Coffee County AlArchives Biographies.....Bowdoin, Daniel T. 1840 - living in 1893 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/al/alfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Ann Anderson alabammygrammy@aol.com May 15, 2004, 11:39 pm Author: Brant & Fuller (1893) DANIEL T. BOWDOIN, planter of Beat No. 6, Coffee county, Ala., was born in Stewart county, Ga., in 1840. He is a son of Turner and Rebecca (Maddox) Bowdoin, natives probably of Monroe county, Ga., where they were reared and educated and whence they removed to Stewart county. About 1855, they moved to Coffee county, Ala., and lived there until about 1880, when they removed to Texas, where they both died in 1890, aged about ninety years. They were both Methodists. Mr. Bowdoin was a blacksmith, wood worker, etc., and also a farmer. He was very industrious and accumulated a good deal of property, but lost heavily in slaves on account of the war. He was one of a large family reared by William Bowdoin, who died in Georgia and who was one of the early settlers. Daniel T. Bowdoin was the fifth of eleven children, viz.: Emeline S., widow of S. W. Stevson; Eli. O., of Crenshaw county, who served in company K, Twenty-fifth Alabama infantry, from 1852 until the close of the war, being wounded once; John and William, twins, were both in the same company in the army; John lost an arm at Chattanooga, and William died after the war; Benjamin, deceased; Octavia, deceased, wife of William H. H. Donelson; Laura, deceased; Dora, wife of William Taylor of Texas; Trambrona; Robert; and Jane, wife of William Brown of Texas. Daniel T. Bowdoin, was reared on a farm, received a limited education, and married at eighteen years of age, in 1858, Miss Tempa A. Mills, whose parents were in all probabilty South Carolinians, but who died at Memphis, Tenn., when Tempa A. was a girl. She was born in Pike county, Ala., where her parents lived a short time. She is the mother of ten children, viz.: James Thomas, died in infancy; Sarah Victoria, died while young; General Washington; John C.; Daniel Theodore; Josephus; Turner Monroe; Rebecca; Francis, and one that died in infancy. Mr. Bowdoin has lived near Elba ever since he has been in Alabama. In August, 1862, he joined company K, Twenty-fifth Alabama infantry, and served with Gen. Bragg in 'the Kentucky campaign, and was in the battle of Murfreesboro, the only general battle in which he was engaged, but he was in many skirmishes. He was struck by a shell at Murfreesboro in the left leg, and at Chattanooga he became so afflicted that he was furloughed home. He did no more active service in the war, and from the wound he has never recovered. He has, however, since returning home performed considerable labor on the farm, and has followed farming all his life. He now resides three miles north of Elba, where he has a farm of nearly 2,000 acres, of which about 1,000 are in the home tract, the rest being scattered and some of it being pine timbered, lands. He has acquired it all by hard labor and good management. Upon this farm he is engaged in raising general supplies and cotton. Mrs. Bowdoin is a Methodist Protestant. Mr. Bowdoin is not a politician, but he liberally supports the democratic party, notwithstanding he was reared a whig. Additional Comments: from "Memorial Record of Alabama", Vol. I, p. 655-656 This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/alfiles/ File size: 3.6 Kb