#6
How Two Brothers
Came out of the War – The Raleigh News and Observer
January 25, 1884
In
front of Baumgartern's photgraph gallery two pictures of two good
citizens of this county are displayed, one of which is labeled
“before the war,” and the other “after the war.” They are
pictures of Dr. Henry J. Walker and Mr. Levi J. Walker (13th
North Carolina State Troops), one of whom is a prominent merchant of
Charlotte. The picture taken before the war represents them as two
beardless youths with clasped hands wearing the Confederate uniform.
In the picture taken after the war they appear just the same, except
that both have beards and the left leg of each is gone. In the
battle of Gettysburg, Mr. L. J. Walker had his left leg shot off at
the knee, and on the retreat from Gettysburg his brother, Dr. H. L.
Walker, had his left leg shot off in exactly the same manner, so
identically that one brother can wear the other's artificial leg.
This coincidence of
legs is not without its advantages, as will be illustrated by this
incident: A few days previous to Mr. L. J. Walker's marriage, he had
the misfortune to break his wooden leg and was thus placed in an
awkward dilemma, but found his way out of it by calling on Dr.
Walker, whose leg he borrowed and the wedding passed off happily.
Brave soldiers they were, these Walker brothers. They are good
citizens too, and our county people hold both of them in warm esteem.
Sometimes we forget
the lasting impact that the war left on so many...even if they did
survive the terrible battles, many of them had permanent scars to
carry with them as a reminder of that terrible blood letting we know
as the Civil War. As in this instance, many learned to live with
their difficulties in an attempt to move on with a "normal"
lifestyle. Beyond the nearly 700,000 deaths in the American Civil
War, nearly three times that many suffered wounds in battle.
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