<P> Wade, her mother, and two younger brothers left their home in central Gettysburg and traveled to the house of her sister, Georgia Anna Wade McClellan at 528 Baltimore Street to assist her and her newborn child . It was July 1, 1863, during the first day's fighting of the Battle of Gettysburg . More than 150 bullets hit the McClellan house during the fighting . </P> <P> About 8: 00 a.m. on July 3, Wade was kneading dough for bread when a Minié ball traveled through the kitchen door and the parlor door of her sister's house and hit her . It pierced her left shoulder blade, went through her heart, and ended up in her corset . She was killed instantly . While it is uncertain which side fired the fatal shot, some authors have attributed it to an unknown Confederate sharpshooter . </P> <P> Wade's mother heard her fall to the floor and went to tell her sister Georgia in the other room that her sister had been shot dead; two union soldiers came from upstairs when they heard the screams of the women . They temporarily buried Wade's body in the back yard of the McClellan house, in a coffin originally intended for a Confederate officer . In January 1864, her body was relocated to the cemetery of the German Reformed Church on Stratton Street . Her final resting place is in the Evergreen cemetery in Gettysburg . On July 4, her mother baked 15 loaves of bread with the dough Wade had kneaded . </P> <P> In 1882, the United States Senate voted to grant Wade's mother a pension, citing that her daughter had been killed serving the Union cause--baking bread for the soldiers . </P>

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