Granduncle Mark's Genealogy Parlor

Col. Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth
1837 - 1861

Reported by
Mark Ellsworth Hickman

    Photo at left: Col. Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth






  • Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth was born in 1837 in Saratoga County, New York, a son of Ephraim Ellsworth and Phebe (Denton) Ellsworth.

    Elmer's maternal grandparents were Benjamin Denton (1785-1848) and Grace (Fuller) Denton (1787-1832). Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth was, in fact, a direct descendant of the Rev. Richard Denton (1603-1662), founder of the first Presbyterian Church in the new world.

    As a young man, Elmer moved from New York to Illinois, working as a clerk in Chicago. It was in Illinois that Elmer met Abraham Lincoln, working as an election aide during Lincoln's campaign, leading to a close friendship between President Abraham Lincoln and our Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth.

    Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth organized a Zouave company within the Union Army when the U. S. Civil War began. Patterned after French units and their unique Algerian uniforms and colorful drills, Elmer's company performed at the White House in 1860.

    In May of 1861 Elmer's New York Zouave regiment prevailed over Confederate forces at Alexandria, Virginia. However, it was here that Elmer was killed while he was removing a Confederate flag, becoming the first publicized Union Army casualty in the U. S. Civil War.

    Col. Elmer Ellsworth was dead on 21 May 1861 in Alexandria, Virginia.

    Reporters who saw President Abraham Lincoln immediately after he learned of Col. Elmer Ellsworth's death wrote that the President broke down into heavy sobbing when he learned of Col. Ellsworth's death.

    President Lincoln arranged for Col. Elmer Ellsworth's funeral to be held in the East Room of the White House.










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(Granduncle Mark)

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