Lewis Co, TN: The Civil War
Many thanks to Billy Jackson for allowing me to publish his articles on Lewis County and the Civil War on the Lewis Co, TN TNGenWeb site.
THE CIVIL WAR: Part One- Lewis Countians in Confederate Service
Celebrating Confederate History Month
© 2000 by Billy Jackson
With the coming of war in 1861, men of Lewis County came together to form companies of local regiments of the Confederate Army. At musters held at Newburg, the men joined their respective companies and marched away to war. Although the following list contains roughly 165 names, there were reported to be more than 400 men from Lewis County who entered Confederate service during the years 1861 through 1865. This figure represented almost the entire voting population of Lewis County at that time. While companies were being formed in and around Newburg, many crossed into Hickman, Maury, Perry or Wayne counties to join regiments as they formed in those areas.
Therefore, many of Lewis County’s men who served in the ranks of the 10th Tennessee Cavalry, the 1st Tennessee Infantry and the 24th Tennessee Infantry Regiments throughout the war remain unlisted. As you browse through the following list, pay close attention to the names. These names, belonging to men who’s journey ended years ago, represent the families that first settled in this area and formed the communities we live in today. There are still many descendants of these men still residing in Lewis County, enjoying the freedom these men fought to preserve.
Gantt’s 9th Tennessee Cavalry Battalion
William Bass, Harvey Beckum, Thomas T. Christian, Samuel H. Grimes, George W. Mayberry, Caleb Scott, John Tait
Biffle’s 19th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment
Abraham Beatty, Kial K. Beatty, Samuel Beatty, James G. Cash, John B. Churchwell, Alonzo Clayton, Willis Clayton, Theodore Clendenan, Albert G. Cooper, A.T. Cooper, J.A. Cooper, J.M. Cooper, David Crowell, Wiley Crowell, George M. Davis, John F. Hensley, Benjamin J. Johnston, Elisha Kelley, Ephraim Kelley, Calvin Lindsey, M.H. Morris, Jesse Nutt, M.H. Pickard, H.K. Plummer, Robert M. Plummer, John G. Sharp, Thomas Sharp, William Sharp, Jesse Simms, Jesse Smith, Isaac Tatum, Eason F. Turnbow, Edward Turner, David Vincent, R.W. Vincent, John R. Williams, D.L. Voorhies
10th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment
James Coble, Jasper N. Peeler
24th Tennessee Infantry Regiment
Robert C. Nutt
Clack’s 3rd Tennessee Infantry Regiment
Valentine Bell, William H. Bell, Alexander Boggus, Nathan J. Christian, George Clayton, Henry Clayton, George W. Conder, Martin L. Conder, William Conder, John H. Cooper, Leander B. Cooper, Robert T. Cooper, Samuel G. Cooper, Thomas M. Cooper, George F.M. Davis, J.G.B. Deen, Noah Deen, William Deen, J.C. Dabbs, John Dodson, James A. Doyle, Peter Francis Fite, William F. Fite, James D. Flanagan, Daniel P. Garrett, Henry Gentry, J.M. Gilmore, Charles H. Goodman, William E. Goodman, Samuel H. Grimes, Henry Grinder, James C. Grinder, William Grinder, Arthur S. Hensley, David Hinson, James F. Hinson, J.P. Hinson, Marshall H. Johnston, Samuel K. Johnston, George W. Kelley, Napoleon B. Lankford, William Lankford, James G. Mayfield, William Mayfield, Martin McClain, Randolph Napier, Franklin M. Peevyhouse, William Peevyhouse, Young S. Pickard, Oliver T. Plummer, Robert M. Plummer, Bennett Pope, Jacob F. Pope, John G. Sharp, James W. Sims, William F. Sims, William Sisco, James Smith, Joseph P. Stewart, A.J. Strickland, Samuel Strickland, Samuel L. Tarrant, Calvin Turnbow, George Turnbow, J.A. Turnbow, Jesse Turner, Samuel Turner, George Vincent, John Vincent, Amos C. Westbrooks, Jasper W. Westbrooks
Voorhies’ 48th Tennessee Infantry Regiment
Richard Baugus, George P. Christian, Jones W. Christian, Nathaniel J. Christian, William H. Crowell, William E. Curry, Richard Dabbs, Jasper Doggett, Ansel F. Goodman, James J. Goodman, Brantly Harbison, Andrew Hensley, Daniel Hensley, James Hensley, Samuel Hensley, George W. Hinson, Calvin Morris, James A. Nutt, James M. Pollock, James Quillen, Daniel Reeves, Jonathan Reeves
Nixon’s 48th Tennessee Infantry Regiment
James Ballard, Thomas J. Brown, Edward Campbell, John Carroll, Anderson V.B. Churchwell, Morris Clayton, Thomas Cooper, William Cooper, Eli Cothran, Green B. Curry, John Curry, William Curry, J.H. Dodson, Daniel E. Fitzgerald, J.P. Gilmore, J.C. Grimes, Levi Carroll Grimes, William E. Grimes, John A. Himes, W.C. Nutt, O.T. Plummer, George W. Pope, Reddon F. Reeves, Joseph Dudley Runions
THE CIVIL WAR: Part Two- The Price of Freedom
Celebrating Confederate History Month
© 2000 by Billy Jackson
Of the 165 documented enlistees of Lewis County who joined the Confederate Army between 1861 and 1865, 35 did not see the homes and families they left behind. With all wars, men leave with the expectations of returning home as a hero, though some know they will pay the ultimate price for their country. During the Civil War, the death rates soared as campaigns, tactics, weapons and disease changed the rolls daily. Some experts place the death rates during this bloody chapter of American history at 1 in 5 men, whereas others place it even higher. The one fact not disputed is that more men died in this conflict than in any other war the United States has been involved in since. In the listing that follows, deaths are listed in chronological order and by the date and location of death. Looking over the information, you will notice increases in deaths during the years of 1862 and 1863. The increase in deaths during 1862 are a direct result of southern soldiers being sent north to one of the most horrendous prisons ever built, Camp Douglas. Camp Douglas was called an “accidental” prison by Northerners as the camps original purpose was to be a training facility for new troops. After the fall of Forts Henry and Donelson in February, 1862, the massive amount of southern prisoners posed a problem for the Union commanders. Modifications were made to structures at Camp Douglas and it was immediately pressed into service as a prison. The camp took up a large section of what is now downtown Chicago, Illinois. Sleeping as many as 120 to a barracks, the men endured hardships beyond comprehension. The men, accustomed to a warmer southern climate, were exposed to the bitter cold of life on the Great Lakes. Men were only afforded thin cotton clothing to protect themselves from the cold winds that blew off the Lakes. Sanitary conditions were such that after heavy rains, raw sewage would flood the campgrounds, contaminating the drinking water supply the men drank and bathed from. Disease ran rampant through the camp and medical care was non existent. When men died, they were simply carted away to be dumped by the roadside or, in one of the infamous mass graves which now rest between the runways of Chicago’s O’Hare airport. Treatment of the southern men was so severe at this place that it earned the nickname “Andersonville of the North”.
The death rate in 1863 rose as these same men, who had recently been released form Camp Douglas rejoined the army at Vicksburg, Mississippi after being exchanged for northern prisoners. Campaigns through Mississippi and Louisiana by Union Generals Grant and Sherman caused some of the fiercest and most prolonged fighting of the entire war. On the morning of May 12, 1863, Confederate Forces led by Brigadier General John Gregg opened fire on the skirmishers of General James B. McPherson’s XVII Corps as they maneuvered towards the town of Raymond, Mississippi in Hinds County. Gregg believed his battle hardened veterans could hold the Union troops at bay and win the battle. Unknown to Gregg was the fact that the force his men had attacked amounted to 12,000 troops, while his own force only numbered 4,000. When the fighting began at 10:00am, the Confederate forces quickly realized the grave nature of their situation but held to the fight. By 1:30pm, the battle was over with a total of Federal casualties: 442, Confederate casualties: 514. Among those 514 dead Confederates were many of the soldiers from Lewis County who served in the 3rd Tennessee Infantry, the regiment which bore the brunt of the many assaults by Federal troops as the battle progressed. As the War raged, more massive campaigns and battles claimed their share of men. Battles at Chickamauga, Atlanta, Franklin and Nashville wore down the numbers of the once strong Army of Tennessee to the point that the Army itself numbered less than a brigade at its surrender in April, 1865. The men who survived held with them the memories of their comrades who died in hospitals, on battlefields and in the prisons. They also held in their fading memory the horrors of what they saw during those years away from home. They marched away as fresh, adventurous men in search of the gallantry and honor of battle. They returned to homes and farms laid waste through three years of Union occupation and rebuilt Lewis County as a place we could all be proud of. During this month, remember the sacrifices that made this community and this country what it is. Remember these men as the heroes they were.
Confederate Roll of Honor: Lewis County
1861 | ||
---|---|---|
Name | Date of Death | Location Of Death |
Bell, Valentine | 15 Jul 1961 | Lewis Co, TN |
Sims, William F. | 20 Sep 1861 | Lewis Co, TN |
1862 | ||
Name | Date of Death | Location Of Death |
Campbell, Edward | 30 Aug 1862 | Richmond, KY |
Cooper, Samuel G. | 20 Feb 1862 | Chicago, IL |
Cooper, Thomas M. | 24 Feb 1862 | Clarksville, TN |
Goodman, Charles H. | 14 Mar 1862 | Chicago, IL |
Grimes, Levi Carroll | 2 Jun 1862 | Columbus, MS |
Grimes, William E. | 21 May 1862 | Hospital, Unknown |
Grinder, James C. | 28 Jul 1862 | Chicago, IL |
Morris, Calvin | 5 Mar 1862 | Location Unknown |
Peevyhouse, William | 13 Nov 1862 | Jackson, MS |
Pickard, Young S. | 8 Apr 1862 | Chicago, IL |
Pollock, James M. | 4 Jun 1862 | Chicago, IL |
Pope, George W. | 29 May 1862 | Hospital, Unknown |
Quillen, James | 22 Apr 1862 | Chicago, IL |
Tait, John H. | 27 Feb 1862 | St. Louis, MO |
Turner, Samuel | 6 May 1862 | Chicago, IL |
Westbrooks, Amos C. | 21 Oct 1862 | Home, Lewis Co, TN |
1863 | ||
Name | Date of Death | Location Of Death |
Conder, John W. | 12 May 1863 | Raymond, MS |
Cooper, Robert T. | 12 May 1863 | Raymond, MS |
Flanagan, James D. | 19 Sep 1863 | Chickamauga, GA |
Garrett, Daniel P. | 19 Sep 1863 | Chickamauga, GA |
Gentry, Henry D. | 12 May 1863 | Raymond, MS |
Grinder, Henry | 19 Sep 1863 | Chickamauga, GA |
Harbison, Brantly | 24 Feb 1863 | Greeneville, MS |
Johnston, Samuel K. | 9 Sep 1863 | Enterprise, MS |
Peevyhouse, Franklin M. | 12 May 1863 | Raymond, MS |
Pope, Bennett | 1 Aug 1863 | Yazoo City, MS |
Turnbow, George | 14 Mar 1863 | Hospital-Terry, MS |
Vincent, George | 20 Sep 1863 | Chickamauga, GA |
1864 | ||
Name | Date of Death | Location Of Death |
Pope, Jacob F. | 24 Apr 1864 | Hospital, Atlanta, GA |
Smith, James | 20 Jan 1864 | Hospital, Location Unknown |
Unknown | ||
Name | Date of Death | Location Of Death |
Coble, James | unknown | Madison Co, TN |
THE CIVIL WAR: Part Four- Remembrance
Celebrating Confederate History Month © 2000 by Billy Jackson
In April 1865, the War for Southern Independence, the War of Northern Aggression or the Civil War as you may call it, came to a close in a house in Virginia. The two great men met together to decide the fate of an army who had fought with valor over the past four years. During those long years of war, the men of the Southern army had endured countless miles on the march, lack of adequate clothing, shelter or food and had been ravaged by almost every disease known to man. In what basically amounted to their own back yard, they had waged war against a government they considered so corrupt, so vile, that they had been willing to put their lives and futures on hold to see it put down and the freedom guaranteed to all men by the Constitution be realized. These men were heroes in their own rite. Simple, hard working and honest men who’s love of their family, homes and country carried more precedence than the love of their self. They had ventured out from small towns from all across the South seeking to right the wrongs of government and return to their homes to live in peace. Over the past few weeks, I have published this small series as a way of remembering the men of this county that fought this war. Now to end this years series, I offer you a look at some of the individual soldiers, from information contributed by descendants or gained through research.
Pvt. William Sisco, 3d Tennessee Infantry; No Place Like Home:
William joined the 3rd Tennessee Infantry Regiment at Newburg in the spring of 1861. Leaving his wife, who was expecting one of many children behind, he set out on the big adventure of war. He was captured after his trial by fire at the debacle of Fort Donelson and spent seven months in Camp Douglas. After being exchanged in Vicksburg, Mississippi in September of 1862, he rejoined
the regiment and fought through the battles of Chickasaw Bayou, Jackson and the bloody struggle at Raymond, where many of his friends perished. He survived the battles of Missionary Ridge and Chickamauga, fought through the disastrous Atlanta Campaign and shortly after the Army of Tennessee crossed back into it’s home state in November of 1864, he went on furlough to see his family. According to his family, he came home on or around the 28th of November, on his way to
Franklin, Tennessee. His young son, born after his father’s departure, was scared of the strange looking man who came up the hollow giving the “Rebel Yell” as he walked to the house. The next day, he left and by the time he arrived at Franklin, he found the battle was over. This trip home undoubtedly saved him from an almost certain death in the battle which has been referred to as the “Valley of Death” by participants and most historians. After the war, he named two more of his newborn sons “Cap” and “Kern” after his officers in the 3rd Tennessee. (contributed by Mrs. Sammye Lawson, descendant of Pvt. Sisco)
James P. Hinson: Kimmins Community:
James P. Hinson was born in 1844 in Kimmins Community. He was only 17 when, in 1861, he enlisted in the 3d Tennessee Infantry Regiment. He went with his regiment to Fort Donelson, where he was captured and sent to Camp Douglas in Chicago, Illinois. He was exchanged with the remainder of his regiment in September, 1862 near Vicksburg, Mississippi. James fought with the 3d TN in the battles at Chickasaw Bayou, Raymond, Jackson, Missionary Ridge. It was during the battle of Chickamauga that he was again captured and sent north to Camp Douglas. He remained there for the remainder of the war. After his parole in 1865, he returned to the Kimmins community, where he lived until his death in 1877 at age 33. He is buried in the Brushy community of Hickman County. (Contributed by his Grandson, Charles Hinson, Vice President of the Maury County Historical Society)
David Hinson: Survives War, Dies in Mormon Massacre:
David enlisted at age 19 in the 3d Tennessee Infantry Regiment alongside his brother James P.. He was captured in the Confederate surrender at Fort Donelson, sent with his regiment to Camp Douglas in Chicago, Illinois and later exchanged in September, 1862 near Vicksburg, Mississippi. David fought in every battle the 3d Tennessee took part in for the remainder of the war. He was paroled after the Confederate surrender in North Carolina in April, 1865. After the war, he returned to Lewis county as did his other comrades in arms. The luck that was with him all through the fierce struggle of the war ran out several years later in 1884 when, during a visit to his old 3rd Tennessee comrades, the Conder boys on Cane Creek, he was killed along with them during the Mormon Massacre. He was aged 40 years. (Contributed by his descendant, Charles Hinson, Vice President of the Maury County Historical Society)
Jasper Doggett, Wartime Diarist:
Jasper Doggett, from the town of Newburg, joined up with Colonel William Voorhies’ 48th Tennessee infantry in the fall of 1862. Doggett survived every battle the regiment fought in from Fort Donelson to the Battle of Bentonville, North Carolina. Throughout his service he kept a very detailed diary covering his experiences as a Confederate soldier at war. His writings of daily life and battles have been referenced by historians over the years. His diary is available through the efforts of the Tennessee State Library and Archives microfilm project. Jasper Doggett’s diary is included in the “Civil War Collection” microfilm series available at the Lawrence County Public Library.
Anderson V.B. Churchwell: Riverside Community Farmer:
Anderson Churchwell, a landholder and farmer in the Riverside/Allen’s Creek Community, was 41 years old when he went to Newburg on November 29th 1861 to enlist in the Confederate Army. He served as a private in the 48th Tennesse Infantry Regiment under both Colonel William Voorhies and George H. Nixon. During his absence, his wife is noted to have operated a “safe house” on the Churchwell family farm, affording safe haven and supplies to such noted Confederates as Nathan Bedford Forrest. His son, Jonathon would also join the fight at age 19. Later, after the Confederate defeat in the Battle of Nashville, Churchwell’s farm was used as a stop for an entire Union Army Corps (approximately 23,000 troops with artillery and wagon trains) during which time the Yankee soldiers burned the fence rails to keep warm. This prompted his wife to verbally assault the Union General in charge, earning her a place in history by being noted in the “Official record of the War of the Rebellion”. Anderson Churchwell survived the war and lived the remainder of his 78 years in Lewis County. He is buried at Dabbs Cemetery at Buffalo Valley. (contributed by descendant, Gary J. Wise)
Jonathan B. Churchwell: “Uncle Brown”, the Last Lewis Co Confederate:
In November of 1861, Jonathan Churchwell was a mere boy of 16 years when he watched his father leave to fight the Yankees. While his father was gone, he tended the family farm and helped his mother hide Confederate soldiers who passed through the area. Some three years later, as the entire Army of Tennessee moved through on it’s way to retake Nashville, Jonathan, now 19, enlisted or conscripted into Biffle’s 19th Cavalry. He fought through the battles at Franklin and at Nashville. Jonathan, or “Uncle Brown” as he became known in his latter years, was the last survivor of the Civil War from Lewis County. He passed away on April 2, 1938 at the age of 93 years and is buried at the Pollock Cemetery near Napier. (contributed by descendant, Gary J. Wise)
Robert T.Cooper, The Fighting School Teacher:
Former Lewis County Sheriff and subscription teacher Robert T. Cooper of Newburg joined the 3rd Tennessee Infantry Regiment in May of 1861. He came from a well-established family of the county. It is said that Robert’s father made the nails used in the coffin of Meriwether Lewis. Robert was elected as a Captain in the Lewis County company of the 3rd TN. He was captured at Fort Donelson and imprisoned in the north until his release in the fall of 1862 near Vicksburg, Mississippi. The freedom enjoyed by Robert and his comrades was short-lived. On the morning of May 12, 1863, Robert’s regiment was ordered into the fierce battle near the town of Raymond, Mississippi. Outnumbered almost three to one, the 3rd Tennessee suffered some of the highest casualties in the battle. Among the dead was Captain Robert T. Cooper. His body rests in the Confederate Cemetery in the town of Raymond, Mississippi.
Elias, William Fletcher and Peter Francis Fite: 3 Brothers in the 3rd TN:
Elias, William and Peter Fite descended from a soldiering family. Their father, Jacob, had served in the War of 1812 and their Grandfather, Peter had fought in the Battle of King’s Mountain during the Revolutionary War. So, when Governor Isham G. Harris made his plea for troops, the Fite boys answered the call without haste. At the time of their enlistment in the 3rd Tennessee Infantry Regiment, Elias was 36, William; 26 and Peter was 21 years old. All three fought through every battle of the 3rd Tennessee, endured the hardship of the dreaded northern prisons and witnessed firsthand the horror of war. It is amazing, given the odds of being a casualty in this war, that all three survived but, they did. All three brothers lived out their lives here until their passing. Elias was the first to go, on 22 Dec 1898 at age 73, William passed at age 74 on 12 Jun 1909, and Peter died on the 23 Jun, 1920 at age 80. (contributed by Claude Fly, descendant of the Fite Brothers) [Editor’s Note: There was a fourth Fite brother, Henry Pinkney Fite, born 1938, who also enlisted with his brothers. Family stories indicate that he died in Lewis Co, TN before 1864 of illness or injuries received during the Civil War. His widow, Margaret Feno Christian Fite, remarried and moved to Arkansas with Henry’s only child.]
If you have information regarding any of these men, please contact the author at the following address:
Billy Jackson
P.O. Box 392
Hohenwald, TN 38462
On the Internet: billyj68@hotmail.com
Phone:(931)796-1570
Additional Lewis County Confederate Information
Name | Regiment | Notation |
---|---|---|
Cooper, Leander Bruce | 3rd Tennessee | Wounded, Battle of Raymond, MS |
Cooper, Alford T. | 19th Tennessee | Wounded at Brentwood, TN |
Cooper, Alexander D. | 3rd Tennessee | Died of Measles, July 10, 1861 |
Cooper, Lt. William McAdams | 48th Tennessee | Died: Tupelo, MS, July 5, 1862 |
Cooper, H.A. | Unk. Texas Regiment | Died at West Point, Mississippi |
Cooper, Lt. Col. Albert G. * | 19th Tennessee | |
Cooper, James C. | 48th Tennessee | |
Bramly, W. L. ** | 2nd TN Cavalry (Capt. Lewis) | |
Banks, Thomas J. ** | Co. I, 48th Tennessee | |
Dowdy, Patrick L. ** | Co. H, 9th Cavalry | |
Nicholson, John S.T. ** | Co. F, 53rd Tennessee | |
Ricketts, William F. | Co. C, 13th Tennessee | Killed in Arkansas 11 Nov 1862 |
*Lt. Col. Albert G. Cooper had two sons in Confederate service. One was killed at Fort Donelson. | **From Lewis County, TN WPA Records -Jessie Clinton, (Signal Mountain Press, 1991) | From information submitted by Mr. Michael Gavin |
Civil War history of James Daniel Murphree
Provided by his grandson, John P. Murphree and Randall Felske
“An Honest Man – The Noblest Work of God” Age 46 years, 3 months, 22 days Co F 42 TENN –
James Daniel Murphree enlisted in the Confederate Army on Oct. 22, 1861, a little less that two months from his 15th birthday. He was captured with the surrender of Fort Donelson, Feb. 16, 1862. He was admitted to U.S.A. Hospital Feb. 25, and returned to his unit as a Prisoner of War on March 3. His name appears on a roll of prisoners at Camp Douglas, Ill. sent to Vicksburg for prisoner exchange. This exchange took place on the steamer John H. Done near Vicksburg, Sept. 20, 1862. He was made 4th Sgt. Sept. 27, 1862 and promoted to 3rd Sgt. Aug. 1, 1863. Later in the war he was wounded and captured again. On Nov. 30, 1864 in Franklin, TN, he was struck by a cannon ball which fractured his left leg. On Dec. 10, 1864, his left leg was amputated. He appears on a list of Prisoners of War who arrived at the Military Prison, Louisville, KY, during 5 days ending May 10, 1865. On June 16, 1865 James Daniel Murphree was set free to go back home. In little more than three years of battle he was captured twice, lost his left leg and had not yet reached his 19th birthday. In 1881, some sixteen years later, at the age of 34, he married Ora Alice Beeler. They had six children: Stephen Estill, James D. Jr., Elizabeth, Nora, Sally & Robert Brown. James D. died in infancy at one month. Stephen Estill died from an accident at the age of 10 years. He and his father James Daniel are buried in the Newtown Cemetery. James Daniel died in Lewis County while teaching school at Napier Furnace.
Lewis County, TN Confederate Pension Applications
Name | Pension # | Unit or Widow's Name |
---|---|---|
Allison, L.F. | PENSION #: S4826 | UNIT: 1st Cav." |
Banks, Thomas J. | PENSION #: S15896 | UNIT: 48th (Voorhies') Inf. |
Bates, John | PENSION #: W4977 | WIDOW: Bates, Frances C. |
Batts, L. | PENSION #: S9493 | UNIT: 8th Ky. Cav. |
Beatty, A.N. | PENSION #: S3069 | UNIT: 24th Inf |
Beatty, H.K. | PENSION #: S4780 | UNIT: 9th Inf. |
Boyce, George Washington | PENSION #: W9214 | WIDOW: Boyce, Mary Louisa |
PENSION #: S4780 UNIT: 9th Inf. Boyd, E.B. | PENSION #: S3857 | UNIT: 23rd Inf. |
Brewer, G.A. | PENSION #: S3858 | UNIT: 6th (Wheeler's) Cav. |
Brooks, Thomas Brantley | PENSION #: W10821 | WIDOW: Brooks, Ellen Byrum |
Burns, Jacob Biffle | PENSION #: W3089 | WIDOW: Burns, Pattie E. |
Cagle, Charles. | PENSION #: W8414 | WIDOW: Cagle, Sarah |
Campbell, J.M. | PENSION #: S7146 | UNIT: 1st Cav. |
Campbell, John E. | PENSION #: S1648 | UNIT: 10th Cav. |
Carroll, John . | PENSION #: S2345 | UNIT: 48th Inf |
Carroll, John | PENSION #: W1667 | WIDOW: Carroll, Mary Catherine |
Carson, J.M. | PENSION #: S2606 | UNIT: 24th Inf. |
Cash, W.M. | PENSION #: W4607 | WIDOW: Cash, Charity |
Cash, William M. | PENSION #: S8417 | UNIT: 10th Cav. |
Christian, J.W. | PENSION #: S14599 | UNIT: 48th (Voorhies') Inf. |
Churchwell, J.B. | PENSION #: S16460 | UNIT: 9th Cav. |
Churchwell, J.E. | PENSION #: S16257 | UNIT: 19th (Biffle's) Cav. |
Clark, Robert Dodson | PENSION #: W93745 | WIDOW: Clark, Melia Roxanna |
Cooper, Alfred T. | PENSION #: S6677 | UNIT: 19th (Biffle's) Cav |
Cozart, B.F. | PENSION #: S8452 | UNIT: 24th Inf. |
Dabbs, Steven V. | PENSION #: W10227 | WIDOW: Dabbs, Mary Elizabeth |
Dobbs, R.I. | PENSION #: S2349 | UNIT: 48th Inf. |
Doyle, J.W. | PENSION #: S14573 | UNIT: 1st (Jackson's) Heavy Artillery |
Fite, Peter Francis | PENSION #: W8542 | WIDOW: Fite, Alice |
Fite, William Fletcher | PENSION #: S10290 | UNIT: 3rd Inf |
Floyd, J.T. | PENSION #: S2607 | UNIT: 48th Inf. |
Freeman, Samuel D. | PENSION #: S7788 | UNIT: 16th Ark. Cav. |
Freeman, Samuel D. | PENSION #: W3935 | WIDOW: Freeman, Martha Jane |
George, Andrew .Jack | PENSION #: S9124 | UNIT: 10th (DeMoss') Cav. |
George, Andrew J. | PENSION #: W5029 | WIDOW: George, Alice |
Grinder, James M. | PENSION #: S1725 | UNIT: Undetermined |
Grinder, W.M. | PENSION #: S12621 | UNIT: 19th (Biffle's) Cav. |
Grinder, W.M. | PENSION #: S2020 | UNIT: 9th Cav. |
Hardin, George W. | PENSION #: W10591 | WIDOW: Hardin, Sarah E. |
Harris, J.F. | PENSION #: S14542 | UNIT: 1st Bn. (McNairy's) Cav. |
Harris, John Franklin | PENSION #: W8638 | WIDOW: Harris, Fredonia Ann |
Hinson, G.W. | PENSION #: S6245 | UNIT: 48th (Voorhies') Inf. |
Johnson, L. A. | PENSION #: S4432 | UNIT: 6th (Wheeler's) Cav. |
Johnson, Leonidas Alexander | PENSION #: W4052 | WIDOW: Johnson, Jennie |
Jordan, James H. . | PENSION #: S3118 | UNIT: 35th Ga. Inf |
Kelley, Elisha | PENSION #: S7986 | UNIT: 9th Cav. |
Lewis, James W. | PENSION #: S10306 | UNIT: 48th (Voorhies') Inf. |
Malugen, Henry Jackson | PENSION #: W5594 | WIDOW: Malugen, Nancy Carolyn |
Mathis, W.H. | PENSION #: S14563 | UNIT: 3rd (Clack's) Inf. |
Mathis, W.H. . | PENSION #: S6383 | UNIT: 3rd (Clack's) Inf |
McClain, Martin | PENSION #: S13577 | UNIT: 3rd (Clack's) Inf |
McClanahan, R.L. | PENSION #: W3872 | WIDOW: Mcclanahan, Francis |
McClearen, A. C. | PENSION #: S14646 | UNIT: 24th Inf. |
McClearen, William Addison | PENSION #: W9578 | WIDOW: Mcclearen, Susan Ann |
McCollum, J. C. 8 | PENSION #: S7098 | UNIT: 42nd Inf. |
McCollum, J. E. | PENSION #: S2609 | UNIT: 42nd Inf. |
McCollum, James Egbert | PENSION #: W8284 | WIDOW: Mccollum, Elizabeth Sally |
Miller, E.L. | PENSION #: S7667 | UNIT: 11th Inf. |
Nicholson, J.S.T. | PENSION #: S6588 | UNIT: 55th Inf. |
Patton, D.L. | PENSION #: S10542 | UNIT: 19th (Biffle's) Cav. |
Peeler, J.N. | PENSION #: S13939 | UNIT: 10th (DeMoss') Cav |
Quillen, James | PENSION #: W135 | WIDOW: Quillen, Delila |
Quillen, Lafayette | PENSION #: W10582 | WIDOW: Quillen, Nancy J. |
Quillin, Willis | PENSION #: S2477 | UNIT: 3rd (Clack's) Inf. |
Rasbury, John C. | PENSION #: W10101 | WIDOW: Rasbury, Sarah A. |
Rochell, Marcellus Rex | PENSION #: W9430 | WIDOW: Rochell, Cynthia Elizabeth |
Russell, Peter (African-American) | PENSION #: C265 | UNIT: Undetermined |
Satterfield, John Smith | PENSION #: W5981 | WIDOW: Satterfield, Cynthia Elya |
Segle, Louis M. | PENSION #: S8455 | UNIT: 1st N.C. Cav. |
Seiber, Frederick | PENSION #: W9916 | WIDOW: Seiber, Jane |
Sims, J.M. | PENSION #: S14078 | UNIT: 10th (Biffle's) Cav. |
Sims, James | PENSION #: S1198 | UNIT: 3rd Inf. |
Sims, Jesse M. | PENSION #: W7773 | WIDOW: Sims, Elizabeth C. |
Staggs, William E. | PENSION #: S3652 | UNIT: 54th Inf. |
Stockard, J.R. | PENSION #: S15944 | UNIT: 9th Cav |
Tatum, Sub Allen | PENSION #: W9585 | WIDOW: Tatum, Mary Jane |
Tharpe, Andrew J. | M.PENSION #: W8512 | WIDOW: Tharpe, Nancy |
Thorp, Andrew Jackson | PENSION #: S4784 | UNIT: 6th (Wheeler's) Cav. |
Warren, W.C | PENSION #: W1450 | WIDOW: Warren, Sarah |
White, Mathias | PENSION #: W10746 | WIDOW: White, Sarah Elizabeth |
Woods, John (African-American) | PENSION #: C264 | UNIT: Undetermined |