Battle of the Wilderness • Tour the Battlefield • Monuments & MarkersThe Armies


The Stonewall Jackson’s Arm wayside marker is at Ellwood, the Lacy family home near Tour Stop One on the Wilderness Battlefield Auto Tour. The marker is at the family cemetery about 180 yards south of the house. It is next to the Arm of Stonewall Jackson monument.

Burial Place of Stonewall Jackson's Arm at Ellwood on the Wilderness battlefield

Burial Place of Stonewall Jackson’s Arm at Ellwood on the Wilderness battlefield

Text from the marker:

Stonewall Jackson’s Arm

Here, in the Jones family cemetery, lie the remains of “Stonewall” Jackson’s left arm. The Confederate general lost the limb during the Battle of Chancellorsville, where he was mistakenly shot by his own troops. Surgeons removed the mangled appendage at the Wilderness Tavern field hospital, one-half mile to your left-rear, early May 3, 1863.

Jackson’s chaplain, the Rev. B. Tucker Lacy, visited the hospital later that morning. As he was leaving Jackson’s tent, Lacy saw the general’s amputated arm lying outside the door. He gathered up the bloody limb and carried it across the fields to his brother’s estate, Ellwood, and buried it here in the family cemetery. In 1903, the Rev. James Power Smith erected the small granite marker that stands over the arm. Smith had been on Jackson’s staff during the Civil War and later married Agnes Lacy, the daughter of Ellwood’s owner.

Jackson remained at Wilderness Tavern for just one day. On May 4, 1863, he made the 26-mile journey to Guinea Station (right). He died there six days later.

 “He has lost his left arm; but I have lost my right arm.”

Stonewall Jackson's Arm wayside marker at Ellwood on the Wilderness battlefield

Location of the marker

The cemetery with the monument and marker is about 180 yards south of Ellwood Manor. (38°19’05.3″N 77°43’56.4″W)

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