US INFANTRY “I” OFFICER’S CUFF BUTTON, RECOVERED FROM ROSE FARM WOODS, GETTYSBURG

$67.50 SOLD

Quantity Available: None

Item Code: 173-2288

This cuff sized button has the spread-winged eagle as found on the General Service button but the shield on the eagle’s chest has the letter “I” for Infantry.

The face of the button has a darkened patina, but much of the original gilt is present.

The reverse of the button has the shank. Backmark, if present, is not legible.

Recovered from Rose Farm woods by local Gettysburg resident John Cullison, who excavated relics on the field from 1935-1959. Cullison sold his collection to the famed Gettysburg Rosensteel family, who held the primary collection of Gettysburg artifacts.

The Rose Farm was at the center of some of the fiercest fighting on the second day of the battle. The farm included the Stony Hill, the Rose Woods, and a twenty acre field where over 20,000 men engaged in brutal and often hand-to-hand combat leaving over six thousand killed or wounded. Ever since it has been known simply as The Wheatfield.

The stone walls of the farmhouse and barn provided shelter to the Confederates of Semmes' and Kershaw's Brigades, and the farm buildings were used as a Confederate field hospital. It is estimated that between 500 and 1,000 Confederate soldiers were buried on the property. Some of the most famous photographs after the battle were taken here by Alexander Gardner.

The stone farmhouse is still standing, but the barn is in ruins after being struck by lightning and burning down in 1910. The farm was in private hands until the 1950s, when it was acquired by the National Park Service.

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