BIO: Captain Edward R. Bowen, 114th Pennsylvania Infantry, Graham's Brigade -- Near the Sherfy farm buildings, the exotically-garbed soldiers of the 11rth Pennsylvania, "Collis' Zouaves," met Barksdale's yelling Mississippians head on. But the Zouaves gave way with the rest of the Federal line and the Peach Orchard prominently fell to the Confederates. Per Bowen's report: "Capt. Fix afterwards stated that when we left the Emmittsburg Road, which was covered with our dead and wounded, and where he was laying, a battery of the enemy came thundering along it, and that when the officer (enemy) commanding it saw our dead and wounded on the road, he halted his battery to avoid running over them and his men carefully lifted the dead to one side and carried the wounded into the cellar of a house, supplied them with water, and said they would return and take care of them when they had caught the rest of us. This they had no opportunity to do, for they themselves were driven back! and the house containing our wounded remained within our lines and our men received the care and attention of our own surgeons." Bowen rose to the rank of major before being mustered out of the service in 1865. -- "Excerpt, "Voices of the Civil War," Gettysburg, a Time-Life Book.