tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1769958914386145384.post5726380659567851076..comments2023-07-31T06:22:46.854-07:00Comments on Potter Profiles: Edgar Wylie Potter, Civil War VeteranDonnahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16013223651889490463noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1769958914386145384.post-86756779739894241452015-04-21T16:40:03.708-07:002015-04-21T16:40:03.708-07:00I had wondered where this comment went as I believ...I had wondered where this comment went as I believe I posted it and when I went back to look it had been removed with no explanation. It will probably remain a mystery...<br />I wish I could say I had more to report. We believe we know the general location of the grave site of Edgar Wylie Potter but it is on property that has long since returned to its natural state. The son of Clayton Potter went to the location in the mid 1950's when he was in his later years and talked to the local residents who recalled a plantation house on which the grave site was believed to be. It had long since fallen into disrepair and "disappeared." The locals were as helpful as could be but the ancestor (a nephew of Edgar Wylie Potter) was unable to successfully locate the grave. He wrote a formal report and I have a photocopy of it. The body had been given a battlefield burial by his fellow troops on the day he was shot. The younger brother came a year later after the end of the war to repatriate the body to western New York State where he helped to farm the land (Machias, NY). During the course of the disinterment, Stanley decided that it was better to provide a proper burial nearby in a "better location" and with a proper pine wood coffin that a local citizen helped him build. We have a copy of the letter back to the family as to why he re-interred the body and the beautiful inscription he carved on a wooden head board. The exact location is not known and the headboard, I am sure has returned to the soil. We are now 60 years after the last on-site serious inquiry so I have little faith in doing today what could not be done 60 years ago when memories were fresher. There is much more that I have if interested... like a diary entry by Stanley, who fought in the Army of the James and was riding his horse probably within 40 miles of the location where his brother was killed as he was returning from a raid on a train station south of Richmond the day before Edgar was killed. Edgar was in the Army of the Potomac and heading south as the Union Army was squeezing the Confederates in the final stages of the war The Overland campaign (Edgar was in the cavalry as part of Sheridan's forces and had reenlisted in December 2013 in Culpeper, VA while overwintering with Grant's forces) was considered the beginning of the end even though the fighting and killing went on for almost another 11 months before Lee surrendered. My email is james.d.lloyd@homemail.com and I live in Locust Grove and within a few hundred yards of where Edgar Wylie Potter started the Overland Campaign in May of 1864. His assignment was to provide protection to the 60 mile supply wagon train that accompanied the Union troops fording the Rapidan River just before the Battle of the Wilderness.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16276522879538805492noreply@blogger.com