Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Edwin Coe had a premonition and was killed the next day at Petersburg. The Massachusetts officer's sword somehow got to Hawaii. So many questions remain

The Coe sword was briefly placed near his headstone in 2014 (Petersburg National Battlefield)
How 2nd Lt. Edwin I. Coe’s sword ended up at a jewelry store in Honolulu remains a mystery more than a decade after it was subsequently purchased by Petersburg National Battlefield, which has occasionally shown it to the public.

Paul Perrone, a researcher in the Hawaii attorney general’s office, told the Picket in 2015 he was shopping for a wedding ring for his fiancĂ©e – now his wife – when he came across the weapon, which had an inscription bearing Coe’s name and indicating it was presented “by his friends in Worcester, Mass.”

Coe, a 19-year-old acting adjutant for the 57th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, died 162 years ago Wednesday – June 17, 1864, during an assault on Confederate positions at the Virginia battlefield. Coe (below) had a vivid dream the night before, and he told comrades it meant he would fall.

An online version of the unit’s history led to the soldier’s photograph and biography. There was now a human connection to this well-crafted piece of steel. Perrone decided to broker a sale between the business and the national park in 2014.

After the blade was shipped to Petersburg, two park employees drove it to where elements of the 9th Corps made the June 17, 1864, assault, about 200 yards behind park headquarters on the eastern section of the battlefield, near the Army’s current Fort Lee. They also stopped by Poplar Grove National Cemetery, where Coe lies.

“Since 2015, the sword has had brief periods of exhibition primarily in pop-up presentations with the anniversary of the Initial Assaults (June 15-18, 1864),” Emmanuel Dabney, chief of resource management at Petersburg, told the Picket this week.

“We've been clear that we are unaware how the sword got to Hawaii, but we've been grateful that we have the sword and are honored to serve as the stewards of it and Lt. Coe's remains at Poplar Grove National Cemetery.” 

Many mysteries remain: Was Coe carrying the sword when he died? How did it end up in Hawaii? Who were his friends in Worcester, Mass., that gave him the sword?

Perrone and Dabney indicated they have learned nothing new on the matter since 2015.

“I think barring some piece of Coe family letters or an observer in the 57th Mass, we're in the dark on this one,” wrote Dabney.

Sword and scabbard before they were sent to Petersburg (Paul Perrone)

Hawaii has a lot of ties to military history

The sword came to the Pacific Diamond and Swiss Watch Exchange in Honolulu in 2012. Owner Ted Gonzalez bought it from an estate dealer.

“I thought it was unusual just because I’ve never bought one before. I decided to buy it and I decided to keep it,” Gonzalez told TV station KITV.

(Photos courtesy Paul Perrone)
Perrone took an interest and began his research on the Ames Model 1850 foot officer’s sword. The frosted blade contains patriotic motifs -- eagles, cannon, olive branches and arrows -- and was obviously manufactured and decorated with care.

Coe, the son of a Unitarian minister, was born in Medway, Mass. He moved to Worcester and joined another regiment when he was just 17 or 18. He then joined the 57th Massachusetts.

According to the regimental history, written by John Anderson in 1896, the young lieutenant was “of excellent character, fond of military service, zealous and ambitious in the faithful performance of duty, loved and esteemed by all who knew him.”

It’s not known when the sword was presented to Coe. The inscription said it was a gift “by his friends in Worcester.” 

Coe was struck by a spent musket ball at Spotsylvania Court House on May 12. He threw up both hands and fell; his comrades believed he was finished. “But in a few moments he rejoined the regiment,” according to the unit history,” saying that he had only been stunned for a few seconds.”

Just before the charge at Petersburg, Coe told comrades he would be killed. The premonition proved correct: He was struck in the head during the early part of the advance. Ten enlisted comrades died in the battle.

Coe left no wife or children. His mother applied for a pension in 1891.

His brother, who served in another Federal unit, took charge of his remains and Edwin was buried near where he fell. He was disinterred after the war and placed in the national cemetery now managed by the park.

How did it wind up at a jewelry store?

If the weapon was used used for ceremonial purposes, it might have been in the fallen officer’s tent at the time of the time. Or if Coe carried it during the charge, it could have “ended up in practically anyone’s possession,” Perrone said in 2015.

“With every branch of the service having at least one base in Hawaii, and with so many government contractors and retired military personnel living here, all kinds of interesting things turn up,” said Perrone (left), adding the story is the sword belonged to a retired serviceman.

Gonzalez, the jewelry store owner, told KITV that he and his wife “agreed to do the right thing” with the sword, rather than sell it for several thousand dollars, and he enlisted the help of Perrone.

“I wanted to literally return the sword to Lt. Coe, and Petersburg is where he has been for the past 150 years,” said Perrone, who contacted then-park curator Jimmy Blankenship and the discussions on the sword commenced.

Chris Bryce, chief of interpretation at the time, said the park, using donations and sales proceeds from bookstores operated by a private concessionaire, paid Gonzalez $1,600 for the Coe sword.

Bryce, at the time, said he was unaware of any surviving Coe descendants. Bryce and Blankenship no longer work for the park.

At the 'right place at the right time'

Coe was among tens of thousands of men in blue and gray who were in the area during the Petersburg campaign and siege. “We don’t have a great number of items that we can put to one person, let alone have an image of an individual,” Bryce told the Picket in 2015.

The 57th Massachusetts was supposed to be in reserve, but took part in the charge. Casualties mounted quickly.

The park believed the Coe weapon is a combat, rather than a presentation, sword. (Jimmy Blankenship, right, with the Federal weapon)

“Chances are good he was carrying it in battle,” said Bryce. “By carrying it,” they (his friends) are with him in battle.”

It's possible the young officer had both a combat and presentation sword, and the one found in the Hawaii shop was the latter. No one knows for sure; Coe may not have even wielded a blade that day.

Students at Worcester State University in 2016 researched the lives of 398 area residents who were killed during the Civil War. Coe was among them.

Perrone told the Picket in an email Monday he and his wife discussed the story just a couple of weeks ago.

“I still feel like returning that sword is something I was meant to do. I'm very grateful to have been in the right place at the right time to do the right thing.”  

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