Washington County Georgia Biographies Zachariah Smith File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by msmithjr@nlamerica.com Milo Smith, Jr. Georgia Table of Contents: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/gafiles.htm Descendants of ZACHARIAH SMITH ZACHARIAH SMITH Milo Smith, Jr. ZACHARIAH SMITH was born April 07, 1824 in WASHINGTON COUNTY, and died September 16, 1863 in WASHINGTON COUNTY. He married SOPHIA BURNETTE November 14, 1854 in WASHINGTON COUNTY, daughter of ISMA BURNETTE and ELIZABETH HUTCHINS. In the 1848 tax digest, he owned 46.5 acres of pineland adjoining Peacock and his brother, Thomas B. Smith and paid a tax of 43 and 42/100 cents. In 1849 his land remained the same, but in 1850 and in 1851 he sold his land and paid a poll tax of 25 cents. In the 1850 census he was living with his brother. Thomas B. Smith and both owned 46.5 acre farms. In the 1860 census, he was living in the 89th District on his farm which was worth $1,200.00, and his personal property was worth $2,700.00. Living in his home were his wife, Sophia, 23, Micajah A., 6, Silas, 4, and a two month old infant. His farm consisted of 80 acres of improved land and 300 acres of unimproved land. His tools were worth $15.00. His livestock consisted of 1 mule, 8 oxen, and 55 hogs worth $400.00. He produced 18 bushels of wheat, 400 bushels of corn, 3200 pounds of cotton, 12 bushels of peas, 100 bushels of sweet potatoes, 2 tons of hay, $50.00 worth of home manufacturers, and $104.00 worth of animals slaughtered. THEY HAD FIVE CHILDREN AS FOLLOWS: (1) Robert E. Smith born December 6, 1863, died February 15, 1944 married Anne Frost, born April 7, 1873, died December 13, 1933 (2) Charles A. Smith, never Married (3) Silas Smith, born September 24, 1857, died September 30, 1890, married Mamie Vickers, who later married Tom Jones (4) Macajah Addison M. Smith, Born January 24, 1856, never married, died August 12, 1885 (5) Zachariah D. Smith, born on November 16, 1869, never married, died on November 18, 1879 Zachariah was a private in Co. H, 2nd Regiment, Georgia State Line Troops, CSA.He entered the service of the Georgia State line sometime in February of 1863 according his wife sophia's widow's pension application filed in September of 1863 in Johnson County, Georgia.. Perhaps he entered the service at the time of the call to arms on February 11, 1863 by Colonel (at that time Captain) Beverly D. Evans. We do know that Lt. Col. Beverly D. Evans, who had a law practice and lived in Sandersville, Washington County, Georgia, headed up this particular unit. The Confederacy had two Acts of Conscription of men into the war. The first was for men up to the age of 35, and the next was for men from 35 to 45 years old, and took place in October of 1862. Micajah would have been 38 years old at that time since he was born in 1824. Lt. Colonel Evans began in September of 1862 when he was elected Colonel of the 13th Regiment of the Georgia State Milita. He was determined to raise a company for Confederate Service and he had gathered about thirty men when the word of the Governor's call for two State regiments reached him. He decided to offer his men for state service and recruited up to the necessary strength, drawing not only from Washington County, But from Warren County and Emanuel County as well, despite what he called the "relentless hands of the conscription officers"." The company styled the"Joe Brown Volunteers," was accepted in January 1863. Upon acceptance of the state captaincy to which his men elected him, Evans resigned the militia colonelcy which until that time had protected him from Confederate conscription. As the time approached for regimental organization, Captain Evans had the following notice printed in the Sandersville Central Georgian for February 11, 1863: Attention Joe Brown Volunteers! You are hereby ordered to parade at Sandersville MONDAY 16th instant at 12 o'clock P. M. for inspection and pay and to be formally enrolled in the State Service, pursuant to orders from the Adjutant and Inspector General. Every member of the Company will be expected to be present and no excuse considered valid that accounts for his absence. Each member will bring with him a Blanket, Quilt, or Counterpane, and also at least two days rations to subsist on, preparatory to take the cars for Fort Valley, Houston County, Georgia, the place of rendezvous designated. The rendevous for regimental elections was to be on the 16th, but not at the place designated. Quartermaster General Foster had not carefully investigated Fort Valley's suitability as a rendezvous point; he discovered only five days before the troops were to assemble that the village was entirely unsatisfactory: "Timber scarce, no running water in four miles, few wells, deep and poorly supplied with water." Foster Suggested that one of the two stations on the Central of Georgia Railroad, Gordon, or Griswoldville, would serve. The govenor chose Griswoldville and telegrams were hastily dispatched to the company commanders involved, notifying them of the change. Griswoldville was near to the line between Twiggs and Jones Counties, the site of a battle on November 22, 1864. The forces engaged were, 2nd Brigade, 1st. Division, XV Corps, Army of the Tennessee and two regiments of calvary (US); 1st. Division Georgia Milita and Calvary Corps, Department of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. The Union Commander was Brig. Gen. Charles Walcutt (US) ; Brig. Gen. Pleasant J. Phillips and Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler (CS) The casualties were estimated at 712 total, of which the Union forces lost 62 and the Confederate forces lost 650 men. The result was, of course, a Union victory. So at Griswoldville, the Second Regiment met, while the First Regiment assembled above Atlanta at Big Shanty, location of Camp McDonald. The Second Regiment's encampment, called Camp Wayne after the adjutant general, was located west of Sam Griswold's industrial village. Thus the early beginning of Zachariah Smith's unit the 2nd Regiment of the Georgia State Line. He was supposed to have been at Camp Wilson on August 10, 1863. Camp Wilson is located about 115 miles north of Atlanta. It's location on an 1863 map showing the posts and camps of the Georgia State Line Troops, also shows that it was about 8-10 miles south of Ringold, Georgia on Chickamuga Creek and what was the Western and Atlantic Railroad. Also located about that area was Catoosa Platform, Camp Coosa which was later renamed Camp Wilson, possibly for Captain, later Colonel James Wilson a thirty-four old lawyer from Terrell County who had earlier served 15 months in the 5th Georgia Regiment. Zachariah's son Robert E. Smith said he died of "camp dysentary", but his wife Sophia's pension application in Johnson Co., Georgia says he died of measles while at home on furlough. The application also verifies the date of his death as September 16, 1863 when he was only 39 years old, which is incorrectly listed in Elizabeth Newson's Washington County Toomstone Book as September 16, 1868. He is buried at the Young cemetary and Sophia is buried at the City Cemetary in Glenwood, Georgia. We also do not know at this time when they moved to Johnson County from Washington County, since Sophia apparently, at least at the time she made application for a pension, was living in Johnson County. Sophia Burnette died in Wheeler on January 28, 1905 where she had been living with her youngest son Robert E. Smith. She lived with him the latter days of her life. He had moved there from Washington County around 1900 and then he moved back to Johnson County sometime before 1910, where he lived until sometime after 1920 he moved to Dublin, Georgia, Laurens County, and lived for a time East of Dublin on now Highway 80 just outside of town where he engaged in farming. Additional information pertaining to the "Georgia State Line", Zecharih's regiment and his company muster roll may be found may be found in a book in the Laurens County Library by the name of "Joe Brown's Army, The Georgia State Line, by William Bragg. A SPECIAL NOTE: August 24, 1997 Zachariah Smith was the father of Robert E. Smith, the Grandfather of Milo Smith, Sr. and the great-grandfather of William R. "Bill" Smith and Milo Smith, Jr. William R. "Bill" Smith and Milo Smith, Jr. have in their posession several pieces of confederate money that apparently belonged to their great-grandmother, Sophia Burnette Smith. Some of this is actually printed on the backs of real newspapers. Apparently the South was so desperate to keep money in circulation that they had resorted to printing it on anything that they could. This money was left to them by their father, which was handed down to him by his father, Robert E. Smith. This money, was in all probability the former property of Robert's mother Sophia. They also have in their posession a Confederate Bond. This bond is is a "coupon bond" whereby the purchaser could clip a coupon each six months and redeem it. It is also a bearer bond, that is, no person's name is stated on the face of the bond, it could, in fact, have been redeemed by anyone who had posession of it. The original face value of this bond was $500.00 and apparently only one coupon was ever clipped, since only one is missing. Our recollection from having been told by our father, Milo Smith, Sr. is that their great grandmother, Sophia, after our great grandfather went off to the war, sold the farm and bought this bond. The agricultural census record of 1860 shows that he had a farm that consisted of 380 acres of both "improved" and "unimproved" land, and that, according to the census, was worth $1,200.00, which was quite a sum at that time. If our recollection is/was true, then her selling the farm might tie in with the fact that he died with measles while at home on furlough from the Confederate Army. Robert E. Smith, our grandfather, was born after his father died. We know that this is a genuine CSA Bond, however for verification purposes we have also found the following information. (1) Stated on the face of the bond is "AUTHORIZED by the ACT of CONGRESS, CSA of AUGUST 19, 1861. (This was one of the official authorizations dates) (2) The official record shows that 1,933 of this type of bond was issued with this authorization date. (3) The record also shows that the official engraver was "DUNCAN" (4) The record also shows that the official due date for redemption of this bond was to be July 1, 1877. (5) The picture on the face of this bond was a man by the name of Howell Cobb. (He was Major General Howell Cobb who commanded the Georgia State Guards and an archenemy of then Govenor Joe Brown) (6) The record also shows that this particular bond was number "1699" out of 1,933 that were issued. (7) The face amount of this bond was $500.00 Notes for SOPHIA BURNETTE: The year was 1863. The Civil War had been going on since 1861. The war had not yet come to Middle Georgia, but many brave young men from Washington County had already left for service in the Confederate Military. The men from Washington County had been assigned to the 28th Georgia Infantry, which was headquartered at Camp Stevens near Griffin Georgia. This unit later served through many of the important battles of the Civil War such as Manassas Junction, Yorktown, Williamsburg, Seven Pines, Seven Days Battle, Malvern Hill, South Mountain, Antietam, Fredicksburg, and Chancellorsville. By August of 1863 the Georgians were in Charleston, and help garrison Forts Wagner and Gregg on Morris Island, and later Fort Johnson, and Fort Sumpter. In February of 1864 the 28th fought at Olustee under command of Captains William Crawford and James Banning. The 28th Georgia lost ninety-five in the battle The regiment fought at Cold Harbor and Petersburg before being assigned to North Carolina where it surrendered in 1865. The Confederacy had two conscriptions for men to serve in the military. The first one was for men who were from 18 through 35 years of age. However, in October of 1862 the Confederacy issued another conscription which would take men from the age of 36 through 45. Beverly D. Evans, who had a law practice in Sandersville, at the request of then Governor Joe Brown,issued a call to arms for men of that area. Colonel, at that time Captain, Evans issued this call to arms on February 11, 1863. At the request of the Governor, Lt. Colonel Evans began in September of 1862 when he was elected Colonel of the 13th Regiment of the Georgia State Militia. He was determined to raise a company for Confederate service and had gathered about thirty men when the word of the Governor’s call for two State regiments reached him in Sandersville. He decided to offer his men for State service and recruited up to the necessary strength, drawing not only from Washington County, but from Warren County and Emanuel County as well, despite what he called the “relentless hand of the conscription officers”. The company styled the “Joe Brown Volunteers”, was accepted by the State of Georgia in January of 1863. Upon acceptance of the State Captaincy to which his men elected him, Evans resigned the militia colonelcy which had until that time protected him from Confederate conscription. As the time approached for regimental organization, Captain Evans had the following notice printed in the Sandersville Central Georgian for February 11, 1863. Attention Joe Brown Volunteers! You are hereby ordered to parade at Sandersville MONDAY 16th instant at 12 o’clock P.M. for inspection and pay to be formally enrolled in the State service, pursuant to orders from the adjutant and inspector General. Every member of the company will be expected to be present and no excuse considered valid that accounts for his absence. Each member will bring with him a Blanket, Quilt, or Counterpane, and also at least two days rations to subsist on. preparatory to taking the rail cars for Fort Valley, Houston County, Georgia, the place of rendezvous designated. Zachariah Smith answered this call on February 16, 1863! Zechariah Smith was born on April 7, 1824 in Washington County, Georgia. He was a son of Micajah and Elizabeth Duty Smith. Micajah was born in Chatam County North Carolina on July 18, 1786, a son of Colby and Anne Henry Smith. Colby Subsequently moved to Burke County, Georgia and then to Washington County Georgia where Micajah probably met Elizabeth and they married around 1810. Sophia Burnette Smith was born in Washington County, Georgia on September 15, 1832. Her father was Isma Burnette and her mother was Elizabeth Hutchins. Her father, Isma was from a line of Burnetts who can be traced back to around 1790 in Martin County, North Carolina. The Burnetts subsequently moved to South Carolina and then to Burke and Washington County, Georgia. Sophia and Zachariah had met in Washington County where they later married on November 14, 1854, and they lived there until they moved to Johnson County. The minutes of Bethany Baptist Church located in Washington County, shows that they joined the fellowship of that church August 11, 1859. According to the 1860 agricultural census of Washington County, Zachariah and Sophia were farming on some land in the 89th District in Washington County. That census showed their farm was worth $1,200, and their personal property was worth $2,700. Living in the home at that time were Zachariah, age 36, Sophia, age 28, Micajah Addison, age 4, William Silas, Age, 3 and a two month old infant named Zachariah D. Smith. Zachariah and Sophia managed somehow to accumulate the sum of $500.00. It could have been from the sale of personal property, or it could have been from the sale of some of their farm land, which according the agricultural census in Washington County, they had a total of 380 acres of land which was valued at $1,200.00. On the 6th day of January 1863, they purchased a Confederate Bond with this $500.00, a coupon Bond, which was but one of the several types of bonds issued by the Confederacy during the war. According to the statement on the face of the bond, the bearer would be able to redeem a coupon every six months until the July of 1877 when it was all supposed to be paid off. Unfortunately for Sophia, the war ended, the South having lost, and the bond was worthless, only one coupon was ever clipped from the bond. When Zachariah was getting ready to leave with his unit of the Georgia State Line Troops, they found that Sophia was pregnant and that she would be expecting, probably in December of that year. When Zachariah left home to join his unit they had at home Charles Smith, 2 years old, William Silas Smith, 6 years old, Micajah Addison Smith, 7 years old, and Zachariah D. Smith, 4 years old. All the business and farming affairs were left in the hands of Sophia. As Zachariah’s regiment had notified him, they were to assemble on the 16th of February and rendezvous at Fort Valley, Georgia. Quartermaster General Foster had not been careful to investigate Fort Valley’s suitability as a rendezvous point; he discovered only five days before the troops were to assemble that the village of Fort Valley was entirely unsatisfactory: Timber scarce, and no running water in four miles, few wells, and poorly supp lied with water." Foster suggested that one of the two stations on the Central of Georgia Railroad, Gordon or Griswoldville, would serve. The governor choose Griswoldville and telegrams were hastily dispatched to the company commanders involved notifying them of the change. Griswoldville was near to the Twiggs and Jones County lines, the site of a later battle on November of 1864. So at Griswoldville, Zechariah’s regiment, the Second Regiment met, while the First Regiment assembled above Atlanta at Big Shanty, location of Camp McDonald. The Second Regiment’s encampment, called Camp Wayne after the adjutant general was located west of Sam Griswold’s industrial village. Zachariah was officially assigned as a private in Company H, 2nd Regiment, Georgia State Line Troops, CSA. Thus the early beginnings of Zachariah Smith’s unit of the Georgia State line. From February to April of 1863 the State Line was sent to form part of Savannah’s garrison, and then was sent briefly to Charleston, SC in early April. By August 10, 1863, Zechariah’s unit was at Camp Wilson, Georgia. This Camp was about 115 miles north of Atlanta. It’s location on an 1863 map showing the posts and camps of the Georgia State Line Troops, also showed that it was about 8-10 miles south of Ringold, Georgia on Chickamauga Creek and what was then the Western and Atlantic Railroad. Also located in that area was Catoosa Platform, Camp Coosa, which was later renamed Camp Wilson, possibly for Captain, later Colonel, James Wilson, a thirty-four old lawyer from Terrell County who had earlier served 15 months in the 5th Georgia Regiment. Apparently Zachariah developed measles at Camp Wilson sometime during the month of August. Like any other diseases of that day, they did not have a medical cure for measles and subsequently his unit commander sent him to Washington County and his wife Sophia. He did not live very long after returning home. and he died on September 16, 1863 at the age of 39. The effects of his death must have been extraordinarily difficult for Sophia since she was left with four small children at home and was expecting another in December. Soon after Zachariah’s death in September, Sophia filed a widow’s pension application in Johnson County. With no one at home to help with the children or the farm. she faced the prospect of a bleak and long winter. While her parents were still living, and doubtless some relatives, the loss of her husband and the prospect of another small child at home must have been very painful for Sophia. Little did She know at that time, her life was to suffer many more hardships before it was over. Her eldest son, Micajah Addison graduated from the Medical College of Georgia in August of 1884 at the age of 24 years old. He then set up a practice of medicine in Johnson County and Laurens County around Lovett, Georgia and practiced there for a relative short period of time. He became sick with typhoid fever and returned home to his mother and died soon thereafter on August 12th of 1885 at the age of 29. Her son William Silas lived to begin a family, but also died at an early age of 33 on September 31, 1890 of typhoid fever, his wife being pregnant with their child for four months when he died. Her son Zachariah D. Smith was not married. He had the measles but he liked to hunt so much that he went hunting anyway. While he was on this hunting trip, he was trying to cross a rainswollen creek on a fallen log, and slipped into the creek. He became very ill after he arrived at home, developed pneumonia and died just a short time later of complications from measles and pneumonia at the age of 20 years. Her son Charles Smith also never married. He was at one time the treasurer of Washington County. Like his brothers, he became sick with typhoid fever and died shortly thereafter at the age of 49 years. However, on December 6th of 1863, three months after her husband had died, and ninteen days before Christmas, another son was born to Sophia Burnette Smith. His name was Robert Eugene Smith. He was to become the father of Milo Smith, Sr. along with eleven other children and the Grandfather of William R. Bill Smith and Milo Smith, Jr. While celebrating Christmas in 1863, Sophia must have felt like she had a lot to be thankful for after all. Children of ZACHARIAH SMITH and SOPHIA BURNETTE are: ZACHARIAH D.6 SMITH, b. WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA; d. November 18, 1879, WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA. MICAJAH ADDISON SMITH, b. January 24, 1856, WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA; d. August 12, 1885, WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA. Notes for MICAJAH ADDISON SMITH: HE GRADUATED FROM THE MEDICAL COLLEGE AT AUGUSTA IN 1884 HE THEN PRACTICED MEDICINE IN JOHNSON COUNTY NEAR SCOTT, GA., AND LAURENS COUNTY NEAR LOVETT, GEORGIA FOR A RELATIVELY SHORT PERIOD OF TIME. HE BECAME SICK WITH TYPHOID FEVER AND RETURNED TO HIS MOTHER'S HOME IN WASHINGTON COUNTY WHERE HE DIED ON AUGUST 12, 1885 AT THE AGE OF 29. HE IS BURIED IN THE YOUNG CEMETARY IN WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA. HE WAS NEVER MARRIED. WILLIAM SILAS SMITH, b. October 24, 1857, WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA; d. September 03, 1890, WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA. ROBERT E. SMITH, b. December 06, 1863, WASHINGTON COUNTY, GEORGIA; d. February 15, 1944, DUBLIN, LAURENS COUNTY, GEORGIA. CHARLES T. SMITH, b. November 10, 1861, WASHINGTON COUNTY; d. June 06, 1910, WASHINGTON COUNTY. Submitter: Milo Smith, Jr. ======================== USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages cannot be reproduced in any format for profit or other presentation. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for FREE access. ==============