whose lives were cut short too soon.
Before I started working at the Trust, I don鈥檛 think I truly recognized how influential the鈥疷.S. military has been in my life. Aspects of the military have always been in my periphery鈥撯疘 worked on a Naval Recreation base for seven summers as a lifeguard, I remember鈥痗ollecting souvenirs from my Uncle鈥檚 Army deployments to Bosnia and Honduras, and I have always been in鈥痑we of my great grandfather鈥檚 service in WWII. But what remained a mystery was a framed newspaper clipping in my grandparents鈥 house鈥痶hat featured two elderly bearded gentlemen sitting in an open car emblazoned with the title 鈥淥ne Wore Blue, And Other Gray.鈥濃
This newspaper clipping remained鈥痑 mystery until the Trust formed a partnership with鈥Ancestry.com and Fold3 to鈥痗onnect鈥痑ncestor history and the places we help to protect. Many of our supporters, like you, have ancestors who served in the military too. With so many鈥痮f our members鈥痑nd staff members鈥痷ncovering their own family history and genealogical trees, I was inspired to do the same. So, after 27 years, I took the first step everyone should鈥痶ake鈥痺hen curious about their family history鈥(if they are able) 鈥 I asked my elders. And I am so happy I did! Within minutes of contacting my grandmother, she emailed me a hefty file filled with pictures, stories, and documents outlining the life of my great-great-great-great-grandfather, Louis P. Hennighausen.
Louis P. Hennighausen arrived as a German immigrant in Baltimore, Maryland at the age of 15. He went on to visit Washington, D.C.,鈥痶hen鈥疪ichmond, Virginia, where he was residing when the Civil War erupted. Although he was urged by his own brother, Carl A. Hennighausen, to fall in with southern secessionists, Louis鈥 sympathies were with the Union, and he returned to Washington, D.C. Once there, he鈥痚ntered the Union Army Company A, Eighth Battalion, District of Columbia Volunteers on April 11, 1861 for a three-month term guarding the Potomac River. In August of 1861, he joined the鈥, eventually rising to the rank of Captain. While in service with the 46th NY, Louis engaged in the鈥Siege of Fort Pulaski, operations about Charleston, South Carolina, and the鈥Peninsula Campaign. At his highest rank, he commanded his own company in the鈥Battle of Secessionville.鈥
His brother Carl served in the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, fighting on the very same battlefield as Louis during parts of the Peninsula Campaign.
Both brothers survived the war. Louis returned to Baltimore,鈥痺here he became a lawyer, philanthropist, and member of the Grand Army of the Republic. The Grand Army of the Republic was a fraternal organization created by the veterans of Union forces. In addition to their advocacy work for veterans of the Civil War, they were an integral part of making Memorial Day a national holiday, honoring those who did not survive the conflict.
In 1913, Louis and Carl traveled to Pennsylvania for the鈥, where veterans from both armies gathered to remember, reminisce, and heal. It was at this event where they posed for this photo together, the very photo that hung at my grandparents' house and caught my eye as a child:
It鈥檚 an honor to鈥痓e part of鈥痑n鈥痮rganization that鈥痜ights every day to protect the memory of service men and women. Thank you for all that you do to鈥痚nsure that the sacrifices they made are never forgotten.
Connor Townsend
Associate of Audience Development