Battle of South Mountain • Turner’s Gap • Fox’s Gap • Crampton’s Gap


The Burial: A Most Disagreeable Task wayside marker is the third from the left of a set of six on the south side of Gapland Road at Crampon’s Gap on the South Mountain battlefield. (map) The area is part of Gathland State Park.

Burial: A Most Disagreeable Task wayside marker at Crampton's Gap on the South Mountain battlefield

From the marker:

Burial: A Most Disagreeable Task 

The treatment of soldiers killed in action depended on which army held the battlefield after the guns fell silent. At South Mountain a few men from each Union regiment were assigned to burial details. To prevent the spread of disease, they lined up the dead where they fell and hurriedly buried them in shallow trenches. Under the best of circumstances it was not pleasant duty. The burial details processed their own dead first, often identifying the bodies by notes pinned to the dead soldiers’ uniforms. The Confederates who died at South Mountain were less fortunate. Most lost their identity at burial. Their last memorial was usually a simple inscription on a crude, wooden headboard they read “100 dead Rebs buried here.”

Some Union families personally retrieved the bodies of their loved ones for reburial after the battle. Most of the Union dead, however, remained buried on the battlefield until 1867, when the War Department reinterred them in the Antietam National Cemetery. The National Cemetery trustees refused to accept the Confederate dead, so the State of Maryland provided a permanent burial ground at the Rose Hill Cemetery in Hagerstown. The South Mountain Confederate dead were laid to rest at Rose Hill Cemetery in 1874.

From the caption to the drawing on the right:

The Union dead at south Mountain were disinterred for reburial at Antietam.

From the caption to the drawing at the bottom left:

This is a burial detail at Antietam. The dead of Cobb’s Legion were buried in shallow trenches at Padgett’s Field and at the eastern foot of Crampton’s Gap.

These exhibits were designed and fabricated by Sunsyne Products, Incorporated, Johnson City, Tennessee

Set of six wayside markers at Crampton's Gap on the Battle of South Mountain