In a Kentucky newspaper, the Lebanon Enterprise, of Friday, June 16, 1905, this article was published. "Now that the people are looking forward to the great Confederate reunion at Louisville, there is a great deal of talk among old soldiers about the things that happened in the sixties, says the Elizabethtown News. In a conversation with a group of them Monday we learned that the youngest soldier in the famous Orphan Brigade was Mr. Henry Harned, living at Boston and well known to most our people. He enlisted in 1861 at the age of 16 and was one of the bravest and best soldiers in this remarkable brigade. he was in every battle with this incomparable command and stood where shot and shell frequently mowed down his comrades in great numbers, yet never got a scratch during the entire war. Ed Porter Thompson in his history of the brigade, speaks of him by name as one of the very bravest and best soldiers and as there was another Henry Harned, he was known throughout the brigade as "Little Henry". There were six Harneds in the Confederate army. Four of them were killed in battle, one lost an arm. He will attend the reunion In Louisville and expects to meet a number of his old comrades." Henry Sprigg Harned, son of Henry Harned II and Charlotte Johnson, was born on Novemeber 9th, 1843, at Boston, Kentucky. he was five feet eight inches tall with blue eyes and dark hair. At eighteen, he enlisted on October 10, 1861, in Company H. 6th Regiment of the Kentucky Mounted Infantry in the Confederate Army at Bowling Green, KY. "Little Henry" fought at Shiloh, Vicksburg, Baton Rouge, Stone River, Jackson, Chickamauga, Rocky Face Ridge, Resaca, and Dallas... He lost three brothers in the conflict: 2nd Sgt. William Harned at Murpheesboro, John at Corinth, Miss, and 1st Lieut. Frank at Intrenchment Creek.