Henry Lawson Wyatt Explained

Henry Lawson Wyatt
Birth Date:12 February 1842
Birth Place:Richmond, Virginia
Death Place:Newport News, Virginia
Unit:Edgecombe Guards
Serviceyears:1861
Battles:Battle of Big Bethel
Memorials:Statue of Henry Lawson Wyatt

Henry Lawson Wyatt (February 12, 1842 – June 10, 1861), was a Confederate soldier during the American Civil War. He died in the Battle of Big Bethel, one of the first skirmishes of the war, making him the first enlisted soldier from North Carolina to die in battle.

Early years

Wyatt was born in Richmond, Virginia to Isham Belcher and Lucinda N. L. Wyatt. He grew up learning carpentry as a trade, and as a child accompanied his father to North Carolina where he would later settle in Tarboro in October, 1856.[1]

American Civil War

In early April, 1861, North Carolina was preparing to secede from the United States. A local militia was organized on April 18 of that year called the Edgecombe Guards, and Wyatt was one of its first enlistees. This company became designated as "Company A" and was placed in the 1st North Carolina Volunteers (later the 11th North Carolina Infantry Regiment).

On June 10, 1861, Wyatt's regiment took part in the Battle of Big Bethel. During the battle, Wyatt and four others volunteered to set fire to a nearby barn which was thought to be aiding Union soldiers.[2] As he crossed a field with the other soldiers a volley struck him down midway, and he was noticed to have a clot of blood on his forehead "as large as a man's fist."[3] His fellow soldiers, who were not hit, quickly carried Wyatt off the field to a hospital in Yorktown. He died the following morning. His body was brought by train to Richmond, Virginia and interred in Hollywood Cemetery.[4]

Legacy

While Wyatt was the first soldier from North Carolina to die during the Civil War, he was not the first Confederate soldier to be killed in battle, despite being lauded as such by some authors.[5] [6] That distinction goes to Captain John Quincy Marr, an officer who was killed at the Battle of Fairfax Court House (June 1861) on June 1, 1861.[7] However, Wyatt can be claimed to be the first enlisted soldier to die in battle if the distinction is made between first enlisted soldier and first officer.

On June 10, 1912, the 51st anniversary of the Battle of Bethel, the North Carolina division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy unveiled a statue of Wyatt in Raleigh, North Carolina.[8] [9] The statue was removed on June 20, 2020, after North Carolina governor Roy Cooper ordered the removal of all Confederate monuments at the state capitol.[10] [11]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Magazine of Western History . 1893 . 56–59 . 28 June 2020 . en.
  2. News: The 20th in Tarboro . 28 June 2020 . The Tarborough Southerner . 27 May 1880. Newspapers.com.
  3. Web site: Henry Lawson Wyatt, Dead at Bethel, 1861 NC DNCR . www.ncdcr.gov . 28 June 2020 . en.
  4. Book: Janney . Caroline E. . Burying the Dead But Not the Past - Ladies' Memorial Associations & the Lost Cause . 2008 . The University of North Carolina Press . 978-0-8078-3176-2 . 32 . 17 November 2023.
  5. Book: Clark's Regiments: An Extended Index to the Histories of the Several Regiments and Battalions from North Carolina in the Great War, 1861-65 . Pelican Publishing . 978-1-4556-0237-7 . 28 June 2020 . en.
  6. News: The Wyatt Memorial . 28 June 2020 . The Raleigh Times . 21 August 1907 . 4.
  7. Norris, David. The Battle of Big Bethel pp. 226 - 227 In Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History, edited by David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2000.
  8. News: Henry L. Wyatt Statue Unveiled . 28 June 2020 . The Greensboro Patriot . 13 June 1912 . 6.
  9. Book: Brundage . W. Fitzhugh . Where These Memories Grow: History, Memory, and Southern Identity . 2015 . UNC Press Books . 978-1-4696-2432-7 . 154 . 28 June 2020 . en.
  10. News: Bridges . Virginia . NC governor orders Confederate monuments removed at Capitol after statues toppled . 28 June 2020 . The News & Observer.
  11. News: Work to remove 75-foot tall Confederate monument at State Capitol postponed . 28 June 2020 . WRAL.com . 20 June 2020 . en.