This War of 1812 Veteran Saw the Battle of Gettysburg from His Porch – Then Joined It

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Laugh all you want, whippersnappers. John Burns will show you how it's done. (National Park Service)

These days, it’s hard to think of a veteran who could have served from World War II, Korea and Vietnam. It’s happened, of course, but imagine a veteran of the War of 1812 and the Mexican War fighting in the Civil War. That’s a span of more than 50 years, much longer than the 24 years that separated the beginning of WWII and the Vietnam War.

Then again, pivotal battles weren’t literally in America’s front yard during the 20th century.

Your average 69-year-old might be happy to ride out his golden years from a rocking chair, but not John Burns. He fought in the War of 1812 and the Mexican War and even tried to work as a supply driver for the Union Army. He was ultimately sent back to his home in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, none too happy to be excluded from the war.

He was considered “eccentric” by the rest of the town. That’s what happens when you’re fighting wars for longer than most people at the time spent in school. Burns also already lived twice as long as the average American of the time and was ready to do more for his country. But Gettysburg was much farther north than the Confederates could ever attack -- or so he thought.

Keep off of John Burns lawn. (National Park Service)

When Confederate Gen. Jubal Early captured the town, Burns was the constable and was jailed for trying to interfere with Confederate military operations. When the Confederates were pushed out of Gettysburg by the Union, Burns began arresting Confederate stragglers for treason. Still, his contributions to the Union didn’t end there.

On the morning of July 1, 1863, Burns watched as the Battle of Gettysburg began to unfold near his home. Like a true American hero, he picked up his rifle -- a flintlock musket, which required the use of a powder horn -- and calmly walked over to the battle to see how he could help.

He “borrowed” a more modern musket (now a long-standing Army tradition) from a wounded Union soldier, picked up some cartridges, then walked over to the commander of the 150th Pennsylvania Infantry and asked to join the regiment.

This time, he wasn’t turned away, but the 150th Pennsylvania commanders sent Burns to Herbst Woods, away from where the officers believed the main area of fighting would be. They were wrong.

Herbst Woods was the site of the first Confederate offensive of the battle. Burns, sharpshooting for the Iron Brigade, helped repel this offensive as part of a surprise counterattack.

There's a lot of red arrows headed that way. (American Battlefield Trust)

Burns was mocked by other troops for showing up to fight with his antiquated weapon and “swallowtail coat with brass buttons, yellow vest, and tall hat.” But when the bullets started to fly, he calmly took cover behind a tree and started to shoot back with his modern rifle.

He also fought alongside the 7th Wisconsin Infantry and then moved to support the 24th Michigan. He was wounded in the arm, legs and chest before he was left on the field when the Union forces had to fall back.

Burns ditched his rifle and buried his ammo before passing out from blood loss. He tried to convince the rebels he was an old man looking to find help for his wife, but accounts of how well that story worked vary. Anyone fighting in an army outside of a uniform could be executed as a bushwhacker, but the ruse must have worked on some level because he survived his wounds and lived for another nine years.

The Battle of Gettysburg turned out to be a major turning point in the Civil War. The Confederates would spend the rest of the war -- two years -- on the defensive.

As the poem “John Burns of Gettysburg,” written after the war by Francis Bret Harte, goes:

“So raged the battle. You know the rest. How the rebels, beaten and backward pressed, Broke at the final charge and ran. At which John Burns — a practical man — Shouldered his rifle, unbent his brows, And then went back to his bees and cows.”

Burns became a national hero after the battle. When President Abraham Lincoln stopped in the Pennsylvania town to deliver the Gettysburg Address, he asked to speak with Burns and met the veteran at his home. He was photographed, which was a big deal at the time, and a poem was written about his life.

A statue of Burns was erected at Gettysburg National Military Park in 1903, where it stands today.

The statue of John Burns. (National Park Service)

The base of the statue reads: “My thanks are specially due to a citizen of Gettysburg named John Burns who although over seventy years of age shouldered his musket and offered his services to Colonel Wister One Hundred and Fiftieth Pennsylvania Volunteers. Colonel Wister advised him to fight in the woods as there was more shelter there but he preferred to join our line of skirmishers in the open fields when the troops retired he fought with the Iron Brigade. He was wounded in three places. -- Gettysburg report of Maj. Gen. Doubleday.”

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-- Blake Stilwell can be reached at blake.stilwell@military.com. He can also be found on Twitter @blakestilwell or on Facebook.

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