Washington County has a rich Civil War history. With Antietam National Battlefield, South Mountain Battlefield State Park, Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, and other sites within the county, there is no shortage of stories to tell. Near such prominent historical sites in the area, Hagerstown is often overlooked when the story of Washington County in the Civil War is considered, yet a myriad of human dramas occurred in “the Hub City” in the years leading up to, during, and after the war that forever impacted the participants and left their marks on the community.
Originally named Elizabeth Town after the wife of its founder, Hagerstown was officially established in 1762 by Jonathan Hager. But a settlement had been located on the site as far back as the 1730s. When Washington County was formed from Frederick County in 1776, it consisted of all of Maryland west of South Mountain and Hager’s Town was selected as the county seat. The vastness of the county lasted until 1789, when Allegany County was formed. The community officially adopted its current name of Hagerstown after the War of 1812.
The population of Hagerstown at the outset of the Civil War was approximately 4,500 people. Of these, 494 were “free persons of color,” 31 of whom were property owners. Due to its predominantly German heritage and the nature of agriculture in the region, Washington County had relatively few slaves compared to other parts of Maryland. The number of slaves in the city is estimated at a few hundred. Regardless of the general objection to and minimal need for slave labor, the community turned out in the presidential election of 1860 to support the Southern Democrat John C. Breckinridge and the Constitutional Union Party candidate John Bell. Republican Abraham Lincoln and Northern Democrat Stephen Douglas received a small percentage of the vote.
At this time, Hagerstown was served by the Franklin Railroad that connected the city to points north, a telegraph, several banks, and a thriving local economic base centered on the agricultural community and manufacturing. The proximity of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal also helped the economy. A college for women, public and private schools, a lyceum (debating and performance hall), and other institutions formed a cultural base in the community. Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran, Methodist, Presbyterian, German Reformed, and two African-American churches provided spiritual homes to area Christians. Hagerstown was home to a small but integrated Jewish community as well.
The results of the election showed Hagerstown to be a community in favor of maintaining the Union, while also respecting the constitutional protection of slavery. There appeared to be little appetite for the Republican platform of preventing the spread of slavery into the territories. But once the first guns were fired on Fort Sumter, battle lines were drawn in Hagerstown, with most citizens favoring the preservation of the Union over all other considerations.
A small but vocal pro-Southern element existed in the community. A local doctor, lawyer, and newspaper editor were caught up in the Lincoln administration’s roundup of influential pro-Southern Marylanders and were held in military prisons for over a year. When Confederates marched through Hagerstown in 1862, 1863, and 1864, they were met with slightly warmer receptions than the icy stares they received when they marched through Frederick and Middletown. Yet one rebel lamented that if the attitude of the people in this part of Maryland was any indication of the sentiment of all Marylanders, the Confederacy could forget the Old Line State ever joining its cause. Nonetheless a number of Hagerstonians “went South,” and some achieved prominent positions in the Confederate military.
After the war, the community had a mixture of former Union veterans and sympathizers interspersed cooperatively with a smaller cadre of former Confederates and Southern sympathizers. This is the citizenry that led Hagerstown through its heyday from 1880 to 1920 and forms the nucleus around which the modern city is built.
This work was inspired by Hagerstown’s recent development of four dozen Civil War trail markers, which are located throughout the city. This book is built upon the collection of images that was compiled for that project. It is our hope that you find inspiration from this work to visit our historic areas and learn more of the stories of Hagerstonians and the city itself during the Civil War.
—Stephen R. Bockmiller
City of Hagerstown
1861
John Cook, mayor
City Council
Lewis Wilhide, Ward 1
George H. L. Chrissinger, Ward 2
Charles H. Henson, Ward 3
Richard Sheckels, Ward 4
Ephriam W. Funk, Ward 5
William M. Tice, city clerk
Andrew K. Syester, city attorney
City of Hagerstown
2011
Robert E. Bruchey, II, mayor
City Council (elected at large)
William M. Breichner
Martin E. Brubaker
Forrest Easton
Ashley C. Haywood
Lewis C. Metzner
Donna K. Spickler, city clerk
Bruce J. Zimmerman, city administrator
John H. Urner, LLC and Nairn and Boyer, LLC,
city attorneys