Louis "Lou" Gagliardi / Ash Franzetti / Alex 'Ace' Maddox / Tegan Ainsley / Taryn Amita / Diana / gothickitteh / gothickitty / Lynn Brooks / @acekatt - #T R A M S _ C R O W _ F U N D *buys 12 iPads* "Anyone got $600 they can spare?" *spits on cancer patient*

Oh no! Louis deleted his Twitter account! What's the reason this time?


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You don't negotiate conditions unless you're in a position of power, Louis. The point of you making an account is that it's easier than you tweeting and us screencapping it, it's a mutual benefit.
 
But no giving out the info of those two brothers and a father, that's too much. I wonder if that historian will ever get an answer, or when/if he does how fast he'll see Lou's claim is bullshit.
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Lou might not actually be totally full of shit this time, which comes as a surprise. Sallie the doggo was given to the men of Company I, 11th Pennsylvania, and according to what @Plastic Inevitable dug up, his ancestor Lewis Osterwise (also spelled Osterweis) was indeed in that company, along with a Michael Osterweis (his father according to Find a Grave) and one Solomon Osterweis. According to the records I've found, Lewis enlisted on 20 September 1861 and was wounded in the thigh at the Battle of Fredericksburg in December 1862, complications of which eventually killed him in 1917. He was transferred to the Veteran Reserve Corps in February 1864, which was basically a unit where they put wounded soldiers who could still perform light duty, freeing able-bodied soldiers to serve on the front lines. This suggests that his leg wound was giving him serious trouble, so it's debatable if he did anything important after Fredericksburg. Michael and Solomon, meanwhile, both joined well after Lewis, in September and March of 1864 respectively. Michael mustered in on 22 September and received a medical discharge exactly three months later; since the regiment would have gone into winter quarters by October or November, he likely did nothing of consequence. Solomon, meanwhile, mustered in on 16 March 1864 and mustered out on 1 July 1865, and Lewis had been transferred to the Reserve Corps in February 1864, so the men never actually served together.
 

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Too late. I've got it screenshotted. now if you back on your word, you can't say you're better than me.

so shut down the thread.
Verify it's you. Screencap your post including the edit button and say "this is me" on Twitter.
 
Lou might not actually be totally full of shit this time, which comes as a surprise. Sallie the doggo was given to the men of Company I, 11th Pennsylvania, and according to what @Plastic Inevitable dug up, his ancestor Lewis Osterwise (also spelled Osterweis) was indeed in that company, along with a Michael Osterweis (his father according to Find a Grave) and one Solomon Osterweis. According to the records I've found, Lewis enlisted on 20 September 1861 and was wounded in the thigh at the Battle of Fredericksburg in December 1862, complications of which eventually killed him in 1917. He was transferred to the Veteran Reserve Corps in February 1864, which was basically a unit where they put wounded soldiers who could still perform light duty, freeing able-bodied soldiers to serve on the front lines. This suggests that his leg wound was giving him serious trouble, so it's debatable if he did anything important after Fredericksburg. Michael and Solomon, meanwhile, both joined well after Lewis, in September and March of 1864 respectively. Michael mustered in on 22 September and received a medical discharge exactly three months later; since the regiment would have gone into winter quarters by October or November, he likely did nothing of consequence. Solomon, meanwhile, mustered in on 16 March 1864 and mustered out on 1 July 1865, and Lewis had been transferred to the Reserve Corps in February 1864, so the men never actually served together.
Oh I corrected myself a few weeks ago; he actually DID have at least one ancestor who marched with Sherman.

But he wasn't Jewish.
 
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