Mother: Mary BURWELL |
_Nathaniel BASSE Gent.________________________+ | (1589 - 1654) m 1613 _John BASSE "the Immigrant"_| | (1616 - 1699) m 1638 | | |_Mary or Anna Marie (Jourdan) JORDAN _________+ | (1596 - 1629) m 1613 _Richard BASSE ______| | (1658 - 1722) m 1695| | | _ROBIN "the Elder" TUCKER of Nansemond Nation_ | | | (1590 - ....) | |_Keziah Elizabeth TUCKER ___| | (1624 - 1676) m 1638 | | |______________________________________________ | | |--Andrew BASS | (1698 - 1770) | ______________________________________________ | | | ____________________________| | | | | | |______________________________________________ | | |_Mary BURWELL _______| (1662 - ....) m 1695| | ______________________________________________ | | |____________________________| | |______________________________________________
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Mother: Elizabeth WINSTON |
_____________________ | _______________________________| | | | |_____________________ | _John BATES "the Immigrant"_| | (1598 - 1666) m 1624 | | | _____________________ | | | | |_______________________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--George BATES I of Skemino | (1625 - 1677) | _Isaac? WINSTON _____+ | | (1550 - ....) | _Isaac WINSTON "the Immigrant"_| | | (1584 - ....) | | | |_____________________ | | |_Elizabeth WINSTON _________| (1605 - 1701) m 1624 | | _____________________ | | |_______________________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Eliza Evelina JONES |
________________________________ | ________________________| | | | |________________________________ | _Francois DOLLAR _____| | (1830 - 1863) m 1853 | | | ________________________________ | | | | |________________________| | | | |________________________________ | | |--Benjamin DOLLAR | (1857 - ....) | _William JONES _________________ | | (1770 - ....) | _Benjamin JONES ________| | | (1807 - 1841) m 1837 | | | |_Sophia RUSS ___________________ | | (1775 - 1822) |_Eliza Evelina JONES _| (1835 - ....) m 1853 | | _Nelson Eckerborn HIGGINBOTHAM _+ | | (1781 - 1860) m 1798 |_Mary Ann HIGGINBOTHAM _| (1808 - 1850) m 1837 | |_Judith Judah WARE _____________+ (1785 - 1831) m 1798
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Mother: Julia Ann BOZEMAN |
_____________________ | _James FORREST ______| | (1780 - 1841) | | |_____________________ | _Anthony H. FORREST _| | (1808 - 1881) m 1833| | | _____________________ | | | | |_Elizabeth___________| | (1780 - ....) | | |_____________________ | | |--Samuel S. FORREST | (1849 - ....) | _Samuel BOZEMAN II___+ | | (1758 - ....) | _Samuel BOZEMAN III__| | | (1782 - 1841) | | | |_____________________ | | |_Julia Ann BOZEMAN __| (1817 - 1879) m 1833| | _James HERRINGTON ___ | | (1755 - 1814) |_Mary HERRINGTON ____| (1780 - ....) | |_Elizabeth MCGEE ____+ (1760 - 1849)
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Mother: Sidney DYER |
Most certainly the Frank Gatewood mentioned in the will of his
grandmother, Lucy (New) Gatewood. In 1860 he and his wife lived
in Houma, Terrebonne Parish, LA. His real and personal property
was valued at $75,000.00. In his home was Mrs. Raby, age 40 and
her son Thomas Raby, age 18, both born in LA and most likely his
mother-in-law and brother-in-law.
May 22, 1862, F. Gatewood was one of several that lived around
Houma, LA that fired upon Union soldiers. Property of the
guilty ones destroyed.
Union side of the story from the Official Records.
HDQRS. TWENTY-FIRST REGIMENT INDIANA VOLS., Algiers, La., May
22, 1862. Maj. Gen. BENJAMIN F. BUTLER, Commanding Department of
the Gulf : SIR: In obedience to your order of the 11th instant
to proceed to the town of Houma, in the parish of Terre Bonne,
and arrest and punish certain parties charged with having fired
upon 4 sick soldiers of the Twenty-first Indiana Volunteers,
killing 2 and wounding the others; to execute the guilty, their
aiders and abettors, if found; to confiscate and destroy the
property of all who were in any manner implicated, I left
Algiers at 9 o'clock in the evening of the day of your order in
a train of cars on the Opelousas Railroad.
My force consisted of four companies of infantry, comprising 240
men, under command of Captains Roy, Grimsley, Skelton, and
McLaflin, of the Twenty-first Indiana Volunteers, and two pieces
of artillery and 30 men of the Sixth Massachusetts Battery,
under command of Lieutenant Carruth. We reached Terre Bonne
Station, 55 miles from Algiers, about 2 o'clock in the morning
of the 12th instant, where we found Captain Rose, with 65 men of
our regiment, previously sent down to recapture Private Miller,
one of the men fired upon and wounded, who had been made a
prisoner at this point, and sent 17 miles farther back into the
country. Here we also found Private Morris, another of the
party, who had been attacked, captured, and imprisoned, and
subsequently released, the circumstances of which are
hereinafter detailed. With the additional force of Captain Rose,
leaving a guard to protect the train and having secured all
necessary transportation, we took up the line of march for
Houma, distant 13 miles, where we arrived at 10 o'clock a.m.
Such persons as we found traveling on the road were arrested to
prevent information being conveyed of our approach.
On reaching Honma all necessary measures to guard against the
escape of the criminals, if there, were taken. I found the town
almost deserted, at least three-fourths of the citizens having
fled upon the previous day, many of them taking such of their
effects as they could readily move, whilst others, in their
haste to escape, left all their property behind and entirely
unprotected. Those remaining were indisposed to have any
intercourse with me whatever, much less to furnish such
information as they possessed and I required. Having secured the
necessary quarters I proceeded to investigate the circumstances
relating to the murder of our men, of the disposition made of
their bodies, and ascertained the following facts: that about 2
o'clock on the morning of the 9th inst. Col. J. W. McMillan, of
this regiment, with 65 men, had passed through the town of Houma
upon an expedition to capture the rebel steamer Fox, which he
had been informed was then in Grand [Caillou] Bayou, some 30
miles beyond that place. This fact coming to the knowledge of
Colonels Bisland and Robinson, they, or one of them, issued an
order, in pursuance of which the militia of that parish
assembled in Houma at an early hour of the same morning. The
object of this meeting was to devise means to prevent the
capture of the above-named vessel or to recapture her should she
be taken. The subject being fully canvassed, and a great want of
unanimity being manifest, Colonel Bisland abandoned his purpose
and adjourned the meeting.
Still later, upon the same day, a band of armed men, variously
estimated from 15 to 20 in number, proceeded upon the same road
taken by Colonel McMillan, but afterward returned, as they said,
for recruits. Late in the evening they again sallied forth in
the same direction, and having obtained information of the
approach of two wagons driven by negroes, each containing two
soldiers of Colonel McMillan's command, sent back by him and who
were on their way to the railroad station, as the wagons were
passing they secreted themselves in a thicket by the road-side 1
½ miles below the town, and in the dusk of evening fired upon
them with guns loaded with buck-shot, instantly killing 2 of the
men, one in each wagon, and wounding the others. The negroes,
being mounted upon the horses, escaped unhurt. The killed were
Sergt. [Jesse] Frakes, of Co. E, and Private [Charles]
Geisendorffer, of Co. G; the wounded were Privates Miller, of
Co. F, and Morris, of Co. I, the former being shot in the
shoulder and thigh and the latter in the forehead, neither
seriously injured. By order of the wounded men the negroes drove
rapidly on and escaped further danger from the firing. The wagon
containing Private Miller and the body of Geisendorffer
succeeded in passing through the town, but the other wagon, in
which were Private Morris and the body of Sergeant Frakes, was
overtaken before reaching it. Miller having proceeded 1½ miles
beyond Houma, in the direction of the railroad station, finding
himself pursued sprang from the wagon, taking with him his own
gun and that of his dead comrade, and concealed himself from his
pursuers. The wagon was soon after overtaken and stopped in the
road, and Miller, under the cover of darkness, cautiously
followed and overheard their plan for his capture. Secreting
himself under a bridge he saw armed men thrown out for his
capture or cutting off his advance. About 2 o'clock in the
morning they retired, supposing he had effected his escape. He
then left his comrade's gun, being unable in consequence of his
wounds to carry more than his own, and succeeded in reaching the
station, distant about 11 miles, at 4 o'clock. Here, greatly
fatigued and exhausted, he lay down to rest. About 7 o'clock 2
men drove up from the direction of Thibodeaux and attempted to
take him prisoner, but he resisted until assured by them that
their object was to protect him from a body of armed men, who
were pursuing him to take his life. He accompanied them to
Thibodeaux, where the shot was extracted from his wound; after
which he was carried 14 miles into the country and delivered to
General Mouton, where he remained until late in the evening of
the same day, when Captain Rose, who had in the mean time
reached Thibodeaux, demanded his surrender, which was effected
by one of the parties who had taken him away going after and
immediately returning with him from Mouton's.
The wagons containing Private Morris and the bodies of the
murdered men were driven into Houma. Morris was taken into
Berger's Hotel, and questioned relative to the assault and
murder and his written statement under oath taken. He was then
charged with having murdered his own comrades, and upon this
shallow pretext thrown into jail, in the same cell with a negro
under sentence of condemnation to the State prison for life,
first having been deprived of his arms and accouterments. He was
detained through the night, when, by taking the oath, a copy of
which is herewith transmitted and marked A, he was liberated and
furnished with the accompanying passport, marked by means of
which he was enabled to reach Terre Bonne Station, where he met
with Captain Rose, as hereinbefore stated, on his return from
Thibodeaux. The bodies of the dead men were robbed of everything
of value, even to their caps, boots, and socks; from that of
Sergeant Frakes was taken letters to General Butler and Major
Hays, and a number of private papers of value only to the dead
and his family. These bodies, after being brutally and
disgustingly abused, being kicked and beaten, the face of
Sergeant Frakes scarcely retaining the semblance of a human
being, the proposition was then made to cast the bodies into the
bayou, but more humane counsel prevailing, they were handed over
to negroes for disposal. They, under direction, dug a hole some
2 feet deep in the open public square a few feet from the
market-house stalls, directly in front of the court-house, and
in the most frequented place of the town. Into this hole,
without a coffin or box, and with but a single blanket thrown
over them, they were unceremoniously tossed and hastily covered
up. The unsightly mound produced by the piling in of the loose
earth was the only monument of their resting-place, but this was
sufficiently conspicuous to attract the attention not only of
every resident of the town but all who might pass through it.
The facts thus far narrated were ascertained with more or less
difficulty soon after my arrival at Houma, but the names of the
perpetrators of these outrages and other circumstances connected
with them we were unable for some days to obtain, and then only
by a resort to the measures hereinafter described.
One of my first cares was to make provision for the exhumation
and decent interment of our murdered men. Accordingly the
citizens were required to furnish respectable coffins and
prepare graves in one of their most prominent church-yards. This
done, on the morning after our arrival we took with us a number
of the leading citizens, who were arrested on the previous day
and still held in custody and such others as we found upon the
streets, to where our dead men had been thrown, and compelled
the most prominent of them to disinter their bodies and
carefully deposit them in the coffins they had provided in
presence of the battalion. The funeral procession was then
formed and the remains conveyed to the burial place of the
Catholic church, where with appropriate religious ceremonies,
performed by Captain Ruse and with the honors of war, their
coffins enshrouded with the flag of their country, we solemnly
committed them to the earth.
In the mean time, assisted by the officers under my command, no
possible means were spared to ferret out the guilty. Failing to
obtain satisfactory information from any of the citizens of the
murderers and their whereabouts, and satisfied that they were
known and their place of concealment purposely withheld from me,
I determined to hold them personally responsible for the
outrages committed, and therefore prepared a proclamation,
marked C, and made every necessary arrangement to carry its
provisions into effect. The evidence of my intention being made
apparent I was sent for by the prisoners and informed that they
had concluded to furnish all the information in their possession
and render all the assistance in their power, joined with the
efforts of their friends, to discover, secure, and bring to
punishment those directly implicated in the crime. They gave me
the following as the most prominent of the guilty parties (all
of whom had fled from town and vicinity before our arrival),
viz: Albert Wood, lawyer and editor of the Houma Ceres; Morelle,
formerly a lieutenant in the rebel army; E. N. Dutrail, deputy
parish clerk; B. Cooper, blacksmith; Gilbert Hatch, son of a
planter; D. W. Crewell, carpenter (working on plantation of
Connelly); Edwards, overseer on Connelly's plantation) Howard
Bond, a druggist; W. Bond, a lad, brother of Howard, and both
living with their father, a wealthy planter near Houma, overseer
on Bond's plantation; F. Gatewood, living on plantation 8 miles
from Houma; Doc. J. L. Jennings, Houma; William H. Hornsby, son
of S. H. Hornsby, grocer in Houma (the latter being also
indirectly implicated).
These, together with other parties unknown, were the active
participants, so far as the people of Houma could determine, in
the tragic events above related. Jennings, Wood, Morelle, and
the Bonds appear to have been the moving spirits; Jennings was
the chief of those who robbed and abused the bodies of the dead.
He it was, and Howard Bond, who sent 3 boys on the night of the
murder 2 miles on the road from Houma to Terre Bonne Station to
burn a bridge over a bayou on Larette's plantation, to delay,
and if possible prevent, our troops from reaching Houma. This
act was prevented by Mr. Larette. Howard Bond then attempted to
destroy the bridge himself, but was also prevented by Mr.
Larette. The boys sent on this errand were a brother of Howard
Bond, William Hornsby (whom I arrested), and a lad whose name
was not obtained. It was averred as a reason for sending these
boys that should they be arrested their youth would protect them
from punishment.
Col. J. B. Robinson, though not engaged in the killing of our
men, took an active part on the day of the murder in inciting
parties to go in pursuit of Colonel McMillan's force. Having
learned these facts and that the parties named had fled and some
of them were still secreted in the neighborhood, detachments of
men under efficient officers were sent out to scour the
surrounding country in search of the fugitives. These
detachments were out both day and night, accompanied by one or
more of the prisoners and other citizens acquainted with the
neighborhood and who had volunteered their aid. It having been
ascertained that Jennings had taken refuge in the house of G. F.
Connelly, that place was visited by a detachment
Thereupon the mules, cattle, and horses belonging to the
plantation, the horse of Dr. Jennings, and several wagon loads
of forage were taken and conveyed to Houma. We also visited
Bond's plantation, and finding that the criminals connected
therewith had made their escape, we seized all the cattle on the
premises. A detachment under Captain Rose, sent in quest of
Colonel Robinson, finding that he too had fled, he took
possession of certain mules, horses, and other property and
returned to Houma. The reports of other commanders of
detachments, herewith furnished, will exhibit the result of
their operations.(*) Our efforts to secure the guilty parties
having proved fruitless and being convinced that further
attempts at the present time would be equally futile, and
satisfied that the prisoners held by me in custody had used
every effort, joined to that of their friends, to secure them
and would continue to do so in the future, I suppressed the
proclamation referred to, concluding to bring them with me upon
my return, which I did.
I then determined to destroy all the property owned by the
guilty parties who had secured their personal safety by flight.
I accordingly, on the morning of May 16, issued an order, a copy
of which is hereto attached and marked D. In pursuance of said
order the following-named property was burned or otherwise
destroyed or seized upon, viz: Property on premises of Howard
Bond burned: One dwelling-house, furniture, and contents; one
sugar-house, filled with sugar; from 50 to 100 negro houses and
other outhouses; one steam saw and corn mill; three stables; two
corn-houses, with contents; one coopershop and blacksmith-shop,
with tools and other contents; one store-house, filled with
molasses; two buggies and harness; stacks of hay and fodder.
Taken from above premises, 35 mules, 20 sets harness, 6
plantation wagons, I cart, 2 yoke of oxen, and 5 loads of
forage. Property owned by Dr. Jennings burned: One
dwelling-house, other outhouses, barn, stables, all their
contents, buggy, and a valuable library and other articles.
Property owned by E. N. Dutrail, consisting of dwelling-house,
stables, and other outhouses, with all their contents, were torn
down and utterly destroyed. Property of A. Wood, consisting of
the Ceres newspaper establishment, was completely destroyed, the
type and other material being thrown into a bayou. The parish
jail (in which Private Morris had been incarcerated), a strong
brick building, by means of a battering-ram was demolished. The
property of Crewell, consisting of a light one horse wagon,
chest of carpenter tools, was seized upon. The personal property
of A. S. Hornsby (groceries), of which there was but little, was
either taken and used or destroyed. The other guilty parties
escaped all punishment, as they possessed no property which
could be seized or destroyed. It is here worthy of remark that a
number of citizens, before we left the town, assigned as their
reason for withholding from us information in their possession
when first demanded that their own lives and property would be
endangered by the parties implicated by their so doing, and some
of them even requested that troops should remain there for their
protection.
I caused the national flag to be planted upon the top of the
court-house, in presence of the battalion and a large number of
citizens, assuring the latter that it must there remain, under
penalty of the destruction of the town in case of its removal.
They were also warned of the terrible consequences that would
result from any further disturbance of the graves of the
murdered soldiers. Finding a number of the inhabitants in a poor
and suffering condition, we furnished them with food during our
stay, and left on our departure enough cattle and other
provisions to supply their immediate wants. On the 15th instant
Captain Slatton, in command of the launch which was to have
pursued with a view to the capture of Colonel McMillan,
voluntarily came in and surrendered himself a prisoner of war,
declaring that he had been deserted by the men who had pledged
themselves to sustain him.
Before leaving Houma I made a demand of $200 upon the treasury
of the parish to pay certain expenses attending the expedition,
which was promptly handed over in Confederate notes, and was by
me paid out to the parties to whom it was due. About noon of
Saturday, the 17th instant, we took up our line of march from
Houma to Terre Bonne Station, reaching the last-named place at 3
o'clock p.m. Here we found in waiting a train of cars, in which
we proceeded to Algiers, leaving behind Lieuts. T. D. Bryant and
J. W. Connelly, with a detachment of men, in charge of the
captured property, with orders to follow on the next train,
which they did on the following day and delivered over the
property left in their charge. This property consisted in the
main of 85 mules, 61 head of cattle, 8 horses, 43 sheep, 6
wagons, 2 carts. I spring-wagon, and 2 carriages, with other
articles, all of which were' turned over to Lieut. W. S. Hinkle,
quartermaster of Twenty-first Regiment Indiana Volunteers.
I brought with me as prisoners the following-named residents of
Houma and vicinity, all of whom were promptly handed over to the
proper authorities, namely: Lieutenant-Colonel Minor, Captain
Slatton, Recorder De Laporte, Sheriff Larette, Dr. Helmick,
Captain Gayne, Messrs. Ernest, Guano, Larette, Wright, Delaspit,
Gentre, Hornsby, and one other.
To Captains Roy, Rose, Skelton, and McLaflin, and to Lieutenants
Carruth, Bryant, Edmiston, Connelly, and Brown I am especially
indebted for the promptness and efficiency with which my orders
were executed. Lieutenant McAfee also deserves favorable
mention. The regular surgeon of the regiment being required to
remain in charge of the hospital at Algiers, Dr. John H. Gihon,
of that place, volunteered to accompany the expedition, whose
services to the sick, which were greatly needed, were promptly
rendered, and in so effective a manner as to elicit for him the
approbation and thanks of the entire command, embracing both
officers and men.
Trusting that my efforts and those under my command to execute
your orders will meet your approbation, I am with respect, your
obedient servant, JOHN A. KEITH, Lieut. Col. Twenty-first
Indiana Vols., Comdg. Detachment. A.
I hereby solemnly swear that I will not take up arms against the
Confederate States (South)America, unless my property, myself,
or those depending' upon me should be threatened. Houma, May 11,
1862. JOSEPHUS MORRIS. Sworn to and subscribed before me this
11th day May, 1862. H. NEWELL, Clerk Third District Court, Terre
Bonne. B. J. Morris, from the State of Indiana, having given his
parole not to take up arms against the Confederate States
(South) during the existing war, has permission to pass
unmolested to Terre Bonne Station, on his way to New Orleans.
Houma, May 11, 1862. H. NEWELL. F. GAYNE. A. S. HELMICK. S. H.
HORNSBY. B. COOPER. C. PROCLAMATION.
A foul and unnatural murder of two American soldiers, repugnant
alike to the instincts of humanity and the practice of civilized
warfare, has caused the presence of this portion of the U.S.
Army among you, for the sole purpose of bringing to justice the
guilty. Although the cowardly miscreants may have fled, fearing
the swift and righteous retribution which should follow the
perpetration of their horrible crime, they are known to the
citizens of this place. By withholding the names of the guilty
parties and their present hiding places they make themselves
parties to the crime, liable both in law and justice to suffer
the penalties of the same. A prompt, full, and free
communication of the names of these wretches on the part of the
citizens of Houma, with such other information as will lead to
their speedy capture, can alone save the town and neighboring
country from the severe punishment so justly merited. The
atrocious nature of the crime itself-- the indecent, shameless,
and un-Christian-like burial and robbery of the dead-- taken in
connection with the unseemly conduct of prominent citizens on
the occasion, and the vile indignities offered to the mutilated
bodies of these two soldiers, have forever disgraced the town of
Houma, which disgrace can only be obliterated by a prompt
co-operation of its citizens in bringing the guilty to justice.
In view of the disposition manifested by citizens of the town
and parish to harbor and screen the offenders, therefore I, John
A. Keith, lieutenant- colonel of the Twenty-first Regiment
Indiana Volunteers, being armed with proper authority from
General Butler, do hereby solemnly declare and proclaim that
unless the names of these murderers are given up within
forty-eight hours, with such information of their hiding places
as will lead to their speedy apprehension, not a vestige of the
town of Houma shall be left to identify its former location, and
the plantations in the parish of Terre Bonne shall suffer in a
like degree. It is to be regretted that innocent and worthy
persons may suffer in this event, but a terrible example is
necessary to teach the people of Louisiana that interest, if not
humanity, should prompt them to discourage acts of cold- blooded
assassination.
The United States troops will quarter in Terre Bonne Parish
until these murderers are brought to justice or it becomes
evident they cannot be found; in which case prominent citizens
of Houma, known to have been sympathizers, some of whom have
already been arrested, will be publicly executed as murderers.
JOHN A. KEITH, Lieutenant-Colonel Twenty-first Indiana
Volunteers. HOUMA, LA., May 14, 1862. D. HDQRS. DETACHMENT
TWENTY-FIRST INDIANA VOLS., Houma. La., May 16, 1862. In
compliance with an order from Major-General Butler I hereby
order the following property of the parties hereinafter named
destroyed by fire or otherwise, but in such a manner as not to
endanger or destroy adjacent property owned by parties not
herein named-- aid property all situated in the parish of Terre
Donne, to wit: Buildings, out-buildings and personal property of
Howard Bond near the town of Houma; buildings on the premises of
Colonel Robinson; property of F. Gatewood; real and personal
property of Dr. Jennings; property of A. Wood; the Ceres
newspaper establishment; parish jail; property of B. Cooper;
property of Gilbert Hatch; house of E. N. Dutrail; property of
----- Crewell. The parties above named, and whose property is to
be destroyed, are known to be identified in a greater or less
degree in the murder of two soldiers and wounding of two others
belonging to the Twenty-first Indiana Volunteers, on the ------
day of May, near Houma. The jail is to be destroyed because
permitted to be used as a place of confinement of one of the
wounded men. JOHN A. KEITH, Lieut. Col. Twenty-first Ind. Vols.,
Comdg. Detachment.
_Andrew GATEWOOD ____+ | (1740 - 1794) m 1768 _Robert Andrew GATEWOOD _| | (1781 - 1823) m 1806 | | |_Margaret KAY _______+ | (1750 - ....) m 1768 _Anthony New GATEWOOD _| | (1812 - 1843) m 1832 | | | _Anthony NEW ________ | | | (1745 - 1833) m 1782 | |_Lucy Dabney NEW ________| | (1787 - 1865) m 1806 | | |_Nancy WYATT ________+ | (1755 - 1833) m 1782 | |--Francis "Frank" GATEWOOD | (1837 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _________________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Sidney DYER __________| (1810 - ....) m 1832 | | _____________________ | | |_________________________| | |_____________________
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