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    Notes


    Tree:  

    Matches 3,201 to 3,250 of 4,783

          «Prev «1 ... 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 ... 96» Next»

     #   Notes   Linked to 
    3201 married several times THOMAS, William H. (I3231)
     
    3202 Married to Christina Born on: ca 1732 Savercool, Jacob (I12807)
     
    3203 Married, lived in California. BLACIK, Evelyn (I1664)
     
    3204 Married, lived in Duluth. BLACIK, Benjamin (I1985)
     
    3205 Married, mother of three boys, living near Tuscon, Arizona in 1940. Moore, Vera June (I15448)
     
    3206 Married. BLACIK, Leona (I1976)
     
    3207 Martha (Esser) Fields, 79, of Edina died Aug. 29, 1999 at the N.C. Little Hospice in Edina.
    Mass of Christian burial is 5 p.m. Thursday at Our Lady of Grace Church, 50th and Eden Ave, Edina. Burial will be 11 a.m. Friday at Holy Trinity Cemetery in New Ulm.
    Visitation will be Thursday from 3-5 p.m. at the church. Arrangements by Gill Brothers Funeral Home.
    She is survived by her husband, W. Brooks Fields of Edina; children: Millie Schipper and her husband Don, Sarah Nessan and her husband Doug of Edina, Brooks Fields and his wife Barbara of Mesa, Ariz., and Rick and his wife Cheryl Fields; 13 grandchildren; sister, Loretta Franta and many nieces and nephews.
    She was preceded in death by her parents, Arnold and Emma Esser; five brothers and one sister.
    She was born in New Ulm, attended New Ulm High School, the College of Saint Catherine and graduated from Carleton College. She served on the Big Sister and Family Children's Board as a member of the League of Catholic Women and was active in church and civic activities. She was a member of Our Lady of Grace and resident of Edina for 50 years.
    Memorial are preferred to Brooks and Martha Fields Minnesota Scholarship at Gonzaga University, which she co-founded in 1977, c/o Gonzaga University, Spokane, Wash. 99258.  
    Esser, Martha Mabel (I3436)
     
    3208 Martha and Mae lived together in their older years. MAYKOSKI, Martha (I250)
     
    3209 martha carpenter clark b. 3 jun 1830 in sullivan county, ny d. 30 oct 1909 in tioga county, pa... Carpenter, John (I17106)
     
    3210 Martin Redfield was one of a company to march to Boston in the Lexington Alarm - April 1775 Redfield, Martin (I2130)
     
    3211 Martin served with the GAR from 1861-1865 in the Civil War. Cox, Martin (I16321)
     
    3212 mary age 15 b. in ny Carpenter, John (I17106)
     
    3213 Mary and Chester had 4 children (Kinney website). Kinney, Mary B. (I13130)
     
    3214 Mary and Laura Puckett married brothers Will and Jim Hamilton. there are four Hamilton boys, in the Allen Puckett family photo. they are Earl, Ray, Harvey, and Orrie.. PUCKETT, Mary Anne (I93)
     
    3215 Mary Ann and Woolston are buried on the site of the original Friends Meeting Pendleton, Indiana. THOMAS, Mary Ann (I3006)
     
    3216 Mary DUFFORD Dufford, Gilbert (I15925)
     
    3217 Mary E. Rowland b. 4-4-1849 Rowland, Mary E. (I15202)
     
    3218 Mary had a sister named Rachel. HUTCHINS, MARY JANE (I13874)
     
    3219 Mary had become blind late in her life through cancer on her face. She with her daughter's home, Mary Waggoner, in Wampole. The cause of death was, supposedly, a fall over a chair. Mary is listed in The Doane Family, Vol. I, p.133 DOAN, MARY (I13990)
     
    3220 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I13455)
     
    3221 Mary Sipes was the daughter of Jacob Sipes, a member of Butler's Rangers. I don't know if UEL families especially associated with one another and were, therefore more likely to marry one another. The Cornells were not UEL so far as I've been
    able to find out in spite of claims to the contrary. 
    Cornell, Joanna (I3830)
     
    3222 Mary was a very dignified and handsome woman in her photos. She is fondly remembered for her excellent cooking. STOUTENBURGH, MARY DIDAMIA (I13670)
     
    3223 Mary was informally adopted by Robert and Kate Thomas. In the 1900 census she is listed as a 12 year old boarder, last name of Dubarks, parents from Germany. There were other Dubarks (also Duborko) in Red Willow County about that time. Mary is listed as a daughter of Robert Hanson Thomas in his obituary (Mrs E.H. Korb of Indianola).

    Robert and Kate's daughter Alice was sickly and about the same age as Mary. Grandma Dunning took Alice to live with her and Mary was raised by Robert and Kate Thomas. 
    Duborks, Mary A. (I86)
     
    3224 Mary's mother-in-law's maiden name was Denslow. HUTCHINS, MARY JANE (I13874)
     
    3225 maybe Mitchiel Mitchell, Aaron Bryant (I5668)
     
    3226 Maynard Man 94, has never worn glasses or visited a dentist. McLeish, Andrew (I14522)
     
    3227 Maynard--June 10--Andrew McLeish, Promient pioneer of this vicinity and a native of Scotland is 96 years old today and enjoying life. He hasn't missed having a large dish of oatmeal for breakfast each day since he was a boy in Scotland. He
    believes it to be one of the most healthful of foods, conducive to longevity. He recalls that as a lad he enjoyed a breakfast of "broes", made simply by pouring boiling water over finely milled oats. 
    McLeish, Andrew (I14522)
     
    3228 Maynard: June 15--Few men live more than four score ten years with the full enjoyment of every faculty yet this is the privilege of Andrew McLeish of Maynard, who has just celebrated his 94th birthday. McLeish, Andrew (I14522)
     
    3229 McPhail Clan Web Site McPhail, Zelma Grace Wright (I11277)
     
    3230 Medical Information: Blue eyes, Gray hair at age 50. Medium complection. Dennis, George Nobel (I13429)
     
    3231 Medical Information: Diabetes, Cancer McLeish, Marjorie Alice (I14499)
     
    3232 Melissa Ward adds: Snover, Nathan G. (I15129)
     
    3233 Melvin's parents were James Archibald Miller (born in Meshoppen) and Emma Diantha Carney (born in Keiserville). James' parents were Jacob Miller and Sarah Miller, # Melvin Eugene (I8315)
     
    3234 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I15541)
     
    3235 member of the Timshoc Meeting in Ireland Jackson, Hannah (I2854)
     
    3236 Memorial Services were conducted at Mitchel Funeral Home, Oxford, November 25,1967 with Rev. Walter Bailey officiating. Music was furnished by Mrs. Marilyn Benjamin with Mrs. Elizabeth York at the organ. Bearers were Leonard Hays, Glenn Hays,
    Jim Hays, Carl Emen, Chas. A. Lewis and Richard Loper. Internment was in the Oxford Cemetary with Mitchel Funeral Home directing arrangements. 
    WINTERMUTE, Carrie (I172)
     
    3237 Mercy paid $75.00 cash for 20 acres of farmland in 1862. She died of angina pectoris after being ill for about a year. Her Tombstone reads, "Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God". SMITH, MERCY (I13669)
     
    3238 Methodist

    Joan and Joe are divorced. 
    Family F39
     
    3239 Methodist Marlatt, Jo-an Virginia (I6453)
     
    3240 Metropolitan News-Enterprise

    Wednesday, September 17, 2008, Page 7

    PERSPECTIVES (Column)

    Evelle J. Younger: Related to Wild West Outlaws and to Nation?s Founding Fathers
    By ROGER M. GRACE
    Seventy-First in a Series



    EVELLE J. YOUNGER, as district attorney, had a practice of personally interviewing would-be deputies who had made it through the initial vetting. One young hopeful who had passed the bar exam only four month earlier met with the DA in October, 1965. He was Curt Livesay?destined to become a legend in the office, but unknowing at that point whether he would make the grade or be told, ?Don?t call us, we?ll call you.?

    As Livesay recounts it, at the end of the questioning, Younger queried:

    ?Have I failed to ask you something that, if you were in my place, you would want to know??

    Livesay, speaking to me by phone from his ranch in eastern Oklahoma, says he proceeded to confess that he had some relatives who had been convicted of brewing moonshine.

    That revelation, Livesay might have thought, doomed his chances of being hired. Not so. The district attorney, doubtlessly amused, put him at ease by inquiring: ?Have you ever heard of the Younger Brothers??

    Younger??Mr. Law and Order??revealed he was a decedent of those fabled outlaws of the old west.

    The stage coach- and bank-robbing Younger Brothers were Cole (their leader), Jim, John, and Bob; they teamed with the James Brothers, Jesse and his half-brother, Frank. The James-Younger Gang rode from a period starting shortly after the Civil War and ending in 1876 after the Younger Brothers (sans John who died in 1874) were apprehended after attempting a bank robbery.

    In conducting a bit of genealogical research, I not only confirmed ties to the Younger Brothers but came across Evelle Younger?s unheralded links with other historical figures who were, decidedly, ?good guys.?



    Resources show that a common progenitor of Younger and of the bandits was Joshua Logan Younger (born 1755). He was the father of, among other offspring, Charles Lee Younger (1779) and Henry Younger (1772).

    Charles Lee Younger was the grandfather of the Younger Brothers.

    Henry Younger was the great-great-grandfather of Evelle J. Younger.

    In figuring relations: a child of your aunt and uncle is, of course, a cousin?in particular, a first cousin. That cousin?s descendents, no matter how far down the line, will all be first cousins to you, but the child of your cousin will be a ?first cousin once removed,? a grandchild will be a ?first cousin twice removed,? etc. Your cousin?s child and your own child will be second cousins; your grandchild and your cousin?s grandchild will be third cousins, and so on. On a family tree, where cousins are on the same horizontal plane (same generation), they?re first, second, third cousins, and so forth, while any diagonal relationships entail a ?removed? status.

    So, starting with Henry Younger and going forward in time: his son, also named Henry, was the first cousin of the outlaws? father, Henry Washington Lee; Henry Jr.?s son Richard was the Younger Brothers? second cousin; his son Harry was a second cousin once removed; and his son Evelle was a second cousin twice removed.



    While journalists are keen about making sure of their facts before reporting anything, I confess that I can?t be altogether certain of the following. That?s because genealogical information going back into the 18th Century is largely based not on official records of any sort, but letters, diaries, and the like. Families typically were large owing to the lack of?well, I don?t need to spell it out?making it all the more difficult to keep track of births. Philandering was common, with doubts existing sometimes, from the standpoint of history, not as to who a child?s father was, but as to the identity of the mother. In short, data is incomplete and conflicting.

    Subject to that disclaimer, it does appear that the aforementioned Joshua Younger was married to the former Elizabeth Lee, and that she was the daughter of Richard Henry Lee, a founding father of our nation. It was he who made the motion on June 7, 1776, as a member of the Second Continental Congress, to declare independence from Great Britain. He was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and later served as a U.S. senator from Virginia. That would mean he was the great-great-great-great grandfather of Evelle Younger?signifying that Richard Henry Lee?s brother?Francis Lightfoot Lee, also a signer of the Declaration of Independence?was the future DA?s great-great-great-great granduncle. (Richard Henry Lee and Francis Lightfoot also had an ancestor in common with Joshua Logan Younger, and were Evelle Younger?s first cousins 15 times removed.)

    Evelle Younger was also, it seems, related to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Richard Henry Lee had a first cousin, Henry Lee II. So?his son, Henry Lee III?known as ?Light Horse Harry? for his activities as a cavalry officer in the Revolutionary War?was a second cousin of Joshua Younger; Henry Lee II?s son, the man who surrendered to Grant at Appomattox was third cousin of Henry Younger Sr.; and Lee was a third cousin four times removed from Younger.

    There?s more.



    Evelle Younger was a distant relative of outlaws other than the Younger Brothers. He was a fifth cousin 10 times removed to Texas train robber Sam Bass; a ninth cousin twice removed to Jesse James; a fifth cousin seven times removed to Butch Cassidy; and a seventh cousin once removed to John Wesley Hardin.

    Speaking of outlaws, someone accused of perjury and obstruction of justice was President Bill Clinton. Richard Henry Lee was first cousin of Anneke Jane Edwards, great-great-great-great-great-great grandmother of Clinton. Evelle Younger was a seventh cousin twice removed to Clinton.

    President Zackary Taylor was Evelle Younger?s third cousin 14 times removed, as was President William Henry Harrison; the latter?s grandson, President Benjamin Harrison, was a fifth cousin 12 times removed. Getting into really remote relationships: President John Kennedy was a seventh cousin 10 times removed, and President Lyndon B. Johnson was an eighth cousin 10 times removed.

    Kin also included author Mark Twain (third cousin six times removed); newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst (second cousin, 12 times removed); blind author Helen Keller (third cousin six times removed); and U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton (third cousin 10 times removed).



    I recently quoted District Attorney Steve Cooley as explaining the kinship of his wife, Jana, to Evelle Younger: her father was attorney Kenneth Younger, a cousin of Evelle Younger.

    I?ve found that their common relative was Richard Younger, Evelle Younger?s grandfather. He had two sons: Richard Emeal Younger and Henry Clive Younger. Richard Emeal Younger?s son was Kenneth Cooper Younger (born March 22, 1922 in Stamford, Nebraska); Henry C. Younger?s son was Evelle J. Younger (born June 19, 1918 in Stamford, Nebraska). Ken and Evelle Younger were first cousins, making Jana Cooley a first cousin once removed to Evelle Younger.

    Cooley notes that his late father-in-law ?and Evelle grew up in, I think it was Funk, Nebraska.?

    He wasn?t sure of the name?but, yes, there is a Funk, Nebraska. It?s a miniscule village which comprises less than one-third of a square mile.

    Continuing his account of Evelle and Kenneth Younger, the district attorney says:

    ?They both were in the service in World War II, and after coming out to California during their service time, they decided to locate here. I think Evelle came first, and then Ken joined him later.?

    Evelle Younger was admitted to practice here in July, 1946, and Kenneth Younger in January, 1951.

    Cooley says that there is a vague awareness in the legal community of a relationship to Evelle Younger, but that ?a lot of people thought that Jana was maybe Evelle?s daughter.?



    We?ll have to assume that the ?Younger Cousins??whose proclivities were quite the opposite of those of the Younger Brothers?did spend time in Funk, Nebraska. After all, nobody would falsely claim to have haled from there.

    However, the 1930 Census shows that by the time young Evelle was 11, he resided with his parents in Hastings, Neb., a short distance east of Funk?and comprising 10 square miles?two-and-a-half times the size of Beverly Hills, but with somewhat lower population. Here?s the census entry from a page listing denizens of Hastings:



    Evelle Younger?s continued residency there is reflected by various newspaper articles appearing in Nebraska during his student years, largely comprised of renditions of his athletic feats, but covering other matters.

    The April 19, 1931 issue of the Lincoln Star relates:

    ?Four Hastings people, two of them Boy Scouts enroute to Lincoln to attend the Scout Circus, escaped serious injury, it is believed, when their light coupe overturned eight miles west of Lincoln?.

    ?Evelle Younger, 13, son of Mrs. H.C. Younger, the driver, was the most severely injured. He suffered a brain concussion and body lacerations and bruises.?

    The Nebraska State Journal?s edition of Feb. 20, 1937, reports:

    ?Evelle Younger of Hastings, Neb., a student at the University of Nebraska where he is majoring in journalism, has received word of his appointment to the United States Naval academy by Congressman Charles G. Binderup.

    ?He has been directed to report at Annapolis June 10.

    ?Younger, 18 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Younger of Hastings, was informed his college credits have been accepted by the academy so that it will not be necessary to take entrance examinations.

    ?After being graduated in 1934 from Hastings high school where he was prominent in athletics and extra-curricular activities, he attended Hastings college for two years. He transferred last fall to the University of Nebraska?.?

    An article on June 27, 1937 in the Sunday Journal and Star confirms: ?Paul Jorgensen of Wilcox and Evelle Younger of Hastings were admitted to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis June 15.?

    As it turned out, Younger did not pursue studies at Annapolis, instead returning to the University of Nebraska. His son, former Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Eric Younger, says he did not learn of the appointment to the Naval Academy until after his father?s death, relating that he thinks that his father?s departure from Annapolis had to do with ?some kind of color blindness.? He notes the condition did not impede his father in his military career in other branches. (Evelle Younger started out in the Army as a private and worked his way up to the rank of major general in the Air Force Reserve.)

    The Lincoln Sunday Journal and Star?s March 13. 1938 edition carries a photo of Evelle Younger sporting a top hat, draped in a high-buttoned cloak like that worn by an undertaker, adorned with a thick mustache, and clasping a whip. The caption explains: ?Right out of Uncle Tom?s Cabin stepped Simon Legree in the person of Evelle Younger, Hastings.? No, he wasn?t in a student production; a fraternity staged a ?story book ball,? a variation on costume parties, with quartettes of students each dressed as characters from a novel.



    FOOTNOTE: The Younger Brothers on Sept. 7, 1876, attempted to rob the First National Bank in Northfield, Minnesota. During that event, the cashier was fatally shot. The three were apprehended following a week-long pursuit, and on Nov. 21 of that year, they pled guilty to first degree murder and were sentenced to life imprisonment.

    Widespread glorification of them as Old West desperados whose deeds reflected adventure and pluck led to repeated efforts to gain freedom for them through pardon or parole?though in fact, they were career criminals, thieves and slayers, who rated the death penalty. On July 14, 1901, Thomas Coleman ?Cole? Younger and James Younger were released on parole, Robert having died in prison.

    James subsequently committed suicide in 1902.

    And Cole? He and Frank James?who had been acquitted in 1881 of armed robbery and in 1902 of the only killing for which he was ever been tried?teamed together in a wild west show.
     
    YOUNGER, Evelle Jansen (I784)
     
    3241 Microfilm of Kings Co., page23 Van Pelt, Teunis Jansen Lanen (I2527)
     
    3242 middle name possibly Richard? Shackelton, Benjamin (I727)
     
    3243 Mildred H. Wintermute
    of Boynton Beach, Fla.,
    formerly of Endicott, N.Y.

    On Tuesday, July 25, 2006, Mildred H. (Ehert) Wintermute, 90, joined her beloved husband, Douglas, who passed away on January 31, 1997. They were married sixty wonderful years. She was born in Endicott on September 23, 1915, the daughter of the late Harry and Elizabeth (Bertram) Ehert. She is survived by two sons, David E. Wintermute (Florida) and Douglas (Holly) Wintermute (South Carolina); three granddaughters, Debra (Eltor), Patricia and Cheryl; three grandsons, Douglas, Daniel and David; two beautiful great-granddaughters, Alexis and India Marie; and several nephews; whom she all loved dearly. She was also predeceased by her brother, Fred Ehert. Mildred and Douglas moved to Boynton Beach, Florida 29 years ago, where they spent their remaining years. She loved her family and especially enjoyed Bingo; she won "big" many times. She will be deeply missed.
    Graveside Services will be held Saturday, 10:30 a.m. at Riverhurst Cemetery, Endicott, with the Reverend David C. Seaver, Chaplain of Spiritual Care at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, officiating. The family will receive friends at Allen Memorial Home, 511-513 East Main Street, Endicott, Friday from 6 to 8 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to the Boy Scouts of America, Jensen Road, Vestal, N.Y. 13850 in memory of Mrs. Wintermute.  
    Ehert, Mildred Helen (I3897)
     
    3244 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I13554)
     
    3245 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I16927)
     
    3246 Military Service

    Name: John D. Lewis
    Side: Union
    Regiment State/Origin: Indiana
    Regiment Name: 25 Indiana Infantry
    Regiment Name Expanded: 25th Regiment, Indiana Infantry
    Company: I
    Rank In: Private
    Rank In Expanded: Private
    Rank Out: Private
    Rank Out Expanded: Private
    Film Number: M540 roll 44
     
    LEWIS, John Daniel (I173)
     
    3247 Military Service - Civil War - Union

    Name: Alexander Wintermute
    Residence: Muscatine, Iowa
    Age at enlistment: 18
    Enlistment Date: 14 Aug 1862
    Rank at enlistment: Private
    State Served: Iowa
    Survived the War?: Yes
    Service Record: Enlisted in Company A, Iowa 35th Infantry Regiment on 29 Aug 1862.
    Promoted to Full 7th Corporal on 29 Jun 1864.
    Promoted to Full 4th Corporal on 29 May 1865.
    Promoted to Full 6th Corporal on 06 May 1865.
    Promoted to Full 3rd Corporal on 06 Jul 1865.
    Mustered out on 10 Aug 1865 at Davenport, IA.

    Birth Date: abt 1844
    Sources: Roster & Record of Iowa Soldiers in the War of Rebellion


    Regimental History
    Thirty-fifth Infantry IOWA
    (3 years)


    Thirty-fifth Infantry. -- Col., Sylvester G. Hill, Lieut.-
    Cols., James. H. Rothrock, William B. Keeler; Majs., Henry
    O'Connor, William B. Keeler, Abraham John, William Dill.

    This regiment was mustered into the service at Muscatine Sept. 18, 1862, and was sent to Cairo, IL, arriving Nov. 24, and there performed guard duty until in April, 1863, when by orders of Gen. Grant, it set out for the Vicksburg campaign, reporting at Duckport, La., to Brig.-Gen. J. M. Tuttle, commanding the 3rd division of the 15th army corps under Gen. Sherman, and was assigned to the 3rd brigade of this division.

    The regiment participated in the battle of Jackson, having 1 man killed and 1 severely wounded. It crossed the Big Black River on May 18 and arrived that evening in the rear of Vicksburg. There it engaged in the severest duties of the siege, at work in the trenches, sharpshooting and on picket, losing 2 killed and 1 wounded.

    When Vicksburg capitulated, it was ordered by a circuitous
    route to Jackson, where it lost 1 officer wounded and some men captured. In March, 1864 with Gen. A. J. Smith's column, it started to join Gen. Banks Red River expedition. At the taking of Fort De Russy the regiment was in reserve, and at he battle of Pleasant Hill it fought valiantly, losing 64 men, out of seven companies, three being on picket duty in the rear.

    On the retreat of Banks' army the regiment had its share of the fighting constantly taking place. At Mansura, La., it lost 3 wounded, and at Bayou de Glaize, 3 killed, 17 wounded and 1 missing. After returning to Vicksburg, the regiment was in Gen. Smith's force which fought the battle of Lake Chicot to clear the river of Marmaduke's blockade. In a few minutes the regiment lost about 20.

    It then proceeded to Memphis, and with its command was engaged in the Tupelo campaign. With the 12th Ia. it formed a part of the brigade of Col. Woods and participated in the battle of Tupelo. It returned to Memphis and was engaged in the Oxford expedition.

    At the battle of Nashville its brigade fought with conspicuous gallantry and great loss, and the 35th engaged in pursuit of the Confederates, afterward marching to Clifton.

    The regiment was soon transferred to the South, still in Gen. Smith's army, to enter upon the Mobile campaign, and at Spanish Fort it did its full share of duty in the siege. It was mustered out Aug. 10, 1865. Losses: killed in battle or died of wounds, 48, deaths from disease, 188; wounded, 95; discharged, 190,

    Source: The Union Army, vol. 4

    Battles Fought
    Fought on 14 May 1863 at Jackson, MS.
    Fought on 9 Jun 1863 at Vicksburg, MS.
    Fought on 17 Jun 1863 at Walnut Hills, MS.
    Fought on 11 Jul 1863 at Jackson, MS.
    Fought on 12 Jul 1863 at Jackson, MS.
    Fought on 14 Jul 1863.
    Fought on 15 Jan 1864 at Middleton, TN.
    Fought on 9 Apr 1864 at Pleasant Hill, LA.
    Fought on 16 May 1864 at Marksville, LA.
    Fought on 18 May 1864 at Yellow Bayou, LA.
    Fought on 18 May 1864 at Bayou De Glaize, LA.
    Fought on 6 Jun 1864 at Old River Lake, AR.
    Fought on 6 Jun 1864 at Chicot Lake, AR.
    Fought on 15 Jun 1864 at Guntown, MS.
    Fought on 14 Jul 1864 at Tupelo, MS.
    Fought on 15 Jul 1864 at Tupelo, MS.
    Fought on 15 Dec 1864 at Nashville, TN.
    Fought on 16 Dec 1864 at Nashville, TN.
    Fought on 27 Mar 1865 at Spanish Fort, AL.
    Fought on 28 Mar 1865 at Spanish Fort, AL.



     
    WINTERMUTE, Alexander (I390)
     
    3248 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I16915)
     
    3249 minister THOMAS, III Peter (I2817)
     
    3250 minister THOMAS, Judah (I2822)
     

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