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My GGG Grandfather, Cicero Laney, Pvt. Co. E 20th Georgia Infantry, Bennings Brigade, Hoods Division, Longstreets Corps, Army of Northern Virginia.
Interesting story on SCV page: http://scv507.weebly.com/laney-william-cicero.html |
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Terry Bagwell
Great Great Grand Father Private, 15th Mississippi Regiment, Company I - Choctaw Guard Three other brothers served. One died in a Yankee hell hole prison in Indiana. |
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The wife's side has had a presence in Montross Va. since 1639. All Sanfords served in the war of Northern Aggression.
9th Regiment, Virginia Infatry, Company C 15th Regiment, Virginia Calvary, Company A 47th Regiment, Virginia Infatry, Company C 55th Regiment, Virginia Infatry, Company E |
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Thomas Shelton, PVT, 23rd NC Infantry, Captured Day1 Gettysburg, released 1865. Fought at Seven Pines, Seven Days Battle, South Mountain, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg.
Irvin Roland Roberts, 2nd LT, 6th GA Cavalry. Only know for sure he was present at Appomattox. |
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Had many ancestors in the war, all that I have been able to trace that far fought in the war on the southern side. But OP said pick one.
George Dare 41st Mississippi Infantry Participated in the night assault at Franklin when Hood threw Lee's corps into the meat grinder as they arrived late in the evening. |
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Hugh A. Haralson a little before the war, but an interesting cat nonetheless.
His daughter married this guy I have relatives scattered all over the losing side of that war. The other side of my family was busy trying to get the fuck out of Ireland. |
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We don't talk about that unfortunate and embarrassing acts of my ancestors.
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Quoted:
I found this picture in my great, great, great grandmother's family photo album. I think it might be from the civil war. http://i1288.photobucket.com/albums/b489/trbrst/81d05f481befa2560d976809cb0b2b4d_zps0htbskir.jpg View Quote GET THAT YANKEE OUT OF HERE!!!!! |
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Capt. Elijah Tillman, 50th Regiment, Georgia Infantry, Company H. Joined 1861, wounded 1863 (mustered out due to wounds received at Chancellorsville), rejoined 11th Regiment, Georgia State Guard in August 1863. Survived the war.
Note about the Captain's family - 13 Tillmans served. 6 died, 4 were captured, 1 surrendered at Appomattox, 2 were mustered out due to wounds. |
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Two distant relatives. Both were poor ass, dirt farmers. (think Jed Clampett before hitting oil). Neither one owned any slaves. Neither had any chance of ever owing a slave. Yet, both signed up to defend their native eland from the damn Yankees.
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Francis Marion SampsonE Co 18th Regiment of Georgia Volunteers. Lost his arm above the elbow in the Seven Days Battles of the Peninsular Campaign. After the war moved to Texas and died in Coleman, Tx in 1927 at the ripe old age of 89. eta: I'm trying to narrow down which particular battle he was injured in. I know arfcom has experts on just about everything so thought I would ask. here is a copy of page 2 of his application for a Confederate Pension He was injured on 27 June 1862, which means it was probably either Garnett's and Goulding's Farm or Gaine's Mill, but the document says (best guess) Seressday's fight around Richmond. Anyone have a better reading from the picture or understand the reference? View Quote That is the Seven Days fight around Richmond, VA June 27, 1862 |
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Don't want to burst anyone's heritage bubble The war was between Republicans and democrats and your ancestors were lied to by the democrats View Quote Yes. The Republicans supported a strong federal government that ruled from DC with the Feds exerting control over all activities that were supposedly 'reserved for the states or people'. The Democrats firmly believed in states rights with the federal government having limited powers as outlined in the Constitution. Which way do you lean? ETA... A tdbit from the "Geneology Trails" book about the 50th Regiment, Co H, (Colquitt County, GA) which had 10 of my relatives as members: "As has already been noted, Colquitt had very few slaves, at any time, and none of her citizens looked on slavery as indispensable to their welfare personally. While the county was a part of Lowndes and Thomas, the citizens of Colquitt territory, living remote from the county sites of these original counties, had practically nothing to do with politics, local, state, or national; and, when the Secession War came on, there was no great feeling among her citizens among themselves, or, for that matter, against any outsiders. In all, some fifteen or twenty of the men enlisted or conscripted in the armies of the Confederacy, lost their lives; but not a life was lost in guerrilla or partisan fighting." |
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Great Great Grandfather on my mothers side. 10th (?) TN Volunteers. Captured, interred in Indiana, paroled, reupped, discharged because of dysentery. Found his pay records in an old Bible in an attic.
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Company E and later Company C of the Cherokee Mounted Volunteers "Rifles".
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My great great grandfather J. W. Cook (enlisted as a private on Oct 23 1862, First Regiment, S.C. Infantry (Regulars), Co. B)
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Paternal Great Grandfather. My sis-in-law was researching and best we can tell he was mustered in at Silver Run, Al. (Munford, Al) and was only like 15 years old. Can't recall the details now, but the outfit he was in was at Chicamauga and he was later wounded/captured at Vicksburg. What happened to him after V-burg is kind of sketchy. (deserted? mustered out for wounds? no idea) We do have a copy of a Confederate pension application he applied for when he was old. I need to get with some CW researcher.
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John T. Hanshew - 51st Virginia ,, he was my great grandfather.
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My Grandfather's Grandfather( he sired my great grandmother when he was 60 on his third wife):
Hubbard Warner, 42nd NC, Co. G. Shot 4 times, was captured at Sayler's Creek within days of the surrender of the A.N.V. Retuned in July, 1865 after being starved at Point Lookout weighing 135 lbs at 6'5" tall. Lived to almost 90, still rode his horse a few miles up to the local bar in his 80's. We still have 3 fence posts at the farm that his son cut from Balck Locust trees. You could say our roots run deep. I've been told I inherited his True Blue Eyes, aka Scottish Blue. |
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Quoted: That is the Seven Days fight around Richmond, VA June 27, 1862 View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Francis Marion SampsonE Co 18th Regiment of Georgia Volunteers. Lost his arm above the elbow in the Seven Days Battles of the Peninsular Campaign. After the war moved to Texas and died in Coleman, Tx in 1927 at the ripe old age of 89. http://mediasvc.ancestry.com/v2/image/namespaces/1093/media/3fab6ecf-2552-4c02-8786-7401d45f6e33.jpg?client=Trees&imageQuality=hq&maxWidth=1663&maxHeight=881 eta: I'm trying to narrow down which particular battle he was injured in. I know arfcom has experts on just about everything so thought I would ask. here is a copy of page 2 of his application for a Confederate Pension He was injured on 27 June 1862, which means it was probably either Garnett's and Goulding's Farm or Gaine's Mill, but the document says (best guess) Seressday's fight around Richmond. Anyone have a better reading from the picture or understand the reference? That is the Seven Days fight around Richmond, VA June 27, 1862 Damn that would make sense, just couldn't read it that way. |
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How do you go about searching for this? View Quote Many of the folks replying here have photos and handwritten notes actually written by the veteran and passed down from generation to generation. The stories are also passed down repeatedly from the old people to the young people in each family. Then to be sure you go to your state department of archives and history to verify by the pension record. Census records also help. You have to make an appointment ahead of time with our department of archives explaining what you want to see. A side note: It is documented in writing and referred to by author and historian Shelby Foote in a PBS interview that when a Union soldier asked a captured Confederate why he was fighting when he had no shoes or food, the Confederate replied, "Because you are here". My grandmother's aunt was a new bride during the Civil War and lived long enough to explain that our family fought simply because Union troops took all their food, livestock and goods. They called it foraging. Very few if any slaves in our area because of the lack of row crops due to hilly terrain. |
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I found this picture in my great, great, great grandmother's family photo album. I think it might be from the civil war. http://i1288.photobucket.com/albums/b489/trbrst/81d05f481befa2560d976809cb0b2b4d_zps0htbskir.jpg View Quote So your great great grandfather was a complete piece of shit? Wonder if it runs in the family...... |
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Quoted: I found this picture in my great, great, great grandmother's family photo album. I think it might be from the civil war. http://i1288.photobucket.com/albums/b489/trbrst/81d05f481befa2560d976809cb0b2b4d_zps0htbskir.jpg View Quote Win. |
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How do you go about searching for this? View Quote This is where I found some info on mine. https://www.nps.gov/civilwar/search-soldiers.htm?submitted=1&battleUnitCode=CNC0050RI |
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Und ze 40xb's ver in Germany also enjoying ze schnitzel und Bier View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Renos were in Vienna eating schnitzel. Und ze 40xb's ver in Germany also enjoying ze schnitzel und Bier And the swedes were in Sweden, eating herring. We're still here. |
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I am pretty sure I was a Confederate private in a previous life.
Does that count? |
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And the swedes were in Sweden, eating herring. We're still here. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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The Renos were in Vienna eating schnitzel. Und ze 40xb's ver in Germany also enjoying ze schnitzel und Bier And the swedes were in Sweden, eating herring. We're still here. WWII forced the remnants left of my family to come to the USA. I am glad they did. |
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Some of my family fought on both sides, most were conscripts for the Union Army right off the boat, Irish immigrants. A few had come to the states a decade earlier and were in the Confederacy. I don't know if any of them ever met in battle. They were all distant cousins or great-great-great+ uncles. Somewhere I have some photos of the graves of those who served from Alabama.
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Heritage not hate. Respond with how you are related and one of your ancestor's name who served the Confederacy honorably, rank and unit designation. I would limit to one ancestor because many of us have all 8 great-grandfathers who served. Here is one of mine: My grandfather's grandfather, Henry B. Majors, Sergeant, 14th Mississippi, Featherstone's Brigade. Henry and his two brothers surrendered at Vicksburg the first time and at Greenville, S.C. the last time. All three survived without a scratch or even getting sick as far as we know, View Quote None. At that time period my ancestors were riding the steppes under the Tsar. |
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I have some Ancestors with the surname of Kinsey that lived in Jones County, NC. They were slave holders and some would have fought in the Civil War. I know of many more ancestors that fought for the side of the Union. Apparently the Kinsey's that I am descended from did something and were kicked out of the Quaker religion after the Civil War. They left NC and went to Ohio.
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Kirkwood,.
ANDERSONVILLE. Captured... Pennsylvania. Screw you Confed people....but I understand heritage. |
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One of my ancestors may have fought some of your ancestors.
Frances Fidler Company C, 27th PA Vulcan94 |
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9th Florida Regiment.
During the war the Florida regiments were combined and reorganized at different times. I think he was in four different named regiments but was with the same group of guys he enlisted with.. He fought at Olustee to turn back the filthy Yankee invasion of Florida. He was later sent to defend Richmond and was in the Battle of Cold Harbor. The two big battles he fought in were overwhelming victories for the Confederacy. He was wounded in the leg at Cold Harbor. He said piss on the loyalty oath after the surrender. He never took it. He walked from Richmond back to Central Florida with a bad leg. That was back before I-95 was built. He wrote 190 letters during the war and we have donated them to the Library at the University of Florida. |
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3rd Great Grandfather, a major in Georgia. All of his sons but my 2nd GG died trying to stop Shermans troops from raping women and children and bayonetting babies when they pillaged and burned Atlanta.
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