Seven Continents: The Year of 2025 in Review

“The Blue Marble” (Earth, photographed by Apollo 17 astronauts, December 7, 1972; NASA, public domain).

Another year almost gone. More milestones achieved for a personal research project that has grown into a multi-faceted, educational outreach program with connections on all seven continents of our planet.

Seven out of seven continents.

That statistic is the one that astonishes me most of all as I sit here compiling our annual Year in Review report for 2025. 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment’s Story is truly now a global community of lifelong learners.

Children and adults are engaged, at the moment I write this, in a quest to understand what it actually meant to be a member of the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry during the American Civil War. As they do so, they are learning that the light of hope persists even when the world is filled with darkness.

Key Project Statistics (as of 6 p.m. Pacific Time on December 31, 2025):

  • First Content Posted to Website: May 25, 2014
  • Total Website Page Views to Date: 967,350
  • Total Number of Website Visitors to Date: 767,532
  • Total Number of Facebook Followers: 2,213
  • Total Number of Instagram Followers: 1,160
  • Total Number of 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Gravesites Documented Via the Project’s Virtual Cemetery: 1,446
  • Total Number of Individual Officers and Enlisted Men Profiled to Date: 345
  • Most Popular Post in 2025: Finding Your 47th Pennsylvanian: Use “Bates’ History” — But With Caution

Why Is There So Much Interest, Globally, in a Single, Seemingly “Obscure” Civil War Regiment from Pennsylvania?

The light and dark blue areas of this map show the reach of 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment’s Story as of December 31, 2025 (image courtesy of Snyder Family Archives).

What started as a personal research interest of one descendant of a 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantryman soon became the research focus of a half dozen descendants of 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers — and then dozens more as the website and social media sites for 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment’s Story launched and gradually attracted followers, including family historians, Civil War enthusiasts, history professors, and students in high schools and universities across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania — and beyond.

In 2020, the project’s audience grew substantially as teachers and students turned to distance learning and the “47th Pennsylvania Volunteers’ Project” as a way to keep minds sharp during the COVID pandemic that prompted the closure of schools and businesses worldwide. It was that year that educators from India residing in the United States and teachers across India found our website and began helping their students better understand the history of the United States by encouraging them to “see” the American Civil War “through the eyes of” the soldiers and families whose biographies were available on our website.

As more people heard about our website, supporters of our work began donating photographs of young soldiers in uniform and letters penned by 47th Pennsylvanians stationed far from home — each artifact a “log on the fire” of expansion — growth that continued even as in-person instruction returned to classrooms across the globe. Since that time, Pennsylvanians have been reading and learning from the same content as students in:

  • Amsterdam (the Netherlands)
  • Bangkok (Thailand)
  • Barcelona, Madrid and Zaragoza (Spain)
  • Bengaluru and Mumbai (India)
  • Brussels (Belgium)
  • Bogota (Columbia)
  • Dubai (the United Arab Emirates)
  • Dhaka (Bangladesh)
  • Dublin (Ireland)
  • Falkenstein, Bielefeld, Frankfurt, and Koeln (Germany)
  • Glasgow (Scotland)
  • Helsinki (Finland)
  • Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam)
  • Hrebinka (Ukraine)
  • Istanbul (Türkiye)
  • Jakarta (Indonesia)
  • Lagos (Nigeria)
  • Lima (Peru)
  • London, Durham, Leeds, and Manchester (Great Britain)
  • Luleå (Sweden)
  • Manama (Bahrain)
  • Manila (the Philippines)
  • Melbourne and Sydney (Australia)
  • Montreal, Courtenay, Edmonton, Ottawa, Saskatoon, Toronto, and Vancouver (Canada)
  • Nairobi (Kenya)
  • Santiago (Chile)
  • São Paulo (Brazil)
  • Seongnam and Seoul (South Korea)
  • Warsaw and Witkowo (Poland)
  • Singapore (Republic of Singapore)
  • Tokyo and Kumamoto (Japan)
  • Vientiane (Laos)
  • Xiamen, Beijing, Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Zhengzhou (China), and
  • Christchurch (New Zealand).

We now even have contacts at McMurdo Station in Antarctica! (Not a bad way to close the book on a challenging and often heartbreaking year.)

A Resolution for 2026

The 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers fought long and hard to help end a devastating civil war, eradicate the shameful practice of slavery and rebuild their shattered nation, and for those reasons alone, should be remembered for their service to the nation.

But perhaps the most important part of their collective story is that soldiers who somehow managed to survive unimaginable horrors never gave up trying to make their world a better one.

And neither should we.

My hope for 2026 is that more individuals in our world will “see wrong and try to right it” while also doing what is humanly possible to heal suffering in ways that “send forth ripples of hope and change.”

Happy New Year!

 

A New Year and Our Second Decade of Storytelling

“New Year’s” (Thomas Nast, Harper’s Weekly, 8 January 1881, public domain).

Out with the old and in with the … old? Such are the lives of researchers and students of the American Civil War and Reconstruction eras as we move forward from 2024 into the New Year of 2025.

Unlike millions of other human beings across our pale blue dot (as Carl Sagan called our planet), we will continue to spend a significant portion of our lives looking back as 2025 progresses. We will do so not because we are backward in our ways of thinking, however, but because we’re hoping to better understand how our nation and world came to be what it is at present — as we also try to answer questions about our respective ancestors and the roles they played in shaping how we became who we are as individuals today.

My promise, as the founder and managing editor of 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment’s Story, is that our travels back in time, during what is now our second decade of operation, will continue to include adventures filled with fascinating twists and turns that will sometimes be sad, but more often than not, will be informative and positively energizing.

Our 2025 education program objectives are much the same as they’ve always been — to hunt for data that sheds light on the lives of the men who served with the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, to learn more about their immediate families and descendants, to find records, photographs and other memorabilia that will corroborate the data we uncover, to use those details, documents, photographs, and memorabilia to tell the stories of those men and their families as accurately and thoroughly as we possibly can, and to motivate learners of all ages across Pennsylvania, the United States and the world to study the history of this regiment and appreciate the impact that its members made, as individuals, on their communities, our nation and our beloved “pale blue dot.”

Welcome to 2025! Let the time travels begin!!

 

A Decade and a Year in Review

Detail from stationery used in a letter by a 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer to his parents (1862, public domain).

When I launched the website for 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment’s Story in 2014, my goal was simple — to create an online space that could function as a basic “placeholder” for the research that I had been conducting, for years, about the life of my great-grandfather, Timothy M. Snyder, who had served with the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry during the American Civil War.

I was simply trying to understand why Tim Snyder had continued to serve with his regiment for such a long period of time (from mid-August 1861 through early January 1866), despite having completed his initial, three-year term of enlistment and despite his having been wounded twice in battle.

Along the way, I began uncovering details about another man — Henry D. Wharton. It seemed, from letters that Henry had written to my great-grandfather’s hometown newspaper, that he had not only served beside Tim Snyder on battlefields far from home, but that he might actually have been Tim’s neighbor or friend — or possibly even his cousin.

So, I began searching Civil War-era newspaper collections for more of Henry Wharton’s letters in the hope of finding more information about my great-grandfather, but what I found was so much more — accounts of battles so poetic, so lyrical, that I felt that Henry might have become a friend of mine, had we lived in the same town, during the same decades.

I needed to know what happened to Henry. Did he survive? Did he make it home? What was his life like before the war? How did he become such a gifted writer? As I learned more about him, I realized that, yes, he did survive, and, yes, he did marry — but he never had children. (“So there’s no one left to tell his story.”)

It was that single thought that inspired me to research and write a biography about Henry Wharton, and it was that biography that prompted me, in turn, to create 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers: One Civil War Regiment’s Story.

I could not have imagined back then that my research would attract the attention of descendants of other men who had also served with the 47th Pennsylvania, nor that my research findings would be of help to other academic and public historians and educators in K-12 school systems, colleges and universities, historical societies, public libraries, and museums across the United States.

Nor could I have anticipated the extraordinary generosity of the volunteers who have trekked over hill and dale through cemeteries, in all kinds of weather, to photograph the graves of 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantrymen, or have ventured to far-flung flea markets and archives of small-town historical societies (or into the dusty, spider-friendly attics of grandparents — “Eek!”) in search of military records, photos and other memorabilia to help me create accurate biographies of their 47th Pennsylvania ancestors.

And I certainly could not have conceived of any future in which my audience would become a global one, with readers of my posts about the regiment’s activities and biographies of individual soldiers transformed into avid fans of the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantrymen who helped to preserve a nation’s Union and end the brutal practice of chattel slavery, wherever they encountered it, whenever they had the power to do so.

But each of those scenarios did come to pass, fueled largely by word of mouth. As my research findings grew, transforming a “placeholder website” into an educational outreach initiative, WordPress and other technology tools documented the history of “The 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers’ Project,” enabling me to provide this helpful snapshot of success for you.

Key Project Statistics (as of 2 p.m. on December 31, 2024):

  • First Content Posted to Website: May 25, 2014
  • Total Website Page Views to Date: 892,101
  • Total Number of Website Visitors to Date: 745,686
  • Total Number of 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Gravesites Documented via the Project’s Virtual Cemetery to Date: 1,448
  • Total Number of Individual Officers, Enlisted Men and Regimental Support Personnel Profiled to Date: 302

I am profoundly grateful to my great-grandfather. He bequeathed the gift of all gifts to each of his descendants and to history lovers everywhere — breadcrumbs scattered, with and without thought, along the path of his life’s journey, never dreaming that his “factcrumbs” would be found, analyzed, layered and baked into satisfying, lifelong “brainfood” for present-day and future students of history.

I am also grateful to Henry Wharton for his presence of mind to faithfully chronicle the activities of the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry in ways that made readers want to learn more about so many of the regiment’s individual members and their families.

As I close out both 2024 and the first decade of operations for “the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteers’ Project,” I thank you, dear reader, for joining me on this journey and ask to you to stay engaged with the content on this website, its related social media accounts and our companion website, Freedmen of the 47th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, because there are more than a thousand soldiers’ stories that are still waiting to be uncovered and told.

May your New Year be filled with laughter, love and light!