In memory of Wm. A. McKellip
Dec 25, 1835 - Apr 04, 1904Location
Memorial Page of Wm. McKellip
Few Carroll County natives had
careers as interesting and far-reaching as William McKellip. Although born and raised
in Taneytown, by the time of his death he had become President Theodore Roosevelt’s
Consul to Magdeburg, Germany. In the years between he fought in the Civil War,
owned a successful law practice in Westminster, was the friend of Presidents Lincoln,
Grant, McKinley, and Teddy Roosevelt, and traveled widely.
In 1862 when the Union Army needed soldiers, McKellip assisted in organizing
companies of the Sixth Regiment Infantry, Maryland Volunteers. He was directly
responsible for recruitment of Company A. Realizing the regiment’s newly recruited
men were poorly supplied with weapons, he and Maryland Governor Hicks went
straight to Washington to meet with Lincoln in the hopes of obtaining better arms.
Following a short interview with the president, they walked away with a note written
on the back of Lincoln’s personal card saying, “Secretary of War: Please give bearer,
Major McKellip, of the 6th Maryland Regiment, the best arms possible, and oblige. A.
Lincoln.”
An exploding magazine rendered McKellip unfit for further military service in 1863, so he returned to Carroll County where he and John E. Smith ran a very successful law practice. Later he became the senior partner in the law firm of McKellip and Clabaugh. He ran for a number of political offices as a Republican but usually lost due to a Democratic majority in the county. President Ulysses S. Grant appointed him as a United States Commissioner to the Vienna Exposition in 1873. While on that mission he traveled around much of Europe with the erudite James W. Reese, a local minister, as his traveling companion. McKellip and his second wife, Sarah, went abroad on several more occasions, and she was in Magdeburg with him when he died.
McKillip’s 1904 funeral was the most elaborate in Westminster’s history up to that
time because he had left a significant mark on his community and elsewhere. His body
was returned from Germany to Baltimore where it was met by many notables. A band
from the ship accompanied his flag-draped casket to the train that brought him back to
Westminster. At Centenary Methodist Episcopal Church speakers recalled his
patriotism. Hundreds of people stood outside the church and lined the streets as his
funeral procession moved to this cemetery. There were more than thirty honorary
pallbearers representing his military career and membership in the Grand Army of the
Republic as well as organizations in the city and county. His relatively modest
headstone belies his many significant accomplishments.

