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- CS - Law, Sarah Chapman | Biographic Profiles - We Will Remember
Sarah Chapman (Gordon) Law :CSA1stNat: Born: August 27, 1805 Birthplace: Wilkes County, North Carolina Father: Colonel Chapman Gordon 1758 – 1813 (Buried: Wilkesboro Presbyterian Chapel, Wilkes County, North Carolina) Mother: Charity Robinett King 1765 – 1858 Husband: Dr John Sanderford
- Can you guys find the find a grave entries for these vets?
It may be more practical and expeditious if you contacted the Sons of Union Veterans who have officers designated for grave site registrations Many states are working through an update right now, a process that takes several years as a rule Many old rural cemeteries have been lost, re-located and those that survive often have poor or inaccurate records Plus, there are always cases where the
- Hospital Stewards at Gettysburg - American Civil War Forums
(Papers of Henry T Bahnson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Bright and Gloomy Days, The Civil War Correspondence of Charles Frederic Bahnson, a Moravian Confederate, ed by Sarah Bahnson Chapman, The University of Tennessee Press, 2003; Compiled service records of Henry T Bahnson, Fold3; Confederate Wounded in Hospital at
- A Tuesday Tea with Sarah Hart Ballou: The Woman behind the most Famous . . .
Sarah will always be remembered as being the recipient of the 'most famous letter' in the Civil War The Sullivan Ballou letter to his wife before fighting his first battle is filled with love and devotion to country Reportedly dated July 14, 1861 one-hundred and sixty-four years ago it reads:
- Profiles of Union Chaplains at Gettysburg | Gettysburg
From 1867 until August 1876, he was pastor of the Congregational Church in Mansfield He had three children from his 1864 marriage to Sarah D Mills Chaplain Welch died on April 17, 1913 near Hartfort
- Admiral Paul Shirley - American Civil War Forums
The J M Chapman was sold and the money divided between the U S government and the informer Lt Shirley and the crew of the U S S Cyane objected and brought suit for a share of the prize money, contending that the J M Chapman was a pirate ship and thus a prize of war
- Confederate Privateers in California - American Civil War Forums
The Chapman docked at the Jackson Street Wharf (Farwell said the Pacific Street in his account 33 years later) Harpending recounted that Greathouse and Law were to be on board by 10:00 p m Harpending and Rubery met the crew as they arrived behind the American Exchange Hotel (Sansone St between California and Sacremento)
- The Disappearance of Sarah Slater: Confederate Spy and Lincoln . . .
Sarah Gilbert Slater was a mysterious Confederate spy who worked with both John Wilkes Booth and John Surratt prior to the assassination of Abraham Lincoln but disappeared shortly after without a trace
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