Owen Thomas Edgar
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Owen Thomas Edgar (June 17, 1831 – September 3, 1929) was, according to data from the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, the longest surviving U.S. veteran of the Mexican–American War.


Biography

He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He enlisted in the United States Navy as a 2nd-class apprentice on February 10, 1846, and was discharged as an Apprentice First Class on August 8, 1849. Edgar saw service on the frigates ''Potomac'', ''Allegheny'', ''Pennsylvania'' and ''Experience''. After the war, he worked at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for twenty-one years, then worked at a bank for another thirty-one years. He spent his final ten years living at the John Dickson Home in Washington, D.C. He became the last surviving American veteran of the Mexican-American War on June 17, 1929 when fellow war veteran William Buckner died at the age of 101 in Paris, Missouri.


Death and interment

Edgar died September 3, 1929, at the age of 98 after suffering a fall from a chair that fractured his leg, and was buried in Washington's Congressional Cemetery."Edgar, Owen Thomas," in "Deaths," ''The Evening Star'', p. 9.


Gallery

File:Owen Thomas Edgar Congressional Cemetery.jpg, Headstone of Owen Thomas Edgar, Congressional Cemetery


References


External links


Owen Thomas Edgar
{{DEFAULTSORT:Edgar, Owen Thomas 1831 births 1929 deaths United States Navy personnel of the Mexican–American War Military personnel from Philadelphia United States Navy sailors Accidental deaths from falls Burials at the Congressional Cemetery