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Richard Welling Burt was born April 23, 1823 in Warwick, Orange 
County, New York. His parents were Foght and Elizabeth (Welling) Burt, 
both of the Empire State. 
Foght, a hatter by trade, remained a resident of New York until
1834. He then removed with his family to Ohio where he changed his
occupation and turned to farming, settling in Coshocton County. The family
consisted of three children R.W., Thomas H. and Josephine. 
  Richard grew 
up on the farm and obtained a practical education in the common school. 
During the Mexican War Burt served as a private for one year in Company B, 
Third Ohio Infantry. Returning home, he married Malona Evans in 1848. He 
interested himself in farming pursuits and in keeping abreast of the times by 
a course of reading and indulging his taste for good books and periodicals. 
Especially interested in newspaper work, Burt finally purchased and became 
editor of the Progressive Age, at Coshocton, in 1853. At the end of 
three years he sold the paper and embarked in the coal and grocery trade in 
Newark, Ohio. 
  With the 
outbreak of the Civil War, Burt watched the conflict a few months and then 
decided that he must have a hand in the preservation of the Union. He 
accordingly enlisted December 3, 1861, in Company G, Seventy-sixth Ohio 
Infantry. Upon the organization of the regiment he was elected Second 
Lieutenant. He went with his company to the seat of war and after the battle 
of Arkansas Post, was promoted to a First Lieutenancy. At the expiration of 
the first term of enlistment, Lieut. Burt re-entered the ranks in March, 1864 
as Captain of Company H, 76th Ohio Infantry, which he commanded until the close 
of the war and was mustered out July 15, 1865. 
  He participated 
in about thirty battles and skirmishes, including Ft. Donelson, Shiloh, 
Milliken's Bend, Chickasaw Bayou, Arkansas Post, Vicksburg, Jackson, Mission 
Ridge, Lookout Mountain, Ringgold, Resaca, the Atlanta Campaign and Jonesboro. 
He went with Sherman on the march to the sea and then returned up through 
the Carolinas to Washington where he was present for the Grand Review. 
At the battle of Resaca, Georgia, Burt received a gunshot wound to the 
mouth and lost most of his teeth. He had the presence of mind to save the 
missle as a momento. He was also badly wounded at Jonesboro. 
  Burt was a poet 
of no mean talent and wrote many war songs. A number of these were published 
and sold very well in the army. The songs included, Sherman and the Boys in 
Blue, Jeff. Davis In Petticoats, General Logan and the Fifteenth 
Army Corps and various others which served to while away many a tedious 
hour in camp and on the march. With previous newspaper experience, Burt also 
served as the regimental correspondent for the Newark True American 
throughout the war. 
  Upon leaving 
the service Burt established himself in the grocery business at Peoria, 
Illinois. He gradually became interested in the manufacture of soap and 
commenced in a modest manner. The business thrived and he formed R.W. Burt & 
Co., marketing soap throughout the United States. His family thrived also. The 
family included his wife Malona and four children whose names were, Oliver, 
Evelyn, Isaac and Lulu. Mrs. Malona Burt departed life at her home in Peoria, 
January 1, 1873. In 1876 Burt married Miss Betsy Cotton. At the death of his 
second wife, in 1891, he took up his residence with his daughter, Mrs. Evelyn 
Starr, and continued a member of that household until his death. 
  Burt politically 
was a sound Republican and religiously, a Universalist. He was Past Commander 
of Bryner Post 67, G.A.R. Department of Illinois and a member of The Society of 
The Army of the Tennessee. He also was a member of the Masonic fraternity. 1906 
found Burt publishing his lifelong collection of poems. He dedicated War 
Songs Poems and Odes to his comrades of the Mexican and Civil Wars, 
relatives and friends. 
  Upon his sudden 
death, at the age of 89 on July 8, 1911, a news release paying homage to him 
stated; "The Flag on the government building flies at half mast in his honor, 
a tribute that is peculiarly fitting to a man who loved his country with 
exhalted fervor and twice offered his life for its defense." 
 
Sources:
  History of Peoria Co., Johnson & Co., 1880, Chicago.
 Portrait & Biographical Album Of Peoria Co., Illinois, Biographical 
Publishing Co., 1890, Chicago.
 Coshocton Age, Coshocton, Ohio, July, 1911.
 War Songs Poems and Odes, Captain Richard W. Burt, J.W. Franks & Sons, 
1906, Peoria, Ill.
 
 
 
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