After the war, she married a Civil War veteran named Richard Leonard; her previous husband had died at Gettysburg. The death of Bernard is in dispute as military records report that he survived the war and mustered out with his company in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1864. Certain records report that the two met during the
Petersburg Campaign and married in
Culpeper, Virginia. She and Leonard divorced in March 1897, with Tepe citing "general abuse" as the cause of the split. Tepe was awarded the
Kearny Cross for her courageous service at Chancellorsville. In 1898, a newspaper reported that Tepe attempted to receive pension for her military service, yet no records indicate that she received this pension. As a result, she became destitute later in life, developing rheumatism and still suffering from her ankle injury incurred during the war. She committed suicide May 24, 1901 by drinking a lethal dose of "
Paris Green," a kind of paint pigment. == References ==