
Carl’s enlistment papers describe him as having a stocky build, 5’9″ with dark hair, blue eyes and light complexion. Because he was just nineteen years old and therefore under age, his father, Gotthilf’s, consenting signature also appears on his enlistment document. The 26th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry saw heavy, but disastrous, action at Chancellorsville under General Hooker and, two months later, fierce combat at Gettysburg under General Meade. After Gettysburg, the Twenty-sixth Volunteer Infantry, as part of the Eleventh Corps, was transferred to the newly formed Twentieth Corps being formed in the Western theater under Sherman where they participated in that general’s famous March to the Sea. While fighting their way through Georgia, Company G was involved in numerous bloody, but lesser-known actions, including battles at Resaca, New Hope Church and Dallas.
Carl was wounded twice; at Gettysburg and then, after rejoining his unit after a lengthy recuperation in a Philadelphia hospital, he was injured much more seriously at the Battle of Dallas. A musket ball passed through his left leg a few inches above the knee cap, injuring the bone and cutting the muscles. His thigh wound was not mortal but became a lifetime handicap for which he would be eventually awarded a modest disability pension. He was treated in hospitals in Kingston, Ga. (four days), Chattanooga, Tn. (10 days), Nashville, Tn. (11 days), Jefferson, In. (6 days), Madison, In. (one month), and Camp Randall in Madison, Wi. before being mustered out May 18, 1865.
Carl married Rosina Borneman on Oct 30, 1865 in Cedarburg, Wi. They moved to a farm near Wayside, Wi., in Brown County and raised five children. They are buried in the Evengelical Lutheran Cemetary near Wayside. For a more detailed, chronological record of Carl Hafemann’s Civil War service with the Twenty-Sixth Wisconsin, see my work in progress entitled, “Cry Of Slander.”
September 29, 1996
Information by:
Richard H Haviland
N8337 North Shore Ln
Menasha, WI 54952
email: rhaviland1@new.rr.com
Carl married Rosina Borneman on Oct 30, 1865 in Cedarburg, Wi. They moved to a farm near Wayside, Wi., in Brown County and raised five children. They are buried in the Evengelical Lutheran Cemetary near Wayside. For a more detailed, chronological record of Carl Hafemann’s Civil War service with the Twenty-Sixth Wisconsin, see my work in progress entitled, “Cry Of Slander.”
September 29, 1996
Information by:
Richard H Haviland
N8337 North Shore Ln
Menasha, WI 54952
email: rhaviland1@new.rr.com