One of the saddest stories of the Battle of Gettysburg is that
of an
Wesley Culp was a native of
When the war broke out in 1861, Wesley
enlisted with many of his new friends and neighbors in the 2nd Virginia
Infantry Regiment. This regiment was part of the famous "Stonewall
Brigade" commanded by General "Stonewall" Jackson, which saw its first
battle at
"Culp's Hill", the one
owned by Wesley's uncle Henry and the same hill on which he had explored,
played, and hunted as a young man, was considered by many to be the
key position on the Union Army's right flank, the "point" of the fishhook-shaped
Union line. When the Confederate army attacked the hill on July 2nd
1863, the 2nd Virginia Infantry was part of the attacking force. It
was sometime during the fighting on July 3rd when Wesley Culp was
shot and killed on or nearby his uncle's hill. Wesley was buried and
his grave supposedly marked by his fellow soldiers of the 2nd