Yank's ashes go home

Civil War veteran long dead and forgotten in Oregon now with bikers, going to Maine

Steve West (from left), Milt Harden and Dan Halverson of Patriot Guard Riders salute the remains of Maine Civil War soldier Jewett Williams on Monday before the group’s journey from Salem, Ore., to Williams’ home state to bury his ashes with military honors at Togus National Cemetery.
Steve West (from left), Milt Harden and Dan Halverson of Patriot Guard Riders salute the remains of Maine Civil War soldier Jewett Williams on Monday before the group’s journey from Salem, Ore., to Williams’ home state to bury his ashes with military honors at Togus National Cemetery.

SALEM, Oregon -- Jewett Williams served in the 20th Maine Regiment in the Civil War. When he died in 1922 at an Oregon insane asylum, he was cremated and his ashes were stored and forgotten along with the remains of thousands of other patients.

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AP/STATESMAN-JOURNAL

A Patriot Guard Rider packs the remains of Jewett Williams aboard a motorcycle for the trip to Maine.

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AP

Civil War re-enactors prepare to participate in the handover of the cremated remains of Maine Civil War soldier Jewett Williams on Monday at Oregon State Hospital in Salem, Ore.

With a color guard in Civil War-era uniforms present, Oregon State Hospital officials handed over Williams' ashes to a group of motorcycle-riding military veterans for a journey across the country to his home state.

"He was a son, a brother, a husband and a father. At the end of his life, however, he was alone and institutionalized here," Oregon Senate President Peter Courtney said at the ceremony. "When he died, nobody came. Nobody came to honor him. Nobody came to take him home. Nobody came. Until today."

Members of the Patriot Guard Riders, a group that attends the funerals of U.S. military veterans, firefighters and police, then solemnly received the ashes, started their Harleys and began the long journey to Maine. Wearing leather vests festooned with patches describing their branches of service, and American flags flapping from their bikes, the group will escort the remains in relays across America.

The ashes of hundreds of other patients remain at a memorial on the grounds of the hospital made famous in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, a film starring Jack Nicholson and adapted from the novel by Ken Kesey. It was in 2004 that Courtney, on a tour, found the ashes of more than 3,600 people who died at the Oregon State Hospital and other institutions, stashed away in a shed in corroding copper cans.

In 2014, the memorial was opened with the remains of patients unclaimed by relatives kept in urns labeled with names, birth and death dates, and embedded in a wall. A gap now exists where Williams' urn had been. Over 300 other remains have been claimed.

"Here we are in this honored spot with all these unclaimed souls," Geno Williams, a U.S. Army special forces veteran and Patriot Guard Rider from Vancouver, Wash., murmured to a reporter after blinking away tears. "It is an emotional moment for me."

The 20th Maine famously prevented a Union defeat at Gettysburg with a bayonet charge at Little Round Top. Williams, of Hodgdon, Maine, joined in October 1864, more than a year later, but many engagements remained. His regiment was at the siege of Petersburg, Va., and in battles with the rebels right up to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox, Va., in April 1865, said Maine historian Tom Desjardin.

"The New Englanders were actively engaged with [Gen. Ulysses] Grant's army in the long siege of Petersburg and the running fight with Lee to Appomattox," said James I. Robertson Jr., retired professor of Civil War history at Virginia Tech.

Jewett shared a tent with his cousin, Albert Williams, who, in a letter reflecting his rudimentary education, described long marches in bad weather and sleeping in the open, according to a family history published online in 2005 by Barbara Ann Estabrook. He also described a scorched-earth campaign.

"i didnt have a chance to get a shot at a reb when we on the rode but i made the Cattle and Sheep and hogs suffer. You bet we killed every thing that we see and burnt every thing as we went," Albert Williams wrote on Dec. 18, 1864, less than four months before he died of fever at age 21.

Jewett Williams was married and divorced, then remarried and moved to Michigan, then to Minnesota where he was a carpenter. His first child died after only 19 months. He and his wife had five more children and moved to Washington state, where the couple separated. In the 1920 Census, Williams was listed as a widower in Portland, Ore.

In April 1922, Williams was admitted to the Oregon State Hospital for the Insane in Salem, as the hospital was then known. He died on July 17, 1922, at 78, of cerebral arteriosclerosis.

None of Jewett's descendants have been found.

His remains are to arrive in Maine on Aug. 22 and will be buried with military honors in Togus National Cemetery on Sept. 17. A period-correct white marble veterans headstone will mark the spot, said Dave Richmond, deputy director of the Maine Bureau of Veterans' Services.

"He will rejoin his comrades-in-arms in Maine," said Greg Roberts, the superintendent of Oregon State Hospital. Also buried at Togus are five other 20th Maine veterans, including one from Williams' Company H.

SundayMonday on 08/07/2016

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