John Heath
On February 28 1900, the Worthing Gazette announced the death of John Heath, a former officer with the Brighton Borough Police Force. Nothing unusual in that perhaps, but before his twenty-five year career in the force John Heath had led a rather remarkable life.
Claiming he was born in Baltimore (he was actually born in Deptford), twenty-year old John enlisted into the American Navy in 1861 to fight in the Civil War, serving aboard the USS Owasco. He was seriously wounded in Texas the following year and discharged from service, but not letting this hold him back, he re-enlisted under the name Thomas Steward in 1863. By the time he was discharged in 1865, John had received no less than thirteen different bullet wounds during his service in the American Navy. He returned to England and joined the Brighton Borough Police Force in 1869, serving until 1894. His son, also John Heath, was an officer in the same force.
John Heath’s story is one of many brought to light by The Monumental Project, who aim to remember the lives of the British men and women who fought in the American Civil War. The team have uncovered various documents that have revealed John’s journey, including a letter to commend John’s ‘uniform good conduct and correct moral deportment’ from the Chaplain of the Naval Hospital in New York, where he was sent after being injured on the USS Owasco, a document confirming the re-enlistment of Thomas Steward in 1863, the announcement of his death in the Worthing Gazette and a striking photograph of the young John in naval uniform, looking confidently into the camera.