Chambers CO. AL L. W. Harmon Obituary Don Clark The following obituary is from "The LaFayette Sun", 1901: MR. HARMON, OF BEAT 4, BY MR. HEFLIN. Oh! Where is he who heard in former hours, his country's call in these chivalric bowers? Gone? Yes he is gone. From the old county of of Chambers another land mark has passed away from his friends and loved ones. While passing through the POOL Plantation near his home, Mr. WALTER HARMON fell into the icy arms of death and his spirit passed over the river. This old citizen, I am told, once filled the offices of Sheriff and Tax Collector of Chambers County, and when the South sent the flower of her manhood to battle in defense of those principles that were right and that can never die, in the grim front of battle-in the thickest of the fight, stood this then buoyant and brave son of Chambers. He was an ardent lover of the Confederacy and wept bitterly, as did thousands of other brave souls, when its star went down. Of him his old comrade, JOE CARLISLE said to me, "A braver soldier never shouldered a gun." He had his faults-who has not? I knew him and judged him to be a man of rugged honesty and good purpose. Let us hope in that mysterious beyond to which he has gone, he has found a God who has given peace to his soul. And when the last land mark of the Confederacy is gone may there be no comrade lost, but a re-united army in that land where all is peace and God is king. Note: Tombstone inscription at Macedonia Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery: LEONARD WALTER HARMON, March 3, 1838 - January 17, 1901 3rd Corporal, Company "G" 37th AL Inf. Reg.