Community Announcements

Brewster Student’s Curiosity Leads to Changing History

We are part of The Trust Project

Sometimes even historians get a key fact wrong.

Last fall, Brewster High School student Ellen Cassidy found just such a mistake while researching a project.

She realized that a black military hero, long believed to come from Paterson, New Jersey, was in fact born in Patterson, New York, and later lived in the Town of Southeast.

Every day on her way to school, Cassidy passes the Milltown Rural Cemetery. It is there that Pvt. Francis Oliver Myers, aka Frank Myers, is buried.

“I was curious about him because he was one of the few black soldiers from Putnam County that fought in the Civil War,” said Cassidy.

Here is what else Cassidy learned about Frank Myers in her research:

Following Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, Myers joined the Union Army. He enlisted with the 54th Massachusetts Colored Volunteers. The 54th consisted of black enlisted men, including two sons of Frederick Douglass and a grandson of abolitionist Sojourner Truth. The 54th took a boat to Hilton Head. Under the command of Col. Robert Shaw, they attacked Fort Wanger and immediately came under fire.

As Colonel Shaw led on “gaining the rampart, he stood there for a moment with an uplifted sword, shouting ‘Forward Fifty-fourth!’ and then fell dead, shot through the heart…” Colonel Shaw would perish with far too many of his men. According to a Port Royal correspondent for the New York Post, “Frank Myers, whose arm was badly shattered by a shell, said, ‘Oh! I thank God so much for the privilege: I went in to live or die, as he please.’ He stood right under the uplifted sword of their brave Colonel Shaw, on the very top of the parapet, as he cried, ‘Forward, Fifty-fourth!’ and then suddenly fell, quickly followed by Myers himself.”

Private Myers suffered grievous wounds including loss of his arm, injuries to his head and back. He was in the hospital for months. He was promoted to corporal and discharged on February 3, 1864 and came home to Southeast. Two years later, The Putnam County Courier ran a brief obituary which stated that Oliver Meyers, aged “about 30 years,” had died on May 19th, 1866, in Southeast. Here is where the historical record falters. The official history books, compiled from a military roster incorrectly list Francis Myers, a soldier from the same unit and with the same dates of enlistment and discharge, as having come from Paterson, New Jersey. This single false detail, probably inserted by a bored or exhausted army clerk – New Jersey instead of New York – was picked up and repeated in articles and books until it took on the sheen of fact.

Cassidy noticed the mistake with surprise.

“Wait!” She told herself. “That’s not right!”

She said, “I reached out to American historian and the first woman president of Harvard University, Dr. Drew Gilpin Faust directed me to Dr. Elyssa Tardiff and Kate Melchior of the Massachusetts Historical Society who then connected me with Dr. Donald Yacovone, of Harvard’s Hutchins Center for African & African American Research.  Dr. Faust and Dr. Yacovone both emphasized the importance of getting the word out and publishing to set Myers record straight.”

Cassidy recently published her findings on New York Almanack and to date, The National Park Service has corrected the record in its online exhibit,  Faces of the 54th . The National Gallery of Art has corrected it in its online roster of The 54th Massachusetts Regiment. The open-source website, Find-A-Grave, has been updated with a comprehensive write up about his service and his burial place and headstone located in Milltown Cemetery, right here in Brewster.

To make sure Brewster, Town of Southeast, and Town of Patterson citizens properly remember Myers, she contacted local veteran Jack Duncan, of the Bob Palmer Project. On Memorial Day they will place a flag next to Meyers military headstone.

She said, “I’m actually hoping to get a historical marker created in his memory as his family actually lived near the Brewster CSD campus, near the intersection of Farm to Market and Route 312 and their family home can be found on historic maps. To me, that’s an exciting idea.”

 

This is a press release provided by the organization. It has been lightly edited and is being published by Examiner Media as a public service.

 

 

We'd love for you to support our work by joining as a free, partial access subscriber, or by registering as a full access member. Members get full access to all of our content, and receive a variety of bonus perks like free show tickets. Learn more here.