News

Tombstone Tales: President Lincoln’s bodyguard in Asheville

Tombstone Tales: President Lincoln’s bodyguard in Asheville

The grave of Capt. James H. Posey is seen at Riverside Cemetery in Asheville, N.C. Posey died February 13, 1917, and served as a Union officer. Photo: Contributed/Shannon Ballard


Editor’s Note: Western North Carolina is rich with untold stories—many resting quietly in local cemeteries. In this Tombstone Tales series, we explore the lives of people from our region’s past whose legacies, whether widely known or nearly forgotten, helped shape the place we call home.


ASHEVILLE, N.C. (828newsNOW) – The headstone is easy to miss.

Set back from the more traveled paths in Riverside Cemetery, it is a simple government marker with just a few lines: Capt. James H. Posey. Co. D. 6th West Virginia Regiment. The marker incorrectly notes his year of birth as 1830. Posey was born in Maryland in 1832.

By the time he died in 1917, James H. Posey was one of the most recognizable figures in Asheville.

The 84-year-old widower moved to Asheville for his health around 1907. He was often seen downtown, sometimes seated outside the fire station, watching the day pass. He lived for a time in the library building and was not shy about telling one particular part of his story.

He said he had once served as a personal bodyguard to President Abraham Lincoln.

Posey was known as a deeply religious man. He spent his later years handing out printed cards with Bible verses and a direct message printed across them: “Do Not Swear.”

He believed just as strongly in simple remedies. Olive oil, he said, could cure most ailments. It was a belief he lived by and loved to talk about.

There was something different about him, but people respected him. He was a Civil War veteran, a captain by rank, and he carried a unique story that made it easier for people to ignore his rants about olive oil and not swearing.

Then came the accident.

In February 1917, at the intersection of Patton and Lexington avenues, Posey was struck in the street by a wagon. He died February 13 at Mission Hospital.

There is a certain weight to that ending. A man who survived the Civil War, who claimed to have served the president during the darkest years in American history, was lost not in battle, but on a city street he walked every day.

The Asheville Times described him as one of the city’s best-known characters, a man whose presence had become part of the rhythm of downtown life. He had friends, a familiar routine, and a place in the city.

His obituary did more than mark his passing. It preserved Posey’s story of a connection to President Lincoln.

Whether every detail of that claim can be confirmed in surviving federal records is still an open question. But in Asheville, it was something people heard directly from Posey, and it was part of how he was remembered.

The man who said he once stood watch over Abraham Lincoln.


Recent Headlines

2 days ago in Entertainment

Tom Holland says new ‘Spider-Man’ is the most emotional, most mature, yet

Tom Holland's Peter Parker is dealing with the reality of making his friends forget his identity in the upcoming "Spider-Man" movie.

3 days ago in Entertainment

Hollywood heavyweights voice ‘unequivocal opposition’ to Paramount-Warner merger in open letter

More than a thousand movie stars, writers, directors and other Hollywood professionals announced their "unequivocal opposition" to the proposed Paramount merger with Warner Bros. Discovery in an open letter published Monday.

3 days ago in Entertainment

Kim Kardashian makes her Broadway producing debut with the criminal justice play ‘The Fear of 13’

Kim Kardashian is adding to her resume the title of Broadway producer. The reality TV star and entrepreneur has signed on to help produce the play "The Fear of 13," about the true story of Nick Yarris, a man who spent more than two decades on death row for a murder he insists he did not commit.

3 days ago in Sports, Trending

Rory McIlroy goes back-to-back at the Masters to join Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tiger Woods

Rory McIlroy is the Masters champion again, this time without falling to his knees on the 18th green and sobbing over finally achieving his lifelong dream.

3 days ago in Music, Lifestyle

It’s music festival season. How to stay safe and healthy while enjoying the show

Music festival season has arrived: a time to gather outside with friends, listening to tunes, dancing, and maybe even getting the chance to rub shoulders with musicians you love.