- Felix M. Witkoski
Felix M. Witkoski (
January 5 ,1850 ?-February 3 ,1952 ) is a spurious candidate for the last surviving Confederate Veteran. He claimed that in 1862 he was turned back as too young by a Texas regiment, but walked toMontgomery, Alabama and successfully enlisted as a water boy in the 53rd Alabama Infantry. He was supposedly wounded in his stomach in theBattle of Atlanta and fought through the rest of the war. It is possible he went to theKlondike in search of gold in 1897, although this was only a story he told in later life. Around that time he moved to California, at first toOakland , thenSan Francisco , and laterGlendale . A chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy presented Witkoski with a Southern Cross of Honor in 1943. He was afflicted with heart disease for the last four years of his life. He died onFebruary 3 ,1952 , inBurbank, California . He is buried with full military honors in anInglewood, California cemetery.However, the 1870 census of Texas indicates that his six-year-old brother was born in Poland, which precludes the family emigrating to the US before 1864. The 1900 census of California documents Witkoski's birth as October 1854, rather than 1850, and indicates that he came to the US in 1864. There is no evidence to document his service, and his subsequent, arbitrary backdating of his birth fits the mold of deliberate fabrication.
ee also
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Last surviving United States war veterans References
*Hoar, Jay S. (1976), "The South's Last Boys in Gray: An Epic Prose Elegy", Bowling Green State University Popular Press, pp. 470-471
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