This is a list of soldiers who lived in
Tippah County at one time, before or after the war.
The names are contributed by the users. If you have
information about a Tippah County soldier please contribute
his name to the list. The information you can include
is the name, rank, unit(s) he fought with, name of his
parents and his spouse, date of birth and death, where
buried and your name and email address if you are
researching him. Please be reasonably certain of the
information you submit.
* ALBERSON, Charles - Pvt. Co. K, 37th Reg't
Mississippi Inf. (later and more commonly known as the
34th). Enrolled Tupelo by Ben Lax. ( Enlisted as a
substitute for Charles C. Terry, diseased.) Charles
was born about 1814 in S. C. He was left in hospital
at Bardstown, Ky. and later died in hospital at
Harrodsburg Ky., Oct. 8, 1862. He was married to
Catherine and was the father of ten children..
Kathlene
McRae
* ARMOR, John Davis - born to Davis W. and Elizabeth Lively
Armor on Jan. 9, 1831. The elder Armors had married in
Giles County, Tenn. in 1815, and John was their fifth son
and ninth child. About four years after John's birth
the Armors removed to Tippah County, Miss., where John
grew to manhood working on the family farm. He and Mary E.
Plaxico were wed in Tishomingo County on December 28,
1854.
By 1860 John and Mary were operating their own farm near
that of John's parents in the Dry Run area of Tippah
County. The Armors eventually became the parents of four
children. After the Civil War broke out John D.
Armor enlisted in Co. B of the 32nd Mississippi Infantry.
His death occurred in the fourth year of that struggle, on
June 17, 1864. John was, in the words of an early
informal family history, "killed in battle in Gen.
Johnston's command, C.S.A."
NOTE: B.C. Wiltshire's Mississippi Confederate Graves
Registrations confuses John D. Armor with his brother
James B. Ms. Wiltshire's book lists a "J.D.
Armour" buried in Benton County and having the dates
1829-1903. These are Jim Armor's county of burial
and dates, not John's. To the best of my knowledge Jim
never served in the Confederate military forces.
Bob Taylor
* ARNETT, Richard Charles -
He was born 16 Feb. 1838 son of Richard Charles and Martha
Woods Arnett. He died 24 Mar. 1901, probably in ,
Benton Co., Miss. and was buried in Cannan Cemetery.
Richard married Margaret Nobie Robertson, daughter
of Alexander H. Robinson and Elizabeth Parker on Aug. 22,
1875 in Cannan, Benton Co., Miss. Margaret was born
12 Jul. 1854 in NC. She died 23 May 1933 probably in
Benton Co., Miss. Richard enlisted Nov. 6, 1861, in
the Captain A. J. Vaughn, Company of Mississippi Troops
attached to 13th Tenn Regiment. His commanding
officers were Captains A. J. Vaughn and Dyer. It was
called the "Dixie Rifles". The commander was
John B. Wright. Richard was shot through the bone of the
right arm on Oct 8, 1862, in Perryville, Kentucky.
He was discharged Nov. 1863. Then he joined Company
B 18th Mississippi (Captain Smith's Company Home
Guard) and was discharged in Gainesville, Alabama, at the
end of the war. His commander was Capt. Bob Smith.
Jana
Mayfield
* AUTRY, George Monroe - George was born at Salem, Ms. 4 Jan.
1842 and died at Rockport, Tx., 15 Feb. 1907 and is
buried in Karnes County, Kenedy, Texas.
He was the son of Jacob B. and Temperance
EMBRY AUTRY. He married Angeline Elmina WILSON (27
Nov. 1841 - 12 Mar. 1921) in Chewalla,
McNairy County, Tenn. 17 Dec. 1857. George
enlisted in Co. K, 34th Miss. Infantry at Salem, MS in
March of 1862. See his
war record as given by himself.
* BARTLETT, Daniel T. -
Daniel was born 1st April 1844 in White County
Tennessee. He wasthe
brother of James and Joshua Bartlett. Daniel joined
Company H 12th Mississippi Cavalry 8th June 1862 at
Ripley, Mississippi. He served this regiment to the end of
the war. On his Application for Pension his answer
to the question "where did your command surrender",
was, "In North Carolina, somewhere". P.A.
McBryde witnessed his application as did his cousin Jesse
H. Bartlett. Daniel married Ruth Ann Wesson on 28th
February 1867.
William
E. Crawford
* BARTLETT, James -
He was the first child of Joseph E. and Martha Thomas
Bartlett. He was a first cousin of John S., James
K., and Jesse H. Bartlett. Born in White County
Tennessee on 9th November 1836. His family moved to
Tippah County Mississippi about 1855. James enlisted
in L Company 2nd Mississippi Infantry on 3rd March 1862 by
Col. Falkner at Ripley, Mississippi. James saw
action at Seven Pines, Gaines Mill, Malvern Hill,
Boonsboro and Sharpsburg. He was captured at the
famous railroad cut on the first day at Gettysburg.
He was sent to prison at Fort Delaware, arriving 6th July
1863. He was released 11th June 1865. James
was married to Cordelia Craighton on 15th August 1861 in
Tippah county Mississippi. James died in Miston,
Tennessee in November 1926.
William
E. Crawford
* BARTLETT, James K. - b 10 July 1833 White Co TN, son of
Nathan and Narcissa Suttle Bartlett. Moved to Tippah
Co when a child. Spouses: Lydia Anna and Amanda.
Enlisted on March 18, 1862, in the Tippah Farmers at
Orizaba under Capt. Granville A. Woods. The company
subsequently became Co. H, 34 Infantry. James K.
achieved the rank of Sergeant. James K. Bartlett was
captured on Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga, on 24 Nov
1863. He served on the Board of Supervisors in
Tippah County District 4 from Jan 1882 - Jan
1884. He died on 29 April 1920 in Tippah Co.
Killed by a tornado. Buried in County Line Cemetery
located on Prentiss/Tippah County line. Submitted by
James K.' g-g-grandniece.
Jo
Carolyn
Beebe
* BARTLETT, Jesse Hargis -
born 2nd November 1839 White County Tennessee, brother of
John Suttle and James K. Bartlett was a member of E
Company 23rd Mississippi Infantry 9th June 1861. He
was transferred to H Co. 12th Mississippi Cavalry 11th May
1862 and served to the end of the war. He died 6th
December 1924 and is buried in Rucker Cemetery.
William
E. Crawford
* BARTLETT, John Suttle -
second child of Nathan and Narcissa Suttle Bartlett was
born 23rd August 1830 in White County Tennessee. He
and his family moved to Tippah County Mississippi in
1840. He enlisted in Company H 12th Regiment of
Mississippi Cavalry on 11th May 1862. He served his
regiment until he became sick and broken down about the
beginning of summer, 1864. John was sent to Ocmulgee
Hospital at Macon, Georgia and admitted on 7th July
1864. He was furloughed home the next day. He
died on 26th July 1864.
William
E. Crawford
* BARTLETT, Joshua - Joshua was born 12th October 1838 in
White County Tennessee. He was the brother of
James. Joshua enlisted in L Company 2nd Mississippi
Infantry on 3rd march 1862. He saw action at the
Battle of Seven Pines on 31st May - 1st June 1862.
Joshua fell ill soon after the battle and was sent to
Chimborazo Hospital on 11th June 1862. He died of
Typhoid on 19th June 1862. Joshua married Eliza
Catherine Rimer on 2nd October 1859 in Tippah County
Mississippi.
William
E. Crawford
* BENNETT, Miles Jefferson
- Miles Jefferson Bennett (born March 3, 1840, died
August 28, 1911) married on December 12, 1865
to Lucy Jane Dodds (born December 15, 1844, died
March 10, 1929) Children- Marshall L., Lillian, Hattie
Garmillia, Thomas Miles, Gaines Petty, Zora Ellen, Bluma
Blanton, Flora Lee, Richard Calhoun, and Crawford Evan.
CSA Service:
Joined May 1, 1861 Age 21 Occupation: Farmer
Enrolled at Tippah Co. by Capt. John H. Buchanan
2nd Mississippi Infantry, O'Conner's Rifles
Promoted to a 5th Sergeant during Jul/Aug 1862 muster,
Promoted to a 4th Sergeant during Sept/Oct 1862 muster
Promoted to a 3rd Sergeant during May/June 1864 muster
Promoted to a 1st Sergeant during Sept/Oct 1864
muster
Wounded at Gettysburg on July 1, 1863 at Railroad Cut
Hospitalized at Richmond, Va.- returned to duty
Captured at Petersburg (Hatcher's Run) on April 2, 1865
with most of his regiment
Released on oath June 11, 1865
Decorated twice for bravery, received the Southern Cross
and is listed on the Roll of Honor
Major Battles- Manassas, Seven Pines (Fair Oaks),
Sharpsburg, Gettysburg, Petersburg
Miles Jefferson was a farmer and lived 3 miles west
of Chalybeate. He then moved to Ripley where he
operated a business on South Commerce Street known as
Bennett's Shop. It consisted of a machine shop,
blacksmith shop and a grist mill. Both Miles and his
wife, Lucy, are buried in the Ripley Cemetery. He was
buried in his CSA uniform. Written by Vanna Clark,
Great-granddaughter.
* BILLS, William Hezekiah - was born
6 May 23 May 1819 in Marshall Co., TN. Married 22 Apr 1840
to Sarah Graham Hardin in the home of her father in
Lewisburg, Marshall Co., TN. He died 13 Jan 1898 in Cloud
Chief, OK and she died a week later. He signed up for 3
years with Capt. A.C. Rucker Feb. 26, 1862 with the 34
Reg. Miss. Infanty. He was Discharged with a Sergeons
Certificate of disability 4 July 1862. The notice states
Final settlement of all accounts given. Signatures on his
enlisted sheets are Lt. Robert E. Delany, 2nd jLt. H.
Manning, 1st Lt. J.W.P. Holiday.
Also enlisting were his sons Branson
Bills and J. Henry. J. Henry signed up at the end of the
war but was not in the regulars and never went to the
front. I don't know if they took turns going and the
others staying at home to take care of the farm and
family. There were 8 living children plus a baby born 4
Mar 1861 and another born 1864 who died 1865.
The son I come through was John G.
Bills b. 29 Dec 1842. Married Agnes Linebarger 14 Nov.
1869 in Tippah, MS. died 30 Sept 1873, a week after his
daughter Sally died, in Kaufman Co., TX. He enlisted
9-19-1861 for 12 months at Iuka, MS by Gen Alcorn.
Discharged 10-1-1862 at Hopkinsville, KY from Co. B, 23 MS
Inf. Enlisted 5-8-1862 at Corinth, MS by Col. Benton for
3yrs.in Co. B 34 MS inf. Captured at Lookout Mtn. TN. on
11-24-1863. Confined at Rock Island, ILL. In a letter his
son wrote to a cousin it states that he was in poor health
and the US was recruting a regement of Conf. Prisoners to
go to Colorado as the Indians had rebelled. He decided to
enlist to help build up his health. He took the oath of
alligience on 10-11-1864 and enisted in Co., 3 US Vol.
INf. for frontier svc for 1 yr. and was discharged
11-29-1865 at Ft. Leavenworth, KS. His wife recieved a
pension and they gave him a script that would be good for
public land but it was lost and never used. The US
registration lists him as being age 22, dark complexion, 6
ft 1/2 inch tall, Black hair, grey eyes and a farmer. On
the last US record it states that he was recieving $74.10
then under remarks it states stoppage for damage to
property of John Mattis and others and I can't tell if its
for $2.90 or $290. The signatures on his absantee ballots
and his US enlisted ballots ( I don't really know what to
call these so forgive me if this is not what they are
called.) Moses McCarley Capt, Col. Benton, Capt. Stubbs,
ST Rogan, Maj. Garon, Capt. Beaularill. These are
signatures and are hard to read so may not have the names
correct. Written by Penny Carpenter
* BLACKWELL, William Thomas- (sometimes called Thomas) was a member of Co. B 2 Miss. Inf (Lt H. Davenport). His first company muster roll card is dated Sept and Oct 1861, 18 Sept. at Ripley, Miss. He served with the unit until he was " killed in battle, Gettysburg, Pa., July 1, 1863." The final entry in his file is a Register of Officers and Soldiers of the Army of the Confederate States who were killed in battle, or who died of wounds or disease, dated Jany 6, 1864. He had two brothers, Henry B. and Joshua B. of Tishomingo County, who both were in the 42nd Miss, and were both wounded at Gettysburg. I know very little more about Thomas, other than his wife's name was Sarah. My husband, Henry Barlow Blackwell II was born on his great-grandfather's 90th birthday, and named for him. Written by Nancy N. Blackwell
* BLAKNEY
- James W. Blakney was born April 19, 1806 in Charleston,
South Carolina and married during 1826 to the daughter of
Aaron Arant, Rebecca who was born October 17, 1806 In
Charleston, South Carolina. Migrating West, they settled
in Marshall County, KY near Sharpe. They had the following
children:
1. Thomas A. born December 20, 1829 in SC
2. Phillip Aaron born May 2, 1832 in KY
3. Lucinda E. born March 23, 1836 in KY
4. Hugh A. born March 8, 1838 in KY
5. John Elmurray born May 9, 1840 in KY
6. Jesse Wilson born September 3, 1844 in KY
7. Melinda Jane born September 18, 1845 in KY
8. Nancy C. born on October 19, 1850 near Ripley MS
According to New Hope Primitive Baptist
Church records, Rebecca Blakney asked for and received a
letter of transferal in December 1847. This family then
settled near Ripley, Mississippi, in Tippah County. They
were land owners and farmers. During the Civil War they
moved back to Marshall County in 1862 and James W. Blakney
died and was buried along the route on November 27, 1862.
Rebecca Arant Blakney died January 14, 1867 and is buried
at New Hope Primitive Baptist Cemetery. Her grave is the
fourth oldest marked grave in that cemetery.
Thomas A. served in Company
G, 34th Regiment, Mississippi Infantry, Confederate Army.
He enlisted March 17, 1862 and died in the hospital at
Chattanooga, Tennessee on September 8, 1862. Do not have
record of where buried.
Phillip Aaron served in
Company served in Co. A 23rd Mississippi Infantry.
Lucinda E. married Issac F. Rhodes on December 13, 1853
and they had 5 children: William A.; Nancy Catherine; Mary
Caroline; John Franklin and Rebecca Jane. Lucinda died
October 24, 1903. Hugh A. married Mary C. Rhodes on
September 3, 1859 and they had a daughter, Mollie.
Hugh A. enlisted in Company
B, 34th Infantry, Confederate Army on February 28, 1862.
He was wounded at Perryville, Kentucky and died in Georgia
on December 20, 1862.
John Elmurray enlisted in
Company A, 23rd Mississippi Infantry, Confederate Army.
His first wife, (name unknown) and twins died during the
Civil War. His second marriage was to Susan Hughey on
December 21, 1868 and they had 5 children: Rebecca L.;
James Thomas: Alice Luella; Monroe Howard and Susan
Elizabeth. Susan Hughey Blakney died April 18, 1879, when
their baby was 8 months old. John E. married Emily
Linebarger on September 29, 1882 and they had 5 children
from this marriage: Mary Agnes; Wilson Henry; Murray
Frederich; Doyle Jane and Michael Newton. John Elmurray
died on June 24, 1917 in Alanreed, Texas.
Jesse Wilson married Jane Man�ley on
November 5, 1868 and they bore 5 children: Hugh
Alfred; William Edward; Jesse Walston; Clinton Randolph
and Dora Ethel. Jane Manley Blakney died October 15,
1891. Wils Blakney married Emma Cordellia Collins on
October 18, 1894, and they bore 3 children: Clarence
Perry; John Clifton and Jettie Estelle. Melinda Jane
married B.W. Harrison. Have no record of death date. Nancy
C. died as a small child and was buried in a fence corner
of the then Arant farm, but have no date.
Marla
Millsap
* BLYTHE, Thomas Jefferson - Great great grandfather of Pres. Bill Clinton (Clinton changed his name from Blythe). Born Aug. 12, 1829 in AL, the son of Andrew Blythe. He married Ester Elvira Baum in Marshall Co., MS Jan. 1, 1849. Thomas enlisted in Co. "F" 34th Miss. on Apr. 27, 1862 along with his two brothers, John Wesley and Newton Jasper Blythe. All three survived the war. Thomas drew a pension for his service. He died Aug. 6, 1907 and is buried in Lowry Cemetery in Tippah County. Click here for more information about him.
* BOGARD, Jacob S. - my g grandfather, served in the 19th
Infantry, Company H, from 1862 until his release at
Federal prison, in Point Lookout, Maryland in June
1865, He served in the Virginia Area , durning his
total time in the CSA. He was wounded in 1862 and
was in hospital at Lynchburg, but was back on his
Company's Muster two months later. He was wounded
again in the battle of Spotsylavinia, Va. on May 6 1864,
returning to his unit several months later. He was
at Petersburg in 1865 and was captured at the Battle of
Petersburg. was imprisioned at Fort lookout until
Lee Surrendered , then took the oath of allegience and was
released.
He returned Home to Tippah County
Spring Hill Community, near Salem Post Office, He then
married Virginia Diane Woodson, and lived on Family Farm
three miles south west of Grand Junction, Tn. near
Michigan City, Ms. He raised his family there and
went to be with the Lord in 1909. He was buried in
his Confederate uniform, in the Family cemetery, He
still carried a mini ball in his leg.
Harry
Bogard
* BOGARD, Jacob S. - My great, great grandfather was Private
Jacob S. Bogard of the 19th Miss. Infantry, Co. H. He
mustered in on February 25, 1862 in Canaan, Mississippi.
The officer that enlisted him was Lt. John B. Hall. From
July 1862 until October 1862 he was hospitalized in
Lynchburg, Virginia. On the May and June 1864 and July and
August 1864 muster rolls he was listed as absent with
leave on wounded furlough. According to the receiving
records of the Wayside Hospital in Richmond, Virgina he
was admitted on May 8, 1864 for a wound to his face. On
May 9, 1864 he appears on the register of Howard's Grove
General Hospital in Richmond, Va.. On April 5, 1865 he is
registered as a prisoner at Point Lookout, MD. having been
captured at Petersburg on April 2, 1865. He was released
June 9, 1865 after taking the Oath of Allegiance to the
United States. He married Virginia Diane Woodson and
they resided in the Spring Hill community near Michigan
City. They had three children, Lula Granville, my great
grandmother, Benjamin Horn and Allie Mae. Jacob Bogard
died 1-26-1909 and is interred in the family cemetery
nearby the residence at Spring Hill which is listed as
being 3 miles east of Michigan City.I am searching for
someone who might know where this location is. Various
family members over the years have been there, as late as
the last decade so I know it is extant but, I have not had
any luck finding someone who can direct me to it now. I
also have a picture of Jacob in his uniform but, do not
have capability to generate it over a computer. Anyone
with information is welcome to e-mail me or to write me at
111 West Main St, Blue Mountain, MS 38610.
This biographical sketch is drawn from information
received from the Mississippi Department of Archives and
History from primary source documents and from Mr. Harry
Bogard who is also a great, great granchild of Jacob S.
Bogard. Thank you,
Maggie
Reese
* BOOKOUT, Simeon Daughtry - Pvt. Co. A 23rd Miss. Reg't. born
7/31/1831 in Tn. to
Branson and Mary W. "Polly"
Bookout. He died Mar 7, 1907 and buried in
Jumpertown Cemetery, Prentiss Co., Ms. He enlisted
Aug. 24, 1861. His pension records state he was a
prisoner of war. He was captured and paroled at
Vicksburg July 4, 1863.
Kathlene
McRae
* BOOKOUT, William Gene - Pvt., Co. B. 2nd Reg't
Mississippi Volunteers Infantry. William
enrolled March 8, 1862 in Ripley by Capt.
Buchanan. William Gene was born in Haywood
Co., Tn about 1832 to Branson and Mary W. "Polly"
Bookout. He was married to Hannah and the father of
three children, Simeon E., Nancy and Elvira.
William was wounded at Manassas Aug. 29, 1862 and sent to
the hospital in Warrenton, Va. where he died of
Vulnus Sclopeticus Lung on Sept 16, 1862. He is
buried in Warrenton Cemetery, Warrenton, VA.
Kathlene
McRae
*
BROCK, George - Probably the
son of Reubin Terrel and Cathrine Wachtel Brock and
brother of my Henry Brock. Served in Co. C, 1st
Battalian.
Terri Mitchell
* BROWN, James Riley - Born Dec. 30, 1836, the son of William
and Rachael Lowdermilk Brown. He married Margaret
Ann Brantley January 01, 1859. James served in Co.
"G" 34th Miss. Infantry. He was active in Civil War
reunions. He died June 09, 1923 and is buried in New
Salem Cemetery in Tippah Co., MS.
* BILLS, William Hezekiah was born 23
May 1819 in Marshall Co., TN. Married 22 Apr 1840 to Sarah
Graham Hardin in the home of her father in Lewisburg,
Marshall Co., TN. He died 13 Jan 1898 in Cloud Chief, OK
and she died a week later. He signed up for 3 years with
Capt. A.C. Rucker Feb. 26, 1862 with the 34 Reg. Miss.
Infanty. He was Discharged with a Sergeons Certificate of
disability 4 July 1862 the notice states Final statement
of all accounts given. Signatures on his enlisted sheets
are Lt. Robert E. Delany, 2nd jLt. H. Manning, 1st Lt.
J.W.P. Holiday.
Also enlisting were his sons Branson
Bills and J. Henry. J. Henry signed up at the end of the
war but was not in the regulars and never went to the
front. I don't know if they took turns going and the
others staying at home to take care of the farm and
family. There were 8 surviving children. Two other
children passed as invants; a baby born 4 Mar. 1861 and
another born 1864 who died 1865.
The son I come through was John G.
Bills b. 29 Dec 1842. Married Agnes Linebarger 14 Nov.
1869 in Tippah, MS. died 30 sept 1873 a week after his
daughter Sally died, in Kaufman Co., TX. He enlisted
9-19-1861 for 12 months at Iuka, MS by Gen Alcorn.
Discharged 10-1-1862 at Hopkinsville, KY from Co. B, 23 MS
Inf. Enlisted 5-8-1862 at Corinth, MS by Col. Benton for
3yrs. in Co. B 34 MS inf. Captured at Lookout Mtn. TN. on
11-24-1863. Confined at Rock Island, IL. In a letter his
son wrote to a cousin it states that he was in poor health and the
US was recruting a regiment of Confederate Prisoners to
go to Colorado as the Indians had rebelled. He decided
to enlist to help build up his health. He took the oath
of alligience on 10-11-1864 and enisted in Co. 3 US Vol.
Inf. for frontier service for 1 yr. and was discharged
11-29-1865 at Ft. Leavenworth, KS. His wife received a
pension and they gave him a script that would be good
for public land but it was lost and never used. The US
registration lists him as being age 22, dark complexion,
6 ft 1/2"tall, Black hair, grey eyes and a farmer. On
the last US record it states that he was recieving
$74.10 then under remarks it states stoppage for damage
to property of John Mattis and others and I can't tell
if its for $2.90 or $290. The signatures on his absentee
ballots and his enlisted ballots are Moses McCarley
Capt, Col. Benton, Capt. Stubbs, ST Rogan, Maj. Garon,
Capt. Beaularill. These are signatures and are hard to
read so may not have the names correct. Information
compiled by Penny
Carpenter
Bryant,
Issac - Issac
Bryant was born in Tippah County, MS ABT 1832. He
married Sarah Liddell. Issac served with the 2 Miss
Partisan Rangers, Company E. Issac survived the Civil
War and as an old man moved to Texas where he died ABT
1920. He is buried at Birdston Cemetery near Streetman,
Texas. (View
Pictures)
Melanie Bryant Elmore
* BRYANT, James Lewellen M. - was a Private in Capt. Elam M. Wells'
Co. Molino Rifles, 2 Brig Ms.Vols. Co. H, E, 23rd Reg't
Mississippi Infantry
Lewellen Bryant born July 28, 1843, was
only 17 years old when he volunteered June 15, 1861 when
the company was being organized for state service. The
company Muster Roll dated September 1861 shows that he
enlisted again by J. H. Kennedy at Baldwyn. He celebrated
his 18th birthday as a soldier and after only 4 short
months on October 14, 1861 his name was placed on a
"Register of Officers and Soldiers of the Confederate
States who were killed in battle or died of Wounds or
Disease" He died at Hopkinsville, Ky. The cause of death,
"disease" The family brought his body back and
buried him in the Pleasant Ridge Cemetery in Union Co.
Lewellen was survived by his mother Martha Bryant, his
sisters Mary Emily Bryant who married D.M. Owen and Amanda
J. Bryant.
J.L.M. Bryant does
not have a government issued Confederate military
marker. CSA Military Record J.L.M. Bryant NA
Microfilm #269 Roll #308. By Betty
Ford
* BURNS (BYRNE), James Henry - served in Co "H" 34th Mississipi Inf.
(Tippah Farmers) from 1861 to 1863. He enlisted at
Orizaba, Miss. One muster rolls says his was in the
hospital or absent sick. He had stomach trouble and
that is what he died of. He was born Mar 1842 in
Tippah co. to William M. and Mary Byrne. He married
Sarah Jane Owen 21 Feb 1861 in Tippah co. Miss. His
brothers and sisters were Alvin Wilson, Napoleon B.,
Susannah, William, Nancy. James Henry and Sarah went
to Montgomery co. Arkansas in 1872. Later he moved
to Scott County, AR. and died in Cedar, Arkansas on
October 25, 1904. He was a doctor and a farmer in
Arkansas.
by Wanda Castoe
* BYRN, Hugh Lawson "Loss" - born June 27, 1840 in Tippah Co.,
Mississippi. His parents were Handy Wood Byrn and Sarah
Rebecca James. He married Tabitha Emily Jackson about 1870
in Mississippi.
Hugh Byrn volunteered to serve in the
Second Mississippi Regiment Infantry, Company B (O'Connor
Rifles) as a Third Lieutenant. Three of his brothers
(Rosodolphus "Rose", William, and Lucas) also volunteered.
The Governor commissioned the officers of the regiment on
February 4, 1861. The regiment was mustered into the State
army at Ripley, March 4, 1861. The regiment assembled
April 30, 1861, at Ripley and was presented a flag by Mrs.
Judge Green. The regiment was sent to Virginia where it
was eventually assigned to General Lee's Army of Northern
Virginia. The Second Mississippi were generally assigned
to Davis' Brigade, Heth's Division. Hugh was promoted to
Second Lieutenant on April 22, 1862 just before the battle
at Seven Pines. He went on recruiting service on July 25,
1862 and returned sometime in August. He fought in the
battles of 1st Manassas (June 21, 1861), Seven Pines (May
31 and June 1, 1862), Richmond (Seven Days), Gaines' Farm
(Cold Harbor) (June 27, 1862), Malvern Hill (July 1,
1862), 2nd Manassas (August 29-30, 1862), Sharpsburg
(16-17 September 1862), and Gettysburg (July 1, 1863). At
Gettysburg he was wounded and captured on the first day,
July 1, 1863, at the Railroad Cut. He was in the hospital
on July 31, 1863, at a U.S. Army hospital in Chambersburg,
Pennsylvania; then the U.S. Army General Hospital, East
Walnut Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania from August 13 to
September 3, 1863; and then the U.S. Army General
Hospital, West's Buildings, Baltimore, Maryland from
September 4th to 12th. After release from the hospital he
was imprisoned at Ft. McHenry. He was subsequently
transferred to the prison at Johnston Island, Illinois on
September 28, 1863. On February 14, 1864, he was paroled
at Point Lookout, Maryland and transferred to City Point
Virginia. He was exchanged on March 17, 1864 and given
furlough until May 10, 1864. He began acting as company
commander of Company B in May. About June 1, he became ill
with Dysentery. He entered General Hospital No. 4 at
Richmond on September 30, 1864. After nearly four months
of sickness, on October 17, 1863, the hospital Medical
Examining Board gave him 30 days furlough to Ripley,
Mississippi to help him recover from "Chronic Diarrhea."
He was on furlough given by the Medical Examining Board on
December 17, 1864 and was in Ripley, Mississippi as noted
in the company rolls of December - February 1865 when the
company was near Petersburg. He was home on sick leave
when the Second Mississippi surrendered with General Lee
at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia. He surrendered on May
31, 1865 at LaGrange, Tennessee and was paroled. The
surrender records state he was on furlough since October
1864.
He moved to Prairie Blossom, Texas in
the early 1870's to engage in cotton farming and other
lines of business. He married Lizzie Simmons in Texas on
May 19, 1887 after his first wife, Tabitha, died. He
applied for and received a civil-war pension from the
state of Mississippi. He died January 2, 1937 in New
Albany, Union Co., Mississippi.
Joe Leahy
* BYRN, Lucas H. Byrn - born about 1839 in Tippah Co.,
Mississippi. His parents were Handy Wood Byrn and
Sarah Rebecca James. After the war, Lucas married J.
C. Kendrick October 10, 1865, in Tippah Co. He moved to
Lamar Co., Texas about 1880.
Lucas volunteered to serve in the
Second Mississippi Regiment Infantry, Company B (O'Connor
Rifles) as a private for 12 months on April 30, 1861, at
the age of 23. Three of his brothers, Hugh "Loss,"
William, and Rose, also volunteered. The regiment
assembled April 30, 1861, at Ripley and was sent to
Lynchburg, Virginia where it was eventually assigned to
General Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. The Second
Mississippi were generally assigned to Davis' Brigade,
Heth's Division.
All of this information was derived
from the Company Muster Rolls in the National Archives.
Sometime in May and June of 1861 he was sick in the
hospital at Winchester, Virginia. He may have participated
in the battle of 1st Manassas. For most of the war he was
frequently on detached duty, so it is not certain how many
battles he participated in as a combatant. On August 14,
1861, he was appointed Hospital Steward. On January 8,
1862 he was placed on detached service at Brigade
Headquarters and returned to the company in March or
April. On April 15, 1862, he was placed on detached duty
in Quartermaster's Department by order of Col. Falkner,
and later by Col. Stone. He was acting Sergeant Major
starting on September 29, 1862. He was on detached duty as
Assistant Quartermaster starting on December 21, 1862. He
was given 40 days furlough to Okalona, Miss. From General
Hospital No. 18 on June 11, 1863, having been sick with
"debility anemmia" since May 3, 1863. He was detailed as
an Ambulance sergeant on April 25, 1864, by the Medical
Examining Board. He was on detached duty as Brigade
Ambulance Sergeant starting on May 1, 1864. He is listed
as absent without leave starting on February 15, 1865. He
was listed [as L.H. Byron] on a register of Prisoners of
War at Memphis, Tenn. -- Deserters from the rebel army.
His name appears under the heading "Administered in lieu
of the Amnesty" dated June 6, 1865. He took an oat of
allegiance that day and was paroled. His description was
recorded as: Complexion - Dark, Hair - Dark, Eyes - Hazel,
Height - 5' 8", Age -27, Place of Residence - Ripley,
Miss.
Joe Leahy
* BYRN, Rodolphus "Rose" Kenton - was born about 1841 in Tippah
Co., Mississippi. His parents were Handy Wood Byrn and
Sarah Rebecca James.
Rose volunteered to serve in the Second
Mississippi Regiment Infantry, Company B (O'Connor Rifles)
as a private for 12 months on April 30, 1861 at the age of
20. Three of his brothers, Hugh "Loss," William, and
Lucas, also volunteered. The regiment assembled April 30,
1861, at Ripley and was sent to Lynchburg, Virginia where
it was eventually assigned to General Lee's Army of
Northern Virginia. The Second Mississippi were generally
assigned to Davis' Brigade, Heth's Division.
Rose fought in the battles of 1st
Manassas (June 21, 1861) where he was wounded in the head
by a shell fragment. He was a patient at the C. S. A.
General Hospital at Charlottesville from July 22 to July
26, 1861.
He was put in the hospital at Ashland,
Virginia April 14, 1862, by order of the Surgeon,
apparently from the lingering effects of the head wound;
i.e., "stunned by shell." He returned to Company B about
the time of 2nd Manassas (August 29-30, 1862). He was
present for Sharpsburg (16-17 September, 1862). He was
sick in the hospital sometime during May and June 1863. He
was present at Gettysburg (July 1, 1863) and the rearguard
action at Falling Waters on the Potomac, July 14. He was
given furlough October 4, 1863, and returned by the first
of November, 1963.
He participated in the battle of the
Wilderness, as well as Spottsylvania and Cold Harbor. He
was admitted to Receiving and Wayside Hospital or General
Hospital No. 9, at Richmond on May 25, 1864 and sent to
the General Hospital at Howard's Grove at Richmond the
next day.
His last muster roll was dated January
and February 1865. According to statements made by his
brothers on their pension applications, Rose was with the
unit when the Second Mississippi surrendered with General
Lee at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia.
After the war, Rose married Frances
Polly Persons on February 22, 1866 in Tippah Co. Her
parents were William Persons and Nancy Harriet Cheek.
Rose's family migrated to Paris, Lamar Co., Texas about
1880 where his occupation, as well as his wife's, was a
schoolteacher. He is believed to have died in Paris,
Texas. They had six children, five were born in
Mississippi and the last in Texas. The children were Mary
Elsie (born January 6, 1867), Handie [Horadus?] William
(born March 28, 1869), Charles Cifford (born February 20,
1871), Daisy Bernice (born January 28, 1873), Thomas
Wesley (born January 16, 1875), and Rosalie (born in May,
1884 in Texas). The children used the spelling Byrne for
their surname. By Joe Leahy
* BYRN, William Horadus - born about 1844 in Tippah Co.,
Mississippi. His parents were Handy Wood Byrn and Sarah
Rebecca James. After the war, William married Nancy J.
Johnson in Tippah Co. on March 13, 1866. He moved to Texas
and was a storekeeper in Lamar Co., Texas. He later
married M. H. Wade on April 12, 1885 and Ella E. Shaw on
September 9, 1888 in Lamar Co. In 1927, his widow Ella E.
Shaw applied for a pension from the State of Arkansas. She
stated on the application that he died April 8, 1924. His
brother Hugh "Loss" Byrn gave a statement Proof of Service
saying he served in Co. B 2nd Mississippi from April 1862
[1863 actually] until surrender in 1865. Ella died
November 11, 1933.
William volunteered to serve in the
Second Mississippi Regiment Infantry, Company B (O'Connor
Rifles) as a private for 3 years on April 15, 1863, at the
age of about 19. Three of his brothers, Hugh "Loss,"
Lucas, and Rose, had also volunteered two years earlier in
April of 1961. All of this information was derived from
the Company Muster Rolls in the National Archives. Some
records have William enlisting in Okolona, Mississippi by
Capt. Ingate. The rest have him enlisting in Ripley by
Capt. Storey.
He joined Co. B in the field in April
of 1863 and was present continuously for two years until
April 1865. He probably participated in the battles the
2nd was involved with:
By General
Order No. 87 [?], dated December 10, 1864, he was placed
on the Roll of Honor for Talley's Mill [Some researchers
list this as Private W.H. Bryan, Company L] He was
captured in Petersburg on April 2, 1865. He was
transferred to prison at Ft. Delaware, Delaware from City
Point, Virginia on April 4th. He took an Oath of
Allegiance on June 11, 1865 at Ft. Delaware. The record
lists Place of Residence - Tippah, Miss. Complexion -
Fair, Hair - Light, Eyes -Grey, Height 5 ft. 4 in.,
Remarks - Released June 11, 1865. By
Joe Leahy
* CARTER, Calvin - Private, Company C,
7th Regiment, Mississippi Calvary. Calvin M.
Carter was enlisted on August 1, 1862 by Colonel
Falkner near Orizaba, Mississippi. This
information is provided from the Company Muster
Rolls that basically make up his military records
and was copied from microfiche at the Mississippi
archives. Some periods of his service appear not
to be documented.
Service Timeline:
The 7th Regiment Mississippi Calvary was organized
August 1, 1862 as the 1st Regiment, Mississippi
Partisan Rangers and was temporarily disbanded
November 15, 1862 and reorganized March 1, 1863.
The designation was changed August 1, 1864 to the
7th Regiment, Mississippi Calvary.
August 1, 1862- Calvin was enlisted by Col W. C.
Falkner near Orizaba, Mississippi.
September 1862-March 1863- Present for duty.
April 18, 1863- Captured near Hernando,
Mississippi. along with five others from his unit.
April 22, 1863- In the custody of the Provost
Marshall, Memphis, Tennessee.
April 29, 1863- Transferred to St Louis and then
to Alton Military Prison, Alton, Illinois.
June 12, 1863- Pvt Calvin Carter released in a
prisoner exchange at Camp Lee, near Richmond,
Virginia. He then returned to his unit.
July 1863-July 1864- Present for duty and assigned
war station with Chalmer�s Brigade.)
August 1, 1864- Pvt Calvin Carter re-enlisted by
Col Hymes in Watervalley, Mississippi.
September 1864- March 1865- Many Confederate units
merged and went on to fight at Manasas and
Gettysburg, Virginia.
April 2, 1865- Pvt Calvin Carter captured and was
held in prison by Headquarters, 1st Brigade, 2nd
Div in Selma, Alabama.
Pvt Calvin Carter was released from custody in
Selma, Alabama at the end of the war and, it was
said, that he walked barefooted, dressed in rags,
back to Tippah County, Mississippi. He is buried,
along with his wife Nancy (Williams), next to his
younger brother James S. in New York
Cemetery. By Marty
Gates
Photo of Calvin Carter
* CARTER,
Thomas Jefferson - born 1845 in Old Tishomingo
County MS to John E.R.Carter and Elizabeth Lumbley Carter.
He entered service April 1862 and was discharged
5/10/1865. He was in Company H 3 rd { Forrests Old}
Tn. Cavalry Regiment also called 18 th
Battalion, 26 th Battalion,Balch's Battalion and Mc
Donalds Battalion. .He moved from Tippah Co., MS or Alcorn
Co. MS to Fannin Co. TX after 1870. He Married in
Alcorn Co. MS 1867 to Mary Hancock. He moved to Stephens
Co., OK and died 1922. By Deloris Carter
Branch
* CARTWRIGHT, James Thomas Asbury - born
May 1838 in Tippah County. At that time, his Mother Mary �Polly�
Cartwright was living with her younger brother, Thomas, because the
extended family had moved as a group from Lawrence County, TN.
They lived in northern Tippah and I believe it was near the present day
Rogers Hill. JTA was given his mother�s maiden name because he
was born out of wedlock. Old family stories and my recent dna
tests have supported the fact that the father was likely one of the
sons of George W and Elizabeth (?) Rogers. The Rogers and
Cartwrights were �joined at the hip� in many ways and lived parallel
lives.
By 1860, he had
married a local girl, Eliza Sylvira Moore (daughter of Jacob and Nancy
(James) Moore and the young family was living next door to his mother
and Aunt Nancy Cartwright in the Silver Springs community on the
southeast side of the county. In fact, Silver Springs is known to
be literally on the Alcorn/Tippah line at the foot of Silver Springs
hill. At one time, the post office was said to be in Alcorn
County. JTA (also called Berry), enlisted in the summer of 1861,
when the War Between the States began. His Civil War records say
he was a member of Co E, 23rd MS Infantry. His officers were
Colonel Joseph Wells from the Blackland community in Prentiss and
Captain Knight. There are many records available describing the
battles of that military body. In February 1862, the 23rd was
moved west from near Hopkinsville, Kentucky over to Ft. Donelson (near
Clarksville, TN) after the Union Army began taking control of the
Cumberland River. Due to the bungling of decisions made by
officers there, Union General Ulysses S Grant took the fort and many
men were sent to Camp Douglas, located in Chicago, Illinois. He
was a Prisoner of War there before being exchanged at Vicksburg in the
fall of 1862. He was reunited with his Unit and remained on
active duty until the end of the war. His wife, Sylvira, told her
grandchildren that �in the summer of 1864, Union troops burned their
farm in Tippah and she went to relatives in DeSoto County�. That
is where JTA went at the end of the war.
In 1870, the
family was living in a small hamlet called DeSoto Front, seen on maps
as late as 1900, but it is gone now. Perhaps absorbed by the
changing flow of the Mississippi River and work done by the Corps of
Engineers. He died of dysentery August 1884 and is said to be
buried at Hinds Chapel Methodist Cemetery, Church and Fogg Roads, Horn
Lake, MS. His twin sons, Newton Columbus and Thomas Lee said they
paced 20 paces to his grave from the northwest corner of the church
(the church has been moved now). Over the years sinking graves were
filled in and covered with grass. Without the church for a landmark,
his burial site is known now only to God, for the family was too poor
to buy a tombstone. His great-granddaughter, Patsy (Hill)
Johnson of Blackland, MS arranged a Military Memorial stone to be
placed at the Carolina Methodist cemetery in the Carolina community
just outside Booneville. That is where JTA�s widow and a large
number of his descendants are buried. By Shirley (Cartwright/Rogers) McKenzie
* CHILDERS,
James
L. - born in Williamson Co.,
TN 4/1/1817. On 1/1/1839 married Annie
Musgrove/Musgrave. Moved to Tippah Co. from Hardeman
Co., TN ca1830's. James served as a cavalryman in
the 1st MS Partisan Rangers under Col. W.C. Falkner.
During a battle in Paden, MS Madison W. Smith was mortally
wounded and James Childers refused to leave his friend's
body. James was wounded during this process. He
called for his wife and word was sent to her that her
husband had been seriously wounded. Annie set out on
horseback but arrived too late. James' body was
moved in 1977 to Jacob's Chapel Cemetery next to his wife
who died 8/14/1904.
Vicki Roach
* CHILDERS, John Marion- Born Lincoln County, Tenn. on 13 Nov. 1825. Moved to Tippah County, Miss. ca 1830's. Enlisted as Pvt. Co.A 7th Mississippi Cavalry Partisan Rangers under Capt. Ford August 1, 1863. Married Margaret L. Cotton Hubbard Oct. 9, 1868. Died Nov. 14, 1907 and buried in Little Hope Cemetery. See picture of his gravestone. By Mike Sparks
* CHILDERS, Stephen Harrison - James' eldest son, Stephen Harrison Childers, was 17 when his father was killed. He joined the Confederate army after his father's death. His fighting was mostly in skirmishes in and around VA. After the surrender he and a friend, barefoot and hungry, walked from VA to their home in Ripley. Stephen married Linnie Griffin 1/1/1867. (This is my husband's side of the family. This information was found in the Ripley Library.) By Vicki Roach
* CHUNN, George W. - age 25, enlisted July 31, 1861 in Capt.
Robert J. Hill's Company, Falkner Guard, at Orizaba, MS,
by Capt. E. M. Wells, assigned to Company B. Died
October 27, 1861, in hospital at Hopkinsville, KY of
measles contracted while in camp. His pay of $7.55
(which he never received) was sent to his widow and four
children. The family later moved to the
Dumas-Pleasant Ridge area.
Shirley
L. Stanford
*CLIFTON,
Mansfield William - Mansfield
William Clifton was about 9 years younger than his brother
Patrick Henry being b 26 April 1847 most likely Hardeman
Co., TN. Mansfield entered the Civil War in Tippah, MS
a child of 16 on 28 August 1863 as a drummer boy in Co.C 1st
MS Infantry some three months before Patrick Henry was taken
prisoner of war by the Union side. Young boys
were accepted as drummer boys but were not allowed to fight
in any battles. However, they laid their lives on the line
marching in front to battle beating out the drums.
Mansfield serve approximately 2 years as drummer boy and
during those two years at one time was in the hospital with
the measles and later taken prisoner of war at Holly
Springs, MS. How long he was prisoner of war is
not known ( I went to Holly Springs once and the locals told
me there was not a prisoner of war camp at Holly Springs,
but the official records says there was) but he was paroled
in May of 1865 by Union 1st Lieu Hugh Creighton at Holly
Springs. Mansfield applied or and received a State of
Mississippi Confederate Pension. His first application
for a pension was in 1911 and he received a pension until 9
July 1924 when he was taken off the rolls. Mansfield
died on Christmas day 1927. According to his son Henry
Mansfield Clifton, he is buried in the Lafayette Springs
Cemetery, Lafayette County, MS
Submitted
by: Richard Phillips
- GGrandson of Patrick Henry Clifton, and
GGnephew of Mansfield W. Clifton.
*COLE, Ezekial R.,
was the fourth of the nine sons and one daughter born to John Henry
Cole and Permelia Andrews Cole of Cotton Plant in Tippah County,
Mississippi. Apparently Ezekial and younger brother, Ira A. Cole
joined the 10th Mississippi Infantry around the 4th of July 1862.
Rowland's "Military History of Mississippi, 1803-1898" states that the
unit moved to Ripley on July 4, 1862. Family histories say the two
joined at Holly Springs.
Casualty reports list Ira Cole as one of thirteen killed in action on
14 Sep 1862, while brother Ezekial R. (E.R.) Cole as having a slight
wound to the left chest in the same action at Fort Craig, Kentucky.
Later reports list Ezekial dying on 30 Nov 1862 from pneumonia at
Academy Hospital in Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee. The next
year, 1863 would prove to be no kinder to the Coles of Tippah
County. submitted by Bruce A. Emmons
*COLE, Ira A., was
Wiley Jackson Cole's next older brother. (Seventh son of nine
sons and one daughter) born to John Henry Cole and Permelia Andrews
Cole of Cotton Plant in Tippah County, Mississippi.
(1845-1862). Ira served and died in the 10th Mississippi
Infantry.
Quote from: 10th Mississippi Infantry from Dunbar Rowland�s "Military
History of Mississippi, 1803-1898"): detailing the action in
which Ira A. Cole lost his life at the age of 17.
"The regiment camped at Clear Creek through the most of June, recruited at Tupelo, moved to Ripley with Wirt Adams July 4, July 29 left Saltillo for Mobile, arrived at Chattanooga August 6, left Tyner's Station August 19
for Kentucky, arriving at Cave City, September 12, taking possession of
the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. General Bragg wrote in his
campaign report that while resting his jaded army at Glasgow, "I
learned that the commander of my outpost brigade at Cave City had
advanced upon and assailed the enemy's fortified position at
Munfordville and after a gallant fight against largely superior numbers
had been repulsed with considerable loss."
This attack was made by General
Chalmers with his brigade, September 14, 1862, hoping to secure the
surrender of Colonel Wilder's command of 4,000 Indiana and Kentucky
troops at the fortified post called Fort Craig. In the attack the
'Tenth, under command of Colonel Smith, was ordered to advance on the
works along the river, and Blythe's Regiment was sent to their support.
In the attack of the Tenth Colonel Smith was mortally wounded,
Lieut.-Col. Bullard was killed, and the command devolved on Captain J.
M. Walker. Captain James L. Finley made the report for the regiment,
and mentioned the gallantry of George Fugel, Color Sergeant, and B. F.
Bonds and R. B, Tatum, Color Guards. The casualties of the regiment
were the greatest of the brigade -- 13 killed and 95 wounded. General
Bragg noted on Chalmers' report, "The loss of the gallant and admired
Colonel Smith, with the other valuable officers and men of this
distinguished brigade, will be mourned by their comrades and the
country." On the 17th, after Wilder had surrendered to Bragg's entire
army, the brigade was, as a mark of honor, ordered to occupy the works.
Colonel Smith, who died about the time of the capture, was buried at
Jackson, Miss.; Lieutenant-Colonel Bullard was buried with his men in
one long trench on the field of battle. A monument to Colonel Smith was
erected at Jackson in 1868, and another monument at Rowlett's Station,
near the battlefield, by his father, James Smith, of Glasgow, Scotland."
By this report, Ira Cole and eleven of his comrades were buried on the
field of battle with his officer, Lt. Col. Bullard.
Four of the Cole brothers would perish in this conflict before the final bugle sounded over Appomattox Court House, submitted by Bruce A. Emmons
* COLE, Wiley Jackson - born Aug 13 , 1847 Cotton Plant, Tippah
Co. MS, married in Saltillo on Dec 17 , 1873 to Mary
Henrietta (Mollie) Rice b. 1855 Saltillo. Wiley
Jackson Cole was a son of John and Pernelia Andrews Cole
--John died in Tippah Mar 1864 and Pernelia died in Tippah
(?) before 1860 census. Wiley Jackson Cole served in
Co I, 2nd Mississippi Cavalry Reserve Regiment, CSA
according to UDC membership certification for my mother,
Elizabeth Nell Holloway Ogle, in 1923. Wiley
died 2 May 1893 and is buried in Lake City, Ark. Mollie
died in 1941 and is buried in Saltillo Cemetery.
Nancy
Ogle Pooley
* COOK, John C.
- born 1841 parents unknown. The Tippah County
Mississippi 1850 U.S. census lists him along with his
brother James as children in the house of their sister
Martha Ann and her husband J.J. Plummer. They were
born in Georgia. John Cook enlisted in F Company 2nd
Regiment of Mississippi Volunteer Infantryat Ripley on 30th April 1861. John
and his regiment were sent to Virginia in time to
participate in the battle of 1st Manassas on 21st July
1861. John took a severe wound in the shin and was
in hospital at Charlottesville, Virginia until he returned
to duty 20th September 1861. Wounded again on 31st
May 1862 at Seven Pines. He was at Richmond,
Virginia in hospital till 5th August 1862 when he returned
to Tippah County Mississippi. John Cook married Mary
Jane Moore on 4th February 1863 in Tippah County
Mississippi. I do not know the date of John
Cook�s death.
William
E. Crawford
* CORDER, Eleazer B. - a
confederate pvt. that served in the Miss. Co. G 45th Miss.
Inf. Enlisted Ellistown, MS. 10 May 1862. 3rd
battalion. He was captured at Murfreesboro,TN Dec
31, 1862. On his company muster roll it shows
he was in Co. G 33 reg't Ms. Inf. and 45th. He
was sent to Camp Douglas, IL and died 1 Feb 1863 and is
buried in Oak Woods cemetery in Chicago.
Eleazer married Temperance Jane Reaves 18 July 1869 in
Pontotoc county. They had one daughter Virginia
Elizabeth Corder born 2 Aug 1860. Temperance Jane
Corder married William A. King in Tippah county 16 March
1864. In the 1850 and 1860 Mississippi census
Eleazer B. lived in Tippah county with other family
members. I am a great-great-granddaughter of Eleazer
and Temperance Jane Corder.
Barbara
Giddens
* COX, John Seal - Born January 12, 1837 in Marshall Co.,
MS. He was the son of Caleb Jr. and Elizabeth Hicks
Cox. He was one of 18 children, two of whom died in
Confederate service. John married first Amanda
Street. She died during the Civil War and he married
her sister, Julia Ann Kiziah Street Oct. 19,
1865. Both wives were the daughters of
Anderson and Keziah McBride Street. John served in
Co. "A" 23rd Miss. Infantry. He died February
14, 1901 and is buried in Little Hope Cemetery in Tippah
County.
* COX, Matthew Jesse - Born Sept. 22, 1831, the son of Elijah
and Celia Horn Cox. Enlisted in Co. "K" 34th Miss.
Infantry as a Private Apr. 25, 1862. Captured July
28, 1864 near Atlanta. He married Mary M.
Elliott. He died Dec. 16, 1899 and is buried in
Liberty Cemetery in Benton County.
* COX,
Robert Washington - Born
1842, the son of Elijah and Celia Horn Cox. He
married Elizabeth E. Hoover. Washington enlisted
April 25, 1862. He was captured either the 20th or
30th of Nov. 1862 in Marshall Co. and sent to City Point,
VA. He was exchanged April 1, 1863 and entered the
hospital with a sore leg on Apr. 19, 1863. Between
that date and the end of the war he was shot and killed by
a Winborn while at home. He is probably buried in
the Cox family cemetery in Benton County in an unmarked
grave.
* COX,
Samuel Whitman - Born Jul.
14, 1831 in Bedford County, Tennessee. Samuel was
the son of Allison and Catherine Jones Cox.
The Cox family moved to Tippah Co. around 1845.
Samuel married Nancy J. Arnett on Dec 22 1850 in Tippah
Co. Mississippi. She was the daughter of Sandridge
and Jane Hudspeth Arnett. They moved to Robertson
Co., Tx. around 1856. He joined the Co. D., 20
Reg., Texas Infantry and was in the service for
three years. He died May 11, 1897.
Jana
Mayfield
* COX,
William Harrison - Born 1834,
the son of Elijah and Celia Horn Cox. Enlisted April
25, 1862 in Holly Springs as a Private in Co. "K" 34th
Miss. Infantry. Wounded at Chickamanga.
Surrendered and was paroled at La Grange, TN 24 May
1865. He married Lucinda Caroline Meeks.
Harrison died between 1900 and 1910 at Hickory Flats, MS
and is buried in Flat Rock Baptist Cemetery in an unmarked
grave.
* CRAWFORD, George William - 1 Cpl./5 Sgt./2 Sgt./4 Sgt.; enlisted
9/15/61 at Mayfield, KY; appointed 1 Cpl. 11/28/61; on
November/December 1862 Muster Roll listed as present as 5
Sgt.; on July/August 1863 Muster Roll listed as present as
2 Sgt.; WIA at Paducah, KY 3/25/64; captured POW at
Paducah, KY 3/25/64; POW admitted to USA General Hospital
No. 3, Paducah, KY 3/26/64 with gunshot wound in left eye;
POW at USA General Hospital No. 3, Paducah, KY,
transferred to Military Prison, Cairo, IL 5/29/64; POW
received at Camp Chase, OH 6/6/64; on May/June 1864 Muster
Roll listed as absent as 4 Sgt.; POW paroled at Camp
Chase, OH 2/12/65 and transferred to Point Lookout, MD;
paroled POW received on James River, VA 2/20-21/65; on
Muster Roll of a detachment of paroled and exchanged
prisoners at Camp Lee, Richmond, VA 2/21/65 as present.
Born January 18, 1830 in TN; died April
4, 1911 in Tippah County, MS; son of Evan & Nancy
(Bright) Crawford; husband of Margaret E. (Sartain) and
Eliza Crawford; 1860 Grav. Co., KY, Census: bp. TN, age
30, farmer.
Greg
* CROOK,
Willis
Arnold - Born 1822
in Spartanburg SC but migrated to Tippah Co. with
parents Jonathan Crook & Lucy B. Arnold some time
after 1828. Spouse Tabitha Cotton. Fell in
battle near Tupelo on July 6 1864, promoted to Captain
on the day of his death. One source says 7th
Miss. Cavalry, another says enlisted 32nd MS Infantry
CSA 3/17/62 in Tippah County, discharged by special
order #52 to accept a Commission in the Mississippi
Partisan Rangers under Col. Falkner. Was First
Lieutenant, Commander of Co. L. Killed in action
at battle of Town Creek near Tupelo on July 15, 1864.
Burial place unknown.
Nelda Hamer
* CRUM, Sgt.
William Allen - was born in Tipton County,
Tenn., in 1837, the youngest of the two children of
Eli and Rachael (Ayers) Crum. His father was a native
of North Carolina: his mother of Tennessee. His
grandfather on his father's side moved from North
Carolina to Alabama in 1812, and lived out the balance
of his life in that state. The father of our subject
was reared in Alabama, and from there went to
Tennessee while yet a young man. There he met Miss
Ayers, whom he afterward married, in 1829. He removed
from Tennessee to what was then Tippah County, Miss.,
in 1837, before the (Chickasaw) Indians had left the
country, and he may be properly termed one of the
oldest settlers of the state. For a number of years he
was a member of the Tippah county board of
supervisors. He was well and favorably known
throughout the state as a high minded, Christian
gentleman, and was an elder in the Cumberland
Presbyterian church for many years. The mother of our
subject died in 1858, his father in 1860, at their old
home in Tippah County. William A. Crum was educated in
the common schools, and during his entire life he has
been engaged in planting. In 1855, at the age of
eighteen, he married Miss Mary M. Smith, a daughter of
John Smith, of Tippah County. They had nine children,
named as follows: Emma, wife of John P. Smith; Rachel,
now Mrs. J. T. Armor; William E.; Mallie O., deceased;
C. Lee; Sarah E., wife of W. H. Cox, Jr.; Mary L.,
wife of J. T. Wall; Benjamin, deceased; and Martha C.
Mr. Crum enlisted in company G, of the Seventeenth
Mississippi infantry, under W. S. Featherstone, of
Holly Springs, in 1861, and was in the battle of Bull
Run, the seven days' fight at Richmond, and other
engagements in Virginia. At Gettysburg he received two
severe gunshot wounds - one in the leg and the other
in the body - and was captured and taken to the
hospital at Baltimore, Md., where he was shortly
afterward paroled. As soon as he was able he returned
to his home, too badly disabled to rejoin his command,
and having to walk with the aid of a crutch for about
four years. After he became able to work he resumed
his farming occupation, and has tilled the soil with
considerable since. He was a delegate to the state
constitutional convention to conform the constitution
of the state to the reconstruction policy of the
government in 1865, and 1875 he was elected a member
of the legislature from Benton County. He is a very
prominent man in the community, and has been active in
the political affairs of his town and county as well
as those of his state. He and his wife are members of
the Christian church, in which denomination he has
been a well known and efficient minister for the past
twenty-six years. He owns six hundred acres of land,
one hundred and sixty of which are under cultivation,
and on the old homestead where his parents lived and
died he may be said to have lived all his life, having
been only three months old when his parents located
thereon. For the past ten years, he has been
postmaster at Hickory flats, where he has taken a deep
interest in all local affairs, and where his family is
in high esteem among a large circle of acquaintances.
Mr. Crum is the only living representative of his
family. He is everywhere looked upon as a progressive
citizen, and an honorable, straightforward business
man. In the former period of his life he read law, was
admitted to the bar and practiced for eleven years at
Ripley and seven at Hickory flats. In all the various
pursuits to which he has devoted himself, he has been
successful always, as planter, preacher, lawyer and
public official he has won for himself the respect of
all with whom he has had dealings. (Memoirs of
Mississippi 606-06)
A second biography:
Crum,
William A., a pioneer citizen Hickory Flat, Miss., was
born in Tipton County, Tenn., in 1837. He is descended
from noble lines of pioneers on both sides. His
paternal grandfather, David Crum was of Buncombe
county, N. C., and his father, Eli Crum, came to
Mississippi 1837, locating on the place where the
subject of this memoir now resides. Here the father
died in 1860 at the age fifty-four years. His mother
was Rachel Ayres, and the maternal grandfather Moses
Ayres, was a pioneer of that part of Tippah County
which is now Benton County, coming in 1837 from
Hardeman County, Tenn. William A. Crum was reared on
his father's farm and has never known any other home.
He received his educational advantages in the schools
of the vicinity, and after school days settled down to
farming. When the somber cloud of war was ascending
the horizon, Mr. Crum enlisted as a private in the
Seventeenth Mississippi infantry of the Confederate
army, and participated in all the engagements in which
his regiment was concern until the battle of
Gettysburg, in which action he was severely wounded
and incapacitated for further service. After the
cessation of hostilities, when it became necessary for
the Southern States frame and adopt new constitutions,
Mr. Crum was a representative of Tippah county in the
convention which drew up the constitution later
endorsed and adopted by the people of the State.
Politically he has always been a devout and ardent
advocate of the principles of Thomas Jefferson and as
the representative of the Democratic part of Benton
County, he served in the State legislature of 1876 and
1877, and for four successive years he was mayor of
Hickory Flat. Shortly after the close of the war he
studied law and was admitted to the bar, and for ten
years engaged in the active practice of that
profession. In 1864 he was ordained as a minister of
the gospel of the Christian church and has been a
local preacher of that faith ever since that time,
most of his ministerial labors having been in northern
Mississippi. On June 28, 1855, Mr. Crum married Miss
Mary M. Smith, a native of Jackson county, Ind., and
daughter of John Smith, born in Kentucky, who came to
what is now Benton county from Indiana in 1830. Her
paternal grandfather William Smith, entered the
Continental army during the Revolutionary war when but
fourteen years of age, and served six years. To Mr.
and Mrs. Crum were born nine children: Cleopatra, the
eldest, is Mrs. C. E. Smith of Memphis, Tenn.; Rachel
is the wife of J. T. Armour of New Albany, Miss.;
William E. is a minister of the gospel at Hickory
Flat, Miss.; Charles Lee, an attorney of New Albany,
represented Union county in the State legislature from
1896 to 1900; Sarah E. married W. H. Cox, Jr., of
Hickory Flat, Miss.; Lou E. is the wife of J. T. Wall,
also of Hickory Flat; Martha C. is Mrs. G. W. Calthorp
of the same place. On June 28, 1905, Mr. and Mrs. Crum
celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary. At the
celebration there were present seven children,
thirty-seven grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren. (Mississippi Biographical 170-71)
Tom
Childers
* CUNNINGHAM, Mareth
L.D. - born in North Carolina abt. 1825,
enlisted in the 32nd Mississippi Infantry Regiment,
Company C, Tishomingo Rebels. Mustered in March 8,
1862 at Cornith, Mississippi, Captain J.W. Swinney's
Company of Mississippi Volunteers, commanded by
Colonel M.P. Lowery.
M.L.D. Cunningham was captured
November 27, 1863 at Ringgold Gap. He died December
13, 1863 from dysentery, in the prison hospital,
Nashville, Tenn. He is buried at the Nashville
Cemetery, grave number 5783. His young wife, Mary
Ann,born in Tennessee abt.1830, died from overwork and
exposure after Mareth did not return from the war.
Mary Ann was the sister of Capt. Frank M. Hughes, 32nd
Mississippi Infantry, Company C.
Mareth's daughter, Elizabeth
Cunningham, married William Thomas Carter, Phillip's
Georgia Legion, Company B, Dalton Guards.
M.D.L. Cunningham is the
gggreatgrandfather of Randy Howald, SCV, W.L. Cabell
Camp #1313, Dallas, Texas, CSA. By Randy Howald
* DICKERSON, Charles Pinkney - Charles was born about 1829 in
Greenville District, SC, the son of James and
Elizabeth McCay Dickerson. He married Martha
Emily Persons, daughter of Joseph John and Nancy
Persons in Tippah Co. in 1858. Their children
were William Henry Harrison (my great grandfather),
C.P., Jr., James A., a daughter M.E. (probably Martha
Emily who is believed to have died in her late teens),
David Nelson. and John Thomas. The family moved to
Chickasaw Co. after the war before 1870. They first
lived in Okolona and when Charles applied for pension
about 1900 he was living in Trebloc, Chickasaw county,
MS.
Charles was a Private in Co. A 23rd
Miss., enlisting in Aug. 1861. The 23rd
surrendered at Ft. Donelson in Feb. 1862.
Charles was slightly injuried between the ribs and hip
bone in this battle. He was captured again at
Big Black River or Champion Hill (probably the same
place) on May 17, 1863 during Gen. Grant's drive to
Vicksburg. He was received at Ft. Delaware,
Delaware on June 9, 1863 and exchanged on July 4th,
the day Vicksburg surrendered. Apparently he was
captured a third time at Franklin or Nashville because
he says in his pension application that he was not
with his Co. when it surrendered in Tenn. (actually
NC), having been paroled for 6 months. He
applied for a pension from Chickasaw County,
application not dated but form dated 1900. In
Sept. 1907 he applied again from Lee County. He
died 14 Dec. 1907. Martha applied for a widows
pension from Lee Co. in 1908 and was living with a son
in Tupelo in at the time of the 1910 census. She
again applied in 1916. Martha (called Mary in
her obituary and one of her two pension applications)
died April 12, 1917 in Memphis while visiting her sons
C.P., Jr. and John Thomas. She was brought back to
Tupelo and buried in an unmarked grave in Glenwood
Cemetery, probably beside Charles but if so his grave
is not marked either.
See picture of him
* ELLIOTT, Calvin D. - Son of Thomas E. Elliott by his
first wife, born in 1838. He married Jemima
Elizabeth Cox, daughter of Eliah and Celia Horn
Cox. He enlisted April 25, 1862 in Co. K 34th
Miss. Infantry. He was captured at Lookout
Mountain Nov 24, 1863 and exchanged March 2,
1865. He was paroled May 24, 1865 at La Grange,
TN. The date of his death is unknown but is said
to have been prior to 1900. Both Calvin and
Elizabeth are buried in Liberty Methodist Cemetery,
Benton County.
* EMBREY, David W. - born 13
May 1841, the son of Jesse and Elizabeth Kavanaugh
Embrey. He was enlisted in Co. B 37th (later the
34th) 26 Feb. 1862 by Capt. A. C. Rucker for 3
years. A pay voucher dated Nov. and Dec. year
cut off but most likely 1862 listed him as being sick
and left in the hospital at Bardstown, KY. Ths
was probably at the battle of Perryville. Sgt.
D.W. Embrey was elected and promoted to 2nd Lt. on 3
Aug. 1863 to fill a vacancy caused by the promotion of
2nd Lt. J.S. Still. David was wounded at the
battle of Franklin and was left behind in Dec. 1864.
David married Betty A. Cole 27 May
1861 in Tippah Co., MS. They had three known
daughters; Daizey, Roxana and Julia. Jesse
Embrey's Bible states that David W. Embrey, son of
Jesse and Elizabeth Embrey departed this life May 27th
A D 1866 at 6 o'clock AM aged 25 years and 14
days. He is buried in the Embrey Cemetery in
Tippah County. Submitted by Syble
Embrey
* EMBREY,
Willis
Kavanaugh - born 12 Dec.
1832, the son of Jesse and Elizabeth Kavanaugh
Embrey. He was enlisted in Co. B 37th (later the
34th) 8 May 1862 by Capt. A. C. Rucker. He was
appointed 1st Cpl. 27 Aug. 1862. After the
battle of Perryville, KY 8 Oct. 1862 he was left in
the hospital at Harrodsburg and was captured. A
voucher dated July and Aug. 1863 states that he was
absent, captured at Perryville and now sick at
home. Another voucher states he was at Ripley
for 3 months in bad health. On 24 May 1865 he
was paroled at La Grange, TN.
Willis married Martha A. Callicott
born 29 July 1836 on 16 Feb. 1854. He died 25
Jan. 1903 in Florence, AL and is buried at Florence
Cemetery there and has a Confederate marker. The
Florence Chapter of the UDC made arrangements to place
marble head stones at the head of the graves of the
Confederate veterans buried in the Forrence
Cemetery. The list was published in the Natchez
Trace Traveler Vol 5, No 1 Feb 1985 page 27.
Submitted by Syble Embrey
* FOLEY,
William Francis - was
born on March 19, 1842 in a small town near Dublin,
Ireland. There were six children in his family
including a brother, George and a sister, Sally.
In 1845, the year
of the potato famine, his parents and family left
Dublin for America. They landed at the port of
New Orleans, Louisiana where they remained for at
least 15 years.
In May, 1861,
William F. Foley, 19 years old, enlisted in the Second
Company, Washington, Louisiana Artillery. He was
wounded on April 6, 1862, at the battle of
Shiloh. At the conclusion of the war he was in a
Union prison in Virginia.
After the war, he
worked in the coal mines of Virginia for a short time
and then made his way to Ash county, south
Carolina. He then moved to Tippah county,
Mississippi. There he dug wells and worked with
wood making walking canes.
He returned to New
Orleans to find his family, but there was no trace of
them. They had all perished in the war or from
yellow fever; or else had fled New Orleans to escape
these two threats.
In 1868 or early
1869, he married Elizabeth Snell Maxwell, a widow who
lived in Tippah county. She had a daughter named
Sarah Louise Maxwell. In January, 1870,
Elizabeth Snell Maxwell Foley died giving birth to
J.F. (Jim) Foley. This son, Jim Foley, died
sometime before 1880.
On October 13,
1870, William Francis Foley married Mary Elizabeth
McCrum. On July 21 of the following year, their
first son, John Wilson Foley was born. He was followed
by Sarah Elizabeth Foley on January 15, 1873; William
Samuel Foley, June 11, 1875; and Minnie Lee Foley,
September 29, 1879.
Sarah Elizabeth
(Sally) Foley died at the age of 8 (June 15, 1881)
from a fall that burst her appendix. Of the
three remaining children, John Wilson Foley married
Daisy Ezelia Owen and they have approximately 74
descendants.
William Samuel
(Will) Foley married Mary Rebecca (Sally) Hanks and
they have approximately 106 descendants.
Minnie Lee Foley
married Joe Warrington and produced approximately 63
descendants.
William Francis
Foley and Mary Elizabeth McCrum began a family that
now encompasses 243 members.
Carol Olonovich
See
picture of Foley family
* GAMMEL, Stephen P. - Enlisted 25 Apr 1862, Pvt. Co. H
(Tippah Farmers organized 18 Mar 1962) 34th
Mississippi Infantry, CSA, originally known as the
37th. On April 9, 1865, the 24th, 27th, 29th and 34th
MS. Regiments were consolidated in the 24th
Regiment. He was born 29 Jun 1843, son of John
Gammel. "Steve" married N. Jane "Jennie"
Dean, and had two children. They had moved to
Grant Co. Arkansas by 1873. Steve had become
very good friends, during the war, with another Tippah
Co. farmer, Elijah Griffin Stacks, who had enlisted
the same day as Steve, and who also moved to
AR. Years later Steve's daughter
married Elijah's son. Steve died 14 Mar 1928 and
is buried in Bethel Cem. North, Grant Co. AR.
Pat Stacks Ramsey
*GARRETT,
Thomas J. �T.J.� � Born March, 1843,
in Tippah County, Mississippi, a son of Alfred
C. and Rebecca (MNU) Garrett. Other children
of Alfred & Rebecca are Julia A., Lucy A.,
Sarah, Rebecca C., Felix, and Susan. The
family was living in Tippah County as per the
1850 U.S. Census. By 1860, the family had
moved to Mitchel, Poinsett County, Arkansas.
T.J. enlisted as a Private, Company K, 13th
Regiment, Arkansas Infantry, C.S.A., on July
23, 1861, at Harrisburg, Poinsett County,
Arkansas. On November 25, 1863, T.J. was
captured and taken prisoner at the Battle of
Missionary Ridge, Graysville, Georgia. On
January 4, 1864, he was sent to Rock Island
Prison in Illinois. On September 26, 1864,
while at Rock Island Prison, T.J. was �shot by
sentinel on parapet during the night while
going to the sink.� He was not �attempting to
escape or violating any of the known rules of
the prison.� On March 24, 1865, T.J. was
furloughed from C.S.A. General Hospital No. 11
in Charlotte, North Carolina, complaint was
V.S. Upper Extremities. After the war ended,
T.J. returned to Tippah County where he
married Miss Mary Sullivan on November 16,
1868. They had the following children: Cora
Belle, Lucy Dee, Mary E., Thomas Walter, and
Bertie Hovis. The family moved to Milam
County, Texas in 1881. On June 22, 1910, T.J.
was admitted to the Texas Confederate Home for
Men in Austin, Travis County, Texas. He died
there on May 2, 1922, and is buried at the
Texas State Cemetery in Austin, Section:
Confederate Field, Section 3 (B), Row: D,
Number: 54.
Submitted
by Rebecca Brubaker Freeman
* GARRETT,
William
A.- Born June 5, 1844 in
Ruckersville, Tippah County, Mississippi, the youngest
of nine children of George W. and Harriet Anderson
GARRETT. He traveled cross country at the age of 19
from Mississippi to Georgia to join the
Confederate army as a private in Company A, Hawkin's
Battery of sharpshooters, 32nd
Mississippi Infantry Regiment. At Tunnel Hill, Georgia
on December 7, 1863 he found and enlisted in this unit
to serve with his older brother, private George W.
GARRETT. In April of 1864 both brothers
transferred to Company E of the 32nd Mississippi, the
same company as 1st Sergeant Abraham B. WALDON, who
was the brother of William's wife, LeAnn Waldon
GARRETT. William's sister Sarah Garrett MOODY
lost her husband Abner MOODY, also in Company E, on
September 29, 1862 prior to the Battle of Perryville
in Kentucky. William A. GARRETT was involved in the
battles of the Atlanta Campaign. He suffered extreme
pain and hardship during the war which left him weak
and susceptible to sickness and disease. He died
from pneumonia on September 1, 1869 at the young age
of 25. His burial location has not been
determined, but it is believed to be in Lee County,
Mississippi; possibly at Baldwyn, Mississippi, where
his brother George W. GARRETT was buried in 1871.
Submitted
by James C. Garrett
* GARRISON, Charles David - Born 13 Mar 1834 in Greenville, SC
to William Brisby and Louisa Ann Evans Garrison.
Came to Tippah County with his parents in early
1840's. On 18 Mar 1862, he enlisted in the
Confederate Army ( later assigned to Company H, 34th
MS Infantry, commanded by Col. Samuel Benton) at
Orizaba, MS in present south Tippah County. His
older brother, Phillip Wilson Garrison, enlisted with
him. In October, 1862 the Garrison brothers
fought at Perryville, KY. Charles (known as
Charley) served with his company until December, 1863,
when he was granted a furlough to return home to his
family. On 26 May 1865, Charley went to
LaGrange, TN to sign surrender papers and regain his
rights of citizenship. Charley was married four
times and sired eighteen children. He died 17
Sept 1922 and is buried under a Confederate headstone
at the base of a huge white oak tree in Harden
Cemetery near the present TippahCounty community of Fellowship.
Charles David Garrison's youngest son, born when he
was 62 years old to his fourth wife, Sarah Ross, was
my maternal grandfather.
Submitted by Jimmy
Coker
* GARRISON,
John
Halber - born July 02,
1838 Greenville, S. C. , son of William B. and Louisa
Ann Garrison. John enlisted June 09, 1861 at
Blackland, MS, in southeast corner of Tippah Co.,
served under Capt. J. M. Wells, Company. On
Sept. 19, 1861, he was assigned to Co. F. 23 Reg't
Miss by Gen. Alcorn at Iuka, MS. He was
captured and was prisoner of war Feb. 16 1862 at Fort
Donelson. He died in Jackson, MS. on Sept. 23,
1862 of long chills. John Halber Garrison
was one of five brothers to serve in CSA.
Submitted by
Charles Garrison
* GARRISON, Phillip Wilson - Born in Greenville, SC, the
of William Brisby and Louisa Ann Evans
Garrison. On 18 Mar 1862, he enlisted in the
Confederate Army ( later assigned to Company H, 34th
MS Infantry, commanded by Col. Samuel Benton) at
Orizaba, MS in present south Tippah County. His
younger brother, Charles David Wilson Garrison,
enlisted with him. In October, 1862 the Garrison
brothers fought at Perryville, KY. where Phillip
was wounded and captured. Phillip died in
captivity on 15 November 1862 and is buried in the
Perryville cemetery.
Submitted by Jimmy
Coker
* GATLIN,
E. S.
- born in Tennessee around the year 1834. He was a farmer who
could neither read nor write. He was married to Elizabeth
"Betsey" D. Gatlin.
At the age of about 37, E.S. Gatlin was mustered in
to the 2nd Regiment, 1st Brigade, Mississippi Volunteers (State Troops)
as a Private on 24 August 1861 by Captain Lindsey. On 19
September 1861, the 2nd Regiment was mustered in to Confederate service
for one year by General Alcorn. Two months later the regiment
became the 23rd Regiment Mississippi Infantry by Special Order No. 228
of the Adjutant and Inspector General�s Office, dated 19 November 1861.
The 23rd Mississippi was sent to garrison Fort
Donelson on the Cumberland River in Tennessee. The entire
regiment was captured when the fort fell to Grant�s Federal forces in
February 1862. After the fort was taken, E.S. Gatlin was left at
nearby Clarksville, Tennessee to wait on the sick and injured.
E.S. was listed among the sick, also.
The last available record of E.S. Gatlin�s military
service is a Company Muster Roll dated 31 October 1862. E.S.
Gatlin was still carried on the roll as a member of the regiment but
listed as "Gatlin sick at Clarksville, now at home."
E.S. Gatlin lived only about ten years after the
war, dying between 1870 and 1880. He probably did not live long
enough to see his son, Edward Leon Gatlin marry Miss Emma Docia Rowland
in 1885. Ed and Docia moved to Tipton County, Tennessee in 1888
and there they lived and reared their children.
[ There are records of two "other" E.S.
Gatlins who served the Confederacy from the state of Mississippi.
One served in the 1st Regiment Mississippi Partisan Rangers, and the
other served as a guard at a Conscription Camp in Enterprise,
Mississippi. The dates of service and ages of the individuals all
conflict so that no two of the three E.S. Gatlins appear to be the same
person. This could be a flaw in the record keeping, or it could
be that the illiterate E.S. Gatlin did not really know how old he was,
or it could be three different individuals. It was not unusual for
soldiers on furlough or sick leave to join Partisan Ranger companies to
avoid returning to regular military duty. The E.S. Gatlin who
served in the 1st Regiment Mississippi Partisan Rangers enlisted on 1
August 1862, fought the battles of Peyton Mill and Corinth, then
deserted on 1 November 1862. This is certainly in keeping with a
man who stayed behind to take care of the sick and then went
home. It was also very common for the men who were too old, or
who had already been injured in the war, to serve as guards at military
sites close to their homes. This, too, fits the profile of "our"
E.S. Gatlin. It is beyond the resourses of this author to offer
the definitive solution to the mystery of the three E.S.
Gatlins. They could all have been the same individual, but maybe
they weren�t.
Submitted by Jeffry
Gatlin
* GENO, John - John was born 1842 in Tippah County Mississippi. He was the fifth child, first son of Francis and Mary Geno. John enlisted in L Company 23 Regiment of Mississippi Volunteer Infantry on 19th September 1861. He was surrendered along with his regiment at the battle of Fort Donnelson on 16th February 1862. He was sent to Camp Douglas Illinois where he developed typhoid. He died in City Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri 12th March 1862. Submitted by William E. Crawford
* GIBBS, Spencer � Spencer, son of Ambrose Gibbs and Judith Ray, was born June 28, 1819 in Union District, SC. He married Sarah Ann Ray, his first cousin once removed and daughter of Carrelton (Carry) Ray and Jenet Scott Martin, February 16, 1841 in Union District, SC. He and his family joined a caravan of several families moving from the Cross Keys area in Union District to Jonesborough in Tippah Co, MS in late October 1859. He enlisted for military service twice during the war. His first military record shows he traveled 31 miles to Corinth, MS, with a Double BBL Shot Gun owned by Dempsey T. Bobo, and was Mustered into State Service, at age 42, on December 5, 1861. He enlisted for a period of 60 days, as a Private in Capt. M. P. Lowrey's Company (Lowrey Guards), 4th Regiment MS Volunteers, 60-day Troops. This company, also known as Company G of the 2nd Regiment Mississippi 60-day Volunteers, subsequently became Company G, 2nd (Davidson's) Regiment Mississippi Infantry (Army of 10000). He served in this company until December 30, 1861, a period of 25 days, and it included duty at Bowling Green, Kentucky. His second military record shows he enlisted August 1, 1863 in Pontotoc, MS, for a 3-year period, in Company G, 1st Regiment Mississippi Partisan Rangers. He was enlisted by Col. William C. Falkner, the Regiment's commanding officer. The designation of this regiment was officially changed August 1, 1864 to Company G, 7th Mississippi Cavalry. His Company Muster Roll for July 1 to October 31, 1864 shows that he was "absent sick since Aug 1, 1864". The reason for his illness is unexplained, and no other information is provided after October 31, 1864. Several of his kindred including his son-in-law Sgt. Marion Ray served in Company G, and his brother-in-law John E. McMakin served in Co. B. After the war, Spencer, an active Mason, moved to Blue Mountain, MS, became the first Blue Mountain Postmaster, and established a mercantile business. He died July 17, 1882, at age 63, and was buried next to his first wife Sarah, who died October 8, 1879, in Union Cemetery at Chalybeate, MS. Submitted by Alton Spencer Ray Jr.
* GIBSON,
Captain
Andrew Jackson (A.J. Gibson) born 3 November 1839,
Mississippi, died 9 November 1903, Ashland, Benton
County, Mississippi, buried in the Ashland
Cemetery. Parents John H. GIBSON and Minerva
Jane RHODES, one sister Sarah E. GIBSON. Married
Naomi Carolyn GLENN, children John Lewis GIBSON,
Hannah B. GIBSON, Joseph Johnson GIBSON, Sarah Fannie
GIBSON, Minnie GIBSON, and Carrie D. GIBSON.
Joined the (3rd) more commonly
recognized as the 23rd Mississippi Infantry, also
known as Blount Guards, Forrest Cavalry.
BLOUNT GUARDS (later assigned as
Company A) Tendered July 15, 1861; mustered at
Ripley, 13 August 1861; Mustering officer, Capt. C.G.
Blount
Officers:
Capt. C.G.Blount
1st Lt. R.M. Swindall
2nd Lt. A.J. Gibson Also served
in the 7th Calvary
Date of appointment: 15 October
1861
Enlisted: 19 September 1862 Iuka, MS by Gen.
Alcorn for 12 months
Fort Donnelson, TN Siege &
Capture 12-16 Feb. 1862 Co. A 23rd
Inf. Regiment (captured) Feb. 1862 and exchanged about
Sept. 20, 1862. Received at Camp Chase 1 Mar.
1862. Sent to Johnson's Island, Sandusky,
Ohio. 17 April 1962. A.J. Gibson appears
on a list of officers of the 3rd Mississippi Regiment
surrendered at Fort Donelson, 16 Feb. 1862. List
not dated. Prisoner at Johnson Island.
Federal prisoner (officers) captured at Richmond, KY,
sent to Vicksburg, 1 Sept. 1862 and exchanged 8 Nov.
1862, for Confederate officers delivered at Vicksburg.
Coffeeville, 5 Dec 1862; Rolling Fork, 20 Mar.
1863; Fore's Plantation, 25 Mar.1863;
Franklin, TN, 10 Apr. 1863; Battle of Jackson
(Captured) 14 May 1863; Vicksburg, May-July
1863; Champion Hill or Baker's Creek, 16 May
1863; Chattanooga, TN, 23-25 Nov. 1863 7th Cal.;
Chickamauga, GA, 19-20 Sept. 1863 7th Cal; New Hope
Church, GA, at the line of Pumpkin Vine Creek, GA, May
25 - June 4, 1864, 23rd inf.; Atlanta, GA, May- Sept
1864 7th and 23rd; (Inspection Report dated 20
Aug. 1864 near Atlanta. Absent commissioned
officer accounted for: sick July 27,
1864); Peach Tree Creek, GA, 20 July 1864 23rd
inf.; Ezra Church, GA, 28 July 1864, 23rd inf.;
Jonesboro, GA, August 31- September 1, 1864, 23rd
inf.; Battle of Nashville, TN, Dec. 15-16, 1864,
23 inf. (captured at Nashville by forces under Major
General Thomas, commanding the Dept. of the
Cumberland, 15 Dec. 1864 and forwarded to Capt. S.E.
Jones, Louisville, KY, 18 Dec. 1864) Sent to
Military Prison, Louisville, KY, 19 Dec. 1864.
Sent to Johnson's Island 20 Dec. 1864. Released on
Oath of Allegiance on 16 June 1865. Residence:
Salem, MS, Fair Complexion, light hair, blue eyes,
Height: 6 ft. Submitted by Pat
Gibson Hendershott
* GILLEN,
William
Carmichael - served in the Second Miss. Partisan
Rangers, Co. E. He was a Sgt. He moved to
Tippah (or Union) Co. in 1848 from Jefferson Co., Al.
He married Mahalia Rowe (whose 3 brothers serving from
Pontotoc Co. were killed in the Civil War!) on Aug.
28, 1848. W.C. was born May 17, 1824 and Mahalia
on April 28, 1827. They had nine children who
were raised in this county. Mahalia died July 7,
1899. She is buried in Cornerstone
Cemetery. W. C. then went to Navarro Co., Tx. to
live with four of his children that had moved to
Texas. He died March 13, 1905 and is buried in
Grange Hall Cemetery, Navarro Co., Texas.
Submitted by
Betty Allison
* GLENN,
William Lowery- My great
great Uncle was Pvt. William Lowery Glenn. He was the
son of Lewis and Priscilla Glenn of Tippah County, Ms.
He married Ann Treese on July 26, 1859 in Hardeman
County, Tn.
He enlisted in Company H, 1st
Regiment Mississippi Partisan Rangers on October 1,
1862 in Ripley, Ms by Colonel Faulkner. This group
later disbanded. Many of the soldiers joined other
units.
I believe that after the disbanding of the
Partisan rangers that he eventually joined the 1st
Battalion Mississippi State Cavalry on April 14,
1864 in Tupelo, Ms. with Capt. Rees.
This unit was later reorganized as Ham's Regiment
Mississippi Cavalry.
Company H of this unit was
present with Wirt Adams on July 7, 1864 outside
Jackson, Ms and was involved in an early morning
skirmish with Major Slocum's troops who were
retreating from Jackson to Clinton after destroying
the bridge across the Pearl River. The family bible
states that he was killed around 8 in the
morning outside Jackson, shot through the head, in the
service of the Confederate army.
I believe that he was left on the
field of battle and is probably buried around the
Clinton area. I have searched some records and can
find no evidence of his death or burial other than the
bible.
I have also been in contact with the local SCV
commander in Clinton and he could provide no
information other than to inform me that there were a
large number of unknowns buried in the local cemetery.
Submitted by Gene
Young
* GOBER, Bushrod Washington
- was born 6/10/1830 in Georgia, possibly DeKalb
County. He was the son of Wiley Gober and
brother of William Harrison Gober. Bushrod
married Arrena Wiginton, daughter of Henry
Wiginton and Arrena Reed on 10/22/1852 in Tippah
County. According to muster rolls, he served in
12 Battalion, 10th Calvary, Co H. His widow's
Bible states, "B.W. Gober was shot and killed by
Yankees on the 3rd day of August, 1863." An
account of his death is in the dairies of Rev.
Samuel Agnew, a copy of which is in the Lee
County Public Library (also at http://docsouth.unc.edu/agnew/agnew.html).
The
entry
for
8/4/1863
reads:
"It
seems
that
a
body
of
Feds
--
number unknown -- came down on Hatchie on
Sunday. On Monday they killed Wash Gober. Gober
shot a man who had run to the Yankees first.
They charged him and eight loads entered his
body. This occured near Geno's (formerly
Winter's) Mill. The Yankees burned the mill and
the residence of a Capt Cheatham. " The entry
for 8/6/1863 reads: "The Yankees at Geno's Mill
were Reid's Tories (southern unionists). They
burned the house of Parson Jeter." Bushrod Gober
is buried beside his infant daughter, Mary, at
the Pleasant Ridge Cemetery in what is now Union
County, MS. Submitted
by Anne
Freeman
* GOBER, Francis Marion -
was born July 1843 in DeKalb County, Georgia He
was the son of William Harrison Gober and Nancy
S. Morgan. The family moved to Tippah County
about 1847. Known as "Frank," he married
Celestia A. Prather 10/13/1865 in Tippah County.
She was the daughter of William H. and Mary S.
Prather. He moved to Texas about 1886, living in
Mertens, Malone and Hubbard in Hill County. He
enlisted 6/15/1861 at Iuka, MS. He served in the
4th Calvary Co as as a private, and then in the
Miss. 23rd Infantry, Co H, as a sergeant. He
filed for a CSA pension in Texas in 1913. His
application states "I was in prison at Camp
Morton, Ind. Had been in prison 18 months.
Captured in West Tennessee. " The battle of Ft.
Donelson was the only major battle he was in
before he was captured 2/16/1862 at Obion Co.,
Tennessee. He was held for 18 months and
released 5/20/1865 at Vicksburg in a prisoner
exchange. Frank Gober died 02/27/1919. Both he
and his wife are buried at the City Cemetery in
Milford, Ellis County, Texas.
Submitted by Anne
Freeman
* GOBER, William Harrison - was born about 1821 in Georgia. The son of Wiley Gober, he married Nancy S. Morgan about 1842. Known as "Harris" Gober, he was a private in Co E, Buncombs Fighting Cocks, 1st Regiment, Mississippi Partisan Rangers (Falkner�s), aka 7th Regiment, Mississippi Cavalry. He was enlisted by Col. W.C. Falkner at Molino, Mississippi on 8/1/1862. A map of Brice's Crossroads shows the farm of Harris Gober on the Ripley-Guntown Road, near the Little Hatchie bottoms. This map was Exhibit F in the Sturgis investigation. The bottom of the map notes "The road between Gober and Brown is full of short turns, very hilly and the hills covered with pine wood." According to the diaries of Rev. Samuel Agnew, Harris Gober died 10/16/1893 of cancer. He is presumed buried at the Pleasant Ridge Cemetery in what is now Union County. Submitted by Anne Freeman
*GODWIN, Akrial/Achrol H. - was born about 1841 in Tennessee, the son of Allen Godwin and his second wife Martha 'Patsy' Reynolds. The family came to Tippah County, Mississippi, before the beginning of the Civil War. He and five of his brothers of served in the Confederacy. He enlisted in the Confederate cause on July 31, 1861, at Orizaba, Mississippi, a private in Company B. 23rd Regiment, Mississippi Volunteers. He died at Hopkinsville, Kentucky, on November 6, 1861, at age 20, while in Confederate service.[submitted by great-great-grandniece, Peggy Smith Wolfe, 2007]
*
GRESHAM, William Jasper -
Born 18 Dec. 1844 in Tippah Co. (now Benton). He
was the son of John A. and Nancy Jordan Gresham.
He enlisted at the age of 17 in Co. D 2nd Miss.
Infantry. Will married Susan Alice McDonald 8
Oct. 1865. He died 27 Sept. 1909 and is buried
in Ashland Cemetery, Benton Co. See this interesting story
about him.
* HAMER,
James
Gillespie - Born Sept.
28, 1825 in Anson Co. NC. Son of Thomas Cochran
Hamer & Sarah Cheirs. He married Sarah Caroline
Matthews who was daughter of the 15th Governor of
Mississippi, Joseph Warren Matthews (1848-50).
There is a privately published book of Hamer family
history called John Hicks Hamer of Anson Co NC.
It and family lore states that J. G. Hamer was a
Colonel in the Confederate Cavalry. He did apparently
go by "Colonel" the rest of his life. My husband
remembered seeing his sabre at a relative's
house. According to it (the Hamer book) and
them, he was in Co. H, 17th (or 19th?) Miss.
Rgt. The book says he fought in the battles of
Harrisburg, Manassas and others, surrendering in
Gainesville AL in 1865. He enlisted at Tupelo
5/30/1861. He died July 3, 1905 and is buried in
the Hamer Cemetery in Benton County.
Nelda Hamer
* HAMER, Joseph Louis - Born August 30, 1837 in Anson
Co NC, died March 14, 1900. Son of Thomas
Cochran Hamer & Sarah Cheirs Hamer. Spouse
Ophelia Wilcox. Enlisted May 15, 1861. He was a
Captain in Co. G, 63rd Regimental Cavalry,
Mississippi. Burial place unknown but possibly
in the Hamer Cemetery (Benton Co.) with his parents.
Nelda Hamer
* HATCHER, Lovid Drayton - Born 15 November 1846 in Tippah
Co., son of Lovitt M. and Rebecca Hatcher.
Enlisted in Co. G 23rd Volunteers in 1861 and was
discharged 24 June 1865. Prisioner at Camp
Douglas, Ill. Married Julia Ann Wilson 6 April
1870 in Obion Co., TN. Moved to Mississippi Co.,
Arkansas about 1900. Died 17 December 1943 in
Blytheville, Mississippi Co., Arkansas. Buried
at Number Nine Cemetery at Number Nine,
Arkansas. Was the last Confederate veteran in
Mississippi County, Ark.
Debbie
Hammonds
* HAWKINS,
James M. - Company
G 23rd Reg't Miss Vols., Tippah Riflemen
James M. Hawkins was the 2nd of 4 sons of Edward
and Elizabeth Hawkins who fought for the
Confederacy. James was born 1827 in Tenn.
and came to Tippah Co., MS with his family before
1850. He was married to Martha Jane McMulan?
(1834-1880) and had 1 son and 4 girls. Pvt.
James Hawkins enlisted 22 Oct 1862 age 35 in Co. G
23rd Miss inf. Tippah Riflemen at Ripley,
MS. Two of James� brothers, David and
William (who would raise James� son for awhile
after the war) were also in Co. G with him.
His brother Ralph was in Co. G 34th Miss Inf.
31 Oct 1862 James is sick in Hospital at Holly
Springs, MS. It is thought that James was in
the battle of Coffeeville, MS 5 Dec 1862 but by
the 20th of Dec. he was sick again in the
Regt. Hospital. James was sent to
Cranden/Brandon (spelling?) Hospital 25 May 1863
and finally died just over a year later 4 Sep 1863
at Lauderdale Springs Hospital, Lauderdale, MS and
buried there in the Lauderdale Springs Confederate
Cemetery. Death was listed as Anasarea.
James was the typical soldier
that died of disease as almost twice as many
soldiers died from disease and other causes as
died in battle. These men may not have
fought in the popular battles of history but the
sacrifices of their service will not be forgotten
by their families.
James was far from home during
this awful time of his life but certain he
received some comfort from his brothers. To
leave a wife and 5 children and go to war one must
believe he felt the cause was most important for
his family and descendents. Submitted by Steven
Rutherford 2nd
Great Grandson of James M. Hawkins,Ripley, MS
* HEATH,
Henry
Griffin -- was born February
17, 1823 in Haversham County, Georgia. He was the
son of John and Mary Heath. Henry married Martha
Samatha Clark, the daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth,
on March 3, 1847 in Haversham County, Georgia.
The Heath family traveled to
Texas by oxen and wagon from Georgia before 1848.
Children of Henry G. and Martha Heath were:
1. John Taylor Heath, born May 15, 1848, married
Myra Ganes McAlister
2. Franklin Newton Heath, born November 20, 1849
3. Jospeh Allen Heath, born January 1, 1851
4. Mary Heath, born and died in 1852.
5. Kenseda Ermine Heath, born November 7, 1855
6. Henryetta Heath, born Februrary 7, 1866
All were born in Texas except
Henryetta. Henry and family moved from Texas to
Tippah County around 1859 to be near the Clark
family.
Henry Griffin Heath enlisted in
Co. I 2nd Miss. Infantry March 5, 1862 at Ripley for
three years. He joined the regiment at
Fredericksburg, Va. April 6, 1862. His captains were
Robert Story and Joshua Benson. He was wounded at
2nd Manassas. He was in the General Hospital,
Farmville, VA. August of 1863 with a severe gunshot
injury to the right thigh. He was furloughed to
report to the nearest camp of instruction in
Mississippi for 60 days. A company muster rool,
March 3 to May 1, 1862 says absent sick at Ashland,
Va. April 14th, also sick at Ashland, Va. He was
furloughed home July 10, 1864 and struck from the
rolls August 31, 1864 for continued absence.
Among remarks is, left sick at
Blackwater Camp, Va. April 9, 1863 by order of
surgeon, sent to hospital Petersburg, June 4th. One
document lists Henry G. as a farmer, another as a
shoe maker. He was 6 ft. tall, blue eyes, dark hair,
and dark complexion.
Henry was on a roll of Prisoners
of War and paroled May 24, 1865 at LaGrange,
Tennessee. Somewhere between his injury and being
struck from the rolls, he must have rejoined the
regiment. From LaGrange, he went back to his family
and I am sure he was needed badly at home. Several
fierce battles were fought around Ripley. Their
Courthouse was burned and many things destroyed.
Martha Samantha Clark Heath was
born January 8, 1825 in Georgia. She died in
Tippah County December 24, 1885 and is buried in New
Hope Cemetery. Henry G. married Mrs. N.C. Whitt on
August 30, 1886 and moved back to Red River County,
Texas in 1887 along with the John Taylor Heath
family.
Henry died May 9, 1900 in Red
River County, Texas. He is buried in a small
churchyard of a Baptist church the family attended
while living in Texas.
See picture of him.
Sibyl D. Slain
* HICKEY,
Pvt. Henry Harvey- Co.
D Ham's Reg't Ms. Cav. unit also known as 16th
Battalion Cav. Ms. State Troops Henry enlisted
the 18th of July 1863 at Baldwyn. He had his own
gun, was 5ft 10inches tall, had dark hair and dark
eyes. Not a lot is known to the author about his war
record but according to a family story he lost a leg
while serving the Confederacy. He was discharged May
5, 1864 in Tupelo. Henry Harvey and Jemima Sharp
Hickey and their children were pioneer settlers who
came from Tn. to Tippah Co. during the 1850's. They
settled on a farm in the Lebanon community. Henry
was born in 1823 in Tn. and Jemima in 1826 in S. C.
They raised a family of 8 children. Henry died Jan.
18, 1879 and Jemima died Aug. 2, 1890. Both are
buried in the Old Bethany/Brice's Crossroads
Cemetery very near to the site of the Confederate
soldiers graves. Henry does not have a government
issued Confederate military marker.
CSA Service Record H.H. Harvey NA Microfilm #269
Roll #75
Betty Ford
*
HICKS, Caleb Ceiles - Son of Joseph and Jemima Cox
Hicks, born Nov. 27, 1829 in Bedford Co., TN.
He married Mary Ann Smith. She was born August 17, 1831 in NC,
and died March 10, 1907 in Whitney, Hill County,
Texas. According to National Archives
records he enlisted in Co. "G" 34th Regiment, Miss.
Volunteers on April 22, 1862 at Tippah, MS by Capt.
Huddleston. (This was first known as the 37th
Regiment). He was shot in the face at the Battle of
Perryville, KY and was left in the Confederate
Hospital there to be captured. His wound
disfigured him for the remainder of his life though
he covered it with a beard. He was exchanged
at Vicksburg, MS on November 15, 1862. After
recovering from his wounds he returned to duty about
May 1863. He was promoted to corporal before
he was captured outside of Atlanta on August 3,
1864. He arrived at Camp Chase, Illinois on
August 14, 1864 and remained there until March 18,
1865 when he was transferred to Point Lookout, MD.
The war ended before he could be exchanged. He
died March 6, 1914 in Whitney, TX where he had moved
in the fall of 1870 with his family, his brother
John Ellis Hicks' widow, and their ex-slaves.
Here he rejoined the rest of the Hicks family who
had moved here prior to the Civil War. Caleb and
wife were both buried in DeGraffenreid
Cemetery. In 1950 this cemetery was covered by
Lake Whitney and their remains were relocated to the
Whitney Memorial Gardens Cemetery. Submitted
by J. Rex Reed See picture of him
*
HICKS, James Haywood - Born in Hardeman Co., TN Feb. 10,
1834, the son of Joseph and Jemima Cox Hicks.
He never married. According to National
Archives Records James enlisted in the Company "D"
of the 19th Texas Cavalry, Parson's Brigade on
March 28, 1862 at Hillsboro, TX. He was
described as being 5 feet 7 inches tall with blue
eyes and sandy hair. His age was incorrectly
listed as 38 (he was 28 at the time). His enlistment shows he traveled 70
miles to the rendezvous and provided a horse worth
$125 and equipment worth $20. Most of his
service was in Oklahoma, Arkansas and
Louisiana. He was engaged in several actions
during the war including the Battle of Yellow
Bayou. His comrades said that he was one of
the truest and bravest soldiers in the
company. He died March 27, 1914 in Whitney, TX
and was buried in DeGraffenreid Cemetery. In 1950
this cemetery was covered by Lake Whitney and J. H.
Hicks� remains were relocated to the Whitney
Memorial Gardens Cemetery. Submitted by J. Rex Reed See picture of him
*
HICKS, John Ellis - Born Oct. 28, 1827, the son of
Joseph and Jemima Cox Hicks. He married
Lucinda Swain about 1850. He enlisted along
with many of his cousins in Co. "K" 34th Miss (also
known as the 37th) Infantry on April 25, 1862 in
Holly Springs, MS. He is said to have been saying
his goodbye's to his wife and five children when his
brother Caleb blew a horn at the end of a
lane. He rode off with the group and his
family never saw him again. He and his brother
Caleb of Company "G" were in the Battle of
Perryville. Caleb was severely wounded while
John was one of only seven men present in Company
"K" after the battle. On March 15, 1863 John was
sent to the hospital by the Brigade Surgeon.
He died of severe diarrhea at Lumpkin Hospital in
Rome, GA on April 25, 1863. He left behind
$9.70 in cash along with his uniform worth $16.00
and his Confederate Government issued canteen and
haversack. He was buried in the Confederate
Section of Myrtle Cemetery in Rome. Years
after the war his brother Caleb asked the publisher
of the local paper to check with a friend in Rome to
determine if John�s grave could be found.
John�s grave was discovered, marked as J. E. Hicks
of the 37th Miss Infantry. After the war,
Caleb moved John�s family with his own family to
Texas.
After the war on December 18, 1865 a deceased
Administrator�s bond was processed; the bondsman was
S. J. McCurley and the bond was signed by his brother
Caleb C. Hicks.
Brother Caleb
Hicks wondered about his brother�s grave. The
following letter was published in the
February 12, 1898 Whitney, TX Messenger, CONFEDERATE
J.E. HICKS' grave, Letter to the Editor of the Whitney
Messenger from Rome, Georgia, January 28, 1898.
Dear
sir,
By request of my old friend, Uncle Caleb Hicks, of
your town, I have made a diligent search for his
brother's grave in the Confederate Soldiers' cemetery
here. This lonely hallowed spot is a part of Myrtle
Hill cemetery where the citizens of Rome bury their
dead, and furthermore I must say, one of the grandest
and most beautiful cities of the dead I ever saw. In
the Soldiers' grave yard there are some four or five
hundred graves, all nicely marked with a white marble
slab about two feet high, one foot wide and two inches
thick. Those of the soldiers who were located before
they died here in the hospital their tombstone has
their name letter of their company, number of regiment
and what state they are from. Those that were not
located their tombs were marked "unknown". The
graves are in nice straight rows each way.
This morning I took it upon myself to go over the
cemetery and read the name on every tomb, and one slab
only I find the name of J.E. Hicks, company K, 37th
Mississippi. I hope this name and description I send
you will fit for Mr. Hicks' brother.
Signed, Joseph L. Pearce.
March 5, 1898
Submitted by: J. Rex Reed
See pictures
* HICKS,
John Jasper - born 6
Feb. 1831 in Hardeman Co., TN to William and Mary
"Polly" Cox Hicks. William Hicks died there in 1836
and Mary Polly moved to Tippah Co. MS soon
afterwards. About 1845 she married Thomas
Elliott.
John Jasper served in Co. D 2nd
Mississippi Infantry. He was a Lt. at the battle of
Gettysburg. His first cousin, Joseph Jasper Cox was
in his Co. and was killed July 3rd, the day of
Pickett's charge. John Jasper's grandson, John
Boyd McGaughy says Jasper was in the charge and was
overseeing his company's retreat when he was shot in
the back. Jasper recovered and a couple of
months later filled out the paperwork to settle the
account of Joseph Jasper Cox with the Confederate
government. John Jasper later made Captain and was
wounded at the Wilderness, May 5, 1864, and
disabled.
Jasper married Mary Elizabeth
"Bertie" Autry February 16, 1871 in Benton
County. They had one daughter, Mary Louisa
Hicks born 6 Oct. 1872 married Robert Bell McGaughy.
Jasper was the first Chancery
Clerk of Benton County, taking office in 1870.
He was also an investor in Col. Wm. C. Falkner's
railroad that ran through Ripley.
Bertie died 12 Dec. 1907 and John
Jasper died 8 Nov. 1910. Both are buried in
Liberty Methodist Cemetery in Benton County.
See
picture of him
*
HICKS, Richard Vandine
- Born in Tippah Co. Jun. 18, 1843, the son of
Joseph and Jemima Cox Hicks. He moved to Texas
when he was 12. According to National Archives
Records Richard enlisted with brother James in the
Company "D" of the 19th Texas Cavalry, Parson's
Brigade on March 28, 1862 at Hillsboro, TX. He
was described as being 5 feet 6 1/2 inches tall with
gray eyes and brown hair. Most of his service
was in Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana. After
the war he married Eliza Wallen. She died
after only two years of marriage and he married
Victoria Hays. He died June 18, 1901 in
Whitney, TX and was buried in DeGraffenreid
Cemetery. In 1950 this cemetery was covered by Lake
Whitney and R. V. Hicks� remains were relocated to
the Whitney Memorial Gardens Cemetery, marked by a
white Confederate tombstone. Victoria drew a
Texas state Confederate pension from his service.
*HILL,
David J. - David J. was
born September 4, 1827, the oldest child of John and
Armanelia Davis Hill of Clover, York County, S.C. He
had a brother, Lawson Alexander Hill, and a sister,
Fannie. David was a civil engineer, land surveyor,
and educator when he came to Blue Mountain, Tippah
County, MS. prior to the Civil War.
David enlisted March 4, 1861 at
Ripley, MS in the O'Conner Rifles which became
Company B, 2nd Regiment, Mississippi Infantry.
Muster rolls July - October 1862 show him detailed
as "baggage guard". He was wounded in the leg and
captured July 3, 1863 at Gettysburg and from July 25
to September 25, 1863 he was a patient at U.S.A.
General Hospital, Baltimore, MD. He was transferred
with 538 Confederate prisoners to City Point, VA and
admitted to General Hospital, Howard's Grove,
Richmond, VA. January - October, 1864 he was
"present" as a private in his old unit Co. B, 2nd
Regiment, Mississippi Infantry. From November 1864
to February 1865 he was detailed as "Brigade
shoemaker since Dec. 16, 1864". According to a roll
of Prisoners of War at Point Lookout, MD, David was
captured April 2, 1865 at Hatchers Run and arrived
at City Point, VA on April 3. He signed an Oath of
Allegiance to the United States on June 27, 1865 and
appears on a register dated July 1865 stating,
"Transportation furnished to Salsbury, Tenn."
David married Mary F. Smith April
4, 1867 at Blue Mountain, MS where he spent the rest
of his life as a farmer and educator. David and Mary
were the parents of six children; Ellen B., Calles
P., Thomas D., David J., Lawson Alexander, and Mary
T. David died at the home of his son Thomas at Blue
Mountain October 18, 1905. His wife Mary had died
August 23, 1895. Both are buried in the New Hope
Methodist Church Cemetery near Blue Mountain, MS.
Raymond Settle
Photo of David J. Hill
*
HOBSON, William B. - William was born May 5,
1842. He was the son of John P. and Lucinda
Morgan Hobson. According the the Partial List
of Confederate Soldiers on the Tippah County Page,
he probably served in Co. "A" 23rd Miss. He
was allowed pension for his service Sept. 6, 1916
according to Court Records. William married
Josephine Ellen Persons, daughter of Joseph John and
Nancy Persons Dec. 26, 1865 in Tippah County.
They lived near Antioch Primitive Baptist Church
near the Benton County line. William died
December 20, 1920 and is buried in Shady Grove
Cemetery in Tippah County.
*
HOLIDAY, John Wesley
Penison - John was born
June 30, 1830. He served the Confederacy as a
1st Lt. in Co. "B" 34th Miss. He married Mary
Ann McAlister October 29, 1869 in Tippah
County. Mary was the daughter of Samuel and
Nancy McFall McAlister. John died December 09,
1902 and is buried in the McAlister Cemetery in
Tippah County.
* HOLLEY,
Grant Hamilton - was
the son of Pleasant and Grace Holley (buried in
Tippah Co.). Grant H. Holley was born Dec. 2,
1834 in Tennessee, married Eliza Ellen Rich (b. June
24, 1836). Grant and Eliza Ellen (Rich) had
the following children: Thomas Elija, Mortha
Cordelia, Benn Duncan, Nancy Pearl, Judy.
Grant was a soldier in the Civil
War (Co. K 10th Miss. Inf.), was taken prisoner to
Illinois for six months. When he was
release he said they gave him a suit of clothes, a
bottle of whiskey, and a train ticket to Corinth,
MS. In 1870 or 1871, Grant moved to McNairy
County, TN.
His second marriage was to
Margaret Hix, June 13, 1873. They had one
child, Ludie.
Notes:
Grant,
Eliza
Ellen,
Margaret,
and
Aunt
Ludie
are
all
buried
in
the
Moore
Schoolhouse
cemetery
in McNairy County near Selmer,
TN. Patricia Holly
Brower
*
HOVIS,
(Hugh) Lawson Berry Note: My information about
my great grandfather, Lieutenant Colonel Lawson B. Hovis, is
almost entirely from Andrew Brown's history The Mississippi
Partisan Rangers, C. S. A. with additions from his correspondence with my family
members and their remembrances.
Lawson B. Hovis was a First Lieutenant in
the O'Conner Rifles when they went to Virginia in
spring 1861, first to Lynchburg where it was mustered
into the Provisional Army of the Confederate States,
then on to the Shenandoah Valley, the first battle of
Manassas, and on into winter quarters at Dumfries. One
of his grandsons, LagroneTigert,
said that Hovis was with General Bee when the general
mentioned Jackson standing like a stonewall. Hovis wrote a
letter to his wife describing that famous battle which was
placed in the cornerstone of the Confederate monument in
Ripley in 1911.
Brown wrote that
Hovis "had an excellent record in the Confederate
Army, having served capably in Virginia as Adjutant of
the Second Mississippi Infantry. . . ." Back in
Mississippi the next year, he assisted Col. William C.
Falkner in recruiting the First Mississippi Partisan
Rangers. In July 1862 Hovis was made captain of
Company B and on September 2 was promoted to
Lieutenant Colonel of the Regiment.
*HUDSPETH,
George W. - George
joined Co. "K" 18 Mississippi Calvalry, enlisting in
the fall of 1862. The commanders were
Captain Lox, Daniel Benton and Captain
Mitchell. George married Dora Mae Webb Dec. 1,
1870. He died Nov. 1901 in Benton
Co. Mississippi.
Jana Mayfield
*HUGHES, Capt. Frank M. -
Possibly of the most beloved couples in the early
days of Wylie were "Uncle Frank" and "Aunt Margaret"
Hughes. Settlers were few and far between in the
little settlement of Nickleville when they came here
December 24, 1869.
Uncle Frank, a first cousin to
Uncle Andy Burns, was born near Real Foot Lake, in
Hardin County, Tennessee on January 8, 1825. The
death of his father in 1837 turned this carefree boy
into days of early manhood. He and his mother soon
moved to McNairy County, Tennessee but later moved
to Tippah County, Mississippi in 1845. In Tippah
County Frank married Elizabeth Burns on January 4,
1846. To them were born six children. Uncle Frank
outlived them all.
The next move made by the Hughes
family made by the Hughes family was to Tishomingo
County, Mississippi in 1849. After the death of
Elizabeth, Frank wed Margaret Waters on January 8,
1867. To this union was born nine children.
This couple raised three children
of Mr. Hughes sister, Mary Ann Cunningham. Mary Ann
married Mareth L.D. Cunningham, 32nd Mississippi
Infantry, Company C. She died of overwork and
exposure after Mareth did not return home from the
war.
In 1861 Frank enlisted in Company
C, 32nd Mississippi Infantry Regiment as 1st Lt. He
participated in the Battle of Shiloh and other
entanglements until failing health brought him home
with an honorable discharge. After he got well,
Frank returned to the Cavalry as a scout. At the
fierce battle of Jonesbough, Georgia on July 28,
1864, he was promoted to Captain, an honor which he
held until war's end.
Before coming to Wylie, Texas in
1869 Frank had asked his cousin, Andy Burns, to buy
a plot of land for him, which Andy did. This one
spot remained home to his family for many years. He
bought and sold other properties and invested in
many businesses, although he had little formal
education. He was a very well-informed gentleman on
community affairs.
Margaret (born 1841) died in
Wylie, Texas in 1920. Frank died at his home
February 2, 1919. Both are buried in the Wylie
Cemetery. They had been members of the Primitive
Baptist Church for 45 years and lived their
religion.
At Frank Hughes funeral services
four of his Civil War comrades attended, complete in
arms and uniform. They presented the old flag of the
Confederacy which Frank had followed throuh a war,
and they also presented Frank's beloved Stars and
Stripes, which he had been proud of in his last
years.
Randy
Howald
*
JACKSON, Morgan S.
- Morgan S. Jackson, Private, Company A, 3rd
& 23rd Mississippi Infantry Regiment, enlisted
on September 19, 1861 at Iuka by Gen. James. L.
Alcorn in "Blount Guards" of Tippah County.
This company was mustered into service on August 24,
1861 at Iuka and assigned as Company A of the 3rd
Mississippi Infantry Regiment. Its officers were
Captain C. G. Blunt, 1st Lieut. R. M. Swindall, and
2nd Lieut. J. T. McBride. It was enlisted for a
period of 12 months. The Regiment responded to
Gen. A. S. Johnston's call to defense and was moved
into Kentucky to defend the Confederacy's northern
borders.
The company roster shows Private.
Jackson "present" from November 1, 1861 through
December 1862. In February 1862, the regiment was
moved into the outer defensive line of the earthen
fortification known as Ft. Donaldson. It was
here on February 16, 1862, that 546 men of the 561
present of the regiment were surrendered. The
prisoners of war were dispersed to three different
prisons. Pvt. Jackson was assigned to (prison)
Camp Douglas in the Chicago, Illinois area.
Here he was to remain until exchanged at Vicksburg
in September 1862.
On November 19, 1861, the
regiment had been redesignated the 23rd Regiment
Mississippi Infantry. On September 24, 1862 Pvt.
Jackson reenlisted at Jackson, Mississippi for the
balance of the war at the reorganization of the new
regiment.
Company records state that
Jackson was detailed on "extra duty" to the hospital
(Vicksburg) on December 25, 1862. This allowed him
to spend the winter months in productive work. North
Mississippi was in Union control, therefore leave
was of little benefit. This also carried higher pay
in the capacity of hospital Stewart.
On May 1, 1863, with the spring
campaigns beginning, he "requested" to go back to
his unit as a private. However, he apparently did
his hospital duties too well, for a little over two
weeks later, on May 16, he was again detailed as
hospital Stewart to the Medical Department (surgeon)
in Vicksburg. The May 16 company roster states,
"Supposed to be at Vicksburg detailed to Surgeon!"
Another possibility exists that he was never
released from medical hospital duty even though
requested. It doesn't appear he ever returned to his
unit.
In the meantime the regiment
fought on May 16, 1863 at the bloody battle of
Champion Hill (outside Vicksburg). The Confederate
forces were forced to redraw toward Jackson. In
June, under Gen. Joe E. Johnston, they attempted to
relieve Vicksburg.
On crossing the Big Black River,
the soldiers met superior Union forces and were
forced to withdraw back to the defenses of Jackson,
leaving Vicksburg to its sealed fate. Vicksburg
surrendered July 4, 1863. However, Pvt. Jackson
didn't survive long enough to see that happen. He
was killed on July 1, 1863 at the siege of
Vicksburg. Had he been with his regiment, he might
have lived to face other battles.
Not to be confused, there is
another M. S. Jackson, who was a member of Company
C., 20th Tennessee Infantry Regiment (from Nashville
area) and was captured the day after the battle of
Shiloh/Pittsburg Landing and also was assigned
to prison at Camp Douglas (Records dated August 1,
1862.) Both men were there at the same time, but
obviously two entirely different individuals with
the same surname and initials.
Submitted by
Tom L. Childers , 2nd great grandson.
Researched by W. C. Jackson, great grandson, of
Walnut, Mississippi. Morgan Jackson was buried
in an unknown grave in Vicksburg. On June 11, 1994,
a monument was dedicated at Little Hope Cemetery
near Falkner, Mississippi. The story and pictures
appeared in the Southern Sentinel a few days later.
* JAMES,
Lt. William Harris - was born Nov. 7,
1940 New Salem, Tippah County, MS and died Oct. 6,
1914, Bellefonte, Boone County, Arkansas.
William enlisted as a private soldier in September
1861 in Co. A (Blackland Gideonites) of the 3rd
Miss. Infantry. His regiment was redesignated the
23rd Miss. Infantry on Nov. 19, 1861. William was
captured with his regiment at Fort Donelson on
Feb. 15, 1862. He was transferred to the prison at
Camp Douglas, Illinois and exchanged at Vicksburg.
Miss. In September 1862. William rejoined the
regiment under Captain Andrew Jackson, company A
of the 23 Miss. Infantry. On April 30, 1864
William became a 2d Lt. In Company A. He was
captured at the Battle of Nashville, Tennessee on
Dec. 15, 1864. William was transferred to the
prison at Johnson Island, Ohio where he took the
oath of allegiance on June 16, 1865.
William returned to Tippah County after leaving
Johnson Island. In the fall of 1866 his father,
Newberry James Jr., left Tippah County and settled
in Carroll (later Boone) County, Arkansas. William
followed his family some weeks later. He married
Rebecca Ann Smith on January 2, 1870. He and
Rebecca had four children, but only two lived past
childhood. William taught school, farmed, and ran
water powered grist mill. Submitted by: Steve
James
* JOBE,
J.W. - was the youngest
child of Samuel and Sarah Frank Jobe. The family
moved to Tippah Co. MS when he was a small
boy. He was the first of the 6 Jobe
brothers to enlist in the Civil War. When he
was just 19 years old he went to Canaan, MS and
signed into the Confederate services for the
duration of the war. Enlistment date was Feb.
25, 1863, discharge date was June 28, 1865. He was a
Cpl. Co. H 19th MS. Inf. C.S.A. In the early
part of the war he was wounded, however he continued
to serve. He was taken a prisoner of war on April 2,
1865 and was released at the close of the war. After
the close of the war, he returned to his hometown
and became a postmaster at Antioch, MS. The
post office was located in his home and the
neighboring patrons came once or twice a week to
pick up their mail. He obtained the mail by riding
horse back to Ripley, MS once or twice a week.
On Oct. 18, 1865 he married Julia Ann Peeler,
daughter of Joseph Daniel and Amanda (Mandy) Peeler.
They moved to near Texarkana AR,
but did not stay there long. As they were on
their way back to MS their oldest child died, and
was buried in AR.
He was a farmer and lived the
remainder of his life in Tippah Co. MS. He
died in 1904, and he and Julia are both buried in
Antioch Cemetery, Tippah Co. MS. (from information
contained in "Samuel Jobe and Y'all by Willard Davis
Kent and Virginia Davis Kent) Submitted
by: Leslie C.
Buchanan
* JOHNSON, Lewis - of Faulkner Miss. Served in the 34th Miss. Co. A. He enlisted 2 Feb 1862. Lewis Johnson m. Nancy Jane Clemmer 25 Oct. 1868 and had the following children: Lucy Jane, Fanny, Joseph, John, Ella, Jennie E. and Minnie. He was born in 1838 and died 1909. He is buried either in Green cemetery or Little Hope (conflicting reports). (Note: there is a marker for Louis Johnson of Co. A 34th Miss. Inf. C.S.A in Little Hope cemetery and Nancy is buried there according to her obituary, apparently in an unmarked grave. Mrs. Louis Johnson's obituary was in the Sentinel Apr. 3, 1913 and it says she died recently at Falkner.) Submitted by: L.S. Miller
* JOHNSON,
William Marion - was born in 1832 in Lauderdale Co.,
AL. He was the son of William and Early
Springer Johnson. The family moved to Tippah
Co. in 1836, the year of its organization.
William Marion was a blacksmith as was his
father. He first married Nancy C., maiden name
unknown. He married 2nd Roenia Crouch 12 Dec.
1872 in Benton County MS. He was a member of
C.T. Bond Lodge number 239 in Hickory Flat.
William was a corporal in Captain
Francis A. Wolff's Company F 3rd Battalion
Mississippi Infantry. He enlisted on October 27,
1861 to serve one year. Captin Wolff enlisted him
and discharded him. He was a volunteer and was
honorably discharged. His records indicate
that he was 30 years old, six feet in height, tan
complexion, hazel eyes, light hair, and a blacksmith
when enlisted. He was discharged at New
Oleans, Louisiana, on February 20, 1862.
William Marion Johnson was
conscripted for service three years after he was
honorably discharged. He appeared in New
Oleans for medical examination, and his Certificate
of Examination was dated on February 7, 1865.
He was enrolled by Lt. Johnson at Enterprise, MS, in
Clark County. Upon examination he was found
"to be incapable of performing active service in the
field" and was permanently exempt. He was
examined by J.D. Alison, Surgeon, P.A.C.S., and L.
Lindsay, Surgeon, P.A.C.S., and was found to have
"Phthisis Pulmonalis", tuberculosis, and
"Nephritis", an inflamation of the Kidneys.
William Marion died 26 Feb. 1890
in Union County and was buried in Hickory Flat,
Benton County MS. His grave has not been
located because the headstone is missing. The
Civil War Pension Application of his second wife
Roenia Crouch Johnson contains a sworn statement by
L.H. Elliott, 81 years old, of Hickory Flat, Benton
County, MS which states that William Marion Johnson
served in Company F 3rd Mississippi Battalion,
1861-1862, at Grenada, Mississippi; Corinth,
Mississippi; and New Orleans, Louisiana. He
served about one year and was discharged on account
of his health. He was not a commissioned
officer and was not under conscript. He was a
volunteer and served as an infantryman.
Mr. Elliott served personally with William Marion
Johnson under Captain F.A. Wolff and Col. A.B.
Hardcastle, Company F, 3rd. Battalion of Mississippi
Volunteers. The statement was taken by M.L.
Elliott, Mayor, Hickory Flat, Benton County,
Mississippi. John Gowdy, 76, of Hickory Flat
made a similiar statement in support of the
application. Submitted by: Roger
Alex Powell, Jr. See picture of him.
*
KENNEDY, Captain James Leonidas "Lee" -
was the first of the Kennedys to
be born in Mississippi. Based upon the census
of 1880, he was born either in 1840 or 1841 due to
his age at the time of the census. His
birthdate was not recorded on the census form.
The census of 1850 for Tippah County is the first
federal census to list everyone in the households by
name. It lists James Lee's name as "Leonidas",
a name from which "Lee" was derived. He was
known throughout his life as Lee, probably to
distinguish him from his father, James H. Kennedy.
James H. Kennedy moved to
Mississippi with his family about 1838 or 1839 from
South Carolina. James Lee was probably born on
the 1,000 acre farm that his father owned in Tippah
County. He was the third of six
children. His brothers and sisters were:
Augustus, Elizabeth, Ross, Oliver, and Samuel
L. Lee named one of his sons William
Ross and another Samuel.
James L. Kennedy enlisted at the
town of Lebanon, Mississippi on 6 March 1862. His
regiment, the 32nd Mississippi Infantry, was one of
several raised in Tippah County. It would
probably be safe to assume that James L. Kennedy was
a farmer prior to the war since that is what is the
postwar census cites as his occupation.
Official muster records show that James L. Kennedy
joined the Confederate Army at the age of 20 as a
private. His unit was Captain W. R. Nelson's
Company, Mississippi Volunteers. Nelson's Company
subsequently became Company B, 32nd Mississippi
Infantry Regiment. His enlistment was for "3
years or war".
Subsequent records show that he
was absent "by orders of the surgeon" due to
sickness in May and June. On 22 August his
company elected him 2nd Lieutenant as was the custom
of the time in volunteer units. He was
promoted to 1st Lieutenant on 24 August 1862.
By December 1862 he was signing the company rolls as
"Comdg" (commanding) indicating that his commander
had probably been replaced due to battle death.
On 1 February 1863 he was
promoted to the rank of Captain, the proper rank for
a company commander. By January - February
1864 the unit had suffered enough casualties to
force the amalgamation of units. Companies B
and I of the regiment were combined and Captain
James L. Kennedy signed the rolls as the commander
of both.
The 32nd Infantry Regiment fought
under General Cleburne in the western theater.
By late war it was sent to fight in the battles
around Chattanooga and later Atlanta. The 32nd
Regiment was in the right wing of the attack at
Chickamauga on 20 September 1863 when Rosecrans'
Army of the Cumberland was driven from the field in
a rout. The 32nd Regiment had been combined
with the 45th Mississippi Infantry at this stage in
the war due to the high casualties.
Consolidation of regiments was not unusual at this
stage of the war when the regimental strengths were
lowered by attrition. It was known as the 32 / 45th
Infantry Regiment and was commanded by Colonel M.P.
Lowry and assigned to the brigade of Brigadier
General S.A.M. (Sam) Wood. About 9 April 1865,
this regiment was consolidated with the 3rd
Battalion, and the 5th and 8th Regiments Mississippi
Infantry and reformed as the 8th Battalion,
Mississippi Infantry. This unit surrendered
with General Johnston's army in the Carolinas in
April 1865.
Captain Kennedy returned to Lee
County (formed from Tishamingo, Tippah and Ponotoc
counties) after the war and became a farmer, raising
his family near Guntown. In latter life, he
went to live with his son, Dr. William Ross Kennedy,
in Merwin or Gloster, Amite County. In latter
years he lost a leg somehow (we now speculate that
it was diabetes). He used to tell his
grandchildren (Ken [Enoch] and Camille) that it had
been "shot off by a cannon in the war".
For the last several years we
have attempted to find where Lee Kennedy was
buried. In July of 2002, a search of the
Tippah County website showed that he had moved to
Wynnewood, Oklahoma to live with his
son. A search of the Wynnewood, Oklahoma
website showed further that there was a Confederate
cemetery named "Oaklawn" in Wynnewood.
The site was active and being cared for by two
S.C.V. members, Mr. Michael Grissom and a young man
named Erik McBroom.
Michael Grissom is the well-known
author of a number of books about the
South. They have voluntarily cared for
the Confederate graves to include that of Captain
Lee Kennedy. Apparently, Lee moved to Oklahoma
and died shortly afterwards. His
headstone says he died in 1913 from emphysema. Mr.
Grissom has insured that a government military
headstone was provided for Captain Kennedy's
grave. Erik McBroom got the Confederate
veteran's marker and cares for it. Mrs.
Choate of the United Daughters of the Confederacy
decorates the grave on Confederate memorial
day. I have provided funds to them to assist
in the maintenance of the grave and insure its
continued upkeep. Submitted by: Ed Kennedy See picture of him
* KIDD, Andrew
Jack - was a private
in Co. G, the 34th MS Infantry, a unit nicknamed
the �Sons of Liberty and led by Capt. J.B.
Huddleston. A.J. was the son of George and
Mahaley Kidd, and was born in Tennessee about
1844. The family moved to Tippah Co., MS by
1850. He and his brothers George and James
H. Kidd enlisted together. Submitted by Reiley Kidd, MD,
5152 54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA 98118-2114
* KIDD, E.F. (Ensilous Fletcher)- enlisted in Co. H, 19th
Mississippi Volunteers �for the war,� on May 18,
1861, in Canaan, MS, 9 months before being joined
by his brothers. This unit was variously known as
the Salem Cavalry, the Salem Dragons, and the Dick
Wright Rifles.
E.F. was born in 1842 in
Dinwiddie Co., VA, the son of William and Mary Ann
Stell Kidd. He came with the family to
Tippah Co., MS by 1850. He was wounded at
the battle of Williamsburg, VA on May 5, 1862, and
apparently didn�t survive the war.
Submitted by Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152
54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA 98118-2114
* KIDD, Eutimeous E.C. - E.E.C.
�Tim� Kidd - enlisted
with his brothers in Co. H, 19th Mississippi
Volunteers �for the war,� on Feb. 25, 1862, in
Canaan, MS. To do so, he lied about his age,
claiming to be 18, when in fact he was not yet 16.
Tim was born Oct. 10, 1846 in
Dinwiddie Co., VA, the youngest son of William and
Mary Ann Stell Kidd. A private throughout
the war, he was captured at Spottsylvania on May
12, 1864, and was a POW at Fort Delaware, DE until
the end of the war. After the war, he
married Barbara Elizabeth �Betty� Stroup in 1869
in Tippah Co., MS, and they had twelve
children. Tim died Oct. 13, 1906. He
and his wife are buried in the Bethlehem Cemetery,
just outside Ashland, MS. Submitted by Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152
54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA
98118-2114 See
picture of him.
* KIDD, George W. - was a private in Co. G, the
34th MS Infantry. George W. was the son of
George and Mahaley Kidd, and was born in Tennessee
about 1839. He and his brothers Andrew Jack
and James H. Kidd enlisted. Submitted
by Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152
54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA 98118-2114
* KIDD, James F. - along with several nephews and
one brother, James F. enlisted in Co. H, 19th MS
Infantry on Feb. 25, 1862. Captured at
Gettysburg, he was sent to a POW camp at at Ft.
Delaware (on Pea Patch Island in the Delaware
River), where he died Sept. 14, 1863. He is buried
in Finn's Point National Cemetery at Ft. Mott
State Park, Salem Co., NJ, on the New Jersey side
of the river.
James F. was the son of
Lodawick and Lucy Kidd, and was born abt. 1830 in
TN. He�s buried at Ft. Mott, NJ.
Submitted by Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152
54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA 98118-2114
* KIDD, James H. - was a private in Co. G, the
34th MS Infantry, a unit nicknamed the �Sons of
Liberty and led by Capt. J.B. Huddleston.
J.H. was the son of George and Mahaley Kidd, and
was born in Tennessee March 1, 1842. He and
his brothers George and James H. Kidd enlisted
together. He married Susan A. �Sudie� Harris
after the war, and they raised 10 children.
He died Feb. 19, 1919 in Benton Co., MS.
Submitted by Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152
54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA
98118-2114
* KIDD, Kinchin Leroy - enlisted with his brothers in
Co. H, 19th Mississippi Volunteers �for the war,�
on Feb. 25, 1862, in Canaan, MS. Kinchin was
captured at Germantown TN September 18 (other
records say December 2), 1863 and was in a
military prison at Alton, Illinois, then later
transferred to Fort Delaware April 4, 1864, until
released at the end of the war on June 11, 1865.
Kinchin was born in Nov. 21,
1837 in Dinwiddie Co., VA, the son of William and
Mary Ann Stell Kidd. He came with the family
to Tippah Co., MS by 1850. Kinchin married Susan
E. Smith before the war began, and they raised 8
children. He died July 4, 1912 in Benton or
Tippah Co., MS. Submitted by Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152
54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA 98118-2114
* KIDD, William K. - mustered in Feb. 25, 1862 as a
private in Co. H, 19th MS Infantry, along with an
uncle and several nephews. He was probably
the son of Robert and Mary Sorrels Kidd of Tippah
Co., and was born about 1844 in TN. He
surrendered at Appomattox with Lee�s army, and was
paroled there. Submitted by Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152
54th Avenue S., Seattle, WA 98118-2114
* LEE, Granville - was born 8 April 1832 in Giles County,
Tennessee; died December 19, 1867 in Tippah
County, Mississippi, and is buried at Wells
Chapel Cemetery in Union County, Mississippi,
along with his parents, Strother Lee and
Catherine (Nutt?), and most of his siblings.
Granville Lee married Margaret A. Spencer,
daughter of John Spencer and Francis
Davis. Their children were Iowa Lee
(married J.F. Sneed), born ca. 1858; John W.
Lee, born ca. 1860; and Minerva Drucilla Lee
(married Samuel Christopher Hamilton, son
of Mary ____ and James Wilson Hamilton,
Sr.). Minerva Drucilla Lee was born 1
April 1862 in Tippah County, Mississippi, and
died 8 November 1957 in New Albany (Union
County), Mississippi. Minerva, Sam, and many of
their children are buried at Pleasant Hill
Cemetery in Union County, Mississippi.
According to Granville Lee's Confederate Service
Record, he entered into service 15 June 1861 -
Pvt., Co. H (Capt. E.M. Wells' Company known as
'Molino Rifles'), 2nd Infantry, 1st Brigade,
Mississippi Volunteers which subsequently became
Company H, 23rd Regiment Mississippi
Infantry. Granville Lee's regiment was
captured at Ft. Donelson 16 February 1862 and
sent to Camp Douglas, Illinois. His name
appears on the Roll of Prisoners of War sent to
Vicksburg, Mississippi, to be exchanged.
The Roll is dated 3 September 1862. Granville
Lee was captured a second time at Oxford,
Mississippi, 2 December 1862 and sent to Alton
Prison in Alton, Illinois. He was paroled
and was among the 850 Confederate prisoners sent
to City Point, Virginia, for exchange by order
of the War Department, 1 April 1863.
Evidently, Granville Lee made his way back to
Mississippi for he was captured a third time at
the Battle of Vicksburg, 4 July 1863. On 5
July 1863, he signed (made his mark) on a
document which stated, "I, G. Lee . . .
being a Prisoner of War, in the hands of the
United States Forces, in virtue of the
capitulation of the City of Vicksburg and its
Garrison . . . do in pursuance of the terms of
said capitulation, give this my solemn parole
under oath--That I will not take up arms against
the United States, nor serve in any military,
police or constabulary force in any Fort,
Garrison or field work, held by the Confederate
States of America . . . ." The Company
Muster Roll for November and December 1863
indicates: "absent without leave since 23
August 1863 - failed to report to parole camp
now in Tippah County."
Having
survived the war and Alton Prison, it is ironic
that Granville Lee was killed [according to
other Lee researchers] when a tree he was
cutting accidentally fell on him.
Submitted by Brenda Brayman
* LEWIS, David S. - was born in Spartanburg
District, South Carolina on the 6th day of October
1834 and died in Alcorn County, Mississippi on the
5th day of March 1905 at the age of 70 years 4
months & 29 days. He is buried at Shiloh
Cemetery, Tippah County, Mississippi where someone
has placed a Civil War marker commemorating his
service. Most of the information given
regarding David Lewis is from an apparent long
time friend who wrote his obituary which is in the
Southern Sentinal dated 03/16/1905.
He came to Tippah County in
1854 or 55 and lived there continuously except for
a short stay while visiting his family in
Texas. He met and married Nancy A Lowrey on
22 February 1859 and together they had 10 known
children. In one census he is listed as a
mechanic but the other censuses he was a
carpenter. He was a Bourbon Democrat &
strong advocate of State�s Rights. He was
generous almost to a fault and was excessively
fond of children & was a favorite among them.
He was a splendid nurse in sickness & would
often leave his business & go and wait on sick
day and night for weeks at a time.
He enlisted in the Confederate
Army in July, 1861 in Company G, Tippah Rifleman,
23rd Mississippi Regiment. He fought in the
West Virginia campaign and from there to Fort
Donelson where he was captured and carried to
prison at Johnson Island in Lake Erie for seven
months. He was brought down and exchanged at
Vicksburg, Mississippi. He was 3rd
Lieutenant in his Company & was a superb
soldier. He was involved in the battles of
Jackson, Baker�s Creek, & Big Black
Bridge. He played an active part in
Coffeeville, Abbeville and Waterford.
Sometime in the spring of 1864 while on detached
service he was slightly wounded, having his arm
shot in two. He was again captured and once
more carried to Johnson�s Island where he was kept
until about the close of the war. Submitted
by: Lenore
Lowry Gifford
* LOWRY, Franklin L. - was born 1 Feb., 1848 in Tippah
County, Ms. He was the son of Isaiah R.
Lowry and Sarah of Tippah County, Ms. In an
application for a peddler's license in 1913 he
stated that he enlisted in May of 1863 into
Company "C" of the 22nd regiment of Calvary and
was discharged on Sept. 1865. On the 5
April, 1913 a proof of service was filed from
Alcorn County, Ms. where W.M. Maricle said he was
personally acquainted with F.L. Lowry and had
known him since the year 1864 when he joined the
Southern army. That he was a confederate
soldier belonging to company "A" regiment of
Moffitts. That he served from the first of
the year 1864 to the year sixty-five. That
he is now and has been for the past twelve months
a bona fide resident of Arkansas. That he is
incapacitated for manual labor by reason of
blindness.
On the back of the proof of
service , J.N. Meeks of Tippah County, Ms. stated
that he was personally well acquainted with
applicant F.L. Lowry and had known him for 55
years. That he was a Confederate
soldier, belonging to Company "A" regiment of
which Moffitt was Colonel, which regiment was
under the command of General Forest: that such
soldier served from August 1864 until the end of
the war in 1865; that he was honorably discharged
(Paroled or released) from such service and did
not desert the same; and that he is now and has
been for the past twelve months a resident of
Arkansas. He married 2 June, 1869 to Paralee
Garner in Tippah County, Ms. (Book 3 p. 124 Tippah
County Marriage Records) He died on
the 30 August, 1919 in Pulaski County, Arkansas
and is buried in Landmark Cemetery, Pulaski
County, Arkansas. In his later years
he peddled housewares all over three
Arkansas counties in his peddler wagon with his
two white mules, Dick and Rhoady. He would
blow on his calvary horn to let people know he was
coming down the road. Submitted by gggrandson Steve
Perdue
* LOWREY,
General Mark P. -General
Mark
P.
Lowrey
(then
Colonel
Lowrey) raised, organized
and
was
elected
to
command
the
32nd
Regiment
Mississippi Volunteer Infantry at Kossuth, Old Tishomingo Co.
[now Alcorn Co.], Miss. during March and early April 1862 just
prior to the Battle of Shiloh. Col. M. P. Lowrey was
promoted to Brigadier-General in early Oct. 1863 soon after
the Battle of Chickamauga, and was given command of
Brigadier-General S.A.M. Wood's brigade about mid-Oct. when
Gen. Wood resigned over issues between himself and General
Patrick R. Cleburne, the division commander. It was
known thereafter as Lowrey's Brigade, and
remained assigned to Gen. Patrick R. Cleburne's
Division in General William J. Hardee's Corps, Army of
Tennessee, CSA.
Rev. Mark Perrin "M.P." Lowrey is often
referred to as "the fighting preacher of the Army of
Tennessee." He was a Baptist preacher living
in Kossuth, Miss. before the Civil War, and had
various congregations around Old Tishomingo County that he
visited and preached at. He was well known for his
"Sunday preachings" to his fellow soldiers during the war,
which contributed to his nickname, "the fighting
preacher." After the war he settled where Blue Mountain
is now located and founded the Blue Mountain College for women
in 1873.
* LUMBLEY, Jacob G. - Born 24 Aug 1838 in Tippah, MS, died 04 Feb. 1918 in Michie, McNairy, TN. Jacob G. was s/o Edmund Lumbley and Nancy B. of Wake Co., NC, Carroll Co., TN & Tippah Co., MS. He served in Co. D 23rd Miss. Infantry. He married 13 Jun. 1869 in McNairy Co., TN to Melissa E. Springer born 23 Oct. 1849 TN died 02 Oct 1901 probably in Michie, McNairy, TN. Jacob was allowed a pension for his service 29 Jun. 1911. He is buried in Gravelhill, McNairy Co., TN. Submitted by: Hellen Nichols Battleson
* LUNA, Issac Currin - Co. A 34 Mississippi Inf. was
born 14 August 1832, the son of Lunsford
Long Luna and Mary Davis Currin. He enlisted in
the Confederate Army, 25 Feb. 1862, Tippah Co.
Mississippi. He was prisoner of war, captured 04
June 1863, and was in prison at Camp Douglas Ill.
He was married to Martha Jane Butler 1853. He died
in Tippah Co. 03 Oct 1877 and is buried in the
Butler Cemetery, Benton Co. Mississippi.
Submitted by: Mildred J.
Brown
Luna, Lunsford Long
- Pvt. Co. A&E, 34th
Mississippi Inf. L.L. was born 05 Feb. 1833 in Hardeman
Co. TN to John Smith Luna (TN) and Sally Davis Currin (AL).
The family moving to Tippah Co. MS in 1834/36. L.L. was named
for his GGreat Grandfather & Uncle who resided in Hardeman
Co.TN . He enlisted in the CSA Army 25 Feb 1862 as a member of
the volunteer �TIPPAH RANGERS� 37th
Mississippi Inf. He was �dangerously� wounded at the
Battle of Perryville, KY on 08 Oct 1862 & returned to duty
in Mar 1863. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Lookout
Mt. TN on 24 Nov 1863 & remained a POW at the � infamous�
Rock Island, IL Union Prison until the end of the conflict.
Surrendered & paroled at LaGrange, TN 27 May 1865,
he walked back home to his family in Tippah Co. MS. L.L.
married Sarah Virginia Blair (b TX 1843) 08 Sept 1860 Tippah
Co. MS. L.L. died 24 Feb 1919 while living with his son,
Joseph Winfield Luna, my Grandfather. L.L. and his wife,
Sarah, are buried in New Salem Cemetary, Tippah Co. MS. Both
graves have markers. In addition L.L. had four brothers, a
brother in law & 1st Cousin who
served in the CSA.
* LUNA, William Lafayette - Pvt. Co. F 2nd Mississippi
Infantry, served under Capt. William L.
Davis. He was placed on the 2nd Mississippi
Roll of Honor for his service at Gettysburg.
William Lafayette was born July 24, 1829 in Morgan
County, AL to John Smith and Sarah Currin
Luna. After moving to Tippah County, he
married Margaret Rowland. William enlisted in the
CSA on May 1, 1861 at the age of 31. He was
on the Muster-in roll in Lynchburg, VA. He
was with Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley, fought
in the battles of 1st Manassas where he was
severely wounded, Seven Pines, and
Gettysburg. He was wounded five times.
In October 1861, he was in
General Hospital, Charlottesville; in April of
1862, he was hospitalized in Richmond. He
was wounded again at Gettysburg on July 1, 1863
and lost the lower part of his arm.
He was taken prisoner-of-war to
Davis Island, NY but was later sent to the
Episcopal Hospital in Williamsburg, VA. He
was transferred from there to South Carolina to
receive treatment for wounds incurred at
Gettysburg. From March to August of 1964, he
was on medical furlough in Mississippi.
William Lafayette Luna was one
of the first mayors of Walnut, MS. He died
May 8, 1918 and is buried in New Salem
Cemetery. Submitted by: Kay Luna
* MASK, James Joseph Robert - was born in Anson County, NC
about 1832 to Silas Mask and Judith Boggan. After
the death of Silas, Judith and several of her
children came to Tippah Co. He was married to Mary
Martha Lockhart, daughter of John and Martha
Lockhart, about 1850. Joseph R. Mask enlisted for
three years on March 17, 1862 in Co. E, 32 Reg�t
of the Mississippi Volunteers and served in Capt.
J.N. Scally�s Co. He is listed as absent for the
company muster roll for May & June 1862 with a
remark that he was sent off sick at the evacuation
of Corinth. He is present for muster rolls for
July and August, 1862. He appears on a register of
the C.S.A. Post Hospital at Dalton, Georgia
suffering from diarrhea. Another register from St.
Mary�s Hospital in Dalton states he was admitted
January 18, 1863 and returned to duty February 24,
1863. On January 21, 1863 the hospital records
that he was vaccinated against smallpox.; January
& February, 1863 and March & April 1863 he
was present for muster. The final entry in his
file states he died at Tullahoma, Tenn. March 14,
1863. In Tullahoma there is a Confederate
Memorial, erected in 1964. It reads: �On this
ground are buried 407 unknown Confederates. Many
of these died in one of the hospitals established
here when Tullahoma was headquarters for the Army
of Tennessee during the first six months of 1863,
following the Battle of Murfreesboro and preceding
the withdrawal of the army to Chattanooga.� The
widow of Joseph Robert Mask filed a claim to
collect monies due her or her deceased husband. He
left four children, the youngest born after his
enlistment.
Submitted by: Jane Webb ,
14860 Mitchell Creek Dr., Fort Bragg, CA
95437
* MASK, William Kirby - was born in Anson County,
NC on the 7th day of March A.D. 1844. His parents
were William Kirby Mask, Sr. and Martha B. Perry.
W.K. Mask enlisted on August 6, 1861 for a 12
month term in the Kossuth Volunteers under Capt.
R. B. Allen. He was listed as a private in Co. D,
2nd Regiment, 1 Brigade, Army of Mississippi. He
was captured at Fort Donelson on Feb 16, 1862 and
appears on a record of the U.S.A. Prison Hospital
at Camp Douglas, Ill where he spent 10 days for
treatment of scurvy. A notation on a Roll of
Prisoners of War states: Rec�d the foregoing list
of Prisoners of War, Ten hundred and Twenty one in
number. � N.G. Watts, Major C.S.A. & Agent for
Exchange of Prisoners. On Board Steamer Jno. H.
Done, near Vicksburg, Miss., September 20, 1862.
Two days later, on September 22, 1862, he again
appears on a Company Muster Roll at Iuka,
Mississippi. His widow, Mary Jane Carter Mask,
filed an application for a pension in 1930 in
Bexar County, Texas. She states that they were
married March 21, 1873 in Tishamingo County, MS.
and that he died July 15, 1926 in Atascosa County,
TX.
Submitted by: Jane Webb ,
14860 Mitchell Creek Dr., Fort Bragg, CA
95437
* MASK, James Franklin - was born Sept 1, 1846, brother
of above William Kirby Mask. An entry in the
Family Bible states that James F. Mask was wounded
at -?- Alabama on the 24th September 1864 - Shot
the ball in above the left nipple and came out
near the spine on the same side - and left in hand
of the enemy.
Submitted by: Jane Webb ,
14860 Mitchell Creek Dr., Fort Bragg, CA
95437
1st Lt. James Hugh Mauldin
1839-1925
* MAULDIN, 1st Lt. James Hugh - born 10 Feb. 1839. Family
history has it that he was at Shiloh and Corinth
as a partisan, later joining the Cavalry when it
was formed under Solomon Street. He was a
1st Lt. in Co. A 2nd Miss. State Cavalry.
The 2nd Cavalry was later placed under the command
of Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. This picture
of him in his uniform was made in the spring or
summer of 1865 upon his return home. He
returned to Benton Co. following the war where he
worked as a blacksmith and farmer.
James died 17 Oct. 1925 and is buried in
Little Hope Cemetery in Tippah County.
Submitted by:
Hugh
Pulliam
*MCALISTER, Benjamin Franklin - Born in Anderson Dist., S. C. April 13, 1839. He was the son of William Russell and Cynthia McAllister. He enlisted and fought in the 21st S. C. Cavalry. Moved to Miss. at the end of the Civil War. Married Mary J. Cunningham in 1858. He died May 28, 1911 and is buried in New Hope Cemetery. Submitted by: Rosemary Hollis
* MCALISTER,
John Alexander -
fought in the 2nd Mississippi Infantry Regiment,
Company L. John was born in Abbeville, SC in
1840. His parents were Alexander and Sarah
McAllister. John's family moved to Tippah
Co, MS around 1845. I believe Alexander and
Sarah are buried in Union Co., MS. John was
wounded in the 7 Pines Battle (on the Roll of
Honor) and did not return until 1863. He was
again wounded in the battle for Weldon's Railroad
near Petersburg, VA. John died in 1906 in
Little River County, AR. John first married
Mary Jane Robinson and later Gerusha Ellen
Thurman. I am descended from Gerusha
Ellen. John died as a result of his
wounds. Submitted by: Presha Merritt
*MCBRYDE,
Samual Oliver - was born in Abbeyville South
Carolina in 1827 son of Maj. Robert Mcbryde
founder of the Ebenezer Church in Tippah. He was
my g/g/g/grandfather. Father of Georgia McByde
who married Willim Timothy Turner of Tippah
County of the first email I sent.
SGT S.O. McBryde D.Co. 7th Miss. Cav. was
reportedly captured at Collierville in Nov. 1862
and most likely died as a POW. His daughter, son
in-law and wife moved to Kaufman County Tx
and there is a Confederate headstone for him
there at College Mound Cemetery. Submitted by:
Erick
Turner
* MCALISTER, Nathan Thomas - Born in Tippah Co. September
18, 1833, the son of Andrew and Mary Ann Hume
McAlister. He moved to Magnolia, AR prior to
the Civil War where he married Francis Ann Delona
McKinley. He died in Pine Bluff, AR of
phneumonia October 11, 1862 while in the
Confederate army.
John and
William "Bill" McIntyre
*MCINTYRE, John
Sidney - Born in
Cumberland County, NC in 1826, one of identical
twins (see information on his twin below).
His parents were William J. and Jane Stewart
McIntyre, the father probably a native of North
Carolina and the mother of Scotland. She was
the daughter of John Stewart, the latter descended
from th Stuarts of Scotland. His parents
migrated to East Tennessee in 1831, where his
father died. In 1838, his mother and her
children all moved to Tippah county, MS, where the
children grew to maturity and received their
education.
He married Mary Ann
Ward, daughter of Elijah and Elizabeth Ward
of Tippah County, MS. Shortly before 1860, John
moved his family to Elm Springs, Washington
County, AR. When the War broke out he moved
again to Texas to avoid the conflict. In
1863, he returned to Arkansas and enlisted with
the Arkansas 12th Infantry, Co. H. and served as
Sergeant. Mary and John had seven children.
John farmed and was a Mason. Mary passed in
1897. John lived to the ripe old age of 92,
he died in Robinson, Benton County, AR in 1918 and
is buried in Yell Cemetery there.
*MCINTYRE, William
James "Bill", The second of four
children, (twin to John Sidney McIntyre) William
J. McIntyre, chancery clerk, Ripley was born in
Cumberland County, NC in 1826. His parents
were William J. and Jane Stewart McIntyre, the
father probably a native of North Carolina and the
mother of Scotland. She was the daughter of
John Stewart, the latter descended from th Stuarts
of Scotland. The parents of our subject
emigrated to East Tennessee in 1831, and there the
father received his final summons. In 1838
the family removed to Tippah county, Miss., where
the children grew to maturity and received their
education. William J. McIntyre, Jr. received
liberal scholastic advantages, and afterward
followed school teaching until the breaking out of
the war. In 1863 he enlisted in Gholson's
cavalry, served until the surrender, and then
returned to Tippah county, where he served as tax
assessor for a period of twelve years.
His ability as a public official became
recognized, and in the fall of 1887 he was elected
chancery clerk, which position he has filled with
energy, efficiency and ability surpassed by few,
if any, public officials. In 1859, he was
married to Miss Sarah E. McCoy, and the results of
this alliance has been the birth of nine children,
one of whom died in infancy. Mr. McIntyre
and family are members of the Missionary Baptist
church, and contribute liberally to the upbuilding
of all charitable and praiseworthy
enterprises. He has, for many years, been a
member of the A. F. and A. M. faternity and is a
Mason in principle and precept. In personal
appearance he is tall and well proportioned, white
hair and beard, blue eyes and a very intellectual
looking head.
Copied from Biographical and Historical Memoirs of
Mississippi Vol. 1, pages 1212-1213.
Bill served
as 1st 2nd and 3rd Lieutenant CSA - Company A, 2nd
Regiment of the Mississippi Calvary. Bill passed
away peacefully at home in 1898 and is buried in
Ripley Cemetery. Sarah moved to Tipton
County, Tennessee near the community of Charleston
to be near her sister's and their families.
She died in 1921, and is buried in the Charleston
Cemetery, Charleston, Tipton County, TN. Submitted
by Melissa
McCoy-Bell 2nd Great Granddaughter
MCCLAIN, Sgt. Lewis M. - Born in 1822 and died in 1912. He is buried in Antioch Cemetery. He severed in Co. G 34th Miss. Inf. and was Sheriff of Tippah County in 1876. Lewis is the great, great grandfather of Mr. Charles W. Reese of 111 West Main Street, Blue Mountain, Mississippi. Charles used this Confederate ancestor to gain admittance into the Col. W.P. Roger's Camp 321 of the Sons of Confederate Veterans in Corinth, Mississippi. Lewis is in the 1904 Confederate Reunion picture on these pages. Submitted by: Maggie Reese
* MCELWAIN, David
Andrew - born March 6, 1844
in Gaston Co. N.C. Parents were
Caleb McElwain and Mary
Williams. David was a private
in 2nd Mississippi State Cavalry Co.
A. He enlisted December 15,
1862 at Ripley, Mississippi.
Was captured May 22, 1863 at Ripley
and released from Ft. Delaware June
11, 1865. He was married to
Ann Darnell. He died Sept. 4,
1937 while living at the Confederate
Home for Men in Austin, Texas.
He is buried at the State Cemetary
in Austin, Texas..
Robert
Green
* MEADOR, Ballard Samuel - born in Cumberland County,
Virginia in December of 1828, the son of JAMES LEE
MEADOR and FRANCES ANDERSON. Ballard and his
brothers, WILLIAM and ALONZO, migrated to Marshall
County, Mississippi sometime in 1850, joining his
brother, PLEASANT MEADOR, who was living near
Holly Springs. BALLARD S. MEADOR is
first found on the 1851 Personal Property Tax Roll
of Marshall County. He was married first, on
5-27-1851 in Marshall County to Miss NANCY JANE
PARKER. They had one daughter, MARY JANE. In 1860
he was living in Baker Beat.
BALLARD MEADOR met MARY NORVELL PERKINS,
daughter of WILLIAM R. PERKINS and SALLIE AMOS,
while he was serving in the Civil War. She was
born in Powhatan County, Virginia in July 1842,
and migrated to Marshall County about 1845. Both
parents died while Mary Norvell was young.
She was a schoolteacher, and lived with her
sister, SARAH D. HORTON in Tippah County. They
were married in Hickory Flats, at the home of her
sister, in 1863. The marriage certificate
has never been found. In the 1866 MS State Census,
B. S. MEADOR is listed in Tippah County, age
30-40, wife age 20-30, and 2 females under
10. Their Children were: WILLIA ANNIE MEADOR
FUNDERBURK, SALLIE EMMA MEADOR WELCH, MARCUS
ALONZO MEADOR, IRENA MEADOR YOUNG and
MANNING MATLOCK MEADOR. They lived near Hickory
Flats until 1898, then near Ellistown in Union
County, Mississippi. Ballard died in 1904 near
Ellistown, Union County, MS. He may be buried in
Old Zion Hill Cemetery.
BALLARD S. MEADOR was a Confederate
pensioner, and his wife drew a widow's pension
until her death in 1919. B. S. Meador was listed
in the May 3rd edition of SOUTHERN SENTINEL as
being in the original 2nd Mississippi Infantry
when it marched off from Ripley on their way to
Corinth on 4-30-1861. In the Union County, MS
chancery clerks office is a Confederate Pension
Record Book that has Ballard Meador listed on page
M.
MEADOR, B. S.; enlisted Tippah County, MS, 1861,
2nd Mississippi Inf., CO B, under Col. W. C.
Falkner and J. H. Buchannan. Married M. N.
MEADOR in 1863. Discharged Aug. 1862. Reinlisted
7th Mississippi Calvary, wounded September 1862 at
PEYTON'S MILL. At home at close of War. (
Paden's Mill is south of Iuka, Tishomingo County,
MS. The Battle of Iuka was fought on September 19,
1862) This information was also published in the
Northeast Mississippi Historical & Genealogy
Society Quarterly, V 2, N 2, P 81, Dec 1981.
In the Confederate Veterans and Widows Pension
Application Files, B. S. MEADOR is listed each
year from 1890 through 1898, and on the
Confederate Pension Rolls of Union County, MS in
1902 and 1903 as a class 4 pensioner. He is not on
the list in 1904 or after. In virtually every year
thereafter, until 1920, M. N. MEADOR is shown as a
class 3 or 6 (widow) pensioner. In
1904, MARY NORVELL MEADOR had to re-register to
continue her pension. She listed BALLARD as
serving in the 41st MS. Infantry.
1st enlistment:
2nd MS. INF: "Capt. John. H.
Buchanan's Company (O'Conner Rifles) 2nd
Regiment Mississippi Volunteers. This
Company subsequently became Company B, 2nd
Regiment Mississippi Infantry.
B. S. MEADOR, age 32, PVT. Capt. John H Buchanan's
CO, joined 5-1-1861 in Tippah County, MS for 1
year, by Capt. Buchanan. Was mustered into company
5-10-1861 in Lynchburg, Va. Card # 47341568. . Was
on company muster roll for May through August,
1861. Occupation; Carpenter
B. S. MEADOR; age 32, Pvt. CO B, mustered into
service 4-30-1861, in Ripley, Mississippi, by
Capt. Buchanan. Was on company muster roll
for March and April 1862. Was last paid by Capt.
G. W. Jones on 2-28-1862. Absent. Remarks: Left
sick at Ashland 4-14-1862 by order of Surgeon.
Card # 473423372
B.. S. MEADOR; age 32, Pvt. CO B, enlisted
4-30-1861, in Ripley, Mississippi, for 1 year, by
Capt. Buchanan. Was on company muster roll
for May through August 1862. Last paid, Final
statement. Remarks: Discharged 7-31-1862 Military
exemption.
B. S. MEADOR, PVT, CO B, appears on register of
payments of discharged soldiers. Date of
discharge, 7-30-1862. payment date, 12-4-1862 by
M. Surrett. Confederate Arch Chapter 6, File #
110, p 459.
2nd Enlistment:
7th MS Calvary: " The 7th
Mississippi Calvary was organized on August 1,
1862, as 1st Regiment, Mississippi Partisan
Rangers. It was temporarily disbanded November 15,
1862 and reorganized March 1, 1863. The
destination was changed August 1, 1864 to 7th
Regiment Mississippi Calvary by S. O. # 169, A.
& G. I. O., dated July 19, 1864":
B. S. MEADOR, PVT, CO B, 1st Reg., MS Partisan
Rangers, enlisted on 8-1-1862 at Ripley, MS for 3
years, by W. C. Faulkner. Was on company
muster roll for 8-1-1862 to 10-31-1862. Absent.
Remarks: Wounded near IUKA, September 19th.
Card # 47179654. Was on company muster roll for
February and March 1863. Pay for horse 40 cents a
day $24.00. Remarks: Absent, wounded in
action near IUKA, MS, September 19th, 1863.
Was on company muster roll for 12-31-1863 to
5-15-1864.
Ballard Meador's Confederate
record is complicated, however, by the confusion
with Benjamin S Meador who lived in Lauderdale
County, Mississippi. We have copies of many
Rosters and Muster rolls in which the information
about BALLARD is mistakenly attributed to
BENJAMIN. For clarification purposes, I have
included the following information about Benjamin.
Benjamin Meador was born August
14, 1815 in Anson County, North Carolina.
and was at least fifteen years older than Ballard.
His wife was Elizabeth Collins who was born in
Kildare County, Ireland. He lived in Lauderdale
County, Mississippi much of his life and died
there January 4, 1878. BENJAMIN MEADOR enlisted
3-4-1861; discharged 4-25-1865; served in CO B,
2nd Mississippi Infantry.
Also found in the file of
Ballard S. Meador, was the following information,
on Card # 47179914: M. D. MEADOR, PVT, CO B, 1st
Partisan Rangers, enlisted 8-1-1862 at Ripley, MS
for 3 years by Col. Faulkner. Was on company
muster roll for 6-30 to 10-31-1864. Absent.
Remarks: Absent, wounded. M. D. Meador
is believed to be MARCUS MEADOR, brother of
Ballard.
Another brother of BALLARD S. MEADOR
was ALONZO F. MEADOR, of Holly Springs,
Mississippi. He was born in Cumberland County,
Virginia in 1827 and lived in Holly Springs, MS.
For most of his life. Alonzo served in
CO H, Blythes Battalion, 7th Mississippi
Calvary. ALONZO spent his last years in
Beauvoir Home for Confederate Soldiers. He died at
the age of 88, on 5-9-1915, in Biloxi, and is
buried in Beauvoir. He had no descendants.
Submitted by Jean Young
Clarke
*MECOY/MCCOY,
John Ferrell- born in McNairy County, TN
on New Years Day of 1830, son of Abner and Polly
Ann Ferrell Mecoy. He was named after his
Grandfather John Mecoy who died while in service
with Andrew Jackson during the War of 1812, with
his middle name being his mother's maiden
name. John moved with his parents and
siblings to Tippah County near the village of
Ruckerville when they purchased a land patent
during the Choctaw Cession.
On December 31, 1851, he married Winnie Mahala
Taylor, daughter of William Alford and Winnie
Stanley Taylor who was also born in Tennessee. The
couple eventually owned 80 acres which they farmed
and raised their family. By the time the War
began Mahalia and John had three living children.
On December 9, 1861, John traveled to
Corinth, MS and signed up with the 60-day troops
as private with Captain Rucker's (Tippah
Tigers) which eventually became known as
Company C. of Davidson's Calvary Mississippi
Infantry. He was discharged and he returned home
in January 1865, his 60 day service turning into
over four years. Two of his brother's,
William Carroll Mecoy and Charles Walter Mecoy
also served for the Confederacy and survived the
War.
He and Mahalia returned to farming and over the
next few years continued to add to their growing
family producing three more children. He
passed away on December 8, 1910. Mahalia
lived on and managed to outlive most of her
children. She died on April 22, 1917 at the
ripe of age of 84, forty three years after the War
ended. They are both buried at New Salem Cemetery,
west of Walnut, MS. Submitted by Melissa
McCoy-Bell
* MECOY/MCCOY,
William Carroll - born
in McNairy County, TN on 3 Feb. 1833. Bill was the
son of Abner and Polly Mecoy. He enlisted as
Private on September 19, 1861 in Iuka, Mississippi,
with Company C of the 23rd Regiment, also known as
the "Tippah Tigers". The regiment was captured
at Fort Donelson, in February 1862. Bill was
transferred from the custody of Provost Marshal in
Memphis, TN to a Military Prison in Alton,
Illinois on July 7, 1862. He was listed as POW until
the company was sent to Vicksburg and exchanged in
September 1862. Records show he was captured again
May 25, 1863, place not given. He was again
captured June 10, 1863 in Mechanicsburg. Two
weeks later on June 24, 1863 he was captured in
Tippah Co. and then two days later in Galesburg,
TN. Bill was transferred to Fort
Delaware on February 29, 1864. He signed a Oath of
Allegiance to the United States at Fort Delaware,
Del., on June 11, 1865, and was released from
Military Prison. Family stories verify that he
escaped twice from the Union Army. It was also
reported that during one of these times, he was said
to have hidden from the Union Troops under his
fiance's skirts as she was quite a large woman.
Bill returned home to Tippah
County. In 1866 he married his fiance Nancy Siddall,
daughter of Joshua Hudson Siddall had nine children.
He and Nannie not only raised their own children,
they raised five others whose parents had
passed. Bill served three terms as Road
Supervisor. In his second term, Bill Mecoy
along with the other supervisors of the district
obtained funds from the county to pay for the nails
necessary to build the bridges in the
district. This was a "first time" to receive
payment as before the blacksmiths donated the making
of the nails for their share of the community work
on the roads. In his third term, the county
furnished lumber for the bridges, where as before
each community had furnished its own lumber. When
his children left home, Bill gave each of them part
of his land for a homestead. He farmed until his
death on December 10, 1907, in Tiplerville, MS south
of Walnut. In his obiturary he is praised for being
a beloved and galant veteran of our own southland.
He is buried in New Salem Cemetery. Submitted by his
2nd great granddaughter Melissa McCoy-Bell
* MEDFORD,
Isom M. - Son of
Jonathan & Kizziah Medford, b. Tippah Co. Nov.
4, 1848. Spouse Susan Jane Hopper.
Family lore says he ran away at age 13 to join the
Confederate Army and was a water boy. He
died February 28, 1930 and is buried in the
Medford Cemetery in Tippah Co. His tombstone
says "Baxter's Co. H, 11th Miss. Cavalry,
CSA." He applied for a pension for his
Confederate service in 1923. He is also
found in a book of Confederate veterans buried in
Mississippi.
See picture of him.
Nelda Hamer
* MELTON, Levi
Benton - Levi Benton Melton was the son of
Anson Melton and Amanda ?. He was born in
Madison County,
Alabama in December, 1840. He was a Private in
Capt. William L. Davis' Company, 2nd Regiment,
Mississippi Volunteers. He received a
disability discharge due to Phthiss Pulmonalis
contracted in the line of duty in November 28, 1861,
according to his pension file. He
married Luvenia Johnson in Tippah County, MS
in 1863 and they had the following children:
Robert Melton born 1864; Gatsey Melton (Female),
born 1866; James Clabern Melton, born December 12,
1868; Herb Melton, born 1869, John Franklin Melton,
born January 3, 1871; Helen Melton, born November
16, 1872; William Benton Melton, born 1875, Effie
Melton, born 1878; Minnie Melton, born 1879, Kate
Melton, born May 3, 1885-died February 4,
1888. Before 1885, they moved to Covington,
Tipton County, Tennessee.
Luvenia Johnson Melton died in
Tipton County, Tennessee July 29, 1894. She is
buried in Indian Creek
Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery, Covington,
TN. L. B. Melton married Dora Hosler in
1896. He died March 1, 1914, and is buried in
Mumford Cemetery, Covington, TN. I am his
great-grandson through his daughter, Helen.
* MERCER-MESSER, Elijah - born 4-14-1841, died
8-14-1898. Buried in New Salem Cemetery,
Tippah Co. (aka James) His grandson C.C.
Mercer of Byhalia, MS just recently installed a
new tombstone. Wife Sarah Jane.
Enlisted with Marion. Fought at 1st
Manassas, Seven Pines, Cold Harbor and all battles
up to Gettysburg. Survived the Railroad Cut
but was wounded at Cemetery Ridge in the left
chest and arm. Gangrene set in and he was
moved to Chimborazo and other hospitals around
Richmond. He was given a 40 day furlough to
return to Ripley. Didn't return but appears
on the roster of the 2nd Miss. Cav. Co. "A".
I don't believe he or Marion served in the 7th
Cav.
Joe M. Mercer Jr.
* MERCER-MESSER , Franklin - born 1831.
Buried Plainview, AR. Wife Amanda.
Joined the 3rd Bn., 45th Reg. Co. F with his
brother Tony. Fought at Shiloh.
Captured at Triune, TN 12-27-62 a few days before
the Stones River Campaign. He was sent to
Camp Douglas, Chicago, IL and paroled 3-30-63 and
delivered to City Point, VA 4-4-63. He
rejoined the 45th. The 33rd was renamed the
3rd then redesigned the 45th, all under
Hardcastle. He was a private.
Joe M. Mercer Jr.
* MERCER-MESSER, Jesse "Tony" - born in Lincoln Co., Tn. on
10-22-38, died 5-21-1914, buried in Old New York
Cemetery. He was the son of Council Bryant
and Sarah Messer (name changed about the time of
the Civil War). Jesse married twice, first
Mary Heath and second Margaret Emma Potts.
He outlived both. On 2-28-1862 he enlisted
with brother Franklin at New Orleans in the 3rd
Bn., 45th Regt. Co. F (Cleburnes Div., Hardees
Corps, Sam Woods Brigade under Maj.
Hardcastle). He was like his father a
blacksmith. He was placed on special duty
and served in many locations. He was later
in the 7th Miss. Cav. Co. B along with his brother
Marion and this is the information that is on his
grave marker.
Joe M. Mercer Jr.
* MILLER, Matthew Jr. - born 4/13/1840, from
Tippah County. He was a private in Co. B,
34th Miss Inf. CSA enlisted May 8, 1862, mustered
in at Corinth, Miss., was promoted to seargeant in
May or June of 1863; was captured at Chickamauga,
September 20, 1863, forwarded to Louisville, KY,
October 5, 1863, taken to Camp Douglas, Chicago,
Illinois, October 7, 1863. Was discharged June 13,
1865.
[email protected]
* MILLER, Samuel T. - born in S.C., the son of Mark
and Elizabeth Miller. He married Judith
Catherine Jeanes 21 Jan. 1860. They had one
child, Mary Elizabeth Miller, born 29 Apr.
1861. Samuel was listed as born in 1838 in
S.C. on the 1850 Tippah Co. census.
Samuel enlisted in Co. G 23rd
Miss. Regiment and was captured 16 Feb. 1862 and
sent to Camp Douglas, Ill. This is the
date Ft. Donelson surrender and probably where he
was captured. He was sent to Vicksburg for
exchange 3 Sept. 1862. Samuel was captured
again and sent to Alton, Il. where he died of
smallpox 16 Oct. 1863.
Judith and her sister lived
together with their children during the war.
When they could no longer obtain salt, they dug
the dirt from under the smokehouse and boiled it,
and then skimmed the salt off the top.
Judith's second husband, John
Merrill Brock, enlisted March 15, 1862 - he was a
private, Company E, 32d MS Inf. "A muster
roll of the company for March and April, 1864
(last roll on which his name appears,) bears the
remark: "Absent wounded at Chickamauga, right arm
amputated." No later record of him has been
found. Judith received a widow's pension on
his service...No. 2510M2 dated April 6, 1909. See picture of him
Sharon
Humes
* MOHUNDRO, John Goodman - The Muster Roll states
that John G. Mohundro enlisted 1 June 1862 in
Ripley by G. L. Baxter for a term of 3 yrs or war.
He was a 4th Sgt in Capt. G. L. Baxter's Co.,
Independent Scouts. This Co. subsequently
became Company A, Baxter's Battalion of Cavalry,
C.S.A.
Baxter's Battalion of Cavalry
was organized January 20, 1863 and appears to be
broken up about June, 1863. Company A became
Company H, 10th Regiment Mississippi Cavalry.
John was born 12 May 1839 in
Tennessee to William Green Omohundro and Martha
Goodrum. He married Ann Crum dtr of Elias
Crum and Frances (Fanny) Kennedy of Tippah Co.
In 1892, John received a
homestead grant of 80 acres in Searcy Co,
Ar. On this land he built 1 house, 2 cribs,
1 stable, had 1 acre orchard and 20 acres cleared.
The
Marshall Republican, 12 May, 1899, In
the death of J. G. Mohundro, of Red River
Township (Searcy Co), the county sustained a great
loss; the church and law, one of their strongest
supporters, and the bereaved family an
affectionate father and kind husband; the Masonic
fraternity (Trace Ridge Lodge, No. 425) one of its
honored members. Bro. Mohundro contacted a
severe case of la grippe while assistant Janitor
in the lower house of the Arkansas legislature
last winter, which terminated in lung trouble, and
being very old was not able to stand the strain to
which he was exposed. He passed peacefully
away last Friday morning. His remains were
laid to rest Sunday at 2 o'clock with Masonic
honors, in the presence of a host of sympathizing
neighbors and friends. The bereaved family
have our heartfelt sympathy in their great
loss. John Goodman Mohundro died 5 May 1899;
age 59 yrs, 11 months and 23 days. He is
buried in Caid Cemetery, Searcy Co, Ar.
June
LeClair
* MOHUNDRO, William Neely - son
of Thomas D. and Elizabeth Mohundro. He was
born 6 Dec 1833 in Tennessee. He was married
on 31 Dec 1856 to Louisa Jane Cox, daughter
of Harmon Cox and Celia Tudor. William
and Louisa had two children: Tabitha
Louellen and Martin Neely.
1850 Tippah Co., Mississippi US Census
Thomas D. Mohundro, 40, blacksmith, Tn
Elizabeth, 41, Tn
Wm. H., 16, Tn
Elizabeth T., 14, Ms
Nancy C., 11, Tn
Thomas M., 9, Ms
Peter E., 7, Ms
John M., 4, Ms
James H., 1, Ms
1860 Tippah Co., Mississippi (page 533, 646/589)
William H. Mohundro, 26, farmer, 0/400, Tn
L. J., 25, Tn
Martin N., 2, Ms
Tabitha L., 7/12, Ms
Company H, 2nd Texas Confederate Infantry Regiment
- W. H. Mohondro, private, captured at Vicksburg,
July 4, 1863, died of pneumonia in New Orleans,
La., July 24, 1864.
Source:
http://www.cba.uh.edu/~parks/tex/irc002h.html
He
is
buried
at
Cypress
Grove
Cem.
No.
2,
Orleans
Parish,
Louisiana. William
Neely Mohundro was the fourth cousin twice removed
of John Burwell "Texas- Jack" Omohundro.
L. Sartun
* MOREHEAD,
David Crockett-
According to a narrative prepared in 1960 from
the stories of Thomas R. Morehead (D.C.'s last
living child), D.C. was born in Hickory Flat, MS
on October 12, 1838 and died in Rains County,
Texas on November 24, 1893. He was the son
of a cotton farmer. There were sixteen children
in his family who lived to adulthood. G.
S. Morehead was possibly his father but this is
not proven. The only brother's name I have
is R.C., who was a methodist minister.
D.C. served in Clayton's Company G, 17th
Mississippi Infantry.
D.C. married Sarah C. Murray
(Morman records have the wrong Sarah Murray
married to him). They married when he returned
from the war, on July 9, 1865 in Tippah County.
They moved to Texas a couple of years after
their marriage. He was licensed to preach
before his marriage, and was stationed as a
circuit rider in Texas from 1875 to 1893 (his
death). He served churches in what is now
Rains, Wood and Van Zandt Counties in East
Texas. He owned a farm in the community
known as Rocky Point (in Rains County).
They had nine children,
Rachael Annie, my g.grandmother
(12/27/1867-10/27/1901), Emma
(2/1/1870-11/4/1954), Carrah (1/8/1873 - 3/15/1948), George
(9/1/1875 - 12/25/1928, Cattie (3/20/1877 -
1/22/1949), Thomas R. (8/29/1880 - ?), Romulus
(12/2/1882 - 5/7/1885), Ella (3/15/1885 -
3/30/1960) and Homer (9/18/1888 - 11/5/1959).
David Crockett Morehead, wife and Son are buried
at Prospect Cemetery in Rains County, Texas.
Barbara King
* MORGAN,
Joseph B. - born
1818 in Lincoln Co., TN. He grew up in Fayette
Co., AL and came to Tippah County, MS about
1836. He served in Falkner' Co. A 1st Miss.
Partisan Rangers/ 7th Miss. Cavalry. He died
before 1900 and is buried in Antioch Cemetery,
Ripley, MS. and has a government marker.
Joseph first married Ann
Hobson and had 13 children by her. He married
2nd Judida Anna Lee Campbell and they had 9
children. Several children died young.
Mavis
Clemmer
* MOSS,
John David - was
born in Limestone County Alabama 10 Dec 1841.
His parents were John, born in South Carolina 26
Mar 1811, died 10 Nov 1884, and Nancy, born 1816
in Tennessee, died 6 Oct 1895, both buried at
McCUAN-MOSS cemetery near Cairo, AL. On 17
Sept 1862, John David enlisted into the 7th
Regiment Alabama Cavalry, subsequently known as
the 9th. John lived in Benton Co. MISS in
1890, and was listed in list of veterans
there. He married Martha Dove Swan.
See John David MOSS' complete
story and picture at http://www.geocities.com/Nashville/Opry/1166/jdmoss.htm
Virginia Flesher
* MULLIKIN,
Emanuel Alexander
- was born November 16, 1842, in Anderson,
South Carolina. He was a son of William
Edwin and Martha Ford Mullikin. He died
December 9, 1899, as the result of being kicked
by a horse. He is buried at Heflin
Cemetery, Star City, Arkansas. Emanuel
enlisted in the Confederate Army at Luka,
Mississippi on September 19, 1861. He
served with the Blackland Gideonites, Captain J.
M. Wells Co., 1st brigade. His military
history is the same as his brother Leander
Wilson Mullikin's. They were captured at
Fort Donelson, Tennessee, on February 16, 1862,
and were sent to camp Morton in Indianapolis,
Indiana. Here, he was in a Prisoner of War
exchange in August 1862, and again fought with
his unit. He fought with Company F, 23rd
Mississippi Infantry. The 23rd surrendered
at Vicksburg, Mississippi, on July 4, 1863.
One of the other members of
this unit was David Feagen. David died
while in Indianapolis and is buried in Crown
Hill Cemetery. David was the husband of
Edna M. Geno, daughter of Francis and Mary
Geno. They were married December 19, 1860
and had one child, Thomas Jefferson Feagen, born
1862. After returning to his home, Emanuel
married Edna Geno Feagen August 1, 1865.
In 1866, they had a child, William Edward
Mullikin.
Edna died, and Emanuel
married Margaret Elizabeth Morgan, on December
7, 1868. Thomas Jefferson Feagen remained
with Margaret and Emanuel, and when they moved
to Arkansas, they took him with them and raised
him to manhood. Thomas married Frances
Louisa Blasengame on September 7, 1884, and they
had three children, Mattie, Edna, and Tom
Feagen.
Emanuel was shown by land
records to have a farm in Spring Twp., Star
City, Arkansas. He served as Mayor of Star
City for one term, 1889. Emanuel and
Margaret became the parents of the following
children: Rufus Kendrick Mullikin, and
Allie Agnes Mullikin. Margaret lived until
1919 and is buried beside her husband in Heflin
Cemetery, Star City, Arkansas.
Submitted by
Peggy J.
Reichard
* NOBLE,
John Robert 3 - (James Baxter2,
John 1) Born 27 Mar. 1843 in Tippah
Co. and died 14 Dec. 1936 in Corsicana,
Navarro Co., TX. He married Florence
Madora BROWN 21 Dec. 1865 in Tippah Co.,
MS. She was the daughter of Jesse and Mary
Nance BROWN. John was a Pvt. in Co. C 1st
Partisans Rangers and later the 7th Miss.
Cavalry. He enlisted 1 Aug. 1862 at
Orizaba as a private. He was in the battle
of Corinth, and the battle of Brices Cross
Roads. They took part in the raids with
Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest throughout TN and
KY, and were in many skirmishes. He was a
prisoner by surrender May 1865 and paroled 10
Jun 1865 at Memphis, TN. He took the Oath
of Allegence in 1866. He was bestowed the
Southern Cross of Honor by the Navarro Chapter
#108 of the United Daughters of Confederacy 26
Apr. 1917 (Book 12, Pg 39). He was in Camp
Winkley #147 in TX. A cousin had the cross
until he was robbed about 1983. His
uniform is with the UDC in their museum they are
building at Hillsboro College in Hillsboro,
TX. He moved to Barry, TX in 1895 where
Florence died and is buried in Dresden Cemetery
beside John.
Kathy G. Wells
* NORTON, Jacob Anderson - (1840-1920)
Jacob was born in Tippah County, Mississippi
on May 9, 1840 and raised on a farm by his
parents William Norton and Sophia Short who
had a family of 11 children. Jacob had 15
children with two wives. He married Elizabeth
Ellen Hallbrook (age 21) on November 28, 1867
in Ripley, Tippah County, Mississippi.
Elizabeth was born December 31, 1845 in
Nashville, Tennessee. Jacob and Elizabeth were
the parents of six children: Mary Ellen
born September 1, 1868 died September 3, 1936
in Roy, N.M. was married to James M. Yates
November 26, 1884; William Anderson born March
9, 1871 died January 7, 1918 in Ft. Worth, TX
was married to Myrta Green; John Washington
born May 9, 1872 died December 15 1960 in
Oklahoma City was married to Naomi Elizabeth
Cox on January 23, 1893; Egbert Sammons born
December 3, 1874 died August 30, 1882 in
Oglesby, Texas; Sally May Catherine born
November 6, 1878 died April 1, 1974 in Denton,
Texas was married July 15, 1894 to Thomas
Moore; and Halley born October 1, 1880 died
January 7, 1881 in Oglesby, Texas. Jacob�s
wife, Elizabeth, died on October 10, 1880 (at
age 34) from blood poisoning after childbirth.
She is buried at Post Oak Cemetery in Oglesby,
Texas.
At age 41, Jacob married a second time to Rosa
Bena Bruckhauswer (age 22) on January 30, 1882
in Fauquier Co., Virginia. Jacob and
Rosa were the parents of nine children:
Edith B. born December 7, 1882 died July 4,
1884 (age 2) in Oglesby, Texas; Dollie born
January 30, 1884 died January 31, 1884 in
Oglesby, Texas; unnamed boy born August 9,
1884 premature and died at birth; Jacob
Henderson (Hennie) born November 1, 1885 died
January 4, 1889 (age 3); Miller born June 12,
1888 died January 4, 1892 (age 3); Cecil Brook
born October 9, 1890 died February 19, 1977
(age 86); Anna Bessie born January 16, 1893
died April 3, 1975 (age 82) was married to
John Daniel O�Leary; Robert Emmett born June
22, 1896 died June 26, 1923 (age 27) was
married to Marie Eloise Dickson November 16,
1916; and Golder Barnes born January 31, 1898
died January 9, 1971 (age 72) was married to
George P. Kimmel April 9, 1925. The
first five children were born in Tippah Co.,
Mississippi. The family came to Texas in
1879 or 1880 when Sally was one or two years
old. All the remaining children were
born in McLennan Co., Texas. The last
three were born in Sperryville, Virginia.
Jacob was a first cousin of famous gunslinger
Luke Short (see Sophia Short).
At age 20, he joined the 2nd Mississippi
Regiment, which was the first regiment
organized in that state, of Southern Army.
Jacob fought for the Confederates in the Civil
War from May 1861 until March 1865 and nine
scars from wounds attest to his faithful
service and the great mercy and providential
care of a covenant-keeping and ever-reigning
God (from his obituary). He served in
the battles of Seven Pines, Seven Days, the
second Manassas engagement, Sharpsburg,
Bristow, North Corinth, and the Wilderness. He
wrote the following account of his Civil War
duty on December 24, 1917 at the age of 77.
On May 9, 1861 (his 21st birthday) was with
Company B, Second Mississippi Regiment,
Volunteers, led by Col. W.C. Falkner, and
Captain John H. Buchanan, both of Ripley,
Tippah County, Mississippi. He drilled
in Corinth, Mississippi. They reached Harpers
Ferry, May 15th, 1861 where the regiment
remained until July 1, when they fell back to
Winchester, Virginia. Jacob was
convalescing from measles and was considered
unable to make the march across the Blue Ridge
Mountains to Piedmont, now Delaplanes, to the
first Bull Run battle.
The following Wednesday he reached the
battlefield where a cousin was killed in the
engagement. Soon thereafter, Jacob
contacted the mumps. In February 1862, he
re-enlisted for three more years and got 30
days furlough. Re-joined his regiment in
Fredricksburg, Virginia. They soon moved to
defend Richmond, Virginia. He was in the
battle of Seven Pines for two days. He
remained in Richmond until just before the
Seven Days Battle. His Heths
Division was detached and sent to
Lynchburg, Charlottsville and on to
Stanton. Remained two days, returned to
Charlottesville, joined Stonewall Jackson�s
army and they were carried to Ashland, twenty
miles from Richmond, from which point
Jackson�s army was thrown against McLellands
Right Flank at Cold Harbor and Gains
Farm. They drove the Yanks across
Chickhoning and pursued relentlessly
McLennand�s army to Harrisons landing. Jacob
was wounded when a double skirmish line
composed of Mississippians and Texans charged
the Yanks at Malvin-hill. He was in the
hospital but joined his company in time to
follow Stonewall Jackson in his famous raid on
the rear of the Yanks at Manassas.
They drove the Yanks from Thoroughfare in Bull
Run Mountains and pressed on and linked on to
Jackson�s right flank near Graveton and fought
and drove the Feds across Bull Run. Here
again, Jacob received a slight wound in the
left hand, which after being dressed he
rejoined his company. They next went to
Frederick, Maryland. Being pressed they
fell back to the crossing of Boonsboro Pike of
South Mountain, and fought the Feds until 11
pm. Fell back to Antietown (sic) and again
fought them the 16th in the evening until
late. Skirmishing and on 17th that
bloody all day and almost exhausted.
When Stonewall Jackson came to their aid from
capturing Harpers Ferry they remained the 18th
no attack by the Feds they re-crossed the
Potomac. They had a sharp battle at
Bristoe in the fall in which Jacob was
severely wounded and hospitalized at Stanton,
Virginia. He joined his regiment in November
or December 1862 and went to Goldsboro,
N.C. He wintered there and near Suffolk,
Virginia. Returned to Fredericksburg
soon after Chancelorville battle in May 1863
and being unable to make the march was left
behind when the army left for
Gettysburg. So with others he was sent
via Stanton by rail and walked down the valley
pike and met his command returning from
Gettysburg at Hagerstown, Md. He aided
in repelling a raid intended to destroy
General Lee�s supply train at Williamsport
before he joined his company. With his
command he wintered near Orange Court House,
Virginia and picketed the Rapid Ann River.
The winter of 1863 and 1864, the spring of
1864 found him at the Wilderness 5th and 6th
of May struggling with Grant�s army. One
cousin lost at 1st Manassas; another lost his
leg at Gettysburg and a 3rd was killed 5th of
May in Wilderness. The 6th he did all he
could to hurl back the Yanks and got a ball
through his arm and shoulder and he was �Hors
Du Combat� until August 14, 1864. He
again joined his company near Petersburg and
with his regiment trying to drive Grant�s
hords (sic) from the Weldon Railroad, he was
shot in both hands. He went home to
Mississippi then returned to his company March
4, 1865. Jacob was sent to Richmond,
Virginia on light duty attached to General
Ewell�s staff. He was captured at
Appomattox Court House and surrendered with
General Lee�s army at Appomattox, C. H.,
Virginia on April 9, 1865.
Following the Civil War, in 1867 Jacob became
a Primitive Baptist minister for the next 50
years. Twenty-six of his early years as
a minister were spent in Mississippi and
Texas, in serving and constituting
churches. His last 24 years were spent
among churches in Virginia and Washington D.C.
Jacob was assistant chaplain of Camp No. 171,
United Confederate Veterans of the District of
Columbia. He preached for a time at the
Primitive Baptist Church, Shepard Street and
Georgia Avenue, but most of his ministerial
service was performed in Page County,
Virginia. He was moderator of the
Ketocton Association, and was faithful,
zealous and untiring in his services in the
cause of truth.
Upon his first wife�s death, on March 15, 1886
he sold his tract of land in McLennan, Texas
to F.E. Scruggs for $750 and distributed the
proceeds equally among his three minor
children: William, John and Sallie Mae.
After a long illness, Jacob died on June 16,
1920 at age 80 at his home at 804 Rhode Island
Ave. in Washington D.C. and is buried in the
Confederate section of Arlington National
Cemetery, Va. Submitted by:
Peter
Leidel
* NUTT, Capt. Thompson
- CO:
D Initial Rank: Private
Joined: Wednesday, May 01, 1861 Term (yrs):
1 Occupation: Farmer Age: 33
Enrolled at: Tippah Co., MS Enrolled by:
Capt. Beck Promoted: Yes
ROH: No
Promoted to 5th Sergeant on 8/20/1861.
Promoted to 1st Sergeant on 11/20/1861.
Elected 1st Lt on 4/23/1862.
Wounded at
Gaines Mill on 6/27/1862. Sent to hospital in
Richmond. Returned to duty.
Wounded (in
foot) at Sharpsburg on 9/17/1862. Furloughed
60-days from 10/8/1862. Captured while on furlough
in MS and paroled at Holly Spring, MS (about Dec,
1862).
Resigned due to disability on
8/8/1863.
15th (STEWART'S-LOGWOOD'S)
TENNESSEE CAVALRY REGIMENT
Also called 2nd organization,
15th Consolidated Tennessee Cavalry Regiment.
Formed February 5, 1864 by consolidation of 15th
(Stewart's), 16th (Logwood's) Regiments and
Street's Battalion Mississippi Cavalry;
consolidated March, 1865 with 14th (Neely's), 21st
(Carter's) and 22nd (Nixon's) Regiments to form
Nixon's Consolidated Regiment. Paroled
Gainesville, Alabama May 1865. This consolidated
regiment was formed at Oxford, Mississippi, by
orders of Major General N. B. Forrest, who
appointed the field officers. His action was
confirmed by the Adjutant and Inspector Generals
Office, but not until July 18, 1864.
Thompson Nutt, Captain, Co. D
Also called E Organized October 1, 1863 at
Orizabah,Mississippi, from Street's Mississippi
Cavalry Battalion.
Thompson Nutt
bn. 5/12/1834 Tennessee
d.
1/4/1910 Van Buren County, Arkansas
md.
Mary Jane Childress
On 1860 and 1870 census from
Tippah County, Mississippi
William E Herron, 1st cousin four times removed
* OWEN,
Daniel M. - Pvt.
6th Miss. Inf., Co. I. Dan joined the 6th
Ms. Inf., May 4. 1862. He may have been wounded
in the Battle of Corinth. He is listed as "died
in service", March 11, 1863. He is buried in the
Pleasant Ridge Baptist Church Cemetery along
with many other family members. His
brother-in-law, James Lewellen M. Bryant, 23rd
Ms. Inf., who died at Hopkinsville, Ky., in
1861, is buried near him. Dan does not have a
government issued Confederate Military Marker.
Dan Owen was born in
Tennessee, May 28, 1824. He was listed on the
1850 Tippah county census in the household of
his older brother, Thomas, who came to
Mississippi about 1843. Dan either came with him
then or came later on.
Dan was a farmer and about
1851, he married Mary Emily Bryant and they had
6 children. The town nearest their home was
Molina. The family attended the Pleasant Ridge
Baptist Church. Prior to Dan's death, two of
their children, Richard and Isabella, had died.
Of the other children the fate of Jennie is
unknown, Estella married Howell L.
Bratten/Bartten. Tom and Frank lived all of
their lives in the same community where they
were reared, farmed, married and raised
families. Mary Emily Owen died in 1920, and is
buried near her husband in Pleasant Ridge
Cemetery. There is no record that she ever
applied for a pension. One can only imagine how
hard and lonely life was for her the 57 years
she survived the death of her husband.
* PARK, John
M. - According to
his CivWar records from NARA, my great
grandfather, John M. Park, was enlisted from
Tippah Co. as a Pvt. in Co. E, 15th TN Cavalry
on 1 Oct. 1863. He was captured on 19 Nov.
1863 in a fight on the Obion River. This
company was also known as Co. D and was formerly
Capt. Nutt's Co., Street's Batt, Miss
Cav. This regt. was formed about 5
Feb. 1864 by the consolidation of of the 15th (
Stewart's) Regt., TN Cav. and Street's Batt.,
Miss Cav. Later it was consolidated
with the 14th TN (Neely's) 21st (Carter's) and
22nd (Nixon's) regts of TN Cav. in accordance
with Special Order # 28 Hdqrs. Cav., Dist. of
Miss and East LA dated 13 Feb. 1865 to form
Nixon's Regt., TN Cav. which was paroled at Ginesville, AL in May 1865.
Jon
O'Donnell
* PERKINS,
Jesse Mercer - was
born abt 1827 in AL. He had a brother John
Perkins born abt 1834 in Al. Jesse enlisted at
Corinth, MS on 19 Dec 1861. He was mustered in
by Maj. M. Berry. He served as a private in
Capt. A.C. Rucker's Co. (Tippah Rebels), 4th
Reg't, Co. C, Mississippi Volunteers, 60-day
troops. He was given a medical discharge on 7
Jan 1862. He died between 1882-1884 and was
buried in an unmarked grave between Walnut and
Marlow, MS.
Elaine P.
Perkins
* RAINEY,
Virgil A.- mustered
at Ripley August 13, 1861 in the Blount Guards,
a unit that became Co. A, 23rd MS regiment, as a
4th corporal. Died in Hopkinsville, KY of
consumption 4 Nov. 1861. He was the son
of Josiah and Alsa Manerva Rainey, and was
born in MS abt. 1841. Submitted by
Reiley Kidd, MD, 5152 54th Avenue S.,
Seattle, WA 98118-2114
[email protected]
* RAY, Marion � Born December 17, 1834 in
Union District, SC. Marion, son of Cary
Ray and Malissa Lawson, married Elizabeth
(Eliza) Jane Gibbs in 1857 in Union District,
SC. Eliza was the daughter of Spencer
Gibbs and Sarah Ann Ray. Marion and Eliza,
with one small child, joined a caravan of
several families moving from near Cross Keys,
Union District, SC to Jonesborough in Tippah Co,
MS in late October 1859. They were the
parents of five other children born in Tippah
County from 1861 to 1869. Marion was
mustered into State Service December 5, 1861,
for a period of 60 days, as a Private in Capt.
M. P. Lowrey's Company (Lowrey Guards), 4th
Regiment MS Volunteers, 60-day Troops, in
Corinth, Alcorn Co, MS. His military
record shows he reported with a "Double BBL Shot
Gun Ownedby Henry Garrett." He was was
appointed 1st Corporal shortly after enlistment,
and served with this unit at Bowling Green,
Kentucky. This company, also known as
Company G of the 2nd Regiment Mississippi 60-day
Volunteers, subsequently became Company G, 2nd
(Davidson's) Regiment Mississippi Infantry (Army
of 10000). Marion began a second
enlistment when he was enlisted August 1, 1862,
at Orizaba, MS for a 3-year period, in Company G
of the First Regiment Mississippi Partisan
Rangers, by Col. William C. Falkner, the
Regiment's commanding officer. He was
appointed 2nd Sergeant shortly after enlistment
and served under Captain John Garrett and
Colonel William C. Falkner. The designation of
this regiment was officialy changed August 1,
1864 to Company G, 7th Mississippi Cavalry. Marion was
captured near the end of the War, and his
military record states "M. Ray, Sergt. Co. G,
7th Regt. Miss. [Cavalry] Appears on a Report of
Confederate Prisoners captured April 2, 1865 at
Selma, Alabama. Report dated Headqrs. 1st
Brig., 2d Div., Cav. Corps, Mil. Div. of the
Miss., Selma Ala., April 4, 1865." There
is no official record on when he was released,
but a capsule history of his regiment states "A
large part of the regiment had been captured at
Selma, Alabama, in early April 1865. Only a
handful of men from the unit surrendered a month
later at Citronelle, Alabama. Some members
of the regiment were paroled at Columbus, MS, on
May 10, 1865." Marion and his family moved
from Tippah Co, MS to Robertson Co, TX in the
winter of 1871, and subsquently to other Texas
counties. Marion applied for a Texas
C.S.A. pension January 4, 1913, it was approved
September 1, 1913, and it was finally allowed
from December 1, 1913. He died June 14,
1914 in Weatherford, Parker County, TX, at age
79, and was buried in Section D of Weatherford's
Old Greenwood Cemetery.
Alton
Spencer Ray Jr.
RAY, Robert Leland - Robert Leland Ray was born to Ambrose Ray and Minerva Ellen
Moore on May 22, 1829, in Union, South Carolina. By 1860, R.L Ray was living
with his young family in Tippah County and was making a living as a farmer.
As the Union makes inroads into Tennessee, he enlists in the
Confederate Army at Holly Springs, Mississippi, as a private on May 14, 1862. The
muster roll shows R.L. Ray present and due pay as Sergeant as of June 15th,
1862. He is enlisted in Company K from Tippah County Mississippi or locally
known as the "Beauregard Relief ". This was the "New" 10th
Mississippi regiment which had been reorganized at Corinth on March 15, 1862.
Robert Leland Ray dies on December 8, 1863, in Tippah
County, Mississippi, when he is 34 years old. Report of his death is sent to his captain, W.P. Stewart,
who is at winter encampment outside of Dalton, Georgia. In the report dated
December 28th, 1863, the cause of death for Corporal R.L. Ray is
listed as "chronic diarrhea". R.L. Ray is buried in Garrett cemetery in Tiplersville,
Tippah County, Mississippi.
* REYNOLDS, ALLEN - was born in 1832. He was a Confederate soldier and a member of Co. H., 34th infantry, Mississippi Volunteers. He died as a soldier in 1863 and was buried in Myrtle hill cemetery Rome, George. Allen Reynolds married Martha Whittington from Jefferson County, Alabama. Martha was born March 5, 1837 the daughter of Wilburn Whittington and Mary Goolsby. Allen and Martha had two sons Jacob Allen born April 1862 and John Francis born December 2, 1859. The sons were born in Tippah County, Mississippi. Martha and the two sons moved to Van Zant County, Texas in 1873. Martha later married Mr. Harrington whom I have no history. There was also a daughter of Martha's, Mary Sanders whom I have no history. Martha Whittington Reynolds Harrington died October 24, 1922 and is buried in Liberty Cemetery on FM2339 about 5 miles west of Callender Lake in Van Zant County.
* RHODES
(RHOADS,ROADS),
Felix Murray - Born
Tippah
Mississippi in 1841 to William and Mary "Polly"
Armour Roads. Mary was the daughter of
Davis W and Elizabeth Lively Armour. Davis
served in the war of 1812, Second Regiment
West Tennessee Militia. Felix volunteered
for service May 26, 1861, at Baldwyn
Mississippi, at the age of 19. He was
assigned to Company K 19th Regiment, Capt Wm H.
H. Tison's Co., Mississippi Volunteers. He
served as an Ambulance driver and was sent to
General Hospital in Richmond Virginia July of
1862. Records show him assigned to
Chimborazo Hospital #5 In Richmond as well as
Wayside Hospital Richmond, General Hospital
Petersburg, VA and Episcopal Church Hospital,
Williamsburg VA. At one point he was
hospitalized for Varicocele Rheumatism.
Evidently Felix was
imprisoned twice as War Records show that he was
admitted to the General Hospital in Petersburg,
VA July 17, 1863, for Orchitis and was ordered
to surgery. It lists him as a paroled
prisoner. He was also captured at
Petersburg April 2, 1865, and was released at
Point Lookout, MD June 17, 1865 after taking the
oath of allegiance to the United States.
Records list Felix as Light Complexion,
Lt. Red Hair, hazel eyes and 5'10".
Felix returned to Tippah Co.
MS. and Married Hettie Lucinda Vandiver on
August 14, 1865. Hettie was the daughter
of Elisha Vandiver and Lucinda Melton Vandiver.
Elisha was a Baptist Minister and the son of
George H. Vandiver and Ascenith Welch. George
was the son of Edward Vandiver, Revolutionary
War Patriot from Pendleton Dist South Carolina.
Felix and Hettie relocated to
McLennan Co. Texas in 1874. He attended a
Confederate Veterans reunion in Sardis
Coryell Co. Texas in 1899. He applied for,
and received a veterans pension in 1915.
Felix died January 17, 1916 and is buried
at Davidson (Old Blackfoot) Cemetery near
Gatesville, TX. Hettie Lucinda drew a
widows pension and died July 4, 1927, and is
buried beside Felix.
Submitted by Doris Cook Dodson [email protected]
*
ROBERSON, R. W. -
Born ca 1837 in Tenn.
- 3 Sept
1860 married Eliza A. Green in Tippah county (I
have copy of
marriage certificate)
- one
son, William Richard Roberson born 25 Aug
1861 in Ripley. This son later moved, date
unknown, with widowed mother to Bolivar, Tenn,
and then to Texas in late 1880s/early 90s
- RW
Roberson enlisted 24 Aug 1861 at Iuka in Co A
(Blount Guards), 2d Regt, 1st Bde, Army of Miss
for period 12 months. 2d REgt later
designated 3d Regt then 23 Miss Inf when it went
into CSA service.
- He
appears in unit muster rolls in 1861 and 1862,
appears in Federal POW rolls as captured at Ft
Donelson 16 Feb 1862 and then as POW at Camp
Douglas, Chicago, IIlinois.
- He was
exchanged at Vicksburg about 20 Sept 1862
with other members of 23d and appears on company
muster rolls for period 24 Sept 1862 to Dec 1862
with last entry noting "killed Dec 5, 1862 in
the Coffeeville fight"
-"Return
of Deceased soldiers, dated Dec 19, 1862 notes
killed in battle at Coffeeville, 5 Dec
1862. There are also two other lists and
register entrys in file noting killed in battle
at Coffeeville.
Above information on CSA service from Compiled Service records of CSA soldiers of 23d Miss Inf on microfilm in National Archives. Afteraction report on Coffeeville battle in Official Records of War of Rebellion note casualties of 23d Miss as 2 killed, 14 wounded, and 4 missing.
*
ROWELL, Benjamin F. - born about 1830 in Carroll
Co., GA, son of Howell and Elizabeth
Rowell. He served Co. G, 23rd
Miss. Perhaps buried at Pine Hill
where is wife and daughter are buried.
Terri Zacher
*ROWLAND, James D. - See James D. Rowland page
* RUCKER,
Capt. Abbot C. - The following obituary
was taken from The Southern Sentential, Feb. 6,
1919:
* RUTHERFORD,
David Flynn - the
6th of 6 sons of Thomas and Margaret
Rutherford who fought for the
Confederacy. David was born 22 Oct 1844
in Georgia and came to Tippah County with his
family in 1848 to finally settle in
Falkner. He was married after the war to
Mary Deilah (Dillie) Ketchum
(1845-1931). They had 2 daughters that I
know of and up to 9 infants that died.
David enlisted at Ripley
Miss 23 Oct 1862, age 18, in company G 23rd
Reg�t Miss Vols by Capt John Riddlespurger,
commanded by Col Joe Wells.
On 5 Dec 1862 David was
wounded (in his left hip) in the action near
Coffeeville Miss and was returned to duty by
order of the surgeon in charge (General
Hospital, Merdian Miss) on 25 Mar 1863.
On a Muster Roll dated 28
Feb-30 Jun 1863 he is listed as �absent cut
off from his command 16 May 1863 and is in
Vicksburg�. David was captured on 4 Jul
1863 at Vicksburg and paroled. David
never made it back to the 23rd Reg�t and is
listed on several Muster Rolls as �Captured
and paroled at Vicksburg� �Absent� and finally
�Absent without leave since 12 Feb
1864�. David signed his mark �X� on a
certificate in Vicksburg giving his solemn
parole under oath not to take up arms against
the US��������.dated 5 Jul 1863. The
parolling officer was Capt Davis of the (I
believe it says) 97th Reg�t ILL Vols.
Being unable to read and write he didn�t think
much of the oath and went on to continue
fighting for the Confederacy with the 2nd
Miss. On his application for pension
David tells that after he was parolled from
Vicksburg he was unable to make his way back
to his command, so he attached hisself to the
2nd Miss and remained with them until the end
of the war. The 2nd Miss surrendered at
Demopolis ALA. I do not know what
company in the 2nd Miss David was in, so I
have no information on any battles he may have
been in. I also have no Muster Rolls of
the 2nd Miss with him listed but am still
looking. After the war he went home to
Tippah County and married on 31 Jan 1867 and
started his family life.
Pvt David Flynn Rutherford
died in Tippah County on 4 Aug 1924 and is
buried at Little Hope Cemetery.
Note: Thomas and Margaret Rutherford had 7 sons with 6 known to have served in the war. Alexander W. Rutherford their youngest son would have been 13 years old when the war started and 14 when his oldest brothers all joined and left home to fight. I have no record on his service but it was very common for kids of that age to run away from home and fight. I�m sure that it crossed his mine many times and that his mother must have been a total wreck trying to keep him at home.
Steven Rutherford 3rd Great Grandnephew of David Flynn Rutherford See Steven's homepage for more information.
* RUTHERFORD, James McCullough - was the 2nd of 6 sons
of Thomas and Margaret Rutherford who fought
for the Confederacy. James was born 18
Nov 1834 in Georgia and came to Tippah County
with his family in 1848 to finally settle in
Falkner. He was married to his first
wife Harriett Reed (1838-1891) before the war
in 1856 and they had 4 children. After
the war in 1896 he married his 2nd wife Molly
Hensley.
James enlisted at Holly
Springs Miss 1 May 1862, age 27, in Company A
37th Reg�t Miss Inf which subsequently became
Company A 34th Regiment Miss Infantry (Tippah
Rangers) commanded by Capt. John Y. Murry.
James quickly moved up in
rank; 30 Oct 1862 appointed
Corporal; Dec 1862 elected 3rd Lt. and
finally on 22 Jan 1863 he was appointed 2nd
Lt. Jr.
NOTE: James has been
listed in many places as a Captain but I
cannot find in any of his military records
where he attained any higher rank than 2nd Lt.
Jr. His being listed as a Capt. may have
had to do with his law enforcement career
after the war or something he was in before
the war.
James was put on detached
service by order of Gen. Bragg on 15 Aug 1863
for Recruiting Service. He missed the
engagement and captured at Lookout Mountain
during this time.
From his military records
James seems to have worked mostly in the
supply lines. He served until the end of
the war and was discharged 26 Apr 1865.
I have no record of parole or oath of
allegiance.
Lt. James McCullough
Rutherford died 8 Sep 1909 in Tippah County
and is buried at Little Hope Cemetery Tippah
County Miss. See picture of
him
Steven
Rutherford 3rd Great Grandnephew of
James McCullough Rutherford
See Steven's homepage for more information.
* RUTHERFORD, John Lemon - was the 4th of 6 sons of
Thomas and Margaret Rutherford who fought for
the Confederacy. John was born 5 Nov
1840 in Georgia and came to Tippah County with
his family in 1848 to finally settle in
Falkner. He was married after the war to
Nancy Ann Elizabeth Ketchum (1842-1908) and
they had 2 children that I know of.
John was a very determined
and deeply dedicated soldier for the
Confederacy. First enlisting at the age
of 21 in Company A 23rd Reg�t Miss Vols. at
Hopkinsville KY by Capt. McCarly either 1 Nov
1861 or 6 Dec 1861, the records are not
clear. What is clear is that he was
wounded at Fort Donelson in Feb 1862 and sent
home. Nothing is said of how bad the
wound was or on what part of his body was
injured. It must have been pretty bad to
have him sent home. The rest of the
regiment was captured at Fort Donelson and was
exchanged about 20 Sep 1862. Nothing is
said if John was part of those captured.
I don�t believed he was because on 1 May 1862
he enlisted in Company A 34th Reg�t Miss Inf.
(Tippah Rangers). I�m sure he looked up
his brother 2nd Lt. James M. Rutherford (see
his story) when he arrived. John�s wound
that he received at Fort Donelson must have
been worst than we thought because on 24 July
1862 he was discharged upon Surgeons
Certificate from the 34th Miss Inf.
After healing for about 5
months he again enlisted (for a third time) in
the 2nd Miss State Cavalry in Ripley 16 Dec
1862 by Capt. Solomon Street the day after his
big brother Capt. William W. Rutherford
enlisted (see his story). After William
was captured John continued on with the 2nd
Miss Cavalry and they were with General
Forrest at Selma ALA on 2 Apr 1865 when they
were assaulted, many being killed, wounded,
captured, or scattered. Nothing is said
about John being captured or wounded.
Since this was at the end of the war we
believe he just headed home. No record
of his parole or oath of allegiance.
Pvt. John Lemon Rutherford
died 24 Aug 1896 in Tippah County and is
buried at Little Hope Cemetery Tippah County
Miss.
Steven Rutherford 3rd Great Grandnephew of John Lemon Rutherford See Steven's homepage for more information.
* RUTHERFORD, Robert Walker - was the 5th of 6 sons
of Thomas and Margaret Rutherford who fought
for the Confederacy. Robert was born 22
Dec 1842 in Georgia and came to Tippah County
with his family in 1848 to finally settle in
Falkner. He was married after the war to
Arteala Singleton and they had 9 children of
which one died as an infant.
Robert enlisted at Corinth
Miss 10 May 1862, age 19, in Company A 37th
Reg�t Miss Inf. Which subsequently became
Company A 34th Regiment Miss Infantry �Tippah
Rangers� commanded by Capt. John Y. Murry.
Robert enlisted right at
the time of the Battle of Farmington. He
may have fought in it and the enlistment paper
work done after the battle or if the company
went back to Corinth after the battle then he
did not engage in that battle. I do not
know. I�m sure as soon as he enlisted
that he looked up 3 of his brothers in the
same company �A� Sgt. Thomas F. Rutherford
(see his story), Jr. 2nd Lt. James M.
Rutherford (see his story) and Pvt. John L.
Rutherford (see his story) and was there at
Perryville to comfort his brother Thomas when
he was wounded. During these exciting
days you can be assured that the Rutherford
brothers watched out for each other as we
would today.
24 Aug 1863 Robert was put
� On daily extra duty by order of Gen. Liddelt
(not sure of spelling) with the supply train.
( Was this good or bad? Depends I
guess.)
On 24 Nov 1863 Robert was
captured with his brother Thomas at Lookout
Mountain along with many others. His
other brothers; James was not captured
as he was on detail and John was in the 2nd
Miss State Cavalry at this time with yet
another brother Capt. William W. Rutherford
(see his story). From Lookout Mountain
Robert and Thomas were sent to Nashville,
forwarded to Louisville KY 30 Nov 1863 and
arrived there 2 Dec 1863. They were
finally forwarded to Rock Island on 3 Dec 1863
and confined there 5 Dec 1863.
Robert served the remainder
of the war as a POW at Rock Island and was
exchanged 20 Mar 1865. Most likely he
and Thomas after being released traveled the
long road home together back to Tippah County.
Pvt. Robert Walker
Rutherford died 22 Mar 1905 at home in Tippah
County and is buried at Little Hope Cemetery
Tippah County.
Steven
Rutherford 3rd Great Grandnephew of
Robert Walker Rutherford
See Steven's homepage for more information.
* RUTHERFORD, Sgt. Thomas
Franklin - was
the 3rd of 6 sons of Thomas and Margaret
Rutherford who fought for the
Confederacy. Thomas was born 27 Oct 1837
in Georgia and came to Tippah County with his
family in 1848 to finally settle in
Falkner. He was married to Martha Ann
Wright (1841-1924) and they had 8 children.
Thomas enlisted at Tippah
County Miss 25 Feb 1862, age 24, in Company A
37th Reg�t Miss Inf which subsequently became
Company A 34th Regiment Miss Infantry Tippah
Rangers commanded by Capt. John Y. Murry.
Thomas fought in many
battles of which some were �Farmington,
Perryville, Murfreesboro, Chickamauga, and
Lookout Mountain. A few days after the
battle of Perryville, Major A. T. Mason made a
list of the killed and wounded. Thomas
was listed as severely wounded but continued
to stay on with Co. A and made all Muster
Rolls after the battle of Perryville and on 15
Apr 1863 he was appointed 1st Sgt. He
was hardcore and deeply dedicated to the
cause. I have not found out just how bad
a wound listed as �severely� was or where on
his body he was wounded.
On 24 Nov 1863 Thomas (and
his brother Robert (see his story)) were
captured at Lookout Mountain along with many
others. After being captured they were
forwarded from Nashville to Louisville KY on
30 Nov 1863 to the Provost Marshall Capt. S.
E. Jones. On 5 Dec 1863 they were
received at Rock Island Barracks IL prison
along with 5591 others. This was the
first group of POW�s to be received at Rock
Island. Somehow he survived this place
and on 20 Mar 1865 1088 POW�s were exchanged
of which Thomas was included.
There is no record of his
oath of allegiance or parole that I could
find. I assume after he was exchanged he
went home to his wife and son. Soon
after, Thomas and his family moved to Texas
and he continued to raise more children and
tell his grandchildren the many stories of his
proud service for the Confederacy.
Sgt. Thomas Franklin
Rutherford died 25 Mar 1906 at Santa Anna
Texas and is buried there.
Steven
Rutherford, 3rd Great Grandnephew of
Thomas Franklin Rutherford, and Bobby Gerald Rutherford, Great
Grandson of Thomas Franklin Rutherford
See
Steven's homepage for more information.
* RUTHERFORD, Captain William
Williamson -
Commander Co. A 2nd Miss State Cavalry.
William Rutherford was 1 of 6 sons of Thomas
and Margaret Rutherford who fought for the
confederacy. William, the oldest son,
was born in Georgia 5 Jan 1833 and came to
Tippah County with his family in 1848 to
finally settle in Falkner. He was
married to Mary Elizabeth Reed (1834-1909) and
had 11 children. William enlisted at
Ripley, Miss 15 Dec 1862, age 29, in Capt.
Soloman G. Street�s company. The company
was called the �Citizen Guards of Tippah
County� and officially �Company A 2nd
Mississippi State Cavalry�. In late
August 1863 the 2nd Miss State Cavalry was
re-organized at West Point Miss. Capt.
William W. Rutherford was acting commander of
Co. A as Capt. Street had left the
command. In Sept 1863 Street officially
resigned his commission and joined the 15th
Tenn. Cavalry as its Major. Major Street
was then soon to be murdered by one of his own
men.
On 1 October 1863 William
W. Rutherford was officially elected Captain
by the remaining men of Co. A 2nd Miss State
Cavalry. On 9 Apr 1864 the regiment was
in Aberdeen Miss. Col. W. L. Lowry was
made the regiment�s commander. On 5 May
1864 the regiment was finally transferred into
Confederate service, though it kept its State
designation. It was then placed with the
rest of Gholson�s Brigade in Buford�s Division
of Forrest�s Cavalry Corp.
On 4 Oct 1864 Capt. William
Rutherford was detailed for 40 days to return
to North Miss. for the purpose of arresting
and returning all absentees and deserters from
his (Gholson�s) cavalry brigade. He was
accompanied by Lt. S. N. Rye and others, and
most probably returned to the Ripley area.
On 6 Mar. 1865 Capt.
William Rutherford was captured with 2 other
men in Ripley by the 2nd Arkansas
(Union). As a P.O.W. he was first sent
to Memphis and arrived there 11 Mar
1865. On 28 Mar. 1865 he was sent to
Vicksburg Miss. where he was exchanged (for a
liked Union prisoner) to the Rebels on 3 Apr.
1865 at about 11am at Camp Fisk.
When the news reached the
Deep South that General Lee had surrendered on
9 Apr 1865, the remaining confederate soldiers
east of the Miss. River were then surrendered
by General Richard Taylor (son of Ex-president
Zach Taylor) on 4 May 1865. Capt.
William Rutherford must have been in the
vicinity of Jackson Miss. when the news came
and he finally went home. There is no
record of his parole or oath of allegiance.
The Rutherford family was
very lucky as neither Capt. W.W. Rutherford or
any of his 5 brothers were killed during this
hard time. All married and had children
and lived out their lives, most in Tippah
County. Capt. William W. Rutherford died
17 Feb 1890 and is buried at Little Hope
Cemetery Tippah County Miss.
Finally legend has it that
William was once wounded near his home after
he done in a Yankee and hid in a hollow log to
escape capture.
Steven
Rutherford Great
Great Great Grandson of William W. Rutherford,
Ripley, Miss.
See
Steven's homepage for more information.
* SCALLY, Henry Petty - was born 12 July 1844 in
Tishomingo Co. MS, the son of Prior Scally and
his wife Henrietta Ragsdale. By 1850
Henry and his family were living in Tippah
County. When the Civil War started,
Henry was 16 years of age, 5 feet nine inches
tall with light brown hair and black
eyes. The first year of the war, his
three brothers enlisted and went off to fight
for the Confederacy. When his brother,
Capt. John N. Scally returned to form a
company from the Hatchie River area, Henry and
his oldest brother William both enlisted in
John's company, "The Hatchie Tigers", Co. E,
of the 32nd Mississippi Infantry.
While the regiment was
training and provisioning in Tupelo that
summer, Henry was taken sick and was
hospitalized in Meridian. On New Years
Day 1863 Henry rejoined his company.
That September Henry saw his first battle at
Chickamauga where brother William was
seriously injured and Capt. John was
killed. Henry was with the 32nd
Mississippi Infantry at the Battle of
Franklin, TN on 30 Nov 1864 and was seriously
wounded. He was taken prisoner on
Christmas Day and was hospitalized. He
remained a prisoner until the War's end.
It was at Camp Chase, Ohio where he took the
oath of alligence to the union and was given
transportation by train to Booneville, MS,
only twenty miles from home.
On the 15th of October 1866
he married Mary Elizabeth Humphrey, daughter
of Thomas and Carolyn Crockett Humphrey.
They had eight children. Henry died at
his home in Corinth 7 Aug. 1921 and was buried
at Wenasoga in Holly Cemetery. (This
information was taken from A SCALLY FAMILY
HISTORY by Douglas Scally.)
Mary Ann
Mitchell
* SCALLY, James Kenneth - Was born 8 May 1841 in North Mississippi. He was reared in Tishomingo and Tippah Counties where his father, Prior Scally, pastored several churches. His mother was Henrietta Ragsdale. When the Civil War started, older brother John N. Scally enlisted immediately. James was the second to enlist on 10 September 1861 in Iuka, MS, for a three year hitch. He was assigned to the 26th Miss. Volunteers, Co. B, the "Booneville Avengers". James was with his unit the following winter at Fort Donelson; Grant placed the fort under seige and won their surrender in Feb. 1862. James spent 9 months as a prisoner at Camp Morton in Indianapolis, Indiana, and was included in a prisoner of war exchange at Aikens Landing in Virginia. In May 1863 James was left sick at Jackson, Mississippi; he was transferred to a hospital near Laurel, MS and later to Cahaba, AL. While convalescing he assisted as a nurse and remained attached to the hospital through 4 Feb. 1864.
James
returned to his unit in the spring of 1864 and
was with them in Northern Virginia in May when
Grant attacked Lee's line to protect Richmond,
the Capital of the CSA, called the
Battle of the Wilderness. James was
badly wounded the first day. After
recuperating, James was granted a 60 day
furlough to return home. It was probably
the last he saw of his unit, for by this time
the unit had surrendered in Grant's seige of
Petersburg, VA.
James farmed in Tippah
County and on 8 Feb. 1868 he married Ella
Victoria Saint, daughter of W. J. and Mary Ann
Saint. They had four sons and two
daughters. Ella died 9 Jan. 1881.
James remarried on 1 Sept 1881 to Nancy
Archer, reportedly four children were born to
this marriage. James moved his family in
1882 to Jackson Co., Arkansas. In the
autumn of 1892, James fell into a creek while
fishing, caught pneumonia and died 29 Nov.
1892. He was buried in Pleasant Grove
Cemetery, south of Tuckerman, Arkansas.
(The above information was taken from the book
A SCALLY FAMILY HISTORY by Douglas
Scally.)
Mary Ann
Mitchell
* SCALLY, John N. - Was born 1832 in Madison
Co., TN, son of Prior Scally and his wife,
Henrietta Ragsdale. In the early 1840s
John removed to Tippah Co. MS with his
parents. His father farmed and pastored
several Baptist churches in north Mississippi
before the war. John N. Scally never married.
John was living in Ripley
where he was serving as deputy sheriff and a
lawyer when it became immanent that war would
be declared. John enlisted in the
Mississippi Volunteers at Ripley on March 4,
1861. He was given the rank of corporal
in Capt Buchannan's company, the O'Conner
Rifles, 2nd Regt., Co. B. On May 10 the
regiment was mustered into service at
Lynchburg, VA and John was advanced to the
rank of 2nd Lieutenant.
John was with his unit at
the Battle of Bull Run at Manassas, VA on July
21, 1861. He was severely wounded in the
arm and side by shell fragments with three
ribs broken. He was hospitalized at
Charlottesville, VA on July 25 for 12 days and
was readmitted on Sept. 9 for jaundice.
The following April the O'Conner Rifles had
returned to Tippah Co. and one year
enlistments had run out. John reenlisted
at Corinth on April 8, 1862 for three more
years. The regiment was reorganizing and
John was promoted and made Captain of a new
company being formed as part of the 32nd
Mississippi Infantry. The unit was Co. E
and John selected "Hatchie Tigers" as their
designation.
On October 8, 1862 John's
unit fought under Gen. Bragg at Perryville,
KY. The 32nd Miss. Infantry was moved to
Chattanooga in anticipation of a major
confrontation over that strategic corridor
through the mountains. The
regiment arrived on Sept. 18, the first day of
fighting, and was joined to Gen. Woods'
Brigade under Gen. Cleburne. The Brigade
including Capt. John N. Scally's company,
engaged the enemy the next morning and
received heavy fire. It was probably
here where John was shot from his horse in the
midst of the charge. Capt. John Scally
had been killed. [Note: It appears from
the above that Capt. Scally was killed at the
battle of Chickamauga, Ga. 19 Sept. 1863]
Mary Ann
Mitchell
* SCALLY, George W. - was born in 1835 Madison
Co. TN, son of Prior Scally and his wife,
Henrietta Ragsdale and the brother of Capt.
John N. Scally. George was six feet
tall, fair complexioned with light hair and
blue eyes. He pursued a career as a
mechanic and cabinet maker. George
enlisted for one year at Ripley, MS on Sept.
18, 1861 and was assigned to the same company
as his brother John, the O'Conner Rifles, 2nd
Regiment, Co. B. George's military
career was a brief one. He was sick with
pneumonia all of December at Camp Fisher in
Virginia. He was examined by the surgeon
and it was recommended that he be discharged
as medically unfit for service. His discharge
was dated New Years Day, 1862, at which time
he apparently was still hospitalized. At the
end of the month he was paid $22 for two
months back pay, plus $25 for clothing charged
but not drawn and $7 for mileage back to
Ripley. John signed the receipts for
George.
What became of George is
not known for certain. It is believed
that he succumbed to the pneumonia, either
never making it back to Mississippi, or dying
shortly thereafter. George never
married.
Mary Ann
Mitchell
* SCALLY, William Hull- was born in Williamson Co.,
TN 28 Nov 1828, the son of Prior Scally and
Henrietta Ragsdale, his wife, and removed to
North Mississippi in the 1840s. William
was married and working his farm with the
assistance of his brother James Kenneth at the
time Mississippi declared its independence
from the Union; his life and that of his wife
were radically changed. William enlisted
and served as a corporal in the 32nd
Mississippi Infantry, Co. E, under his brother
Capt. John N. Scally. William was
seriously wounded at Chickamauga and later
told his family that he saw his brother Capt.
John N. Scally shot from his horse in the
midst of the battle. Unable to get to
his brother in the rush of the battle, and
wounded himself, William did not learn until
evening that his brother had been killed.
In 1850, William married
first Amanda Ernest (born 1833, died 1875
Hatchie, Tippah Co., MS) and had two
sons. After Amanda's death William
married Nancy Green Doty, a widow.
William died 24 Dec 1917 and is buried in the
Harmony Baptist Church Cemetery in Walnut,
Tippah Co. MS. (The above information
came from A SCALLY FAMILY HISTORY ,
written by Douglas Scally, a descendant of
William Hull Scally)
Mary Ann
Mitchell
* SEXTON, James Dickerson - enlisted December 17, 1861
as a 2nd Lt. in Company B, 1st Regiment of the
Mississippi Partisan Rangers. I have a
copy of his resignation letter dated May 3,
1863 stating that due to wounds received on
September 19, 1862 at the battle of Iuka near
Peydon Mill, he was disabled and unable to
resume his duties.
J. D. Sexton was born
January 18, 1832 in Tennessee. His
parents are believed to have been Elijah and
Temperance Sexton, although complete proof is
lacking. About 1851 he married Frances
Elizabeth Crowder. In 1860 the J.D. and
Elijah Sexton families are living next door in
Tippah County (although J.D. is listed as
Richard Sexton in the census, perhaps because
he went by the name "Dick", and the census
taker perhaps thought it a nickname for
Richard). After the war the family moved
to Ripley, MS and later to Mills County,
Texas.
J.D. Sexton was very active
in Confederate Veteran activities and became
commander of the Jeff Davis Camp #117 in
Goldthwaite, TX (Mills County). He died
in Goldthwaite in 1909.
Ronnie
Smith
*
SHINNALL, Samuel Berry - Born 9-22-1844 in SC, son
of Samuel Berry and Nancy Shinnall. Family
migrated to Cherokee County, Ga. around 1850.
He enlisted in Co. "A" 23rd Ga. Infantry on
8-31-1861. His unit saw action at Seven
Days, Seven Pines, Malvern Hill, 2nd Manasas
Creek, South Mountain, Sharpsburg, Crampton
Cap and Fredericksburg. He was promoted
to 3rd Corporal and was still on rolls on
4-30-1864. After the War he returned
home and married Martha Elizabeth Pugh,
daughter of Benjamin and Eliza Pugh, on
1-6-1867. Around 1870 they moved to Tippah
County obtained some land and started
farming. They had a family of ten
children. Sam died on 10-9-1921 and Martha
died twenty years later on 10-2-1941.
They are both buried at Clear Creek Cemetery.
See picture of him
B. J.
Clark
* SMITH, Levi - Born 1834, Caswell County,
North Carolina. He moved with his
parents, Richard and Sophia Gibson Smith
around 1836, to Tippah Co. Mississippi.
He married Mary Adeline Montgomery in 1851,
Tippah Co. Ms. Levi enlisted on the 17th
day of March, 1862, in Co. G 34th
Mississippi Regiment under the command of
Samuel Benton and T. S. Hubbard. He was
killed the on either the 14th or 15th day of May 1864 at the Battle of Resaca,
Georgia. Source: Levi Smith appears in a list of casualties in Walthall's Brigade, in the operations, around Dalton Georgia,
May 7 to 20, 1864 including the battle of Resaca May 14-15, 1864. Last pay card received state Levi "killed at Resaca"
Mary
Adeline Smith applied for a Mississippi Confederate pension on
Jul 30, 1900. (Originally submitted information from Jana
included Mary Adeline maiden name as Carlisle, this was later proved to
be in error based on other family records, it appears that either Mary
gave incorrect info on her confederate widows pension or the
information was recorded wrong. The corrections were provided by Juliane Montgomery Burbach)
Jana
Mayfield
* SMITH, William Thomas - Born Jan 29 1847 in Tippah
County. He was the son of Alvis C.
and Mary B. Belote Smith. He enlisted in
the Spring of 1863 in Co. "A" 7th
Mississippi Cavalry and served until the
close of the war. Captain
Tom Ford was the commander of Co.
"A". He and his brother, James
Edward Smith moved to Robertson Co. Tx. around
1871. He married Susan Catherine Cox, b.
Jan 4, 1853, Tippah Co. and daughter of
Samuel Whitman and Nancy J. Arnett Cox.
They married and lived in Robertson Co. until
William Thomas Smith's death on Jun 27,
1913. He applied for a Confederate
Pension from Robertson County. He had
sworn statements from Joe H. and
James Riley Brown testifying on his behalf
stating that all three were in the Co. "A" 7th
Calvalry. In 1908, Joe and James
Brown�s postoffice address was Falkner, Tippah
Co. Mississippi.
Jana
Mayfield
* STACKS, Elijah Griffin - Pvt. Co. H (Tippah
Farmers organized 18 Mar 1962) 34th
Mississippi Infantry, CSA, originally known as
the 37th. On April 9, 1865, the 24th, 27th,
29th and 34th MS. Regiments were
consolidated in the 24th Regiment.
Elijah enlisted 25 Apr 1862 along with two of
his brothers, N. M. and S. F.
Stacks. He was born 19 Oct
1837 in Campbell Co. Georgia. His
parents were Thomas Stacks born 1788 in North
Carolina, and Elizabeth Neighbors b 1897 in
South Carolina, who moved to Tippah Co. about
1852. Elijah had nine brothers and two
sisters. He married his first wife Luiza
Caroline Hale (also found spelled Hall) in
1865. They had seven
children. After she died he
married Mary Carolyn Hargrove in 1879.
They also had seven children. In the
fall of 1884, they moved to Grant Co. Arkansas
where he died 12 Dec
1895. He is buried in Bethel Cemetery
North, Grant Co. AR. in Ico
Community. Elijah Griffin Stacks
was my great grandfather.
Pat Stacks
Ramsey
* STACKS, Nathan M. - Pvt. Co. H (Tippah
Farmers organized 18 Mar 1962) 34th
Mississippi Infantry, CSA, originally known as
the 37th. Nathan enlisted 25 Apr
1862 along with two of his brothers, Elijah
Griffin and Samuel F. Stacks. He was
born 1831 in Newberry South Carolina.
His parents were Thomas Stacks born in North
Carolina, and Elizabeth Neighbors born in
South Carolina, who moved to Tippah Co. about
1852. He married Eliza Rochester and had
three children. Nathan died in Nov 1862
in the Civil War supposedly at Dunlap Camp in
Tennessee. I have been unable to find
where Dunlap Camp was located and where he is
buried, but his wife Eliza is buried in
Ebenezer Methodist Cem, Benton Co MS.
Pat Stacks
Ramsey
* STACKS, Samuel F. - Pvt. Co. H (Tippah
Farmers organized 18 Mar 1962) 34th
Mississippi Infantry, CSA, originally known as
the 37th. On April 9, 1865, the 24th, 27th,
29th and 34th MS. Regiments were
consolidated in the 24th Regiment.
Samuel enlisted 25 Apr 1862 along with two of
his brothers, Elijah Griffin and Nathan M.
Stacks. He was born 1833 in Newberry
South Carolina. His parents were Thomas Stacks
born in North Carolina, and Elizabeth
Neighbors born in South Carolina, who moved to
Tippah Co. about 1852. He married Nancy
Fowler and had nine children. His
death date and where he is buried is unknown
at this time.
Pat Stacks
Ramsey
* STARK, Alexander Nathaniel
� Enlisted in Company G
(Tippah Riflemen), 23rd Mississippi Infantry on
November 1, 1861 at Hopkinsville, KY.
Captured at Fort Donelson, TN. Prisoner at
Camp Douglas, IL. Sent to Vicksburg, MS on
the river steamer Jonathan H. Done for exchange
on September 20, 1862. Fought in battles
at Coffeeville, MS, campaign and siege of
Vicksburg, MS (23rd Miss. did not surrender),
and the Dalton-Atlanta campaign. Killed in
action on August 26, 1864 at Atlanta. His
brother William M. Stark said that his brother
was shot in the head while in the trenches in
front of Atlanta.
Born: 1834 � Henderson Co., TN
Died: August 26, 1864 � killed at Siege of
Atlanta
Wallace
Walters
* STARK, William Malachi
� Enlisted in Company G (Tippah Riflemen) 23rd
Mississippi Infantry on June 2, 1861 in Tippah
County. Discharged sick on January 9,
1862. Enlisted in Company K, 10th
Mississippi Infantry on May 14, 1862 at Holly
Springs, MS. He participated in the
battles at Mumfordsville and Perryville, KY,
Murfreesboro, TN, Chicamauga, GA, Missionary
Ridge, TN, the Dalton-Atlanta campaign,
Florence, AL, Franklin and Nashville, TN.
Twice wounded � July 28, 1864 in front of
Atlanta and in November 1864 at Franklin,
TN. Paroled at Greensboro, NC on April 26,
1865.
Born: December 19, 1842 � Henderson Co.,
TN
Died: April 17, 1929 � Memphis, TN (buried
Elmwood Cem.)
Wallace
Walters
*
STEPHENS, Harrison-- Harrison Stephens was born in
Tennessee in 1822*. His wife was Mary
Eleanor Starks who was born in South
Carolina in 1828*. By 1848 Harrison
Stephens had migrated to Mississippi and in
1851 was living in Itawamba County.
Harrison Stephens by 1856 was living in the
Pleasant Ridge Community in Tippah
County. At this time he owned 6 slaves
and by 1860 his personal property and real
estate was valued at $14,230.
Harrison Stephens enlisted
into the Confederate Army in Tippah County and
was a leader of a Cavalry Platoon (Co. G 7th
Miss. Cav.). After the war he was
returning home, and as he was nearing his home
in Tippah County, he stopped to get a drink of
water. A briar hooked around the trigger
of his gun (which he had placed on the ground),
and as he picked up his gun, it discharged and
killed him. His wife, Mary Eleanor
Stephens, died a few months later. An
account of his children follows:
Danette Kong Pool (great-great-great-granddaughter of Harrison Stephens, Sr.)1. Orthella Stephens, b. 1848 Mississippi. Married John Braddock.
2. James Stephens, b. 1850 Mississippi. No record.
3. Harrison T. Stephens, Jr., b. 1853. Migrated to Texas.
4. Gertrude Pauline Stephens*, b. 1854 Mississippi. Married Tom Cross. Daughter Mary Eleanor Cross married Lloyd Thomas Welch. Their child Verdie Eleanor Welch* married T. N. Braddock, Sr.* (*Note: my maternal grandparents).
5. John Volentine Stephens, b. 1858 Mississippi. Migrated to Texas.
6. Jake (J. T.) Stephens, b. 1858 Mississippi. Migrated to Texas.
7. Joe M. Stephens*, b. 1859, buried in Rucker Cemetery (Tippah County).
* Notes: the following gaves were found in Nance Cemetery -- according to my listings there were two Nance cemeteries plus a Nance Family Cemetery which may not be correct:
Stephens, Harrison A., Feb. 19, 1862 - Sep. 7, 1862
Stephens, Mary E., wife of H.A., Apr. 12, 1827 - Feb. 23, 1863
Stephens, Joseph M., Mar. 11, 1860 - Apr. 8, 1919
Pogue Cemetery:
Cross, Gertrude, May 5, 1855 - May 22, 1932.
Falkner Cemetery:
Braddock, Thomas N., Apr. 24, 1903 - Feb. 14, 1960
Braddock, Verdie E., Jan. 12, 1903 -
Welch, Loyd T., Nov. 8, 1871 - Apr. 2, 1956
Welch, Mary E., Oct. 15, 1873 - Jan. 26, 1968
*
STREET, Solomon - Solomon was born in 1834, and was
one of 15 children born to Anderson and Keziah
McBride Street. He married Rhoda
Balch. Sol enlisted early in the war (1861) in
the Magnolia Guards which later was merged into the
2nd Miss. Infantry. He served at First
Manassas, Seven Pines, and the Seven Days
Battles. After North Miss. was invaded in 1862
he hired a substitute under the provisions of the
Conscription Act and returned home. He was a
Capt. in the Tippah Guards. He later served in
the 15th TN under Gen. N. B. Forrest. Killed
May 2, 1864 in Bolivar, TN by Robert Galloway, son
of William Galloway who Sol had killed in a argument
over cotton. See this
story about him.
* SWAN, Robert
Franklin - was born 29
Aug 1836 in TN, died 11 Dec 1898, McLennan Co TX. He
was son of Wilson H SWAN and Mary McDONALD. He married
27 Dec 1860, Benton Co MS to Ann Maria ALEXANDER, dau
of Robert ALEXANDER and Martha ALLEN from VA. Robert
and Ann, along with her mother and stepfather's
family, (James S ROUNDTREE) moved to Titus Co TX about
1880. Robert enlisted in Spring of 1862 at Holly
Springs MS. He was Private in 17th Regiment Infantry
(Featherston's), fought at Chicamauga with Longstreet,
was wounded and captured 29 Nov 1863 at Fort Sanders,
Knox Co TN, and held prisoner at Ft Delaware for 10
months and paroled at end of war. Those signing
affidavits for his widow's pension were: G.W. DUNCAN
of Titus Co TX, who was neighbor to Robert and Ann in
Benton Co MS, saw him at his home when he was wounded;
J.H. WILSON of Hill Co TX, knew Robert since he,
(J.H.) was a child, says he had 3 brothers who served
in same unit as Robert; J.A. MILLER of Titus Co TX,
knew Robert and Ann in Tippah Co MS, and met up with
him on the field, after the battle at Chicamauga; J.A.
WILLSON and Georgia WILLSON, son in law and daughter
of Robert also signed affadavits. Other known children
of Robert and Ann were: Laura E, Robert T, Mary and
Oscar V SWAN. Ann Maria SWAN's last known residence
was Honey Grove, Fannin Co TX in 1910.
Virginia Flesher
* TAPSCOTT,
Lucius Lycurgus � Enlisted in Company I, 2nd
Mississippi Infantry March 1, 1862. Transferred
to Company A January 16, 1863. Wounded at
Gettysburg � left in the hands of the enemy.
Prisoner at David�s Island, New York. Paroled at
City Point, Virginia September 8, 1863. Returned
to regiment. Captured at Petersburg, Virginia
April 2. 1865. Released at Point Lookout,
Maryland June 21, 1865.
Born: July 15, 1838 � Caswell County, North
Carolina
Died: August 13, 1905 � Nettleton, MS
Wallace
Walters
* TATE,
John William Steen -
enlisted in the 1st Miss. Partisan Rangers Co. E 7th
Miss. Cavalry as a private on 8/1/1862 at the age of
41 by Col. Wm. Falkner. He enlisted for a 3
year period. On 9/1/1864 he was promoted to
3rd Corporal. Battles in which he participated
were Peyton's Mills, Collierville, Wyatt, Moscow,
Cold Water, Hernando, Harrisburg, Greenwood, Salem,
and Tippah Creek. The unit was surrendered to
Major General E.R.S. Candy at Citronelle, Alabama by
Lieutenant General Richard Taylor on May 4, 1865 and
John's name appears on a Roll of Prisoners of
War. They were paroled on May 16, 1865.
During the war John provided his own horse named
"Sills". The horse was hit by a minie ball
during a battle. John recovered the bullet
which remains in the family to this day. At
the end of the War, the horse was sold and Bibles
were purchased for his children with the proceeds of
the sale. He married Mary Elizabeth Hardin March 8,
1849. His son, my great grandfather, Zachary
Hardin Tate, was born in Keownville, now Union
County in 1858.
Jim Woodward
* TERRY,
Charles M.D.- was
born 10 May 1837 in the Greenville District of South
Carolina. In 1842 his father and mother,
Asbury and Winniford Terry, moved the family to
Tippah County, Mississippi. They lived on Oak
Lawn Plantation near the town of Salem. Asbury
died 17 September 1850 and is buried in the old
Salem cemetery. Winniford and the
10 children worked the land and made their
living. The family of 5 boys and 5 girls did
well for themselves; they had 11 slaves.
Charles wrote a diary covering
the period 1856 - 1860 covering life on a
farm/plantation in Mississippi. It is full of
references to daily routine and neighbors.
Charles ran the farming operations for the
family. His middle name might have been
"McDowell"; his father's mother was Rebecca Ann
McDowell.
Charles joined Captain Thomas J.
Hardin's Mississippi Volunteers 25 May 1861 at
Chulahoma, Mississippi. This company
subsequently became Company I, 19th Infantry
Regiment Mississippi Infantry.
Hospitalized for pnuemonia
General Hospital, Camp Winder, Richmond, Virginia 20
February 1863. Released 17 May 1863.
Private Terry was shot in the
face. Casualties List says "6th Brigade,
Longstreet's Division, engagements before Richmond
26 June - 1 July 1862". Medical report says
"age 24, gunshot wound at right angle nose coming
out angle left lower jaw, health good".
He was promoted to Corporal
after returning to duty. He was wounded in the
left thigh and captured at Spottsylvania, Virginia
on 12 March 1864. Hospitalized at
Lincoln Hospital, Washington D.C. Sent to
prison in Elmira, New York 23 July 1864.
Charles M.D. Terry was exchanged
as prisoner 29 October 1864.
The family moved to Dallas, Texas
after the War in 1866. Charles married
Martha Ellen Clark in June 1869. He made a
fortune as a cotton broker and merchant. His
daughter, Maidie Terry, would grow up to marry T.L.
Bradford who was the first mayor after Dallas was
incorporated. Mr. Bradford was also a founder
of Southwestern Life Insurance Company.
Hugh
Corrigan IV
*TERRY,
James Stacey -
was born in the Greenville District of South
Carolina in 1834. His parents, Asbury and
Winniford E. Graydon Terry, moved the family to
Tippah County in 1842. They lived on Oak Lawn
Plantation near the town of Salem. At age 21
James, the oldest son in the family moved to La
Grange, Tennessee and worked as a clerk in a store.
In 1861, James enlisted in the
Southern Guards, Company A, and spent 12 months in
the artillery division, his command being stationed
respectively at Cape Girardeau, Belmont, Colombus,
Island No. 10 and New Madrid in the defensive
operations of the Confederates along the Mississippi
River. With a number of his comrades, James
swam the river to the Arkansas side, rejoined the
Confederate forces at Fort Pillow. In 1862 he
was assigned to Company A of the Fourth Tennessee
Infantry, and with that command participated in the
invasion of Kentucky. He fought in the battles
of Perryville, Murfreesboro, Chattanooga,
Chickamauga and Nashville. At the last named
place he was captured and spent some time in Federal
prison at Camp Douglas in Chicago. He rejoined
his command in time to take part in the defense of
Atlanta, where he was wounded. During his
carrer as a soldier he was wounded several other
times, and took part in thirty-seven pitched
battles. At Richmond, Virginia in 1865
he received his parole, returned across country on
foot to Mississippi where he worked on the family
farm in Tippah County.
James moved to Dallas in
1872. He Married Callie Hicks of DeSoto
County, Mississippi. He joined his brothers in
business, and made his fortune in the flour mill and
wollen mill business and eventually the real estate
business. His descendants still live in
Dallas.
Hugh
Corrigan IV
* TIGRETT,
Capt. David Porter "Dave" -- Captain David Porter Tigrett was
elected at 35, First Sgt., Company L (the Liberty
Guards), from Tippah County, MS. Dave Tigrett
was captured at Petersburg, VA on April 2,
1865. He was Commander of Company L, 2nd
Mississippi Infantry, CSA. He was born March
14, 1827 or 1828, probably in TN. His parents
were Rev. Samuel Tigrett (1797-1852) and Annie Jane
Bell (b. ca. 1800 in TN), Dave Tigrett married
Louisa J. _____. Their children included Sarah
Jane "Sallie," b. ca. 1864; Kitty; Vera May; and son
D. F. Tigrett. David Porter Tigrett was my
great great grandfather. He died on May 20,
1894 and was buried at Wiers Chapel between Dumas
and Ripley, MS.
Submitted by:
Becky
Smith , P.O. Box 293176, Kerrville,
TX 78029-3176
* TIMMONS,
William
Robert
Monroe
"Bill" Born on September
12, 1845, Tippah County, MS, He and his family are
listed in the 1850 Census for Tippah County. He
enlisted on 13 September 1861 in Company "G" 31st
Regiment Tennessee Infantry. He served until the
surrender. Service is documented by records from
National Archive and Texas State Archive.
He was listed as a corporal on 30 April 1864, last
available roster for Company "G."
Married Mahalla Jane Roten on 4 February 1866 in
Tippah County. Family relocated to Clarksville,
Red River, Texas about 1890.
W. R. M. "Bill" Timmons died on 18 December 1906,
at Clarksville, Red River County, Texas. A
Confederate Widows' pension was granted to Mahalla
Jane Timmons on 1 September 1916 through the state
of Texas. She received this pension until her
death, 26 July 1925. Submitted by: Timothy G.
Timmons
*TURNER, Hardee L. My g/g/g/uncle was
born in 1837 in North Carolina, son of James and
brother of Henry H. Turner. Married Sarah Bumpas.
Hardee L.
Turner, Private, Company K, 10th Mississippi
Cavalry, enlisted May 14, 1862 at Holly Springs,
Miss. by Captain Harris for 3 years, detached
February 16, 1863 as Teamster, Supply train, died
in Huntsville hospital May 21, 1863 of Cholera
Morbus having been for sometime with Diarrhoea,
/s/ G. W. Burton, Surgeon, B. Franks, Huntsville,
Ala. was paid May 22, 1863, for making coffin
& burying above named man. The grave site is
currently unknown since the occupying union troops
used the wooden headstones for firewood.
M269: Compiled
Service Records of Confederate Soldiers Who Served
in Organizations from the State of
Mississippi. Submitted by:
Erick Turner
*TURNER, Henry H, my g/g/g/uncle born
in 1833 in North Carolina. Came to Tippah county
with James Turner and family about 1840. Married
Margaret Sarah A. Morton.
Served in the 7th Mississippi Cavalry CSA.
Transferred to 23 Mississippi Infantry. Captured
at or near Big Black Bridge (Vicksburgh) later
exchanged and sent to Confederate hospital in
Richmond Virginia. Died of fever shortly after.
His wife and much of his family moved to
Kaufman, TX shortly after the war.
There is a headstone for him in the College Mound
Cemetery, see picture below. Submitted by:
Erick Turner
*TURNER, Wiley Redmond - He was born in 1842
and was my g/g/g/uncle and brother to William
Timothy and James Elder.
Wiley served in the 1st Battalion, Mississippi
Infantry (Army of 10,000), later called the 10th
Mississippi. and was KIA at Ft, Craig Kentucky
during the Battle of Muunfordsville in 1862, Wylie
Redmond Turner is buried with other members of the
10th Miss. at the Col. Robert A. Smith
memorial. He is also mentioned in Lt. Stewert's letter. Submitted
by: Erick
Turner
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James Elder Turner
* TURNER, William Timothy (my
g/g/g/grandfather) was born in Tippah County in the Orizaba
area, son of Wiley and Sussanah Turner. He served with the
2nd Mississippi Cav. (reserves) I Co. (The Lula Whites) He
married Georgia McBryde and moved to Kaufman TX in 1892 and
was buried there at College Mound Cemetery in 1914. There
are a couple of letters he had wrote detailing his civil war
service trying to help a friend W. W. McGraw get his
Confederate pension.
Here is a link discussing his Friend and his letter:
Below is story found at http://www.txgenweb6.org/txnavarro/biographies/m/mcgraw_william_w.htm
about a letter William Timothy wrote to his friend
shortly before both their deaths.
William Washington McGraw was born in Marshall County, MS
and was in Navarro County by the 1900 Census. He served in
Co I, 2 MS Cavalry known as the Lula White Rebels. McGraw
enlisted late in the war. The rolls of December 31,
1864, show the companies at Tuscumbia, Carthage, Fulton and
Cotton Gin. Mr. W. T. Turner of Kaufman County, Texas wrote
that he knew W. W. McGraw and in fact had served with him in
the same unit from the time of his enlistment until their
surrender in about April 1865. In a correspondence dated
June 25, 1913 Turner wanted McGraw to come to Kaufman so
they could see each other and "talk over old times."
Submitted
by: Erick
Turner
* WALDON,
Abraham B., Jr. - Abraham B. Waldon, Jr.
was born March 27, 1823, Laurens, County, S.C, the
son of Abraham B., Sr. and Martha (Walton) Waldon.
He married Ann Mathis in 1853 in Tippah County, MS
and they became the parents of Mary Ann Elizabeth,
Sarah, T. J., John Wesley and Roxie Ann. Abraham B.,
Jr. was a farmer and a miller.
According to Civil War Records
from the Mississippi Department of Archives and
History A. B. Waldon enlisted April 27, 1862 in
Corinth, MS in Co. E., 32nd Mississippi Infantry,
CSA, for 3 years. He is shown as Present from
May 1862 through April 1864 and was promoted from
Private to 1st Sergeant in June, 1862. The Jan
and Feb, 1864 muster roll notes "furloughed for 40
days 25 Jany 1864 by order from Army
Headquarters." He appears on a "muster roll of
Officers and men paroled in accordance with the
terms of a Military Convention entered into on the
28th day of April, 1865, between General Joseph E.
Johnson, Commanding Confederate Army, and Major
General W. T. Sherman, Commanding United States Army
in North Carolina. Roll dated near High Point,
N. C., April 27, 1865. Paroled at Greensboro,
North Carolina, May 1, 1865.
Abraham B. Waldon, Jr. died May
25, 1877 and Ann died December 24, 1906. Both are
buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery in Tippah County,
MS. Submitted by: Raymond Settle
* WALDON, Issac J. -
Issac was born January 11, 1835, Laurens, Co., S.C.,
the son of Abraham B., Sr. and Martha (Walton)
Waldon. He married Lora Jane Holcomb in 1857
in Salsbury, TN. They were the parents of
Martilla, William Carter, Sarah Mottie, Mary A.,
Martha, Hardy P., Issac Benjamin, John Pinkton and
Charlie R. Issac operated a water powered gin
and grist mill on the Hatchie River.
According to his pension
application, Issac enlisted in 1861 and served until
March 9, 1862, in Co's B & D, 1st Mississippi
Partisan Rangers/7th Regiment Mississippi
Cavalry. From March 9, 1862 to April 9, 1865,
he served in Co. D, 2nd Mississippi Infantry, CSA.
"He was captured 1863 and incarcerated Alton
Prison." He was discharged April 9,
1865.
Issac died January 6, 1907 and Lora
died October 27, 1924. Both are buried in
Waldon Cemetery in Tippah County, MS.
Submitted by: Raymond Settle
*
WHITE, Robert Silas -
He
married Elizabeth Ann CROWDER July 25, 1860 in
Ripley, Mississippi. She was born August 16,
1837 in Memphis, Tennessee and the family moved to
Ripley when she was about 10 years old. She
had a sister named Bell and at least two brothers
who went with her husband to fight in the Civil War
with the others from Ripley. Elizabeth Ann
Crowder White Hays, applied for a widow's pension in
Nov., 1933. It was denied because they were
married from July 25, 1860 until his death in
1868. The law stated that they had to
live together for 10 years before the Confederate
soldier's death. She reported that he died of
wounds received in the Civil War in Covington,
TN. He was born ca 1835 in MS, probably in
Ripley, MS to Robert White and Mary Ann. He
was a Presbyterian singing teacher and a
farmer. According to some accounts they were
prominent supporters of the Presbyterian Church in
Ripley as was the father of Robert White, William
White of Sumter, SC. I have located Robert S.
White on two different rosters, but cannot determine
which one is our ancestor. She died about 1938
in San Angelo, Texas. [Note: There was a
Robert S. White in Co. C 2nd Miss. (Davidson's) Army
of 10,000 and also a Robert S. White in Co. B 34th
Mississippi Infantry, enlisted 5/8/1862. The
23rd Mississippi was first known as the 2nd, then
the 3rd and finally the 23rd. Davidson was
Col. of the regiment. It was captured at Ft.
Donelson 16 Feb. 1862 but some men escaped
capture. Robert probably was one of the later
and joined the 34th.]
Submitted by: [email protected]
& Dawn
Moorehead-Street
* WILBANKS, William Darious - born 30 Oct. 1845 in Union County, SC, the son of Daniel and Morrilla Wilbanks. According to this letter written by William to obtain a pension, he enlisted in the 4th Miss. Cavalry:
Veteran of Civil War, CSA, Aug 1862 to 1864, 4th Mississippi Calvary, Company G. In November 17, 1909 W. D. applied for a Soldiers Pension. He was a soldier from Miss., in Forest's Calvary. "I enlisted in 1862 Forrest Calvary, Chalmer Regiment, Bill Fortier Col, Garretts Company, Capt. John Garrett, Lieutenant Willis Cook, 2nd Lieutenant Virg Grace. Battles - Bakers Cross Woods wounded in shoulder and breast. Shiloh, wounded in both right and left arms. Coldwater, wounded in left side. Disability - Broken shoulder and shorting of left arm five inches, complete disability left arm, impaired right arm. Incapacitated - 3 months one time and 4 months another time. I was detached by Capt Garrett and put in charge of twelve men to conscript and look up men that were laying out from the Army. At Pontatoc I was severly wounded in the shoulder and was carried to the home of Sam Stanton. I was not fit for anymore service. Attended by Dr. Holmes at Pontatoc, Miss. Was paroled at Corinth, Miss. after surrender. Took oath when paroled. At the time of surrender or soon after I got able and went to Corinth and got my parole.
No record of his service in the 4th
Miss. Cavalry was found as shown in this War
Department communication # 1589811 dated Nov 22
1909: "There are no records, on file in this office,
of such an organization as Captain John Garrett's
Company, Chalmer's Regiment, Forrest's Cavalary,
Confederate States Army."
" The records show, however, that one Darius
Wilbanks, private,Company G (Captain John Garrett),
7th Mississippi Calvary, Confederate States Army,
enlisted August 1, 1863. He was reported on
the company muster roll covering the period from
July 1, to October 31, 1864, last on file, as absent
on detached service. No later record of him
has been found."
signed by Adjutant General......
Since Shiloh was fought in 1862
and he enlisted in the 7th Miss. Cav. 1 Aug. 1863,
he must have served in some other unit.
Perhaps the records have just been lost.
He married Isabella West , on 15
February 1865 in Tippah County, ( entry #
196). He married second Ruth Minerva.
We were told that he was a spy
and that he had a horse named "Fine As Silk" that he
had confiscated while in Nashville on a
mission. Darious also carried the seven"Minnie
Balls" that he was shot with around for years in a
little metal box.
William died 6 May 1911 in
Ridgeley, Lake County, TN and is Buried at Burris
Chapel cemetery. Ruth filed for pension
(#4838) based on his service.
Submitted by Vernon
E. Krouse husband of Meredith Wilbanks.
* WINBORN, Joseph W. - enlisted as a private in Company K
of the 34th Mississippi in Salem on March 8, 1862
and served until the end of the war. Three of
his brothers enlisted as well: Pugh H., James
E. and Samuel W. A fourth brother, William V.,
joined the 2nd Cavalry from Carroll County.
Joseph was assigned as a teamster for much of his
service. He took part in the engagements at
Farmington, Resaca, Prairieville, Chickamauga and
Atlanta.
Joseph�s parents were Richard W.
and Rebecca Floyd Winborn of North Carolina.
The family emigrated first to Lauderdale County,
Alabama, then to Marshall County, Mississippi,
locating 12 miles east of Holly Springs in
1836. Joseph was born there in 1840. He
married Cornelia M. Hoover in 1860, and they had 9
children: James Albert, Charles M., John R.,
Clara E., Laddison B., Joseph M., Lucious Lambert,
Samuel Addison and Cornelia D.
After the war, Joseph and his
family lived in Salem and Ashland. He was
sheriff of Benton County for over 20 years beginning
in 1878. Joseph died in 1902. The Benton
County town originally established as Reed�s Switch
was renamed Winborn in his honor.
Joseph and Cornelia, along with
his parents and several descendents, are buried in
the Ashland Cemetery.
Submitted by Tom
Winborn Barnett, grandson of Samuel Addison
Winborn.
* WILLINGHAM, George W. - enlisted in the year 1863, 11th Miss. Calvary. His commander was Gen. Stephen D. Lee and his captain's name was W. C. Gambell, Co. K. This information was taken from his confederate pension application. George served in this unit for two years and was wounded and was on leave for 5 mo. and reenlisted in Falkners Regiment (1st Partisan Rangers/7th Miss. Cavalry). George was born in MS in 1843. He married Mary (Polly) Jane GOSSETT on Jan 12, 1867 in Alcorn County. His residence was in Alcorn Co. up unto the 1900's, then he moved to Walnut, Tippah Co. Polly and George are both buried in Tuscumbia Baptist Church cemetery in Alcorn Co. Submitted by: Erwin Willingham
* WILLIS,
George Preston - June 21, 1840 - Oct. 11,
1918. George was born the the first of nine
children born to William and Jane Willis in Jackson
Co. AL. By 1850 the family had moved to
Tippah, MS. They were living in the 3rd
District of that county in the 1850 census.
George Willis enlisted Sept. 1. 1861 into the 26th
MS Infantry Confederates States Army, Company F at
Luka MS. He served until March 25, 1865. When
he first enlisted, he was in the Anna Terry Guards
Co. F of the 26 Reg't Mississippi Volunteers which
changed to Capt. Henry C. Hyneman's Co. He was
temporily reattached to Co. G. of the 32nd
Miss by March of 1862, and transfered back to the
26th by January 1863. He was wounded outside
of Cold Harbor in May of 1863 and was sent to the
hospital. He was promoted to Corporal on June
31, 1964 by order of Col. Reynolds and was on the
Honor Roll by General Order # 87 on Dec. 10,
1864. He was captured in the hospital in
Richmond VA on April 3, 1865 and turned over to the
Pro. Marshal on April 28, 1865.
George received his discharge and
married Sintha Elizabeth Smith (Jones) .
Elizabeth was the widow of James Smith, who died in
the war.
George and
Sintha married and lived in Alcorn County
District 5. To them were born 8 children.
Their children were born between 1868 and 1886 and
their names were Rachel Mellisa, Eliza Annie,
William Crawford, Martha Roette, George Tillman ,
James Edward, John Frank, and Minnie Lee.
In the early years of 1890 the
Isaac Maicle family, the George Willis family, the
William C. Willis Family, the F. C. Karr Family, and
the F. W. Laughlin Family , all from Alcorn Co. MS
moved to Eddy ,Texas, a small town in Falls
Co. About 1911 the Willis Family moved to
Oklahoma looking for richer soil and richer days.
Most of the families settled in the Ponotoc
Co. George Willis died oct. 11, 1918 and
is buried in Lightning Ridge Cemetery OK.
George P. Willis is my husband Glen's Great
Grandfather and most of the information I got from
his military records and one of his Great
Granddaughter's, Nadene Willis Allen. We have
a picture of him ,
wearing the Southern Cross of Honor. Submitted
by: Genie Hollomon
* WILSON, Alexander B. "Bart" - muster in along with his brother James at Bolivar, Tn. in the 22nd Tenn. which was later consolidated with the 12th Tenn. Infantry, Co. H. He was born in McNairy Co., Tenn., the son of William and Francis Wilson. They moved to Tippah Co., Miss. and were found in the 1850 and 1860 census of Tippah Co. The post office was Cannan Post Office. Bart was in the 1880 census of Benton Co. along with his family. He is believed to be buried in an unmarked grave in Redfern Cemetery, Benton Co. Submitted by: Scott Forrest Wilson
* WILSON, James M. - mustered in along with his brother Alexander "Bart" at Bolivar, Tn. in the 22nd Tenn. which was later consolidated with the 12th Tenn. Infantry, Co. H. He was born in McNairy Co., Tenn., the son of William and Francis Wilson. They were found in the 1850 and 1860 census of Tippah Co. The post office was Cannan Post Office. Jim's war record shows that he died at home in Aug. 1863. Submitted by: Scott Forrest Wilson
* WILSON, John - was the son of William and Francis Wilson. His is listed as an overseer on the 1850 and 1860 Tippah Co. census. Submitted by: Scott Forrest Wilson
* WOODS,
Egbert S.G. - born in Tippah County,
Mississippi in 1836, Egbert S. G. Woods was raised
as a farmer. It is unknown who his siblings or
parents were. Egbert married a Louisa McElroy
in 1859. He initially joined Company F 2nd
Mississippi Infantry Regiment as a Private at the
age of 26. He enlisted in Ripley, MS on March 1,
1862 and was enrolled by Capt. Powers. His records
show that he was wounded in the neck at Gaines Mill
on 6/27/1862. Furloughed 30-days. Returned to duty.
It is presumed that in June of 1863 he went to
another regiment.
At wars end, Egbert Woods moved
to Webster County and continued his life as a
farmer. He fathered 10 children and passed
away on October 16th, 1914. He is buried in
North Union Cemetery in Webster County, Mississippi.
His wife Louisa McElroy passed
away on June 11th, 1923 and is buried next to him.
Note: Egbert
S. G. Woods was a younger brother to Captain Granville A.
Woods, born 1826; John Woods, born 1828, and William
Woods, born 1838. Their parents were Tennessee-born Thomas
Woods and wife, South Carolina-born Elizabeth B.
Hunt. This information was obtained from the 1850 and 1860
Tippah County census. .[submitted by researcher, Peggy
Smith Wolfe, 2007] Submitted by: Jack
Taylor II
*
WRIGHT, Adam Mitchell and Gideon Harrison - Adam Mitchell Wright and twin
brother Gideon Harrison Wright were born 1845 Tippah
County, Mississippi. They were the youngest children
of Joseph Nicholas and Nancy A. Wright. Joseph N.
Wright died 9 May 1846, wife Nancy A. Wright then
married Wesley A. Pool. They had one daughter,
Martha A.S. Pool. Wesley died in 1852 and Nancy died
in 1855. The Wright children and Martha Pool were
then made wards of the Probate Court. In late 1858
or early 1859 the family removed to Arkansas. In
1861 the two brothers joined I Company, 2nd Arkansas
Infantry. Gideon H. Wright joined CSA forces in
Memphis 20 June 1861 and had to travel 300 miles to
join the 2nd Arkansas. Adam M. Wright joined 18 July
1861 in Powhatan, Lawrence County, Arkansas.
Gideon�s service record shows his age as "18". Both
were wounded in the Battle of Shiloh, Gideon was
sent to a hospital in Jackson, Mississippi and later
sent home to Arkansas. He was discharged 24 November
1862. After being wounded at Shiloh, Adam M.
Wright was captured 11 October 1862 at Harrodsburg,
Kentucky, he was sent to Vicksburg via Cario,
Illinois, paroled and rejoined his Company 16
January 1863. He was again wounded during the Battle
of Chickamanga 19 September 1863. His service
records note that in the summer of 1864 he was sent
for extra duty at Atlanta, Georgia working as a
teamster.
Both Adam Mitchell and Gideon
Harrison Wright lived in Texas for a time and
finally settled in Oklahoma in the early 1900s
Adam Mitchell Wright first settled in Pooleville,
Carter County, OK then moved to Stephens County. He
and his sons built the first cotton gin in Stephens
County in the Hamlet of Arthur. Adam Mitchell Wright
died 27 September 1919 at the family homestead
outside Velma, Stephens County. He is buried in the
Old Cemetery at Velma. Family history states that
Adam carried a "minnie ball" in his hip from the War
until his death. Adam Mitchell Wright was
married twice, first to (1869) Josephine Lang
McMillan, they had five children. Josephine died
soon after the birth of her fifth child, in Brown
County, Texas. Adam then married Elizabeth Ridgel
Davis (Nov. 1882), this marriage produced six
children that survived until adulthood. Gideon
Harrison Wright married Emmaline A. Davis, they had
nine children. Gideon died in Verden, Grady
County, OK, 27 April 1924
Submitted by: Melvin Wright
, greatgrandson of Adam Mitchell Wright, Whidbey
Island, Washington
* YANCEY,
William Edward � Enlisted in Company C
(Tippah Tigers), 23rd Mississippi Infantry on August
1, 1861. Promoted to Corporal on November 10,
1861. Captured at Ft Donelson,TN February 16,
1862. Prisoner at Camp Douglas, IL.
Exchanged at Vicksburg September 30, 1862.
Present for duty through August 1864. No
further archive record available.
Born: 1843 � Mecklenburg Co., Virginia
Died: not known
Submitted by: Wallace
Walters
* YANCEY,
Robert Lewis � Enlisted in Company L
(Liberty Guards), 2nd Mississippi Infantry on
February 26, 1862. Wounded at Antietam.
Fought in battles of Gettysburg, Falling Water (MD),
the Wilderness Campaign, Spotslyvania, Petersburg
(wounded), and surrendered at Appamattox April 10,
1865.
Born: January 8, 1844 � Mecklenburg Co.,
Virginia
Died: January 23, 1925 � Tippah Co.,
Mississippi
Submitted by: Wallace
Walters
* YANCEY,
Green Lee � Enlisted in Company B, 1st
Mississippi Partisan Rangers (7th Mississippi
Cavalry) in August 1862. Re-enlisted at
Ripley, MS on March 1, 1863 when regiment
reorganized. Surrendered at Citronelle,
Alabama with General Forrest.
Born: October 9, 1845 � Mecklenburg Co.,
Virginia
Died: June 8, 1922 � Tippah Co.,
Mississippi
Submitted by: Wallace
Walters
* YANCEY,
John Samuel
� Enlisted in Company B, 7th Mississippi Cavalry
in 1864 Joined Gen. N.B. Forrest�s command at the
Battle of Brices Crossroads. Surrendered
with Forrest at Citronelle, Alabama, May
1865.
Born:
November 28, 1847 � Mecklenburg Co., Virginia
Died: August
13, 1928 � Tippah Co., Virginia
Sumitted by: Wallace
Walters