Sunday, July 24, 2022

Valley Head Cemetery

Location:
State Highway 117
DeKalb County, Alabama
34.57690, -85.62170
Find A Grave Cemetery ID: 1862069

Date of Visit: April 13, 2013

EP Nicholson
Corp Co F 1 Ark Mtd Rifles
Confederate States Army
1839    1909

Aaron Center Dean
Co C  62 Ala Regt
Confederate States Army
1835   1915

Lieut
Hugh David Wilson
Co I
12 Ky Cav
CSA
1844  1917

Zachary T Davenport
Pvt Co A Davenport’s 
Ala Cal
Confederate States Army
1845    1922

Davenport’s obituary is posted on his Find a Grave memorial:

"Z. T. Davenport was born near Valley Head, Ala., November 17, 1845, and died January 6, 1922. Early in 1863 he enlisted in the service of his country and was a member of Company A, 1st Alabama Battalion Cavalry, in which he served faithfully to the end of the struggle. He was in the battle of Selma, Ala., under General Forrest, which was fought after the surrender at Appomattox.
"He was married to Miss Amanda Alman, December 14,, 1871. To this union were born two children, a son and daughter. The daughter, Mrs. Jesse Barnard, is still living.
"In 1883 Comrade Davenport joined the M. E. Church, South. He and the writer because attached to each other when small boys and had been lifelong friends. He was a man of veracity, industry, economy -- true to his family, true to his Church, and true to his country. He was always cheerful and spread sunshine wherever he went. He was a member of Camp Estes No. 1659, U. C. V., was a regular in his attendance, and was always the life of the occasion. For several months prior to his death he was a great sufferer, but he bore it all patiently and died peacefully and triumphantly.
He leaves a daughter, two grandsons, several brothers, and a host of friends to mourn his loss.
"Clothed in his Confederate uniform, he was laid to rest in the Valley Head Cemetery, there to await the resurrection morn."

Obituary by J. M. Price, Adjutant Camp Estes No. 1659, Fort Payne, Ala., published in The Confederate Veteran Magazine, Vol. 30, 1922.

  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/58418111/zachary-taylor-davenport: accessed 24 July 2022), memorial page for Zachary Taylor Davenport (17 Nov 1845–6 Jan 1922), Find a Grave Memorial ID 58418111, citing Valley Head Cemetery, Valley Head, DeKalb County, Alabama, USA; Maintained by sassytazzy (contributor 46808807).

David Dean
Co A
1st Ala Cav
CSA

Dean’s application for government tombstone is labeled in red ink with “Capt Davenport’s 1st Ala Cav Bn”. 

  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/15568771/david-dean: accessed 24 July 2022), memorial page for David Dean (26 Jun 1836–2 Dec 1908), Find a Grave Memorial ID 15568771, citing Valley Head Cemetery, Valley Head, DeKalb County, Alabama, USA; Maintained by Evening Blues (contributor 46587085).


Pvt John G Whited
Co H
21 Ga Inf
CSA
1825
1862

Whited entered service in DeKalb County in Marcy of 1862. He died in June of diseases of disease in Stanardsville, Virginia. 
  • Compiled Service Records of Confederate Soldiers Who Served in Organizations from the State of Georgia.  Original data from: The National Archives, Entry for John Whited, 21st Georgia Infantry, Retrieved from at 3-Fold, July 24, 2022,  (http://www.fold3.com).
  • Georgia State Division of Confederate Pensions and Records, and Lillian Henderson. Roster of the Confederate Soldiers of Georgia, 1861-1865. Vol. 2(Hapeville, Ga.: Longina & Porter, 1959), 918. Retrieved July 24, 2022 from http://babel.hathitrust.org/.




Head Springs Cemetery

Location:
US Highway 11
DeKalb County, Alabama
34.63360, -85.61330
Find A Grave Cemetery ID: 23331

Date of Visit: April 13, 2013

Moses C. Hengar
Corp Co F  7 Ala Cav
Confederate States Army

CW Patty
Corput’s Co 
Ga Lt Arty


Pvt
Richard Mahaffey
Co F
Malones
Ala Cav
CSA
1836
1863


The following is posted on Mahaffey’s Find a Grave memorial:

July 6, 1863 Richard Mahaffey died of Pycemia of Vaccination. Effects of deceased sodier ($43.50) turned over to Quartermaster, C.S.A. 1963 (Conf. Arch. Chap.10, File No. 21, pg.405). Name appeared on a list of sodiers killed in battle, or who died of wounds or disease, Certificate number 1679, "remarks" Q.M.R. (Conf. Arch., Chap. 10, File No. 2, pg.169). Measles and small pox killed many many soldiers, and the military vaccinated soldiers and civilians in mass in an effort to forstall an epidemic. Richard died from pyacemia, which is blood poisoning or general septicemia, resulting from the absorption of septic matter into the circulation. An ulcer developed from a measles vaccination. Vaccination material, live virus, was obtained from a blister on an individual with an active case of measles. If the amount given was too great, or if the sample taken was septic, the recipient could easily contract measles as well as blood poisoning. Richard developed an ulcer at the point of the vaccination, then measles, and, finally, blood poisoning according to the records. Imagine how he must have suffered for those 8 days in a hot, un-air conditioned hospital in the month of July at Tunnel Hill, Georgia! When I visited the site of the Tunnel Hill hospitals and the Tunnel during the annual reinactment, we saw photographs of the actual hospitals. "There were so many hospitals at the Tunnel Hill location," one observer said that "it looked like a city." "The Tunnel Hill location was an excellent site for the hospitals, because there was abundant fresh water from a spring on the site, the railroad provided easy transport of patients, and the mountain on the North side of the hospital provided protection from the enemy." The following from the Tunnel Hill Historical Foundation, the Daily Citizen. The Tunnel Hill Historical Foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation of historic sites in and around Tunnel Hill, GA. 138th Anniversary Reenactment, September 7-8, 2002, beginning on page 34. "... from the battlefields of Chickamauga, Ringold and the cemetery at Tunnel Hill. The following note was made on the lists that were kept as the soldiers remains were disinterred. 'They were buried at Tunnel Hill in the Citizens' Graveyard, about one mile from the village on the Cleveland wagon road. Thirteen of these were in the east part of the Graveyard commencing at the South end. Thirty-five were put in the cars for shipment from Ringgold last Wednesday and we suppose reached their destination before this. Ninety were placed in the cars at Tunnel Friday evening and will go forward Monday next.' The first three removals began in May 1867; the second, October, 1867 and the final removal concluded July 28, 1869. The firm of Scott & Lyle of Dalton was paid $1,427.70 for the removal and shipment of 1126 Confederate remains. They were received at the Confederate Memorial Cemetery in Marietta, GA, for re-burial and still rest there today. As a December 1999, sixty-seven names of soldiers removed from Tunnel Hill have been identified. Their names were gathered from several sources and are listed below" (Beginning with Alabama) Number 9. was - Mahaffey, Richard d: July 6, 1863 Pvt. Co. F 9th Ala Cav This information about the Tunnel Hill location, medical information, and military unit information was given to me by Marvin Sowder, a local historian at Tunnel Hill, Georgia.


Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/15568401/richard-mahaffey: accessed 24 July 2022), memorial page for Richard Mahaffey (1836–1863), Find a Grave Memorial ID 15568401, citing Head Springs Cemetery, Valley Head, DeKalb County, Alabama, USA; Maintained by Evening Blues (contributor 46587085).



Sunday, July 17, 2022

Bankhead Cemetery

Location:
County Road 642
Mentone, DeKalb County, Alabama
34.55970  -85.55580
FAG:21389

Date of Visit: May 29, 2015

Serg
Elijah S Hardwick
Co H
48 Ala Inf
CSA
1831
1897

Friday, July 15, 2022

Scott Cemetery

Location:
Scott Cemetery Road
Saragossa, Walker County, Alabama
33.883595  -87.413467
FAG: 26120

Date of Visit: April 18, 2015


John Francis Thomas
Pvt Co H  20 Ala Inf
Confederate States Army
Dec 12 1825
April 19 1907

Dorsey Creek Missionary Church Cemetery

Location:
State Highway 69
Bremen, Cullman County, Alabama
33.977291  - 86.982079
FAG: 22531

Date of Visit: August 18, 2015


William H H Wise
Co K
3 Ala Cav
CSA
1841
1879

Father
JA Childers
Co D
1 Ala Inf
CSA
1844 - 1905

Manasco Cemetery

Location:
Supreme Road
Townley, Walker  County, Alabama
33.818954.  -87.424713
Find A Grave Cemetery ID: 24184

Date of Visit: April 18, 2015

James K Polk Manasco
2nd Lieut Co G 56 Ala Cav
Civil War
Feb 27 1845   June 7 1923


Jeremiah Manasco
1 Lieut
Co A 27 Regt Ala Inf
Confederate States Army
Jan 16 1832
May 1 1862
MD

 

Jeremiah was a son of John Manasco and Lucinda Luster of Walker County, Alabama. He enlisted in the Confederate Army on September 25, 1861 and was elected 1st Lieutenant by Captain Weeden’s Walker County Company. In the company October it was organized into the 22nd Alabama Infantry regiment. The 22nd Alabama was in the line of battle both days in April of 1862 at Shiloh. According to several sources Jeremiah was wounded in the left arm. The wound was so bad that it was necessary to amputate his arm. He was sent home where he died on May 1, 1862. 

Several sources stated that Jeremiah was serving as a medical aide to General Albert Sydney Johnston at the time of his death. There is no description of Jeremiah’s wounding reports from the 22nd Alabama found in the Official Record of the War of Rebellion and he does not appear in Johnston’s staff. 


  • Compiled Service Records of Confederate Soldiers Who Served in Organizations from the State of Alabama. Original data from: The National Archives, Retrieved from at October 31, 2019. (http://www.fold3.com)
  • Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 31 October 2019), memorial page for Dr Jeremiah Manasco (16 Jan 1832–1 May 1862), Find A Grave Memorial no. 36762080, citing Manasco Cemetery, Townley, Walker County, Alabama, USA ; Maintained by ~A MS Bama Son~® (contributor 46971531) .
  • Manasco, Karen, Genealogy.com’s Manasco Forum, August 26, 2004, https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/manasco/207/
  • National Park Service, Soldier and Sailor’s Database, 22nd Alabama Infantry, https://www.nps.gov/civilwar/search-battle-units-detail.htm?battleUnitCode=CAL0022RI , accessed October 30, 2019. 





Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Lebanon Baptist Church Cemetery

Location:
County Road 55
Falkville, Morgan County, Alabama
34.370857  -86.969462
Find A Grave Cemetery ID: 2140862

Date of Visit: March 19, 2015

James A Kilpatrick
Pvt Co I 5 Ala Cav
Confederate States Army
Jun 4 1836.  Dec 18 1926

Henry Quattlebaum
Co C
Hardie’s Cav
Ala Vols
CSA
April 15 1847
March 29 1926

McKendree Cemetery

Location:
County Road 55
Falkville, Morgan County, Alabama
34.370178  -87.022619
Find A Grave Cemetery ID: 24357

Date of Visit: March 19, 2015

William H Gibson
Pvt Co I 5 Ala Cav
Confederate States Army
Jul 16 1840  Nov 23 1901

Guin City Cemetery

Location:
11th Avenue
Guin, Marion County, Alabama
33.965218 -87.909691
Find A Grave Cemetery ID: 23174

Date of Visit: March 14, 2015


James A McCowan
Co A. 1 Ala Cav
Confederate States Army
Feb 18 1842     Dec 26 1899


Dr. Jeremiah Guin
Company I
43 Ala Infantry

Dr. Guin was the man for whom the town of Guin was named after he gave the railroad the right of way through his land, and negotiated a train stop there. He was a county physician, farmer, and business owner. Dr. Guin does not have a government issued marker. Information about this man is inscribed in a series of three panels in a brick monument. 

  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6656240/jeremiah-m-guin : accessed 05 July 2022), memorial page for Dr Jeremiah M. Guin Sr. (13 Nov 1831–20 Jan 1890), Find a Grave Memorial ID 6656240, citing Guin City Cemetery, Guin, Marion County, Alabama, USA ; Maintained by Janie Spencer (contributor 46546614) .


Welti Cumberland Presbyterian Church

Location:
County Road 747
Welti, Cullman County, Alabama
34.138732 -86.738233
Find A Grave Cemetery ID: 1970334

Date of Visit: March 4, 2015

William W. Williams
Pvt Co E 1 Regt Ga Cav
Confederate States Army
May 21 1840  Dec 13 1918

A Note to Visitors