ĢƵ

close

Minerd family had big presence in Civil War

By Janelle Sheetzfor Heraldstandard.Com 3 min read
1 / 4

William Minerd was from Mount Braddock.

2 / 4

Perry Enos was from White.

3 / 4

Robert Rankin was from Elliotsville.

4 / 4

Martin Miner was from Normalville.

?For most people, a family reunion probably means catching up with out-of-touch cousins. The Minerd reunion is a little bit different — the familyĢƵ genealogy has been chronicled on Minerd.com and the family is estimated to have about 50,000 descendants in the country.

“I meet new cousins all the time,” Mark Miner, the reunionĢƵ organizer and founder of the website, said. “The goal is to connect.”

This year, the family connected to their past by marking the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. A total of 107 plaques lined the walls of the Indian Creek Valley Community Center to honor relative soldiers, including 32 from Fayette County.

For Miner, honoring them was important not only because of the anniversary, but also because of the number of soldiers involved and what they fought for.

“You see the events in Egypt when all of a sudden, thanks to social media, a revolution breaks out and freedom comes at a lot of hard work,” he said. “Idealistically, freedom sounds great but, actually, itĢƵ difficult to sustain. The Civil War was one of those moments that kept our country alive at the cost of hundreds of thousands of casualties. ItĢƵ important for us to not forget these men — simple common farm folk who put their lives on the line for something they believed was worth fighting for.”

The familyĢƵ Civil War ties are also the subject of MinerĢƵ book “Well at This Time,” which chronicles the wartime diaries of soldier Ephraim Miner. Some of the Minerd relatives have bought the book to place in local libraries.

In addition to the war, Miner also said family history is important but is often forgotten by many.

“There is a vast disconnect between young people and their history because itĢƵ been so poorly taught in schools,” he said. “Parents and grandparents need to teach history. Who else would teach the connection?”

History is important to other relatives, too.

“ItĢƵ important to know where you come from,” Sid Miller said. “Genealogy is very, very interesting. It gives me pride that I know I had all these cousins that fought in the Civil War.”

These connections keep bringing Minerd relatives in to the reunion, even those whose families left the area in the 1800s.

“The reunion brings them back to reconnect with their roots,” Miner said.

The reunion also included a one-man performance by re-enactor Bill May, an all-day campout by the Sons and Daughters of Union Veterans of Somerset County and a trip to Gettysburg which included a private tour of the battlefield where Minerd relatives fought.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.