PARK AND CEMETERY. 
V 
A War-Time Memory 
I T was in 1862 that Major Peter Keenan made his last charge. Under him were 
500 Pennsylvania cavalrymen — on the Confederate side were 25,000 veterans led 
by “Stonewall” Jackson. In the face of such odds Keenan could look forward to 
little else than defeat. Yet he ordered an advance, and his troops responded to the 
call. The records show that hardly a Union man came out of that battle alive. 
The story of their heroic defeat has now been written in enduring marble. 
Whatever may happen to other records, the KEENAN MEMORIAL is sure to carry 
its message down into the future. It should be noted that this shaft is nearly thirty 
feet high. It was formed out of PITTSFORD VALLEY MARBLE for 
Peck Brothers, Wellsville, N. Y. 
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