Goodspeed’s Biography of Nicholas Carriger
Source: Goodspeed’s Biographical Appendix of Carter County – History of Tennessee (Chicago, 1887). Transcribed by Dawn and Jackie Peters.
Nicholas Carriger, farmer and carpenter, was born in Carter County, January 12, 1842, the son of Daniel S. and Margaret (Patterson) Carriger, the former born in Carter County in about 1815, the son of Christley, a farmer who removed to Missouri in 1846, and from there to California, serving as a soldier under Gen. Fremont, and died soon after his discharge. The mother, a daughter of Robert Patterson, was born in Carter County, and died in 1847 in Missouri, She was a member of the Baptist Church. Our subject, the third of four children, after his mother’s death, came to Carter County, and lived with his uncle, working on the farm and at the carpenter’s trade until January 14, 1863, when he enlisted in Company B, Fourth Tennessee Infantry, as a private. In August, 1863, he was captured at McMinnville, and was paroled, joining his company at Lexington, KY. He was mustered out September, 1865, at Nashville, and returned to Carter County. After spending the year 1871 in Missouri, he returned to Carter County, his present home. He has never desired office, and is an esteemed man. He was married January 1, 1873, to Catharine, a daughter of Elijah Simmerly, and has four children. Both are Presbyterians.
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