In 1869, Governor
Oden Bowie, of
Maryland, requested that the state should take care of the Confederate dead from the battlefields of western Maryland. Wind, water, and animals had exposed the dead, hurriedly buried in shallow graves. Governor Bowie requested that Thomas Boullt of Hagerstown, Maryland, one of the Trustees for Maryland in the Antietam Cemetery, employ men to find and identify the Confederate dead buried in
Washington and
Frederick counties. Moses Poffinberger and Aaron Good of Sharpsburg identified
ad hoc burial sites from throughout the western part of the state, primarily from the battlefields at
Antietam,
Monocacy and
South Mountain, but also from skirmishes and from
Robert E. Lee's retreat from
Gettysburg. In 1871 the
Maryland General Assembly bought land in Hagerstown, Maryland, from the newly established (1865) Rose Hill Cemetery. With this land, the Assembly created the Washington Confederate Cemetery as part of the larger public cemetery. The States of Maryland,
Virginia and
West Virginia removed more than 2,000 dead from battlefield and skirmish sites and reburied them in the cemetery. In the course of removal and reburial, only 346 soldiers were identified. One of the identified dead,
Isaac E. Avery, died in action on July 2, 1863, at the
Battle of Gettysburg. On that evening, his brigade stormed
Cemetery Hill, trying to dislodge the Union forces. Halfway up the hill, he was hit in the throat by a musket ball. Mortally wounded, he fell from his horse. He scrawled his final words on a piece of paper: "Tell my father I died with my face to the enemy." Avery's body was carried as far as Williamsport, Maryland and buried there, but moved to the Washington Confederate Cemetery. A plaque was placed in the cemetery for him in 2007. ==Monument==