108:. He was later relocated to the Meadow Bank Farm, owned by a friend of the Meade family, where he remained for several years. He was moderately active in retirement and Meade rode the horse in several memorial parades. His last parade was as the "riderless horse" in the funeral procession of his master, in November 1872. Baldy lived another 10 years. He was euthanized on December 16, 1882, at the age of 30, when he became too feeble to stand. On Christmas Day of that year, two Union Army veterans (Albert C. Johnston and H.W.B. Harvey) disinterred Baldy's remains and decapitated him, sending the head to a taxidermist.
84:, on July 2, 1863, Baldy was hit by a bullet that entered his stomach after passing through Meade's right trouser leg. He staggered and refused to move forward, defying all of Meade's directions. Meade commented, "Baldy is done for this time. This is the first time he has refused to go forward under fire." Baldy was sent to the rear for recuperation. In 1864, having returned to duty for the
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Despite Baldy's unusual, uncomfortable pace, Meade became quite devoted to him and rode him in all of his battles through 1862 and the spring of 1863. The horse was wounded in the right hind leg at the
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December 2009 to return Old Baldy to the GAR museum on Griscom Street. Ceremonies marking the resumption of public display of Old Baldy at the museum were conducted on September 26, 2010.
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64:, where he was struck in the nose by a piece of an artillery shell. Soon after, in September 1861, he was purchased from the government by Meade in
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128:. The latter museum closed in August 2008, pending a relocation, and most of its artifacts were distributed to other museums, including the
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Baldy was born and raised on the western frontier and at the start of the Civil War was owned by Maj. Gen.
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Library in Philadelphia. In 1979, his head was loaned to the Old Baldy
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and then to the farm of Meade's staff quartermaster, Captain Sam
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Baldy's head was mounted on a plaque in a glass case and displayed in the
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Kaufman, Herb. "Old Baldy's Head Is
Featured in Museum's Meade Exhibit."
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207:. Gettysburg, PA: Farnsworth House Military Impressions, 1995.
30:(ca. 1852 – December 16, 1882) was the horse ridden by
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68:, for $ 150 and named Baldy because of his white face.
188:"Old Baldy to return to Frankford Civil War museum."
205:Traveller & Company, The Horses of Gettysburg
236:Grand Army of the Republic Museum and Library
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44:and in many other important battles of the
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52:Early life and Civil War service
231:Old Baldy Civil War Round Table
16:Horse in the American Civil War
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219:General Meade Society website
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118:Grand Army of the Republic
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74:Second Battle of Bull Run
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191:Philadelphia Inquirer
122:Civil War Round Table
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251:Individual warhorses
96:Retirement and death
42:Battle of Gettysburg
90:Siege of Petersburg
261:1882 animal deaths
256:1852 animal births
186:Colimore, Edward.
46:American Civil War
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203:Magner, Blake A.
86:Overland Campaign
23:Old Baldy in 1863
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140:See also
88:and the
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32:Union
209:ISBN
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