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George
Johnston Fairweather was born in 1838 at Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada.
George was the son of Benjamin Fairweather, born around 1800, also in
Woodstock and the second eldest of sixteen children born to Benjamin Sr.
and Martha Beardsley. One brother, Andrew, having been born on October 6,
1829. George’s mother was Margaret Currie, born on July 20, 1829. George’s
father Benjamin hanged himself in 1850, precipated by his wife’s death.
Sometime between 1851 and 1861 George and his family
migrated from Woodstock, New Brunswick to the state of Maine in the U.S.
George was a true “river man” and when at Bangor, Maine and at 21 years of
age, he enlisted in Captain Cunningham’s Rockland’s 4th Maine
Infantry Regiment, Company A; on May 31, 1861 for a period of three years,
not June 15, 1861 as has been reported..
The 4th
Regiment was organized at
Rockland and mustered in June on 15, 1861; leaving Maine
for Washington, D.C. on June 20th. It was attached to Howard's
Brigade, Heintzelman's Division, McDowell's Army of North Eastern Virginia
until August 1861, then to Heintzelman's Brigade, Division of the Potomac,
to October 1861, transferred over to Sedgwick's Brigade, Heintzelman's
Division, Army of the Potomac until March 1862 and to the 2nd Brigade, 3rd
Division, 3rd Army Corps, Army Potomac until July 1862. It was then
decided it would operate more efficiently with the 2nd Brigade, 1st
Division, 3rd Army Corps, with which it stayed until March, 1864, then
sent to the 2nd Brigade, 3rd Division, 2nd Corps.
Fairweather's Regiment camped on Meridian Hill in the
Defences of Washington, until July 16, 1861, advanced on Manassas,
Virginia from July 16 through 21, participated in the Battle of Bull Run
on July 21st, resumed duties in the Defences of Washington,
D.C., until March, 1862, then advanced on Manassas, Virginia again from
March 10 through the 15th, participated in the Peninsula
Campaign from April until August, participated in the Siege of Yorktown
from April 5th through May 4th, participated in the
Battle of Williamsburg on May 5th, the Battle of Seven Pines or
Fair Oaks from May 31st. through June 1st and numerous other
battles, including Malvern Hill, Pope's Campaign in Northern Virginia,
the Battles of Groveton, Bull Run, the Battle of Fredericksburg, Virginia,
participated in the Mud March", the Battle of Chancellorsville, the
Gettysburg Campaign, the Battle of Gettysburg and the Mine Run Campaign
from
November
26th through December 2nd.
On
December 23, 1863 George accepted a reenlistment bounty and reenlisted as
a veteran volunteer. In l861 many Union regiments were raised for a term
of 3 years. Hence in the spring of l864 many of these regiments would be
eligible for discharge. To promote reenlistments the War Department came
up as an enticement that if a certain number of men reenlisted in a
regiment then that regiment would retain its number and be called a
Veteran Regiment. Further, those who reenlisted were entitled to a 30 day
furlough and a bounty. They were also entitled to a special chevron which
they could wear on their uniforms signifying them as veterans. That was
how the “Veteran Volunteers” unit came about. He was listed as absent,
however, on a 35 day furlough, having deserted when he failed to report
back on March 24, 1864. But for what ever reasons, his service records
reveal instead of returning he enlisted in the 19th Maine
Infantry.
The 19th
Maine was
organized at Bath, Maine, mustered in on August 25, 1862 and saw a lot of
action before Fairweather joined it. But George survived
some of the fiercest battles of the Civil War, with the 19th.
He saw action in the
Chancellorsville Campaign,
the Battle of Gettysburg from July 1st through the 3rd,
the
Battles of the Wilderness
May from 5th through the 7th, the Siege of
Petersburg from June 16, 1864, to April 2, 1865, at Deep Bottom, the
Appomattox Campaign and was at the Appomattox Court House on April 9th
for the Surrender of Lee and his army.
Eventually George made his way out of the service and all the way to
Australia.
Little is
known of George’s life in Australia, except he never married, remaining
single his entire life and lived in the Bowral area of New South Wales.
Bowral was a grant of
2400 acres made to John Oxley by the Governor in 1823 in recognition of
his services. With later purchases converted to an outright grant to his
sons in 1829, Oxley's holding comprised 5000 acres.
It extended from
Mt. Gibraltar in the north and from the Old South Road in the east, to the
new line of road between Mittagong and Berrima in the west, today, the Old
Hume Highway at Bendooley Hill, and south to the Wingecarribee River at
Burradoo; about 5km from Bowral today, towards Moss Vale.
John Oxley himself never lived in the area, sending his
sons with herds of cattle to graze on the land after it was granted.
In 1858 Henry Oxley
conveyed his share of the grant to his brother John, who promptly
subdivided 200 acres in the path of the proposed railway.
Although the first
lot was not sold until 5 years later, John stood to make 50% profit on his
purchase, from only 5% of the land. Smaller farms to the south were also
let, but only on 99 year leases.
The town
subdivision stood to the left of the present railway line, and ran five
blocks from Bowral Street to Bundaroo Street, and two blocks east to
Bendooley Street - the area presently occupied by the commercial centre of
the town. The 133 hardy
souls who lived there in 1871 considered it a dream. The first hotel, the
Wingecarribee Inn, was built in 1862 on the corner of Bong Bong and
Boolwey Streets, a church school was built in 1861 and there
was a blacksmith, bakery, general store, newsagency, and a butchery, and
more substantial houses were being built every year. In the 1880s a
tannery operated at the corner of Bong Bong and Wingecarribee Streets,
behind where the Commonwealth Bank stands today.
Fairweather
applied for a military pension in a letter he wrote, addressed to Orlando
Baker, Esq., American Consul, Sydney. It was attested to in a “Wollondilly
Press” newspaper article written on him on August 19, 1908, around the
time of his death in 1908, certificate 8773, AT 70 years of age. They
described him as “an old man
living alone in a hut near Burrawang” that was “brought to the hospital at
Bowral by Constable Webb shortly after midnight on Thursday, in a
condition of collapse, and died shortly afterwards”.
An
inquiry was shortly held but little was learned, as George had no known
friends or relatives. It is not known if George ever received a pension,
or any consideration for his years of service. He lived and died alone at
84 years of age and was buried in a pauper’s grave in Bowral Cemetery;
without even having a headstone. Eventually, interested parties in New
South Wales discovered that fact and made an application for a proper
headstone and obtained one from the American Veterans Administration in
Washington D.C. in 1992; and had it erected on his gravesite to honor his
memory. |
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Anthony Douin, Records
Technician, Maine State Archives.
Bowral
Cemetery Records
Linda Emory, Berrima, New South Wales
New Brunswick Genealogical Society,
Federicton, New Brunswick, Canada
Provincial Archives of
New Brunswick.
Maine Infantry Regiment Histories
“Fayerweather Friends, The Fairweather
Genealogy”, Donald Williams, Canada, 1990
“Southern Highland News”, newspaper,
1992, 2005
“History Magazine”, Royal Australian
Historical Society, 1992
Library of Congress, U.S. Civil War
Regimental Histories
Mittagong Express, newspaper, 1908
U.S. Consulate Papers
“Wollondilly Press”, newspaper,
1908
“Fayerweather Friends, The Fairweather Genealogy”, Donald
Williams, Canada, 1990 |