Nansemond County Virginia USGenWeb Archives Military.....Civil War veterans ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/va/vafiles.htm ************************************************ Nansemond County Civil War Veterans - biographical sketches - notes & trivia - 1898 roster of veterans John Wesley Addison 9th Virginia Inf., Co. F John was born April 3, 1833. He was an oysterman by trade. He married Mary Eliza Moore (11/28/1838-05/04/1900) on November 12, 1854, and together raised eight children. He enlisted at Cedar Point, first appearing on the rolls April 14, 1862. He served in the division guard May 1863 - August 1864. John died Sept. 1906. "Frank" Francis Marion Alford 19th Battalion Virginia Heavy Artillery, Company B (Capt. Henderson's Eastern Shore Co.), Private Alford was born July 1827, the son of Benjamin Ward and Martha Pugh Cherry Alford (buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Norfolk). His father was Captain of the Portsmouth Light Dragoons, which was posted to Jerusalem [now Courtland] in the aftermath of the 1831 Southampton Insurrection. Frank claimed to have inherited Nat Turner's sword from his father, although that claim was disputed, and that is not the provenance of the sword recognized as Turner's. Frank was educated in Carlisle, PA, & Wake Forest, NC, studying law & medicine, although he never practiced, having inherited "a competency" - a quarter of his father's estate. Frank 1m. Mary Cornelia Forrest (1829-1864) July 17, 1854 in Norfolk Co.; she is buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond; they had one son. He 2m. Susanne Caroline McPherson (1852-1933) Jan. 26, 1870 in Gates Co., NC; she applied for a pension Mar. 17, 1928 in Suffolk, stating they m. Jan. 27, 1870 in Sunbury, Gates Co., NC; they had two sons and two daughters. He was stationed at the Naval Hospital in Portsmouth, Va.; after he regained his health, he clerked for the Richmond Commissary. He died May 26, 1901 in Suffolk, of Bright's disease. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block O, Lot 95. (no dates on stone) (CSA) Edward Archibald Allen 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private He was the son of Archibald and Mary Swepson Allen of Suffolk, Va. He was born Oct. 3, 1843 in Nansemond Co. and married Priscilla Armistead Saunders. Allen graduated from University of Virginia, was professor of English at the University of Missouri and professor of Language at Farmville College after the war. He died in 1922. Robert Riddick Allen 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Allen was born Dec.18,1845 in Nansemond Co., the son of Archibald and Mary Swepson Allen. He married Frances Jones Cosby (1859-1896) on Jan. 27, 1891. Allen was believed to have been killed in the war but appeared at his home riding a mule after the war. He entered the business world and became one of the most substantial business men of his day in Suffolk. He always took great interest in the Tom Smith Camp of Confederate Veterans and was one of the last survivors of that organization. He died Nov. 15, 1920 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 44. Robert Pierce Allman 13th Virginia Cavalry, Co. C, Private Robert was born in Southampton Co., Va. on May 15, 1837, son of Lewis and Lucy Camp Allman. He enlisted in the spring of 1862 and was wounded and discharged by surgeon's certicate just eight months later. His wife was Martha Jane Whitfield Allman and had two children; Robert H. and Lucy Jane Allman. Robert died in January 1886 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk, Va. William J. Allmond 9th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private. Allmond was born Dec. 12, 1837. He was discharged Nov.8, 1862 by a surgeon's certificate. His wife was Marie Allmond. He died Dec. 13, 1903 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 44. William A. Almond Commissary Department CSA, Co. C., Private. Almond was born Jan. 10, 1834. He married Sarah M. (1839-1922) and died Mar. 9, 1914. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 64. (CSA) Benjamin Franklin Ames 3rd Virginia Infantry, Co. F, Sergeant Ames was born in 1836, the son of John and Mary Rose Ames of Nansemond Co. He married Roxanne Va.Mo. Riddick (b. 1840), daughter of Edward Cunningham and Unice Catherine Pierce Riddick, February 7, 1855. Ames died of wounds received at Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. A stone was placed in the family cemetery in the Sleepy Hole district of Nansemond Co., but he was buried on the battlefield at Gettysburg. Later his body was removed and reinterred in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond. His widow remarried in 1867, to widower Dempsey Langston, also a veteran. John Wesley Ames, Sr. 13th Virginia Infantry, Co. F, 1st Lt. Ames was born Feb. 24, 1822, the son of John and Mary Rose Ames of Nansemond Co. He resigned from the Confederate Army at Camp Cook in July of 1861. He was a farmer, Mason and a trustee on the board of Yeates Free School. He lived in Belleville, Nansemond Co. after the war. His second wife was Martha Ann Wainwright (1829-1909), the daughter of Thomas and Nancy Baker Wainwright. They had seven children. Ames was a magistrate and an Overseer of the Poor. He died in Norfolk on May 6, 1903 and is buried in the Ames family cemetery in the Bennett's Creek area of Suffolk, Va. Richard Baker Ames CSA Richard was born June 18, 1838, the son of John and Mary A. Rose Ames of Nansemond Co., Va. He married Martha Jane Gaskins (12/31/1841-10/02/1915) and together raised four children. Richard died February 7, 1872 and is buried in the family cemetery in Bennett's Creek area of Suffolk, Va. W.J. Apperson 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private He later transferred to the CS Navy. Benjamin Franklin Archer 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Archer was born September 1, 1845, the son of Stephen and Mary Ann Archer. He married Margaret Ann Archer (1849-1893), daughter of William and Polly Archer. He died September 7, 1917 and is buried on the family farm in Suffolk, Va. Calvin Archer 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company E (2nd), Sergeant. Archer was born in 1836 in Nansemond Co., Va., the son of William and Polly Archer. Calvin died at Pt. Lookout, Maryland, of pneumonia April 2, 1865 and is buried there in Grave #1394. Stephen B. Archer 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Archer was born April 2, 1832 the son of William and Polly Archer. He was a school teacher in Nansemond Co., Va. Archer was discharged by a surgeon on June 23, 1862 because he had a heart problem. He was a farmer and died March 2, 1894. Rufus Arline 41st Virginia, Company I, Private Arline was born in 1844 in Nansemond Co., Va., the son of John W. and Hester Arline, who owned a 76-acre farm seven miles SE of Suffolk. In 1863 he was sick in the hospital and was listed as missing on the final roll. Beverly Arthur Armistead [also appears as Armstead] 13th Virginia Cavalry, Co. I, Private and 1st Sgt. Born 07/10/1834, he was the son of Francis Noble and Catherine Lucretia Harris Armistead. His wife was Laura Collins Armistead. Beverly died 11/26/1886 in Portsmouth, Virginia. [paroled at Appomattox] Robinson Arnold 59th Virginia Militia, 3rd Company Arnold was born Dec. 22, 1825. While being confined in the Union prison at Pt. Lookout, Maryland, he lost his eyesight. Arnold wrote the book "Uncle Alec and his Mule" and invented a new sort of bee hive. He was burned to death when his house caught fire on Mar. 22, 1911 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D. Francis Marion Arthur 9th Virginia Infantry, Co. I, 2nd Lt. Arthur was born February 17, 1843, the son of James S. and Charlotte Ward Arthur. He had a fair complexion, light hair, blue eyes and was 6'2" tall. At the Battle of Gettysburg on July 3, 1863 on the slope of Cemetery Ridge Arthur's company lost twenty-seven out of the thirty-eight men that went into the fight. He married in 1872, Mary Irvin Williams (1853-1936), daughter of Hardy C. and Adelaide Sangster Williams. He was a farmer after the war. He died Feb. 25, 1902 of mouth cancer and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 78. (CSA) John Calvin Arthur 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Corporal - promoted to 2nd Lt. Arthur was born in 1838, the son of James S. and Charlotte Arthur. He died of wounds received in Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. Patrick Henry Arthur 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, 1st Sergeant Arthur was born in 1839 the son of James S. and Charlotte Arthur. He married Margaret Long Cowper (1840-1912), daughter of Richard Green and Margaret Long Cowper, and was a doctor. He died in 1899. William James Arthur 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Captain Arthur was born in 1827, the son of James S. and Charlotte Arthur. He was a farmer before the war. He resigned at Yorktown in April of 1862. After the war he lived in the Sleepy Hole district of Nansemond Co. and taught at Belleville. His wife was Martha Caroline Arthur. Hiram T. Artman 3rd Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Private later Ord. Dept., Private. Artman was born February 8, 1830 in Penn. He married Mary E. (1825-1896). After the war he owned H.T. Artman & Son Carriage & Harness Shop on South Main St. in Suffolk. The building is still standing and is called the Artman building. Hiram died November 18, 1909 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Lot 105, Block F. (CSA) Addison Ashburn 6th, Virginia Infantry, Company E, Sergeant Ashburn was born in 1827, the son of Elisha and Elizabeth Ashburn, and was a farmer. He was wounded May 8, 1864 at the Battle of the Wilderness and died May 22, 1864. Benjamin Franklin Ashburn 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Ashburn was born Oct. 16, 1842, in Nansemond Co., the son of Sylvester K. and Martha A. Ashburn. He was severely wounded in the Battle of Second Manassas; after recovery, he was in charge of medical supplies in Mobile, AL, & Charlotte, NC. Ashburn married Mollie Lassiter (11/26/1848-1/17/1930) Mar. 13, 1872, in Henderson, NC, and he was confirmed in the Episcopal church there in 1873. He conducted business in Baltimore, MD, 1866 to 1890. Ashburn died in May 15, 1902, in Norfolk, after attending Confederate memorial activities, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 49. No dates given on his stone. (CSA) Photos of stone, D.Cert. & obit posted with Find a Grave Mem. #9797953. His widow applied for a penion July 16, 1926, in Warwick Co. George W. Ashburn 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A., Private Ashburn was the son of Sylvester K. and Martha A. Ashburn and was born in 1845. He was killed July 1, 1862 at Malvern Hill. Henry Ashburn 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Sergeant Ashburn was born July 29, 1839 in Nansemond Co., the son of Elisha and Louvinia "Winney" Simons Ashburn. He enlisted Aug. 6, 1861 as a private, was promoted to corporal May 1, 1862, and to sergeant Aug. 1, 1864. He was paroled at Appomattox C.H. He married Elmira Frances Gardner (4/2/1844-3/13/1922) ca. 1868. He was a farmer in Chuckatuck District, Nansemond Co. He died August 23, 1913, and both are buried in Western Branch Baptist Church Cemetery. Peter Ashburn 13th Virginia Cavalry, Co. K, Private Ashburn was born July 25, 1832 in Nansemond Co., son of Elisha and Louvinia "Winney" Simons Ashburn. His first wife was Elnora Gay (1835-1866); his 2nd, Judith Caroline McClenny (1844-1921). He died March 4, 1908 and is buried in Western Branch Baptist Church Cemetery. Richard Davidson Ashley CSA Richard was born July 14, 1844. His wife was Texanna Umphlett Ashley (7/10/1856-6/20/1926). He died February 6, 1910. They are buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. Jacob W. Austin 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Austin was born in April 1829 in Virginia. He lived in the Holy Neck district of Nansemond Co., listing as address of Hallaup, Virginia. His wife was Emerline N. Darden (01/1842-01/1925). He received a pension by 1911. Jacob died October 1905, and is buried in the family cemtery near the intersection of Ellis and Gates Road. (see Nan.Vol. 2) Richard Austin 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Austin was born ca. 1835, son of John and Dorchas Austin. He enlisted in June 1861 and was present for the final roll call. George W. Babb 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Babb was born September 9, 1836 in Nansemond Co. and was the son of James Sr. and Cinthia Babb. His family owned a small 47-acre farm 8 miles SW of Suffolk. He applied for a pension 29 Oct 1909, being "too old and feeble to do any work." His wife Sarah Ann Outland (06/06/1849-12/27/1919) received a pension after his death. He died November 16, 1911 in Nansemond County and is buried in the Babb-Rawles family cemetery on Rt. 664. Meritt E. Babb 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Babb was born in 1839 in Isle of Wight County, the son of Willis and Martha Babb. Before the war he was a laborer on T.G. Williams' farm in Nansemond Co. He died in Richmond December 15, 1862 of Typhoid Fever. Nathaniel Babb 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Babb was born February 29, 1826 in Nansemond Co., Va., the son of James Sr. and Cinthia Jones Babb, and was a farmer. He was 6 feet tall, light complexion, gray eyes and dark hair. He enlisted August 17, 1861. During a small raid at Williamsburg in May 1863, he was shot in the back below his left shoulder, and he carried that pistol ball the rest of his life, "rendering that side almost useless." After the war he got a pension from the state and was living in Holland, Va. He appears in the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County). He died February 28, 1904 and is buried in Poplar Spring Cemetery in Franklin, Va. - Section 1, Plot 18/19. William H. Babb 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd ), Corporal Babb was born in 1832 in Isle of Wight County, the son of Willis W. and Martha Babb. He was killed in battle at 2nd Manassas, April 13, 1864. There was a claim made by Nathaniel Riddick, attorney, for $77.00 in the name of Elizabeth "Elizzie" Babb, widow, who married him February 1, 1855. They lived in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co. In the 1860 census they were worth in real estate $2,200 and personal, $50.00. William H. Babb 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private William was born in 1832 and was a farmer. He enlisted at Cypress Chapel. Charles Bagnell 4th Virginia Infantry, Private Bagnell was born in 1835 and lived in Nansemond County after the war. Francis M. Bailey 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, 2nd Sgt. Bailey was born in 1842 in Southampton County, the son of Jesse L. and Dorothy A. Bailey. He had a light complexion, light hair, blue eyes and was 5'8" tall. James M. Bailey 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 4th Cpl. later 2nd Lieutenant. Bailey was born in 1839*, the son of James M. and Ann Bailey. He was wounded at the Crater on July 30 and died of his wounds August 8, 1864. *Cedar Hill list (Block C, Lot 22) gives b. 1840. Robert S. Bailey 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Bailey was born in 1845, the son of James M. and Ann Bailey. James Baine 41st Virginia Infantry, Co. I Killed at 2nd Manassas. Benjamin Baines 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Baines was born in 1841, the son of Elijah and Virginia Baines. He was a farmer. Alexander Baker 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company G, Private Surry Light Artillery, Private Baker was born on August 26, 1841 in Isle of Wight County, the son of Henry and Judith C. Brock Baker. He was a farmer. He married on February 26, 1860 Roxanah Gwaltney, daughter of Richard H. Gwaltney, in Southampton Co. He married on February 25, 1864 Margaret L. Millington, daughter of Jacob C. and Mary Millington, in Surry Co. He married on July 12, 1877 Octavia L. Williams, daughter of Hugh K. and Emeline Virginia Holland Williams, in Nansemond Co.; Octavia (1844-1908) is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 77. He married lastly widow Alice B. Atkinson (Mrs. John W.) Jones, daughter of Dr. "Archer" Archibald Jr. and Mary Elizabeth Thomas Atkinson, on July 16, 1919 in Washington, DC. Alice's father (1832-1903) was a Surgeon in Wise's Brigade, CSA. Alexander & Alice were living in 1900 in Baltimore, MD, with him working as a traveling salesman; it states they had been married 8 years. Alexander & Alice were living in 1910 in Baltimore, MD, with his son John D. Baker, with Alexander working as a chemist for an extracts firm. They were living in 1920 in Baltimore, MD, with their son Robert F. Baker, with Alexander working as the Captain of a Bay Steamer. He applied for a pension Sep. 16, 1924 in Princess Anne Co., being totally disabled, stating he surrendered Lee at Appomattox C.H.; an attached note states he was badly injured in a fall while visiting his granddaughter in PA. Baker died at the Veterans' Home in Richmond June 5, 1926, and was buried in Windsor [not on IWCHS GSSTF report #26]. Alice (1863-1848) is buried in Meadowridge Memorial Park, Elkridge, Howard Co., MD. Beverly Proctor Baker 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Sergeant Baker was born on January 21, 1840 and was the son of Samuel and Sarah Haslett Baker. His father owned a 54-acre farm 10 to 13 miles south of Suffolk. He married on February 19, 1868 Lydia Maria Darden, daughter of Edward H. and Clarissa Rawls Darden. After the war he was a surveyor and was a member of the Nansemond County Board of Supervisors for Cypress Chapel District. He was a Constable of his district and farmed. Beverly died in Suffolk August 2, 1923 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block I, Lot 56 1/2. John J. Baker 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K Baker was born in Virginia in 1826 and lived in the Holy Neck District. His wife was Judith A. Mary Baker (b. 1831 in North Carolina). Laurence Simmons Baker 1st North Carolina Cavalry, General General Baker was born May 15, 1830, the son of Dr. John Burgess and Mary Wynn Gregory Baker of Gates County, N.C. He attended West Point and was a friend and classmate of General U.S. Grant. When Grant became president he offered Baker a job in Washington, but Baker did not take it because he felt he was needed by his men at home. He was a ticket agent for the Seaboard railroad on North Main Street in Suffolk. Laurence married Elizabeth Earl Henderson. He died April 10, 1907 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block V, Lot 11. His photograph appeared in the "Suffolk News-Herald" April 30, 2009, courtesy of the Nansemond-Suffolk Historical Society. Marshall E. Baker 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K Baker was a teamster and illiterate. Philip Barrand Baker 12th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private (Granted MD by the Univ. of Virginia January 28, 1862) Promoted to Surgeon (Major), 41st Virginia Infantry Baker was born August 5, 1828 in Norfolk, Va., the son of Richard M. and Lelia Barrand Baker. He married 1st - Lydia Maria Darden (b. 1/10/1851); 2nd - Rosa M. Mansfield (b. 1860), daughter of Joseph B. and Lucy I. Minor Mansfield, in August 1876. In 1885 he was practicing medicine in Suffolk. Philip died January 20, 1887 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 32. Elisha Lawrence Ballard 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, 2nd Lieutenant and Captain. Elisha was born 1834 (1870 census) in Nansemond County, the son of Robert M. and Margaret A. Williams Ballard. He married Wortley Jane Chapman of Isle of Wight County and had nine children. In the 1860 census he was a deputy sheriff. After the war he lived in the Holy Neck District of Nansemond Co. John R. Ballard 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private John was born in 1845 and was a farmer. He was killed May 6, 1864 at the Battle of the Wilderness. James H. Barden 3rd Virginia Regiment, Company B, Private His widow Virginia Cross Barden, as a Confederate widow, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County), which gives enlisted 1861; discharged 1865; served 3 years; wounded in left knee; she was a resident of South Quay. Their son Terence Thucydides Barden is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk. Isaac Pipkin Barnes 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, 3rd. Sgt. Isaac was born 1843 in Isle of Wight County, the son of William E. and Phereba Jane Councill Barnes. He enlisted Aug. 24, 1861 at Beaver Dam, IoW.Co. He was paroled Apr. 25, 1865 in Isle of Wight Co. He married Feb. 13, 1868 "Dora" Eudora Ellen Darden of IoW.Co. and had six children. In the 1870 census he was a farmer living in the Holy Neck District of Nansemond Co. He died Feb. 14, 1878 and is buried in with his parents in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 52. His widow 2m. Tiberius Gracchus Jones, Dec. 14, 1880. [T.G. Jones is buried with 2d wife in Holland Cemetery.] James Barnes 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Barnes enlisted at Cypress Chapel. He had bronchitis and was on sick furlough 06/07/1864 at Appomattox. Samuel Barnes 31st N.C. Regiment, Clingman's Brigade, Hoke's Division, Johnson's Army, Private Barnes was born March 8, 1842 and lived in Suffolk after the war. His wife was Ida V. Barnes (1858-1942). He died July 31, 1919 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 18. Dr. Thomas Holland Barnes CSA - Physician? Thomas was born May 1831 in Nansemond County, the son of James and Elizabeth Holland Barnes. After the war, he was a physician, and statesman, serving in the General Assembly, the constitutional Convention, and as the county chairman. He was a member of the board of visitors of William and Mary College and of the Medical College of Virginia. He never married. He died June 4, 1913, in Suffolk, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 52. The cemetery list has him as a Confederate veteran, but he is not readily found on the state rosters. *His monument gives born May 23; his D.Cert. (#14864) gives May 28. William Henry Barnes 31st N.C. Regiment, Clingman's Brigade, Hoke's Division, Johnson's Army, Private William was born August 21, 1843. He married Eliezenia S. (1841-1915). He was in the construction business after the war and built the clerk's office on Main St. He lived on North Street. William died March 21, 1923 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block O, Lot 102. Leonidas Davis Barrett 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company D (Southampton Greys), Private "Lonnie" was born Sep. 2, 1841 in Southampton County, the son of Benjamin T. and "Sallie" Sarah E. Barrett. He enlisted May 3, 1861 in Jerusalem (now Courtland), and was surrendered by Lee at Appomattox April 9, 1865. He was a blacksmith. He married Alice A. Barrett Dec. 18, 1867 in Southampton Co. They lived in Windsor Dist., Isle of Wight County in 1870; in Newsoms Dist., Southampton County in 1880, and in Suffolk in 1900. He died Oct 1907 in Suffolk, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Benjamin F. Bartlett 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Benjamin had a light complexion, light blue eyes, and brown hair, and was 5'6" tall. He was a resident of Nansemond County. Robert James Bartlett 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, 2nd Sergeant Robert was born January 22, 1834 in Nansemond Co., the son of William R. and Eleanor/Ellen Bartlett. He married Elizabeth Ann Pruden (10/13/1837-07/01/1891) on January 21, 1858. His second wife was widow Sarah C. Daughtrey Wright, married February 26, 1893. His third wife was widow Ida Virginia Davis Channell Wright, married February 26, 1895. [Ida 3m. Robert Mahaffey; her D.Cert. gives bu. May 26, 1925, Suffolk, but the cemetery is not specified.] After the war he lived in the Chuckatuck district. He died February 13, 1907 in Suffolk and is buried at Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery - Lot 220A. William T. Bartlett 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private William was born in 1841, the son of William R. and Eleanor/Ellen Bartlett. His wife Sarah Cornelia Pruden Bartlett (1843-04/11/1919) received a pension for his services from the state. He died December 29, 1886 and is buried at Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery - Lot 220A. James F. Batten 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Batten was born in 1832 in Virginia. He was wounded and captured in the retreat from Petersburg to Appomattox. After the war, he was a farmer and lived in the Sleepy Hole district. Junius Franklin Batten 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F - the Nansemond Rangers Batten was born in 1844 in Isle of Wight Co., Va. and was farmer. He was the son of William and Margaret Whitley Batten and was the first husband of Margaret Jane Gayle Batten Edwards (1842-1936), daughter of John Thomas and Margaret Ann Gayle. He drowned in 1877 in Nansemond Co. Samuel Batten 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F - the Nansemond Rangers Batten was born in 1839 and died September 8, 1861 at Camp Cook of disease. Richard Henry Beamon Signal Corps Richard was born January 6, 1817 and was a doctor. He lived in the Sleepy Hole District of Nansemond County. He married on December 18, 1867 Rebecca Jane Applewhite (7/8/1825-5/18/1891) and had three children. They lived on the Nansemond River, near Magnolia. He died July 26, 1891 age 74 yrs, 6 mo. and 20 days. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block O, Lot 98. James Washington Bennett 1st Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private 1st Eng. Reg., 1st Army James was born March 1827 in Virginia, the son of Stephen and M.R.H. Bennett. He farmed in Greensville Co., and later in Nansemond Co. He was living in Myrtle in 1901 and died there October 21, 1911. He married "Mattie" Martha Ann Moody, daughter of James H. & Elizabeth Moody, Nov. 15, 1870 in Northampton Co., NC. He received a pension for his war service. Mattie applied for a pension Feb. 17, 1912, saying they married 1866 near Greensville Co. Their son "Rufus" Ruben Bernard Bennett married Vivian P. Faircloth, daughter of John T. and "Dora" Eudora Ann Mountford Johnson Faircloth; Vivian is buried at Antioch Christian Church, near Windsor. James E. Benton 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private James was the son of Abram and Nancy Benton and a resident of Suffolk before the war. He received a pension for his war service. He died at Myrtle, Virginia ca. 1911. John Lewis Benton 33 N.C. Infantry, Company E, Private Benton was born February 28, 1844, in Gates Co., NC, the son of Mills & Elizabeth Baker Benton. After the war he settled in the vicinity of Cypress Chapel and was a prominent farmer and a Sunday School worker. His wife was Martha Brinkley Benton (07/30/1843-01/07/1926). He died March 3, 1914; both are buried in the Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. Thomas E. Benton 13th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Private Benton was born in 1833. He living in Suffolk in 1900 and received a pension for his war service. Thomas Swepson Bernard 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 3rd Cpl Promoted to 2nd Sergeant, Courier to Gen. Mahone. Thomas was born October 8, 1829 in Suffolk, Va., the son of Allen Rodney Bernard, a Methodist minister in Suffolk, and Lucy Swepson Bernard. He married Georgie Glover on August 16, 1866. He died in Jacksonville, Florida. William Berry 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private William died November 9, 1864 in a Union prison in New York state. Anthony Boone "gave valuable service to" Peninsula Light Artillery Boon was a black soldier. He was born free circa 1799. Bro/o Jason Boone. He died January 13, 1892, age 92. CS stone dedicated November 12, 2016, Skeetertown (LAUDER-SKEETER) Cemetery. (Find a Grave Mem. #173029020) Jason Boone "gave valuable service to" 41st Virgiina Infantry, Company K Boon was a black soldier who served in both armies. He was born free in 1831. Bro/o Anthony Boone. He received a Confederate Pension and lived to be 105 years old. He died October 21, 1936. His funeral was at Mt. Ararat Church. Marked in Skeetertown (LAUDER-SKEETER) Cemetery. (Find a Grave Mem. #173028499) Joseph Boothe 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private, later Sergeant Joseph's father owned 374 acres of land 9 miles south of Suffolk. Joseph was born April 15, 1832 and was the son of Joseph Nathaniel and Mary E. Griffin Boothe. He married February 26, 1868 Mary E. Brinkley (1/3/1839-4/13/1877), daughter of Admiral and Margaret Jane Saunders Brinkley. Joseph Boothe owned a dry goods store with James R. Baker, "Boothe and Baker." He died March 29, 1880 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 22. James E. Boyd 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F. Boyd was born in 1838 and died as a prisoner at Point Lookout in Maryland. David Boyette 33rd North Carolina Infantry, Company E, Private David was born in 1842 in Gates Co., NC. His wife was Annie E. Boyette (1842-1896). Boyette was captured July 3, 1865 at Gettysburg; a POW at Point Lookout, MD, until exchanged. He was again captured Apr. 3, 1865, and paroled May 4, 1865. He died Apr. 1, 1895 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 46. Richard Simon Boykin 18th Virginia Artillery, Company A, Lt. Richard was born May 1, 1846 in Southampton County. He was the son of John and Caroline Kello Boykin. Caroline was the daughter of Richard Kello. He first married Nannie Urquhart in 1872. She died in 1881. He married his second wife Susan Pretlow (1863-1949) on April 6, 1887. By his two wives he had seven children. He read law with his uncle Judge George T. Bartlett of Georgia and was admitted to the bar. He was Treasurer of the City of Suffolk and was a member of the state legislature (1888-1889). He died January 24, 1913 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 82. William F. Bracey 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Bracey was wounded on August 9, 1863 and died of his wounds September 14, 1863 at the N.C. Hospital at Petersburg, Virginia. Benjamin S. Bradley 17th North Carolina Regiment, Company B, Private Bradley, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted July 15, 1861; discharged August 15, 1861; served 1 month; wounded in shoulder; resident of South Quay. James R. Bradley 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Bradley was born in 1836 and was a mariner before the war. He lived with William and Rhoda Porter in the 1850 Census of Nansemond County. He was killed October 27, 1864 at the Battle of Hatcher's Run. James Washington Branch Confederate Defenders of N.C., Private Transferred to 61st Virginia Infantry, Company G, Sgt. James was born September 24, 1834. He was granted a pension in 1900 (S- Va.P 05-05-1900, p. 8). He re-applied for his pension in 1902, stating he had been shot through the left arm & side, at the Wilcox farm, near Petersburg. His wife, Martha Elizabeth "Mattie" Griggs, died in 1899. He died March 24, 1906 in Suffolk and is buried at Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block A, Lot 45. John Brenan 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Captain He was born in 1834. According to the 1850 census his mother was Sarah Brenan of Norfolk County. Before the war he was a saddler and worked for N.B. Hawes, harness maker in Suffolk, Brenan was wounded October 27, 1864 at Burgess' Mill and was admitted to Harewood Hospital where his right thigh was amputated. He died November 25, 1864. Jesse Bruce Brewer 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I He was born November 18, 1825, the son of John and Harriet Bruce Brewer of Nansemond County. Before the war he was a surveyor. He first married Elizabeth Francis Smith (1827-1854), daughter of Benjamin Devania and Fanny R. Day Smith on December 19, 1849. His second wife was Elfrida Charlotte Holland (2/24/1837-10/13/1925), daughter of Dr. Lemuel C. and Catherine Holland. They were married November 21, 1855. He was a captain of the Hampshire Cavalry, part of Company I of the 13th Virginia. He died June 15, 1862 in Prince George County, Virginia. His wife sent a claim stating that "he died from sickness by exposure to army life." John Marchant Brewer CSA John was born about 1820 in Nansemond Co., Va., but later became a merchant in Wake Forest, North Carolina. He married Ann Eliza Waite and raised ten children. After the war he became a farmer. John died about 1907. George Washington Briggs 44th Virginia Infantry, Field and Staff Officer Briggs was born in 1827 at "The Exchange" plantation located near Lake Cohoon. He was the son of Merritt and Jurusha Briggs. He went to the University of Virginia Medical School (1845-1849) and practiced medicine in Suffolk and Chuckatuck. He married twice: (1) Mary Frances Ward in 1848 in Charlottesville and (2) Jane Maria Evans in 1866 in Norfolk. He was assigned to North Carolina Troops throughout the war. He died in Suffolk on December 20, 1878 and is buried in Richmond. William H. Briggs 41st Virginia Infantry appointed Assistant Commissary of Subsistence (A.C.S.) Transferred to 13th Virginia Cavalry, Captain Admiral Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private. Brinkley was born in 1834 in Nansemond Co., the son of Charles Brinkley. (In 1850 census #283). He died June 17, 1922. Albert Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Albert was born in Nansemond Co. in 1838, the son of Abram and Rachel Brinkley. His father owned 53 acres fourteen miles south of Suffolk. Archibald Brinkley 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Archibald was born in 1843, the son of Charles Brinkley, and was a farmer. Frederick Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Brinkley was born December 10, 1842, the son of Abram and Nancy Knight Brinkley. His father owned 629 acres of land twelve miles south of Suffolk. He married Ida V. Knight (1854-1930) on February 1, 1874. Brinkley died April 3, 1915 and was buried in the Eureka Baptist Church Cemetery in Corapeake, N.C. George W. Brinkley 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Brinkley was born in 1843, the son of Daniel and Mary Eliza Eppes Brinkley, and was a student when the war started. Hugh Griffin Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, 2nd Lt. Hugh was born on August 15, 1840, the son of Admiral and Margaret Jane Saunders Brinkley. He married on June 19, 1867 Susan Catherine Daughtrey (1847-1920). Their two children were Hugh Jr. (b. 1868) and Mary (b. 1869). He died, according to the family Bible in 1869. J.T. Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Brinkley was wounded at the Battle of the Crater. Jackson Richard Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Brinkley was born on January, 20, 1840 in Nansemond County, the son of Jason and Elizabeth Brinkley. He married on February 22, 1866 in Norfolk County, Mary E. Brinkley (1839-1914), daughter of Abram and Nancy Knight Brinkley. He was the father of eight children. He was a farmer in the Holy Neck district. He owned 170 acres three miles south of Suffolk. Brinkley belonged to the Tom Smith Camp of Confederate Veterans and as one of the tallest men in the group often carried their flag as Color Sergeant in parades. Brinkley died May 12, 1913 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 38. James Henry Brinkley 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private James was born September 19, 1840, the son of Lewis and Catherine Baines Brinkley. His wife was Mary Elizabeth Brinkley (02/04/1843-04/07/1913). He died August 13, 1912, and both are buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. John G. Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Brinkley was born in 1838, the son of Abram and Rachel Brinkley. He was a farmer before the war. His father owned 108 acres of land in Nansemond Co. John Randolph Brinkley 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K, Private Brinkley was born October 22, 1837 in Nansemond Co., the son of Admiral and Margaret Jane Saunders Brinkley. He married Mary Eliza Rountree (7/28/1839-6/13/1914) on March 21, 1861. He died in 1884. Lazarus Parke Brinkley 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Brinkley was born June 17, 1844 in Nansemond Co., the son of Jackson and Martha Amanda Parker Brinkley. He married Sarah E. Rogers (1847-3/11/1916), daughter of Jonathan and Mary Eliza Rogers, on February 23, 1870. He was a member of the school board for his district for many years. Brinkley died November 23, 1910 and buried at Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery, Suffolk, Va. Philip Beverly Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, 2nd Lt. Brinkley was born June 14, 1844, the son of Abram and Nancy Knight Brinkley of Nansemond Co. He was a farmer and owned 193 acres twelve miles southwest of Suffolk. He married Armesis C. Franklin (b. 11/7/1848), daughter of Javan Riddick and Jane Rebecca Lee Eppes Franklin on February 22, 1866. They had seven children. He was a member of the Tom Smith Camp. Brinkley died April 29, 1928 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block A, Lot 43E 1/2. Richard H. Brinkley, Sr. 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, 3rd Cpl. Brinkley was born August 14, 1831 in Nansemond Co., son of William Eley and Mary Norfleet Brinkley. He was an auctioneer and married Sallie A. Brooks (10/11/1840-1917), daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Goodwin Brooks of N.C. He died January 27, 1892 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 69. Robert Beverly Brinkley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Captain Brinkley was born January 27, 1836, the son of Admiral and Margaret Jane Saunders Brinkley of Nansemond County. He was one of the sixty men that voted in the first election in Suffolk for mayor and council on May 2, 1858. Brinkley was the superintendent of Cypress Chapel Christian Church Sabbath School. He was killed on May 25, 1864 at Hanover Junction. Exum Britton Britt 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Captain Britt was born February 8, 1831 in Isle of Wight Co., the son of Exum O. and Miranda Joyner Britt. In his youth he moved to Suffolk and was working as a clerk before the war. After the war he entered the lumber trade and was an accountant living in Suffolk. Britt served thirty-two years on the Suffolk School Board, was a member of the Masons, Knights of Pythias, American Legion and of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Britt was also active in politics, served as Commissioner of Revenue, and was a postmaster of Suffolk from 1893 to 1896. He married Eudora Porter Riddick (1833-1865) and later Ellen Custine Riddick (1845-1888), both daughters of Benjamin and Eliza Jerusha Porter Riddick. Britt died of "Old age & Debility" March 1, 1916 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D. Lot 24. Calvin Brittain 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Brittain was born April 13, 1834, the son of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Brittain. He married Lucy Ann Carpenter, the daughter of Benjamin and Mary Carpenter. Brittain died June 29, 1884 and is buried at Wesley Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery in Chuckatuck, Va. George W. Brittain 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Brittain was born October 29, 1836, the son of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Brittain. He married Sarah Lemuel Cowling (1847-1924) on February 11, 1869 at Wesley Chapel Methodist Church. Brittain died December 30, 1903 and is buried at Wesley Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery in Chuckatuck, Va. Samuel Brittain 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private William H. Brittingham 9th Virginia Infantry, Company G, Private Brittingham was born in 1837 in Nansemond Co. He was a carpenter and joiner. After the war he lived in Portsmouth, Va., where he died February 10, 1907 and was buried in Cedar Grove Cemetery. William C. Broocks 26th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Broocks was born in 1841. He was a mechanic and served on gun boats at West Point as a carpenter during the war. He later lived in Crittenden, Va., and received a pension. William H. Brothers 2nd North Carolina Volunteer Cavalry, Company C, Sergeant. Brothers was born in 1840 the son of William and Elizabeth Knight Brothers. His mother married Kedar Rabey after the death of William's father, which makes Andrew Jackson Rabey of the 41st Virginia Infantry his half brother. Joseph Samuel Brown N.C. Blues CSA and the Norfolk Light Artillery Blues Brown was born April 2, 1841. He died September 18, 1887 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 39. (no dates given) Joseph Samuel Brown 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Transferred to the Signal Corps Bunting was born July 22, 1820 in Accomac Co., Va., the son of George and Elizabeth Mitchell Bunting. He married in Portsmouth, Virginia on September 8, 1845 Eliza M.J. Clarvoe, daughter of Bennett Horatio and Rosanna Mitchell Clarvoe. They had two sons. He was a farmer and in the mercantile business in Suffolk. He is buried at the Old Episcopal Church Cemetery at Reed's Ferry in Suffolk, Va. Stephen David Brown 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I Brown was born April 28, 1825 in Gates, North Carolina. He married Martha Brown Pierce (b. 6/17/1823), daughter of Evaline Brown Pierce on February 8, 1854 and lived in Nansemond County. He enlisted in March 1862 and served until January of 1865. John Allen Browne 8th Alabama Volunteers, Sergeant Browne was born February 14, 1844* in Tuscaloosa Co., Alabama, the son of Randall R. and Mary Browne. He first married Josephine P. Jones (1842-1/25/1890) on Feb. 8, 1866 in Petersburg. He then married widow Margaret Badger Lassister (1/1844-1927) on Dec. 1, 1891 in Nansemond Co. [The 1900 Census (Cypress District, Nansemond Co.) gives born Feb. 1845, married 18 years.] He died November 29, 1901 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery - Block D, Lot 84. Joe J. Bryant 13th North Carolina Regiment, Company F, Private Bryant, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted January, 1862; discharged April 9, 1865; served 3 year, 3 months; wounded in right arm & shoulder; resident of South Quay. William Burns Burns was born in Maryland in 1838. After the war he was living in Crittenden and receiving a pension in 1901. Caleb Rodgers Busby 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Busby was born January 28, 1845 in Gates County, N.C., the son of James and Mary M. Bonnewell Busby. He married Emily A. Lassiter (1845-1901) daughter of James and Elizabeth Meredith Lassiter on February 19, 1869. He was a drummer during the war and was present at Appomattox. Busby died in 1908 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 47. Edward Bush 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F Bush was born about 1842. He was a resident of Nansemond County, had a light complexion, brown hair, blue eyes and stood 5'9½" tall. Henry Ludlow Bush 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Bush was born on June 28, 1832 in Long Island, New York. His wife was Ann Louisa Cake Bush (1837-1883). He was a ship builder and seaman. He died April 10, 1910 and is buried at Mt. Zion Church Cemetery in Crittenden, Va. Isaac Farrar Bush Confederate States Navy Isaac Bush was born in New York in 1835. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 54. Benjamin Butler 1st South Carolina Infantry, Company L, Private Butler was born in 1837 and lived in Nansemond County after the war. Carr D. Butler 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K and 62nd Georgia Infantry, Company I, Private Butler was born June 2, 1844. At the end of the war he was in central North Carolina guarding government property. When he learned that the war was over he and his companions from Somerton straddled government mules and made their way back to Nansemond Co. The mule he kept as long as it lived and a photograph was taken of the mule in its old age. Butler is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 116. David Lisbon Butler 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K, Private Butler was born Apr. 20, 1844, Nansemond Co. He enlisted on August 1, 1862 at South Quay. In August 1863, he was detailed as a Scout on the Black Water. The 24th Virginia Cavalry served in General Gary's Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia, and fought in various conflicts around Richmond. Later it was involved in the Appomattox Campaign, where Mr. Butler was captured the day before the surrender. The Unit surrendered with 19 officers and 144 men. Its commanders were Colonel William T. Robins, Lieutenant Colonel Theophilus G. Barham, and Major John R. Robertson. Butler married three times - to Missouri C. Edwards in 1868, to Mary "Molly" Haywood in 1883, and to Ada Ann Judkins in 1885. He was elected Adjutant when the Beaver Dam Camp of Veterans was organized in 1903. He applied for a pension Dec. 1, 1903. Beaver Dam Baptist Church accepted him into membership by letter of transfer in September 1929 from South Quay Baptist Church. Butler died June 19, 1931, at a son's home, at Maynard, Isle of Wight Co., and is buried in Beaver Dam Baptist Church Cemetery, near Carrsville, Isle of Wight Co. His widow applied for a pension on July 11, 1931. Hezikiah Butler 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Hezikiah Butler enlisted as a substitute. James Madison Butler 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private James Madison Butler was born August 27, 1838 in Isle of Wight Co., the son of Hezekiah and Faithy McClenny Butler. He married Sarah Jane Williams (1845-1929) of Chesterfield Co. May 10, 1866. Butler and his bride were on the first train that arrived in Suffolk after the war. He was the founder of James M. Butler and Sons, a blacksmith, wagon and carriage shop on South Main Street in Suffolk. He had been detailed to the Quartermaster department, where he learned to build wagons. Butler died April 7, 1892 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 45. John B. Butler 9th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Musician Butler was born about 1834 in Virginia. "John C." married Lavinia "Winnie" Beale, Dec. 1, 1855 in Margarettsville, Northampton Co., NC. He was a farmer. They lived in Chuckatuck Dist., Nansemond Co. in 1880. He applied for a pension May 28, 1901, & Oct. 30, 1902, in Isle of Wight Co., totally incapaciated from palsy. He died Oct. 1, 1908. Winnie applied for a pension Apr. 21, 1910, in Isle of Wight Co., stating John "played fife in the war, and ever was very nervous." King's "Historical Notes" gives John D. Butler, 9th Virginia Infantry, Company E, drummer. Milton D. Butler 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Butler was discharged December 5, 1862 by reason of being over 40 years old. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 80. (no dates given) Wiley Butler ? ?, Company G, Private Butler, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted January 15, 1864; discharged February 4, 1866; served 2 years, 19 days; wounded by powder; resident of Elwood. James B. Butt 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Butt was born December 4, 1833, the son of Dr. John N. and Carolina Butt. He was a Mason and is listed as a reverend. Butt died February 19, 1880 and is buried at Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 52. George Washington Butts 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Butts was born February 22, 1843 in Chuckatuck, Va., the son of Edward A. and Mary Mills Corbell Butts - his mother, the daughter of Col. Samuel Corbell of the War of 1812. Butts married Harriet C. Denson (1842-1914), daughter of Richard Henry and Sarah Wilson Denson. They were married in November 1865, and had four children. He graduated in chemistry and mathematics at the University of Virginia in 1860. He graduated from the Medical College of Virginia in 1868 and became a doctor and farmer in Chuckatuck. He was also Tresurer of Nansemond County at one time. He died September 6, 1912 and is buried at Wesley Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery, in the Chuckatuck district of Suffolk, Va. Walter Butts 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Lieutenant Butts was born in 1841 in Chuckatuck, Va., and was the son of Edward A. and Mary Mills Corbell Butts. He was a student of medicine preparing for college when he enlisted in the army. He was wounded at Gettysburg on June 3, 1863 and died July 11, 1863 in a Gettysburg hospital. He was buried in a cornfield at Gettysburg. His body was removed in 1872 and reinterred in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Va. Daniel A. Byrd 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Byrd was born in 1831, the son of Abel and Frances Byrd and owned a small farm of 25 acres six miles southwest, of Suffolk. Byrd was married and had two children. He had brown eyes, black hair, and was 6 feet tall. He received a medical discharge on October 31, 1861. Edward D. Byrd 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Byrd was born in 1838 in Nansemond Co., the son of Abel and Francis Byrd. He was on the pension rolls of Norfolk after the war. George W. Byrd 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Byrd was born in 1842 in Nansemond Co., the son of Abel and Frances Byrd. His father was a farmer in Nansemond Co. He was wounded at the 2nd Battle of Manassas on August 30, 1862 and died on September 3, 1862 at the CSA General Hospital, Culpepper, Va. John Byrd, Jr. 24th Virginia Cavalry Byrd was born December 28, 1816 in Nansemond Co. and was a farmer. He married Sarah Copeland (03/03/1817-01/16/1893). John died June 8, 1904 and both are buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. Richard Henry Byrd 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Byrd was born in 1828 in Nansemond Co., the son of Abel and Frances Byrd. He was a carpenter. His father owned 50 acres of land 8 miles west of Suffolk. He was captured April 29, 1863 at Germanna Ford, and again October 27, 1864 at Burgess Mill, and exchanged both times. He married Armesia Parker, daughter of Elias and Crissey, March 25, 1866. Entirely disabled, Richard applied for a pension June 29, 1900, and again July 5, 1902; his address was Nurneysville, Va. in Nansemond Co. after the war. He died in August 1903, of kidney and bladder trouble & a rupture. His widow moved in with her son near Saunders, also in Nansemond Co. "Armezia" applied for a pension March 14, 1905. William H. Byrd 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I William Byrd lived at Nurneysville, Va. in Nansemond Co. and received a pension after the war. Francis M Capps 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Frank was born Halloween 1831*, the son of William L.D. and Catherine Capps. He married Martha Susan Copeland October 10, 1860 in Suffolk. He enlisted June 4, 1861 in Suffolk. He was captured April 4, 1865 at Amelia Court House, and was released June 24, 1865 from Pt. Lookout, MD. He died October 7, 1899*, and was buried in a Wilroy family cemetery. *The regimental history (1st ed., 1986) gives b. 1832; d. 10/7/1889; living 1890 as Portsmouth farmer. Henry Clay Capps 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Capps was born in 1836 in Nansemond County and was a farmer. He was living with James Hargrove according to the 1850 Census. In 1904, he was a ship joiner living in Florida. John C. Capps 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Transferred to CS Navy. Capps served aboard the CSS Virginia II from November or December of 1864 until April of 1865. John Cartwright 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Cartwright was born in 1841. His wife was Mary L. Cartwright. He was postmaster at Cartwright's Wharf, Va. Elden K. Casey, Jr. 41st Virginia Infantry, Company G, Private Transferred to the 61st Virginia Infantry, Company I Casey was the son of Elden K. Casey, Sr., a farmer in Nansemond Co. His arm was amputated when he was wounded in the Battle of the Wilderness on May 6, 1864. James A. Casey 41st Virginia Infantry, Company G, Private Transferred 61st Infantry, Company I, Private Casey was born in 1841 in Nansemond Co., the son of Elden K. Casey, Sr. He had dark hair, blue eyes, a light complexion and was 5'9" tall. After the war he was a steamboat engineer, licensed in 1869, and living in Berkley, Norfolk Co., Va. He married in that same year, Nannie F. Woodhouse, daughter of Sawyer Woodhouse. Charles Henry Causey, Sr. 3rd Virginia Cavalry, Company B, promoted to 1st Lieutenant in 1862, Later promoted to Captain in the Secret Service on General Magruder's staff. Causey was born July 14, 1837 in New Castle, Delaware, the son of William and Mary Colvin Causey. He received his undergraduate degree from Madison College, Uniontown, Pennsylvania in 1857 and his law degree from the University of Virginia. He was a state senator from 1884-1887, Commonwealth's Attorney for Suffolk and the attorney for the Atlantic and Danville Railroad and the Seaboard Airline Railroad. Causey practiced law in Suffolk until his death. He married Martha Josephine Prentis, daughter of Peter Bowdoin and Eliza Wrenn Prentis on September 26, 1864 and had eight children. He died August 27, 1890 in Suffolk, Va. and was buried in Cedar Hill Cememtery, Block D, Lot 8. James Colvin Causey 3rd Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Causey was born at "Montrose" near Hampton, Virginia on September 24, 1841, the son of William and Mary Colvin Causey. He was attending Emory and Henry College when the war started. During the war he served in various jobs: as orderly for General Robert Toombs, as a scout for Major General C.M. Wilcox of North Carolina, was a courier attached to the headquarters of General Robert E. Lee and in the secret service until August 1864. He married on February 28, 1879 Evelyn Spotswood Douglas and had two sons and one daughter. After the war he was a farmer and later a businessman in Baltimore. Causey died May 7, 1907 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 112. James Colvin Causey 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 1st Sergeant Channell was born August 27, 1842. He was a painter. He died on May 28, 1872 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 41. Richard A. Channell 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 1st Sergeant, Clerk Channell was born January 18, 1840. He died December 20, 1892 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 99. Virginius Childrey 8th Reg. N.C. Cavalry, Company A, Private Childrey was born May 28, 1846 and died August 16, 1914. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block A, Lot 5. Daniel Harvey Christie 23rd North Carolina Infantry, Colonel Christie was born in Frederick County, Va., and later came to Suffolk to organize and instruct music. He married Elizabeth Ann Norfleet of Suffolk on November 22, 1858 and had three children. In the Battle of Gettysburg, Colonel Christie was shot through the lungs. The ball was extracted but he died of the wound in Winchester, Va. on July 17, 1863 and is buried in Stonewall Cemetery. William John Phillip Cowper Cohoon 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Transferred to Cohoon's Battalion as 2nd Lt. Transferred again to the Signal Corps Cohoon was born June 6, 1829 in Nansemond Co., the son of John Cowper Cohoon, Jr. and Mary Louisa Everett Cohoon. His first wife was Emily E. Flynn (06/04/1833-05/31/1856), whom he married on October 19, 1853. She was the daughter of Capt. Owen Riddick Flynn. His second wife was Sallie Louise Beamon (02/29/1832-11/30/1918), daughter of Nathaniel and Ann Beamon of Nansemond Co., whom he married November 30, 1959. William was the father of seven children. Cohoon died October 3, 1900 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 45. Willis Everitt John Cowper Cohoon Cohoon's Battalion Virginia Infantry, Captain Charles W. Downing's Company, Private Cohoon was born January 4, 1824. He married twice: first Frances C. Smith, second Indiana M. Denson. Cohoon died April 25, 1880 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 43. Burwell Collins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Collins was born in 1825, son of Burwell and Lucy Harris Collins. His father owned 70 acres 8 miles south of Suffolk. Collins and his wife Martha J. had two children. Collins died after 1890 in Norfolk, Va. Edwin T. Collins 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Collins was born in 1840, the son of Thomas R. and Mary Collins. He lived in Somerton after the war and received a pension in 1900. Elliott E. Collins 14th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Collins was born in 1839. He lived in Somerton after the war and received a pension in 1905. John Collins unknown unit (10+ possibilities) Collins was born October 25, 1821, and died August 18, 1892. He and his wife Margaret J. are buried in Liberty Spring Christian Church Cemetery - his grave is marked CSA. William A. Cooper 61st Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Cooper was born ca. 1827. He was on the Confederate Roll of Honor and lived in Nansemond County after the war. Elisha D. Copeland 59th Virginia Reg. Volunteers, Company C, Private Copeland was born about 1835 in Nansemond Co., the son of James and Nancy Copeland. He was discharged from service in Petersburg in 1863. He married Camilla Caroline Boykins (b. 1846), daughter of John M. and Eunice Boykins, on May 16, 1867. Elisha Rawls Copeland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Copeland was born ca. 1833 in Nansemond Co., the son of James and Ruth Copeland. He married Matilda Ann Holland (b. 1847), daughter of Lemuel and Nancy Holland, on April 23, 1867. John R. Copeland 59th Regiment Virginia Military, Colonel Captain of a Volunteer Company of Riflemen Copeland was born November 11, 1811 in Nansemond Co., the son of John and Mary Saunders Copeland. On October 11, 1836, he married Judith Ann Hunter (02/13/1819-06/18/1880), daughter of Dr. Edward R. and Catharine Hannah Dorlon Hunter. Throughout his long life he has been identified with the public interests of Nansemond Co. and Suffolk. For over thirty years he filled the offices of Justice of the Peace and Overseer of the Poor. In 1870 he was appointed cashier of the Farmers Bank of Nansemond and was elected President of the bank in 1884. He died October 21, 1892 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 31. Virginius Copeland Maybe North Carolina Outfit Copeland was born August 13, 1841, the son of Winfield Scott and Catherine E. Randolph Copeland. "He was mortally wounded in battle in Northern Virginia after serving nearly three years and being many times engaged in battle," according to the Copeland Family Bible. He died December 6, 1863. William Thomas Copeland 59th Reg. Virginia Volunteers, Company C, Private Copeland was born in 1826, the son of James and Nancy Holland Copeland. He was discharged at Camp Lee. His first wife was Ann Marie Holland Copeland, and his second wife was Martha Turner Copeland. William Copeland died January 29, 1912 and is buried in the family cemetery near Buckhorn. John David Corbell 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Transferred to 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Corbell was born September 28, 1841 in Nansemond Co., the son of Thomas Mitchell and Sarah F. Phillips Corbell. He married Mary Elizabeth Godwin (b. 01/01/1844), daughter of Edwin and Sarah F. Lawrence Godwin. His obit states that he served in artillery, until having his foot cruched, and transferring to cavalry. He lived in Chuckatuck and was a very prominent citizen of the community. After he retired from farming, he moved to Port Norfolk (now Portsmouth). He died there December 13, 1925, at the home of his son, Dr. R.L. Corbell, and was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery (Plot H823), Portsmouth. Nicholas B. Corson 32nd Virginia Infantry, James City Artillery, 1st Company H, Hawkins Battery Corson was born January 16, 1834 in New York state. He married Rosa Pitts (1833-1909). He died March 16, 1917 and is buried in Mount Zion Church Cemetery. John Y. Councill 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, 1st Lieutenant Councill was born in 1839 in Isle of Wight Co. Before the war he boarded, as a teacher, with Jethro Riddick, owner of a 645-acre farm 18 miles southwest of Suffolk. He resigned his commission January 16, 1862 due to severe dyspepsia. He is listed on the roll of prisoners at Fort Wool, Hampton Roads, in August 1862 and died that same month. John Everett Cowling 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Lieutenant Cowling was born November 21, 1836, the son of Samuel and Ann L. Phillips Cowling. On January 5, 1860, he married Susan Ann Wright. He was killed on May 16, 1864 at Drewry's Bluff. Samuel Thomas Cowling 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, 1st Corporal; 13th Virginia Cavalry, Co. B, Private. Cowling was born February 25, 1841, the son of Samuel and Ann L. Phillips Cowling. He married Amanda Brittain (1840-1931) on December 6, 1866. He died April 25, 1881 and is buried at Wesley Chapel Methodist Churchyard in Chuckatuck District of Suffolk. Henry D. Cowper 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Cowper was born in 1840 in Hertford Co., N.C., the son of Joseph G. and Narcissus S. Cowper. Cowper and his parents were living in Nansemond Co. in the 1850 Census. Both his father and mother were postmasters of Suffolk. After the war he was in the oyster business and was the first to ship oysters north packed in ice. He married Evelyn Whitfield in 1870. Cowper died on August 17, 1872 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery. A stone with the name Cowper is the only marker in the lot. William E. Craig 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Transferred to the CS Navy Craig was born in 1824 and was an oysterman. He was wounded in the Peninsula Campaign and discharged at Fort Boykin on November 7, 1861. John J. Creekmore 15th Cavalry, Company F, Pro Sergeant Creekmore was born 1848. His wife's name was Mary Butler. Creekmore died in 1909 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 55. James Thomas Crocker 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F Crocker was the son of Joseph and Nancy Crocker. He had a dark complexion, dark hair, dark eyes and was 5'7" tall. He married Roxanna Turner Matthews, a widow. Crocker died in 1913 and is buried at Oakand Christian Church Cemetery. Jules O.B. Crocker 9th Virginia, Co. I, Captain Jules was born October 16, 1825, the son of Col. Sampson and Sarah Blunt Crocker. He died on March 6, 1890 and is buried in Churchland Baptist Church Cemetery. Thomas E. Cropper 1st Maryland Cavalry, CSA, Company B, Sergant Cropper was born March 5, 1842 in Cecil Co., MD, the son of Perry and Rebecca White Cropper. A dentist, he lived in Suffolk. He married Mary E. Mansfield September 3, 1877, in Suffolk. He died January 15, 1913, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 32. Alfred B. Cross 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Cross was born in 1839. He was a farmer and was said to be living in South Carolina in 1904. Charles T. Cross 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I Cross was born April 10, 1844 in Nansemond Co. He was discharged in February of 1862. He died March 4, 1911 and is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery. Elisha T. Cross 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Cross was born circa 1838, the son of John and Margaret A. Cross. He enlisted in April 1861, was wounded in the left knee, and was discharged in 1864. He married Annie Elizabeth Jenkins Milteer, August 22, 1867, in Nansemond County. She was the widow of Charles Benjamin Milteer, Sr., who also served in the Co. I; their son Charles Jr. is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church. She appears in the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County), as a resident of Cleopas. James W. Cross 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private, 5th Sgt. Cross was born in 1840 and was a mariner before the war. He was killed August 30, 1862 at the Second Battle of Manassas. John O? Cross ? Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Private Cross, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County) gives enlisted January, 1861; discharged April 9, 1865; served 4 years; wounded in hip; resident of South Quay. Joseph Milton Cross North Carolina Regiment Cross was born October 29, 1845 in Sunbury, Gates County, N.C., and lived most of his life there. He married Mary Elizabeth Norfleet. He was a planter, a cotton gin and sawmill operator and a merchant. He was superintendent of the Methodist Church Sunday School in Sunbury. His last years were spent in Suffolk. He died March 3, 1922 and is buried in the family cemetery in Sunbury, N.C. Thomas Hardy Cross 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private, Later 3rd Sergeant. Cross was born October 11, 1841 in Nansemond Co., the son of Hardy and Martha N. Peete Cross. He attended the University of Virginia 1858-1861. Cross enlisted in the Brazilian Army and served for twenty-three months. He married on January 3, 1879, Eleanor "Ellie" Wright (b. 03/13/1841), daughter of Thomas S. Wright of Smithfield. In 1870, he returned to Nansemond County. He was employed as a farmer, school teacher and also was Deputy Collector for Internal Revenue with headquarters in Suffolk. In 1879 he was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates. On April 1, 1890, he was appointed Deputy U.S. Marshall. Cross died May 28, 1903 and is buried in Ivy Hill Cemetery in Smithfield, Va. William H. Cross 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Cross was born in 1840. His father was the owner of 383 acres of land, 16 to 20 miles SW of Suffolk. Cross died August 23, 1864 at the 2nd Division Depot Field Hospital U.S.V. Army Corps, City Point. George Henry Crump Crump was born March 7, 1816 in Surry County, Virginia, the son of John Crawford and Mary B. Crump. Listed in the 1850 census #625, he was a farmer and worth $8000. Crump married Elizabeth Judith Rochell (1821-1866) of Southampton County on October 1, 1840. She was the daughter of Clement and Ann Rochell. His second marriage was October 28, 1868 to Louisiana Finney (1844-1913), daughter of Dr. Crawley and Margaret Ann Whitfield Finney. Their daughter Lulie's obituary styles her father "Col." He died January 18, 1879 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 23. Oceola Claudius Crump 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Crump was born November 9, 1838 at Cherry Grove, Nansemond Co., the son of John C. Crump. He married Mattie B. Lassiter (1840-1926) and died February 2, 1900. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 3. Charles B. Crumpler 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Crumpler was born in 1842 in Isle of Wight Co. He was at Appomattox when the war ended. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 106. Julius Benjamin Crumpler Lt. Roy's Independent Scouts Crumpler was born October 31, 1845 in Isle of Wight Co., the son of Matthew and Jemima Saunders Crumpler. He came to live in Nansemond County in 1860 and was a farmer in the Chuckatuck District. He married Mary Frances Pierce (1842-1902), daughter of Patrick and Lucy Ann Gay Pierce, on January 3, 1867 in Isle of Wight County. They had eight children. He died January 18, 1926 and is buried in Oakland Christian Church Cemetery. Henry Randolph Culley 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 4th Sergeant Culley was born August 24, 1831. He was a brick mason. He and his wife Mary Ann Culley had three children. Culley died August 2, 1912 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 85. David B. Curry 4th Virginia Infantry, Private Curry was born July 4, 1827 and died November 26, 1887. He married widow Sophia Ann Allen Riddick. They buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 71. (On the foot marker, his name is spelled Cury CSA) Benjamin Franklin Cutchin 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A - Corporal; Quartermaster Sergeant; Full Private Cutchin was born circa 1840, the son of Josiah G. and Margaret F. Cutchin. He enlisted April 17, 1861 in Suffolk. He married Ann Eliza Hodges, August 8, 1861 in Suffolk. After the war, he was a member of the Memorial Association, Mahone's Old Brigade of the Army and a merchant in Suffolk. Cutchin died January 26, 1903, a week after his wife's funeral. They are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Adolphus B. Cutchins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Cutchin was born in Nansemond Co. in 1841, the son of Bartholomew and Elizabeth Cutchin. He died of disease at Camp Winder Hospital, Richmond, Va. Algernon Sidney Darden 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C On staff of General Chambliss as Aide without Commission Darden was born January 28, 1829 in Isle of Wight. He married Mary Swepson Allen (1837-1913), daughter of Archibald and Mary Swepson Allen. He was a merchant in Suffolk after the war and lived on Main Street where the Birdsong Recreation Center is now located. Darden died April 3, 1893 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 71. Dempsey Langston Darden 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Darden was born September 25, 1842, the son of William Wright and Nancy Langston Darden. His father owned 200 acres of land 18 miles south west of Suffolk. Darden, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted June 6, 1861; discharged April 9, 1865; served 3 years, 10 months, 3 days; resident of Elwood. He was married first on February 7, 1867 to Alice N. Skinner (1850-1873), daughter of Henry M. and Maria Riddick Skinner. His second wife was Elizabeth S. Haslett Darden (1851-1930), daughter of Jethro & Sophia Ann Odom Haslett . Dempsey Darden died January 24, 1905 and is buried at Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery, Nansemond Co. Elisha H. Darden 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Darden was born January 28, 1830, the son of William Wright and Nancy Langston Darden. His wife was Nancy Wilson Darden Darden (1842-1906). When the war started he enlisted in April 1861 but was discharged in 1862 just before the evacuation of Norfolk. He died September 29, 1912 and is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery. Hugh Kelly Darden 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private also: in Major James Milligan's Signal Corps & Scouts (Source: reverse of new stone) Darden was born in 1847. He was a student before the war. He was 5'3" tall, had a light complexion, blue eyes and dark hair. He was dischared in Winchester in 1862 for being under 18 years old. After the war, Darden was a member of Stonewall Camp UCV at Portsmouth. He was listed on the Confederate Roll of Honor. He died June 1, 1903 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 24 1/2. There are no dates on his [old marble foot-] stone. John Darden 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 1st Sergeant Darden was born in 1842. He was killed at the Battle of Second Manassas on August 30, 1862. John D.H. Darden 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Darden was born August 16, 1821 in Nansemond County. He was a farmer and stood 6'1½" tall. He was discharged August 16, 1864 as too sick and unfit. "Jack" John Robert Darden 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Darden was born March 9, 1841, in Isle of Wight Co., to Mills W. and Sarah Jane White Darden. His widowed father remarried, to Millicent White [m.bond 11/25/1844] in Gates Co., NC, but died April 25, 1854. John was a clerk in Suffolk before the war. He became a Quaker, and married "Mattie" Martha J. White (11/22/1841-5/1/1881), March 9, 1869, in Perquimans Co., NC. He was farming in 1870 & 1880 in Belvidere, Perquimans Co., NC. Mattie is buried with her parents in the White-Nicholson family cemetery in Perquimans Co. Jack remarried, to Novella S. Darden (1856-1932) February 12, 1892, in Nansemond Co. He died December 28, 1919 and is buried at Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk - Block C, Lot 101. John Wilson Darden 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private later Cpl. Darden was born in Nansemond County on July 16, 1841, the son of Wilson H. and Nancy Ann Norfleet Sumner Darden. Darden, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted May 3, 1861; discharged August 10, 1865; served 4 years, 3 months, 7 days. He died November 27, 1908 and is buried in Poplar Spring Cemetery, Franklin, Va. - Section 2, Plot 44B. Julius Caesar Darden 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, 4th Corporal Darden was born March 27, 1841, the son of Charles Henry and 1st wife Nancy Seeds Darden. He was a resident of Ivor Station, Southampton Co. and was a student when the war started. During his service, he was appointed 4th Corporal of his company. He married Lucie Ann Turner (1847-1923) February 1, 1871, in Isle of Wight County. Julius died on September 8, 1889 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk - Block C, Lot 100. Justin R. Darden 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Darden was born in 1846 in Nansemond Co., the son of Edward H. and Clarissa Darden. He died in 1868. Moses Darden 61st Virginia Cavalry, Company F, Private The 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County) gives enlisted February, 1862; discharged 1865; served 3 years, 1 month; resident of Elwood. Riseup R. Darden 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Darden was born in 1836 in Nansemond Co., the son of Edward H. and Clarissa Darden. He died in 1863. Samuel Putnam Darden 9th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Darden was born March 25, 1823 in Suffolk. He had a dark complexion, iron gray hair, hazel eyes and was 5'9" tall. He enlisted in February 1863, and deserted Mar 1863. He returned to his unit April 1864 and was imprisoned in Castle Thunder in Richmond. He was returned to duty May 31, 1864, and was pardoned by President Davis in August. He was captured at Five Forks, and held at Point Lookout, MD until June 1865. Samuel Darden died of dropsy April 20, 1880 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 20. His wife, Sarah Louise Cross Darden, remarried, to Owen K. Pinner. William Darden 27th Virginia Regiment, Company I, Private His widow Delucia Darden, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County), which gives enlisted May, 1861; discharged June, 1864; served 2 years, 11 months; she was a resident of South Quay. Allen Daughtrey 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K, Private Daughtrey was born September 15, 1840 in Isle of Wight Co., a son of Joshua and Priscilla Holland Daughtrey. He served as a courier for Gen. Roger A. Pryor. He married Martha Elizabeth "Bettie" Norfleet June 13, 1867 in Nansemond Co. He married Sarah Cornelia Rawls March 9, 1889 in Nansemond Co. He is on a list of Nansemond County men who were veterans. On his record was written "could not see therefore could not date." He died November 29, 1919 in Franklin. He & Cornelia are buried in Poplar Spring Cemetery, Section 2, Plot 72A. Brother of Eley Daughtrey. Charles W. Daughtrey 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Daughtrey was born in Suffolk in 1844, the son of Mills C. and Margaret P. Beale Daughtrey of Suffolk. He went to school in Albemarle Co., Va. He was a clerk in the merchantile business in North Carolina after the war. Daughtrey died on September 22, 1866 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 44. Darien Parker Daughtrey 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Later detached as Brigade Headquarters Clerk - on account of weakness Daughtrey was born in 1832 in Nansemond Co., son of Rev. Jacob Kader and Ann Lester Daughtrey. Before the war, he was a clerk in the store of Benjamin D. Smith. He married Elizabeth Pugh. He was still living about 1910, as were his four brothers & brother-in-law James Neverson Milteer, who all served in the same company. Edward R. Daughtrey Private Edward R. Daughtrey was born October 12, 1824, and died June 3, 1876. His widow Mary A. Daughtrey (1833-1912) appears in the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County). They are buried in a Daughtrey family cemetery, near the intersecion of Holland and Glen Haven Roads. Eley Daughtrey 41st Virginia Cavalry, Company K, Private Daughtrey was born in March 26, 1838 in Isle of Wight Co., a son of Joshua and Priscilla Holland Daughtrey. He was detailed as a cook December 15, 1862. He was wounded in the back May 15, 1864 at Spotsylania C.H. and returned to duty in October. He was paroled at Appomattox C.H. He married Julia Anna Rawls January 10, 1867 in Nansemond Co. He died of chronic nephritis September 22, 1930, in Nansemond Co. and was buried in a private cemetery 5 miles east of Franklin. Brother of Allen Daughtrey. Jacob Edward Daughtrey 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Daughtrey was born September 25, 1845, the son of James H. and Margaret Catherine Langston Daughtrey. On January 10, 1867 he married Lucy A. Winborne (b. 01/25/1846), daughter of John Bryan and Sarah Matilda Howell Winborne (m. 1842 Southampton Co.). They had eleven children. Daughtrey was a farmer. He died April 28, 1914 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 102. Jacob Henry Daughtrey 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Daughtrey was born April 15, 1843, son of Rev. Jacob Kader and Ann Lester Daughtrey. He married Whittie Agnes Sharrock (b. 1850), daughter of Whitman T. and Margaret C. Sharrock. They had five children and lived on a farm nine miles east of Suffolk. He died May 8, 1919, and was buried in the family cemetery; added to list with his parents. James Daughtrey 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Daughtrey died May 29, 1863 of typhoid fever in Chimborazo Hospital, Number 1 in Richmond, Va. Jesse D. Daughtrey 6th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Orderly Sergeant. Daughtrey was born August 1, 1842 and educated in Albemarle Co., Va. At 17 he began an apprenticeship as a machinist in Richmond. At the beginning of the war he made munitions in Richmond and was a member of the reserve force there. After the war he was a locomotive engineer on the railroad until severely injured in a wreck. He came back to Suffolk and in 1889 published band music. Daughtrey died April 12, 1907 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 44. John D. Daughtrey Daughtrey was born in 1843, the son of Mills C. and Margaret P. Daughtrey. Mills C. Daughtrey, Jr Daughtrey was born in 1835, the son of Mills C. and Margaret P. Daughtrey. Robert Calvin Daughtrey 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Cpl. Daughtrey was born August 12, 1836, the son of Rev. Jacob Kadar and Ann Lester Daughtrey. He married Mary Frances King, daughter of Michael and Ann Eliza Savage King, on December 24, 1857. They lived on a farm in the Holland area and had eight children. He died October 13, 1920. They are buried with his parents in the Daughtrey family cemetery on Barnes Rd. Talbert G. Daughtrey 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Daughtrey was born in 1839, the son of Jacob Kadar and Ann Lester Daughtrey. After the war, he was a farmer living near Holland. His first wife was Graphelia Daughtrey. His second was Laura Virginia Wiggins Daughtrey. He died April 19, 1918. William Henry Daughtrey CSA Surgeon Daughtrey was born 1835. He graduated from the University of Virginia in 1853 and received his M.D. from University of Pennsylvania. He was a surgeon during the war and continued to be a doctor, serving the community of Newsoms Depot in Southampton Co., Va. after the war. William Davidson 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Davidson was married and lived in the Holy Neck section of Nansemond Co. He died July 6, 1882. John James Deyer 7th North Carolina Infantry, Company I, Private 8th Georgia Cavalry Deyer was born July 17, 1839 in Norfolk. After the war he settled in Southampton Co. He married Josephine Jordan Dunstan of Murfreesboro, NC, in February 1868. He was a member of the House of Delegates from Southampton Co. (sessions 1881 and 1882), clerk of the folding-room of US House of Representatives (sessions of 1889 and 1891), and a member of the State Republican Committee. He died April 4, 1902 at Old Dominion Hospital in Richmond of an aneurysm of the esophagus, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 61. James D. Dickerson 18th Virginia Infantry, Company H, Private Dickerson was born December 26, 1844 in Richmond [some sources gives Scotland]. A baker like his father, he enlisted at Richmond by March 8, 1862. He was wounded in the left thigh by a large shell fragment May 31, 1862 at Seven Pines, where his twin brothers were killed. He was on detached service as a teamster June 9, 1864, and surrenderd with Lee at Appomattox Courthouse. He farmed in Southampton & Isle of Wight Co. after the war. He married Mary Agnes Bulls July 13, 1886. Totally disabled by old age, he applied for a pension September 22, 1930. He was admitted to Eastern State Hospital in Williamsburg June 10, 1945, and died there October 6, 1948 - the last Confederate veteran from Nansemond Co. He & Mary are buried in Mill Swamp Baptist Church Cemetery (IWCHS GSSTF #55). Richard Dillard CSA Colonel Dillard was born 1821 in Nansemond Co. He graduated from University of Virginia in 1839 and received his M.D. from University of Pennsylvania. From Chowan County; he was a member of the North Carolina Senate, 1857-1859. John Dixon 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F Dixon was born in 1845. Henning Smith Doughtie 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, 2nd Lt. Transferred to Capt. Grandy's Artillery Battalion Doughtie was born in 1835, the son of William H. and Elizabeth Smith Doughtie. He married Sarah Norfleet (1840-1929). He died in 1910 and is buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. Judson E.N. Doughtie 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Doughtie died in a Richmond hospital on May 14, 1863. William W. Draper 13th Virginia Infantry, Company C Draper lived in Nansemond County after the war and received a pension. His wife was Mary R. Draper. Elliott Jefferson Driver 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Driver was born December 31, 1840, the son of John and Beershebe Driver. He was wounded twice during the war. His wife was Mary Driver. His son Wilson E. Driver married Lucy Waring Baylor, daughter of Robert P. Baylor, who also served in the 13th Virginia Cavalry, from Essex County. After the war, Driver was Postmaster and a merchant in the village of Driver, which was named after him. He died February 20, 1908 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 24. Archibald Duck 9th Virginia Infantry, Co. E, Captain Duck was born December 28, 1833. He resigned from the army in the spring of 1862 (not reelected). Duck died April 11, 1910 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 26. Benjamin Duke 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Duke was born in 1837. He enlisted for service April 20, 1861. Burwell Duke 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Duke was born December 12, 1837, the son of Prentice and Mary Smith Duke. His father owned 114 acres of land 6 miles west of Suffolk. He was present at Appomattox when the war ended. Later he lived at Savage Crossing, Nansemond Co. with his wife Harriett Duke. He received a pension in 1900 for his service. David W. Duke 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 1st Lieutenant; detached to Brigade Pioneer Corps in 1863. Duke was born February 22, 1836. He was present at Appomattox when the war ended and later returned to farming. He married three times: Margaret S. Ballard, December 11, 1860, in Norfolk; widow Virginia Louisa Parker Ballard, November 19, 1865, in Nansemond County; & E. Wortley Eley, June 1, 1882, in Nansemond County. Duke died suddenly June 5, 1886 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 27. Hardy Duke 13th Virginia Infantry Hardy Duke was born in 1832. His wife was Margaret Raby Duke (1840 - 1934). Duke died in 1912 and is buried in Churchland Baptist Church Cemetery. Henry Duke 9th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Private Transferred to 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Duke was born July 17, 1844 in Nansemond Co. He returned to Suffolk after the war, but later moved to Norfolk. He was a farmer, a Mason, and a member of the Knights of Pythias. Henry Duke's wife was Elizabeth A. Capps Miars Duke (01/28/1848-01/16/1902). He died October 24, 1925 and is buried in Churchland Baptist Church Cemetery. Henry Harrison Duke 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Duke was born in 1826 near Holland, Nansemond Co. He married Sally Maria Gardner, raised a large family and farmed near the Blackwater River. He died January 31, 1908 and was buried in a family cemetery. He is marked in Beaver Dam Baptist Church Cemetery. Brother of James Madison Duke. James Adderson Duke 5th North Carolina Infantry, Company B, Private Duke was born April, 1836 in Gates County, North Carolina, son of Francis and Edith Duke. He enlisted February 13, 1862. He was a railroad conductor in Wilmington, NC, when he married "Lou" Louisa E. Edwards, August 30, 1866, in her native Southampton County. He died December 5, 1890 and is buried in Beaver Dam Baptist Church Cemetery. His son was born in Gates Co. in 1879; his daughter, 1884 in Dodge County, Georgia. James Madison Duke 14th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Duke was born April 29, 1837. After the war, he settled near Holland, Va. He was a great hunter, enjoying the chase. Duke died February 11, 1923. Brother of Henry Harrison Duke. Joseph T. Duke 24th Virginia Cavalry, Co. I, Private Duke was born July 12, 1845 in Cypress Chapel, Nansemond Co., Va., the son of James and Dorothy Griffin Duke. He was very active in politics. He is buried in Churchland Baptist Church Cemetery. (no dates on his stone) Lewis G. Duke 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Duke was born on April 16, 1845, the son of Prentice and Mary Smith Duke. He died January 22, 1910 and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery in Portsmouth, Va. [Oak Grove list gives: DUKE, Calvin Lewis, Plot D 212] Nelson Duke Duke was born about 1818, the son of the son of Benjamin Duke. He farmed in Nansemond County. He married Mary Elizabeth Brothers (b. 1837). They had a son and two daughters. He left will Sep. 5, 1895 (proved Nov. 13, 1899). Nelson & Mary are buried in Liberty Spring Christian Church Cemetery - his grave has a CSA marker. Owen Flynn Duke 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Duke was born December 6, 1845 in Suffolk, the son of David O. and Catherine Flynn Duke. He attended VMI before the war. He died May 8, 1891 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 33. Parker Duke Cohoon's Battalion Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private; transferred to 61st Infantry, Company I. Duke was born circa 1840 in Nansemond County, the son of "Whit" Whitmell and Susan Duke. He had black hair, blue eyes, was dark complected and was 5'11" tall. He married Elizabeth Rawls Jan. 1, 1868. Duke died Oct. 13, 1896, of apoplexy. He & his widow were buried in the southeastern part of Nansemond Co. but was reinterred when the City of Suffolk took over the property for a land fill. They are now buried in Holly Lawn Cemetery, Suffolk. His widow applied for a pension Sep. 4, 1908. Richard R. Duke 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Duke was born in 1836. He was wheelwright in 1860 and was boarding at a farm 12 miles west of Suffolk with Mills Lawrence. He lived in Whaleyville after the war and got a pension for his service. Thomas Duke 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Duke was born in 1827. He was 5'10" tall, had blue eyes and black hair. Thomas was a farmer, married and had five children. He got a pension for his war service. William T. Duke 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Duke was born January 10, 1834, the son of Prentice and Mary Smith Duke. His wife was Christiana Duke (09/07/1853-03/08/1914). He died on February 18, 1918 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G. Lot 129E 1/2. Emanuel Dunford 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private In 1863, Dunford was assigned to Brigade Headquarters; later he was detailed with the Ambulance Corps because his horse had been killed. After the war, he lived in Nansemond County and received a pension. Charles M. Early 7th North Carolina Infantry, Company C, Private Early was born on May 21, 1844. He was wounded at Cold Harbor. He died June 25, 1898 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 54. Jackson Eastman Eastman was born in 1838. His wife was Fannie Eastman (1845-1901). He died June 28, 1881 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 9. Albriston Edwards 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, 3rd Sgt. Edwards was born May 16, 1828 in Southampton Co., Va., the son of John and Sallie Joyner Edwards. He married on February 1, 1859 in Nansemond County, Frances Ann Howell, daughter of Rev. Edward and Sarah Pipkin Barnes Howell. They had eight children. After the war Edwards lived in Holy Neck District four miles south of Carrsville. He was a merchant in Holland, Va. Living in 1910. Edwin N. Edwards 19th Virginia Battalion, Company E, Private (Not in the book) Edwards was born in 1844. He was listed on the 1920 Nansemond County Census in the Chuckatuck District. He was married twice: his first wife was Sarah Edwards and his second was Edy Vaughan Edwards. R.P. Edwards 7th N.C. Infantry, Company H, 1st Lieutenant Edwards was born in 1832. Robert Samuel Elam 22nd Virginia Battery, Company E, Captain Elam was born November 19, 1831, the son of William D. and Susan F. Elam of Campbell Co.* He married twice, first in 1860 to the Mary S. Bruce, who died April 14, 1862, and second to widow Martha Ann Robertson Barnes (1829-1902). [*Both marriage records give born Charlotte Co. (FamilySearch.org "Va. Marriages")] Martha and Robert had six children. During the war, he lost a limb. Elam died October 1, 1891 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 59. Thomas Gordon Elam Clarksville Blues, 14th Virginia Regiment, Company E, Captain Elam was born November 8, 1844 in Campbell Co. During the war, he was a field telegrapher for General Fitzhugh Lee. He lived in Suffolk for several years after the war and married Emily S. Arnold in 1870; they had three children. He was editor and owner of the Suffolk News-Herald and later editor of the Danville Register. Thomas Elam was Mayor of Suffolk 1872-1873. In the last several years before his death, he was in the insurance business. He was also remembered for his office of First Lieutenant Grand Commander of the Virginia Confederate Veterans. He died about 1915 in Salem, Va. Benjamin Claudius Eley 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Eley was born November 20, 1838 in Isle of Wight Co., the son of Robert Lankford and Martha Ann Holland Eley. He married Eugenia Ann Cowling (8/17/1838-10/19/1884), daughter of Samuel and Ann L. Cowling on January 27, 1859 in Nansemond Co. He died in July 15, 1911 in Chuckatuck and is buried in Wesley Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery, Chuckatuck, Va. James Eley 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Eley was born in 1841. He had black hair, black eyes, a fair complexion and was 6'2" tall. After the war he lived near Holland, Nansemond Co., Va. Eley, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives Co. F/16th Va. Inf., enlisted 1861; discharged August, 1864; served 2 years, 6 months; resident of Elwood. In 1900, he filed for a pension for his war service. Richard Seth Eley 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, 1st Lieutenant Eley was born May 22, 1835. He married Eliza Porter Riddick (1858- 1925). After the war he was a merchant in Suffolk. Eley died September 29, 1886 in Suffolk from a war-related illness. He was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 48. Walter Holland Eley 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, 3rd Lieutenant Eley was born August 31, 1840 in Isle of Wight Co., the son of Robert L. and Martha N. Holland Eley. On January 31, 1861, he married in Nansemond Co. Mrs. Nancy Jane Riddick Ames (b. 1837), daughter of Jethro and Elizabeth Vaughan Riddick. They had seven children. Eley had a farm in Cypress District and was the High Sheriff of Nansemond Co., 1870-1874, School Trustee and for one term, Deputy Commissioner of Revenue. He died Dec. 8, 1915, and was buried in an Eley family cemetery on White Marsh Rd. William Thomas Eley 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, 1st Lieutenant Eley was born January 17, 1838, the son of William and Lydia Eley. He was a doctor. He died July 11, 1862 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 74. On his stone it reads, "Killed in action from wounds he received in battle before Richmond while in defense of his country - Wounded June 30, 1862, age 24." Frank R. Ellenor 3rd Battery Light Artillery Ordinance, Company C, Sergeant Ellenor was born December 29, 1843. His wife was Sallie Ida Ellenor (1846-1933). He died May 28, 1917 and is buried at Whaleyville Methodist Church Cemetery. "Frank" Francis W.* Ellis 14th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Frank was born April 27, 1846, the son of Wiley and Martha Ellis. He was a farmer in Cypress district. He married Sarah C. Babb, February 7, 1866, and they had 3 children. He died June 21, 1901, and was buried in the Babb-Rawles family cemetery, on Rt. 664. *The NPS Civil War Soldiers database gives Frank/Francis H. Ellis. James E. Ellis 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Ellis was born in 1816. He was farmer and owned 124 acres of land 8 miles south of Suffolk. He was married and had three children. He was killed at the Crater on July 30, 1864. Robert Calvin Ellis 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Ellis was born January 22, 1831 in Nansemond Co., a son of Alfred and Nancy Ellis. He was at Appomattox when the war ended. He married Cassandra Frost (1847-1887) December 10, 1868. After the war he settled near Liberty Spring Church. He died November 13, 1898 and is buried in Liberty Spring Christian Church Cemetery. James Evans Major, CSA Evans was born in Suffolk June 24, 1824, the son of James, Sr. and Ann Poole Evans. After the war, he moved to Florida, where he owned several orange groves. He died January 12, 1904 in Fort Myers, FL, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 58. John W. Evans CSA - Captain Evans was born March 31, 1839. His wife was Mary Elizabeth Evans (1866-1942). He died November 16, 1903 and is buried in Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery. Isaac Williams Everett 14th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Everett was born in Nansemond Co. on October 9, 1836, the son of Thomas and Charity Williams Everett. He married on September 26, 1861, Ann Eliza Porter (b. 1839). They had four children and lived in the Holy Neck District after the war. Isaac & Ann "Everitt" have a memorial window in Holy Neck Christian Church. J.W. Everett 14th Virginia Cavalry, Company D, Private Everett was born in 1830. J.W. Everett 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Everett was born in 1838 in Nansemond Co. In the 1850 census he was living in the home of John R. and Mary A. Lee. He returned to Nansemond Co. to live after the war. Robert Fanny 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Fanny was born in 1824 in Gates County, N.C., the son of Stephen and Nancy Danford Fanny. He married Elizabeth Nurney, daughter of Charles and Rebecca Gummer Nurney in 1851. They raised twelve children on a farm in the Sleepy Hole District of Nansemond Co. He was a member of Stonewall Camp of Confederate Veterns. Fanny died June 22, 1898. Peter F. Farley 12th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Farley was a musician in the army. His wife was Virginia S. Farley and received a pension in 1903 for his war service. Farley is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 46. (no dates on the stone) Riddick Faulk 37th Virginia Regiment, Private Faulk, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County), which gives enlisted May 10, 1861; discharged June 8, 1864; served 3 years, 22 days; rheumatism in legs; resident of South Quay. Andrew Harrison Forrest 9th Virginia Infantry Company B Transferred to the Confederate States Navy (CSS Virginia {Merrimac}) Forrest was born in 1839* in Mathews Co. His wife was Georgie A. Jordan Forrest (1851-1923); they married Apr. 24, 1873, in Norfolk. Andrew H. Forrest died on April 12, 1921 and is buried in Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery in Crittenden, Va. [*D.Cert. 8449 (Chuckatuck #2) gives b. Feb. 25, 1840] James A. Fowler CSA Fowler died March 18, 1924. James A. Fowler 8th Georgia, Company H, Private Fowler was born in 1845. William J. Fowler 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Paroled to Nansemond County after the war. Hamlin Lee Eppes Franklin 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, First Corporal and Clerk Franklin was born 1843, the son of Javan Riddick and Jane Rebecca Eppes Franklin. He was killed July 30, 1864 at the Crater. Jethro Riddick Franklin 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Franklin was born December 15, 1822. His second wife was Julia Ann Brinkley Franklin (1832-1884). They raised five children on a 150 acre farm, 12 miles southeast of Suffolk. Franklin died in 1904 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 104. William J. Frost 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Frost was born August 20, 1840 in Nansemond Co., the son of William and Priscilla Frost. His father owned 442 acres of land seven to fourteen miles southeast of Suffolk. He married Anna Mary Arline Frost (1850-1915) March 26, 1868, in Nansemond Co. He died April 20, 1905 and is buried at Liberty Spring Christian Church Cemetery. On his stone is CSA. John Levi Fulgham 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Fulgham was born May 29, 1840 in Isle of Wight Co., the son of Jesse and Mary Elizabeth Lowe Fulgham. He moved to Nansemond Co. in 1857. After the war he was Sheriff of Nansemond Co. and lived in Suffolk. He married on March 4, 1870, Martha Washington King (1837-1910), daughter of William and Barsheba Smith King. John Fulgham died in 1925 in California. Joseph H. Fulgham 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Sergeant Joseph was born in 1843. He was the son of Jesse Washington and Mary Elizabeth Lowe Fulgham. His wife was Sarah Ethridge Fulgham. Joseph died in 1891 and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Norfolk, Va. with a CSA marker. [Plot 5AE-L22-S9] John James W. Fuller 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company G, Private Fuller was born in 1843, the son of Charles & Mary M. Kirby. He enlisted May 21, 1861 in Jerusalem (now Courtland). He was captured at Gettysburg and sent to Point Lookout, Md. He was exchanged Feb. 13, 1865. He died in 1870 in Suffolk, supposedly, but a James W. Fuller was granted administration on the estate of his brother, William Henry Fuller. He's buried in a family cemetery somewhere behind Lipton Tea in Suffolk, Va. William Henry Fuller CSA Brother of John J.W. Fuller. He was murdered Dec. 24, 1877 in Southampton Co. He's buried in a family cemetery somewhere behind Lipton Tea in Suffolk, Va. Calvin Luther Gardner 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Gardner was born on June 12, 1844 in Nansemond Co., the son of James and Lilly Gardner. His mother owned 86 acres of land 18 miles southwest of Suffolk. He was wounded in a battle in Petersburg. He married Maggie B. Hoffman (1847-1902). Gardner was a Postmaster in Suffolk. He died on July 2, 1892 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 94. Maggie received a pension for his war service. James H. Gardner 14th Virginia Regiment, Company I, Private "Gardiner," as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County), which gives enlisted February, 1862; discharged April 6, 1865; served 3 years, 2 months; wounded in left knee; 5' 4"; resident of South Quay. John Gardner Gardner was born circa 1831, in Southampton County, the son of Lawrence & Patsey Gardner. He married Caroline Susan Daughtrey, daughter of Robert & Abby Daughtrey, Sep. 2, 1858, in Nansemond County. (Nansemond Co. M.Reg. 1858, p. 106 #24) An article (Suffolk News-Herald, Nov. 15, 1955, p. 3) on the 93rd birthday of their daughter "Sally" Sarah Ann (Gardner; Mrs. William Jesse) Horton states she never knew her father, as "she was born was away fighting with the Confederates in the Civil War. He never returned home." Caroline 2m. James Thomas Doughtie, son of William H. & Nancy Doughtie, Mar. 19, 1868, in Nansemond County. (Nansemond Co. M.Reg. 1868, p. 204) Lemuel H. Gardner 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Gardner was born August 20, 1842*, in Southampton County, the son of Lemuel R. & Nancy Daughtrey Gardner. He was captured at Wellville, Nottoway Co., appearing as a POW Apr. 11, 1865. He married Missouri Antinette Peele (6/15/1846-2/19/1927), daughter of Nelson & Martha Butler Peele, Jan. 3, 1867, in Nansemond Co. He died March 13, 1913 of arteriosclerosis and is buried in the South Quay Baptist Church Cemetery. [*D.Cert. #6604 (Holy Neck #7) gives b. March 12, 1844, Southampton Co.] [The regimental history gives A. Lemuel Gardner of Surry Co.] Wiley "Nity" Gardner 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Gardner was born in 1834 in Southampton Co., the son of James and Lilly Gardner. He was deaf and dumb. His mother owned 86 acres of land 18 miles southwest of Suffolk. On the evacuation of Norfolk in 1862, Nity went home to Nansemond Co. Thomas Rice Gaskins 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, 2nd Lieutenant. Gaskins was born October 19, 1835, the son of John and Lovey Carney Gaskins. He resigned at Yorktown in April of 1862. Gaskins married twice, first to Penelope Frances Oliver (09/28/1836-05/07/1872); they had three children. His second wife was Margaret S. Gaskins (07/26/1836-01/04/1916). He died December 23, 1910 and is buried in the Gaskins-Lee Family Cemetery, Bridge Road, Suffolk. John Everett Gay 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Gay was born in 1835. He was murdered on January 8, 1870 at Magnolia Springs, Nansemond Co., by William James Urquhart [below]. His wife, Matilda Hedgepeth Gay, received a pension in 1902 for his war service; she is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk. William H. Gay 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Gay was born April 29, 1828, the son of Everett and Priscilla Gay. Before the war he was living in Isle of Wight Co. and was married to Lucy Gay (ca. 1827 - ca. 1881) about 1849. He had hazel eyes, brown hair, fair complexion and was 5'7" tall. After the war, he was a lumberman and founded the Gay Manufacturing Company. He and his associates began the Suffolk and Carolina Railroad, which later was sold to the Norfolk and Southern Railroad. It was at first a narrow gauge railroad used to haul lumber in the Suffolk area and was later extended to Edenton, N.C. Being a firm believer in education and religion, he had several schools built that doubled as churches. He remarried Sep. 12, 1882 in Suffolk to widow Olivia S. Voight Voight Gay (1851-1919). He died April 13, 1907 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 79. Archibald Campbell Godwin 57th North Carolina Regiment, Brig. Gen. Godwin was a native of Chuckatuck, born in 1831. He moved to California at the age of 19 to be a rancher and miner. When the war started, he moved back to Virginia. He led Hoke's Brigade at Gettysburg and was named Brigader General on August 5, 1864. Godwin was killed September 19, 1864 at Winchester in the Shenandoah Valley by a shell fragment. David Jeremiah Godwin 9th Virginia Infantry, Colonel Godwin was born in 1829 in Nansemond Co. and was a lawyer before the war. He was wounded in 1862; resigned and joined the Invalid Corps. Godwin died January 18, 1890 and was buried in Cedar Grove Cemetery in Portsmouth, Va. [Row 2, Plot 082] Lucien J.B. Godwin 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Godwin was born in 1834. At the end of the war, he was paroled to Nansemond Co. Willis Henry Godwin [AKA William H. Godwin] 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Godwin was born about 1843, the son of Willis and Virginia Godwin. He was a sailor when he married Anna L. Heath, daughter of George Thomas and Mary Frances Holland Heath of Norfolk, and widow of Edwin Eley Johnson [E/9th; WIA May 20, DOW June 12, 1864] and a Mr. Holland, in October 10, 1867* in Isle of Wight County. They had at least one son and four daughters. Godwin was a farmer in Isle of Wight County, were he died of some chronic disease Oct. 27, 1885. Anna applied for a pension June 8, 1906, in Suffolk, where she had lived about nine years; *it gives her third marriage as in 1865. She died February 10, 1919, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block I, Lot 51. Azra Powell Gomer 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Captain Gomer was born in Nansemond Co. October 17, 1835, the son of John and Margaret Ann Powell Gomer. He married on March 7, 1877, Ada Hinton Darden (1851-1927), daughter of Jacob and Janette Norfleet Darden. Gomer was a school teacher and postmaster in Belleville, Virginia. In later years he worked as a deputy clerk in the Nansemond County Clerk's Office. He lost a leg at Gettysburg. Gomer was the last survivor of his company, Joseph O. Lancaster having died June 12, 1909. Gomer died December 16, 1909 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 94. James H. Goodman 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, 1st Lieutenant. He surrendered May 1, 1865 with General J.E. Johnston's Army of Tennessee. John Charles Goodman Assistant Surgeon, CSA Goodman was born in 1839 in Nansemond Co. He graduated from University of Virginia with a M.D. in 1858 and was an assistant surgeon during the war. Later he set up his medical practice in Somerton, Nansemond Co., Va. W.G. Goodman 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Goodman was born in 1837. Thomas N. Goodson 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Goodson was born in 1827 and received a pension after the war. L.S. Goodwin 5th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 1st Sergeant Goodwin was born in 1827. James Gould 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Gould was discharged on May 1, 1862 under the provision of Confederate States law exempting Quakers from military service. Horace L. Gray 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Lieutenant Gray was born in 1829. He was detached as a nurse and ward master in a hospital in Richmond during the war. He died in August 24, 1901. Hamlin S. Griffin 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Griffin was born in 1840 in Nansemond Co., the son of Richard and Christine Griffin. His father was a farmer and owned 50 acres of land 13 miles south of Suffolk. John T. Griffin Griffin was born in Suffolk on February 5, 1838, the son of Nathaniel and Virginia Ann Gwinn Griffin. His father moved them to Norfolk about 1844. Griffin graduated from Columbia University in Washington, D.C. in 1859 and taught there until 1861. During the war he served as a engineer on General Randolph's staff. After the war, he taught school at Churchland Academy 1865-1866. In 1865, he married Julia Armistead Benn (10/16/1842-01/16/1902), daughter of Thomas and Nancy Benn- her father, an ensign in the War of 1812. He served two years as surveyor of Nansemond Co. and in 1867, he was elected president of Norfolk Storage Company. In December 1885, he was president of the Merchants and Farmers Bank and a director of the Atlantic and Danville Railway. He had been living in Churchland several years when he died April 14, 1920 and is buried in Churchland Baptist Church Cemetery. John Griggs 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Griggs was granted a pension in 1900 (S- Va.P 05-05-1900, p. 8), but does not appear on the pension rolls. Henry Gwynn 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Captain Gwynn was born in Maryland in 1837. William Gwynn 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Gwynn's wife Leah H. Gwynn received a pension in 1900. Thomas S? Hackney 1st North Carolina Regiment, Company K, Sergeant Hackney, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted June 28, 1861; discharged June 27, 1865; served 4 years, 1 day; wounded in right knee, left shoulder, & chin. Buford C. Hall 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Sergeant Hall, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted June, 1861; discharged April 9, 1865; served 4 years; resident of South Quay. Cornelius Hall 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company K, Private Hall was born on December 23, 1827 in Smithfield, Isle of Wight Co., Va. His wife was Martha S. Hall (1843-1910). He attended University of Virginia from 1846 to 1848. Hall died at Chuckatuck on February 1, 1899 and is buried in Wesley Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery. George Hall 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Hall is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 14. (no dates on the tombstone) [2 in 1860 Census in Lower P'sh, Nan.Co.: Overseer, age 28, & Clerk, age 22] James William Hall 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company G, Private Hall was born in Isle of Wight Co. on March 27, 1847. He moved to Nansemond County in 1874. He married first Josephine "Jodie" Catharine Watkins and second, on September 17, 1874, Almedia Virginia Cowling, daughter of John Monroe and Mary Pruden Phillips Cowling. He was a farmer, saw mill operator and merchant. He was a resident of Georgia in his later years but died in Suffolk while visiting relatives. Joseph Patton Hall, Jr. 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Hall was born on January 3, 1843, the son of Joseph Patton and Laura Ann Mardaugh Hall. He married Anna Jones Copeland (05/15/1845-06/14/1905), daughter of Winfield Scott and Catherine Randolph Copeland, in Jackson, N.C. on March 11, 1880. His father owned a drug store in Suffolk. After the war, Joseph took over and ran the store until his death. The business is still on Main Street in Suffolk, today. Hall died April 23, 1918 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 35. Rufus Cornick Hall 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Sergeant Hall was born on October 10, 1842, the son of Arthur E. and Margaret Parker Hall. He married Roxanna E. Stallings (06-22-1840 - 03-02-1923), on January 4, 1866 in Gates Co., NC. After the war, he was an undertaker, residing in Hampton & Norfolk. He died January 14, 1915 in Norfolk, and was buried with his parents in a Hall family cemetery, on South Quay Rd. Jesse Augustus Hamilton 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Hamilton was born October 23, 1840 near Somerton, Nansemond Co., Va. He was a farmer, a member of the Knights of Pythias and of the Tom Smith Camp of Confederate Veterans. Hamilton died in West Norfolk and is buried at the Churchland Baptist Church Cemetery. John G. Hamilton 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private He was wounded at the Battle of the Crater, captured near Appomattox, and held prisoner at Point Lookout, Md. Benjamin H. Hannaford 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 2nd Sergeant Hannaford was born April 5, 1840. He was a jeweler in Suffolk. He died February 23, 1878 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 22. Albert B. Hargrave 2nd North Carolina, Company H, Private Hargrave was born January 5, 1838, the son of Richard and Nancy Richards Hargrave. Albert enlisted in service June 2, 1861. He married on May 28, 1868 Adaline V. Phillips (01/09/1837-02/27/1893), daughter of Nathaniel P. and Adaline D. Pinner Phillips. He died March 20, 1911 in Suffolk, Va. William E. Hargrave 41st Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Hargrave was born December 22, 1842 in Sussex Co. He was a farm laborer and moved to Suffolk in 1907. When he applied for a pension in 1910, he stated that he had catarrah [asthsma], a result of his wartime exposure, that he was hard of hearing, and that he was willing to do anything for a living. His wife was Victoria Virginia Hargrave. He died December 13, 1917 and is buried in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery. Edward Denby Hargroves CSA Hargroves was born October 27, 1846, the son of James and William Eliza Denby Hargroves. His father was postmaster of Hargrove's Tavern, in Nansemond Co. After the war Hargroves was a farmer and a merchant. He married on November 24th, 1870 Fannie Day Eley (b. 1846), daughter of William and Lydia Eley Day Eley. He died October 8, 1899 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 74. Willis Webster Hargroves 9th Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Transferred to 34th N.C. Infantry, Company D Hargroves was born July 12, 1841. He was a prominent farmer of the Lower Parish. His wife was Julianna Hargroves. Hargroves was accidently killed on a railroad trestle on February 16, 1905 and is buried in Cedar Grove Cemetery in Portsmouth, Virginia. [Oak Grove list gives: HARGROVES Sr, Willis Webster, d. 14 Feb 1906, Row 2, Plot 038] Albert Harrell CSA Albert Harrell was born January 12, 1823. His wife was Sarah J. Harrell (03/13/1821-06/22/1892). He died December 27, 1886 and is buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. Dempsey Cole Harrell 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Harrell was born January 11, 1837. After the war, he engaged in the manufacture of bricks. His mill made many of the bricks now standing in the walls of the buildings in Suffolk. Perhaps he was the first to introduce the brick making machine in this section, as before that time the bricks were made by hand. His plant stood near the present Lake Kilby. He was noted for his quick wit and jovial disposition, having a pleasant word for everyone; when he was in a gathering, such as a sale, he could keep the whole crowd amused by his wit. He died May 4, 1895 and is buried at Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 85. Brother of Robert Franklin Harrell. Durant L. Harrell 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Harrell was born about 1826 in North Carolina. He entered into a marriage bond to wed Sarah J. Odam February 12, 1850 in Gates Co., NC. Before the war he farmed in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co. He enlisted May 18, 1861 at Chuckatuck. The regimental history states he was discharged September 5, 1862 as over age. His widow applied for a pension April 26, 1888 in Suffolk, stating they married February 14, 1841 in Gates Co., NC, and that he died in Henderson, NC in April 1862 from an injury to his lungs received in handling a cannon, which caused the hemorrhage from which he died. Elkanah Harrell 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Harrell was born November 20, 1843, the son of John Wesley and Delilah Byrd Harrell. He was a resident of Nansemond Co., had a dark complexion, brown hair, grey eyes, and was 5'7" tall. His wife was Louisiana Norfleet (5/18/1842-11/11/1906). Elkanah Harrell died February 6, 1921 and is buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. Isaac Shelby Harrell 16th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Harrell was born in North Carolina in October 1838. He was a farmer in Nansemond Co. before the war. He married Mary Eure, May 14, 1872, in Gates Co., NC, and Mary Susan Umphlett circa 1879. He filed for a pension in 1903, giving his address as Buckhorn, Nansemond Co., Va. James Harrell (1st) 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Harrell was born in 1840 in Nansemond Co., son of Jethro and Ann "Nancy" Jones Harrell. He was wounded in the abdomen June 8, 1864 at Cold Harbor and shot just above the left hip Feb. 7, 1865 at Hatcher's Run - the scar plainly showing on both sides. After the war, he farmed near Holland. He married "Sallie" Sarah Whitfield, Mar. 12, 1874, in Nansemond Co. He applied for a pension July 5, 1902, stating he was half-disabled from old age, lameness in the back from the hip wound, and vertigo from having been struck in the head by a falling tree. He is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery. His gravestone states he and died in 1918, but his wife's D.Cert. states she was widowed when she died, June 24, 1917. James Harrell (2nd) 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Harrell was born ca. 1839 in North Carolina. He was a clerk for Owen R. Flynn in Suffolk, according to the 1860 census. Javan Harrell 33rd North Carolina Infantry, Company E Javan Harrell was born about 1847 in Sunbury, Gates Co, NC. His wife was Defrassa McCutter Harrell. He served in the Battles of New Bern, Hanover Courthouse, Gaines Mill, and finally Glendale, where he was captured. He died January 13, 1924, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk. (source: Find a Grave Mem. #9798463, citing gg-gson Charles Harrell, and donated obit) John Harrell 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Harrell was born in 1811 in Nansemond Co. He was married and had two children. Harrell owned 110 acres of land 12 miles southwest of Suffolk. He died at Point Lookout, Md. of smallpox on July 21, 1864. John Thomas Harrell 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Harrell was born in Nansemond Co. Jan. 22, 1846, the son of Isaac and Elizabeth Smith Harrell. He was a farmer. He died Mar. 31, 1920 in Hazletts, Gates Co, NC, and was buried in a Harrell family cemetery, Mineral Springs Rd., near Whaleyville. Joshua M. Harrell 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Harrell was born in Suffolk in 1843. Before the war, he was a farmer. Obed E. Harrell 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, 3rd Sergeant Harrell was on special duty as brick carter at Sewell's Point Battery. His wife was Mary Ann Harrell. He was discharged in 1862. Reuben H. Harrell 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Harrell was born in Nansemond Co. in 1820, the son of Jethro and Mary Raby Harrell. His wife was Nancy S. Harrell (b. 1820). He was captured at Gettysburg and died of diarrhea on September 9, 1863 at Fort Delaware. He is buried at Finns Point National Cemetery, NJ. Richard Augustus Harrell CSA Surgeon Assistant in the 9th Virginia Infantry Harrell was born 04/28/1834 in Nansemond Co., Va. He graduated from University of Virginia in 1856 and served in the war as an assistant surgeon. He died 11/06/1870 in Warwick Co., Va. Robert Franklin Harrell 14th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Harrell was born in Nansemond Co. on March 26, 1834, the son of Abraham and Ester Byrd Harrell. He married on February 14, 1856 Olevia Harrell (b. 1828), the daughter of Oliver and Margaret Wesherly Harrell. After the war Harrell was a mechanic, farmer and contractor. He died May 17, 1928, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk, Block F, Lot 69. Brother of Dempsey Cole Harrell. Thomas Harrell 13th Virginia Cavalry Co. I, Private Harrell was born ca. 1825. He was discharged for age 37(?) and rheumatism and is buried at Oak Grove Cemetery in Portsmouth, Va. [not on Oak Grove (or Portlock) list] Wilson Harrell 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private; transferred to CS Navy Harrell was born in 1838, the son of Ann Harrell. He had sandy blonde hair and was 5'9" tall. Harrell joined the 41st Va. Infantry at the beginning of the war; then he transferred to the CS Navy as a crew member of the CSS Virginia {Merrimac} from February to May of 1862. He returned to the 41st Infantry in October of 1863. After the war he was a farmer in Nansemond Co. Robert L. Harris 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Harris was born September 7, 1832 in Nansemond Co. He was a shoemaker. On entering the war, he was described as 6'1¾" tall, blue eyed, dark brown hair with a fair complexion. After the war he was a resident of Portsmouth, Va. He died March 2, 1885 and is buried at Oak Grove Cemetery in Portsmouth. [Row 9, Plot 364] Thomas J. Harris 41st Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Harris was from Suffolk, Va. Thomas K. Haslett 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K Haslett was born in 1840 in North Carolina, the son of Jethro H. and Sophia Ann Odom Haslett. His father owned a 238-acre farm of 13 miles SW of Suffolk. He was listed in the 1880 Nansemond Co. Census. William J. Haslett 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, 2nd Lieutenant Haslett was born in 1841 in North Carolina, the son of Jethro H. and Sophia Ann Odom Haslett. He was killed June 30, 1862 at Glendale. Clarence Riddick Hatton VMI Cadet at Newmarket Hatton was born in 1847 on Stockley Farm in Nansemond Co., the son of Daniel Herring and Cornelia Riddick Hatton. He entered the war as a lieutenant and was raised to the rank of major. He was wounded in the neck during the fighting around Petersburg. He served under General Godwin of Portsmouth. He was Commander of the New York Department of United Confederate Veterans with the rank of General. His wife was Sarah C. Hatton. Clarence Hatton died January 15, 1927 in New York City and is buried in the Confederate Cemetery in New York City, N.Y. Theodore Haughwout 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Haughwout was born October 28, 1831. His wife was Alice Haughwout (1856-1883). He died October 9, 1892 and is buried Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery in Crittenden. Napoleon B. Hawes 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Hawes was born ca. 1835. He was a merchant and owned a harness shop in Suffolk. He enlisted in April of 1861 and served throughout the war. In 1864, he was serving as Provost Marshall in Petersburg. He was a member of the Suffolk Masonic Lodge #30 and died March 4, 1905. Somers R. Hazelwood 53rd Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Hazelwood was born ca. 1839. He enlisted in April of 1861 and received a pension for his war service. Hazelwood is buried at Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery in Crittenden, Virginia. Edward Moore Henry CSA - Captain Henry was born May 16, 1832. He married Indiana Virginia Kilby (12/21/1834-05/25/1906), daughter of John Thompson and Nancy Ann Newton Jones Baker Kilby. Edward Henry died June 20, 1905 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 29. Robert H. Herring 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Herring was born in 1846 in Nansemond Co. He had a dark complexion, brown hair, blue eyes and was 5'10 7/8" tall. After the war he was a railroad section master. He died January 11, 1889 and was buried in Cedar Grove Cemetery in Portsmouth. [Row 3, Plot 179] Tom Hester Served both Sides in the War Hester was born in 1848 and was a black soldier that served on both sides during the war. George William Hicks 32nd Virginia Infantry, James City Artillery, Hawkins Battery, 1st Company H William M. Hicks 32nd Virginia Infantry, James City Artillery, Hawkins Battery, 1st Company H., Orderly Sgt. Hicks was born ca. 1840. He lived in Crittenden, Va. after the war and received a pension for his service. John Francis Higgins, Sr. 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private; transferred February 19, 1862 to CSS Virginia {Merrimac} Higgins was born at St. Mary's, Maryland on June 1, 1842. He had a light complexion, light hair and blue eyes. He was in the first great battle of Ironclads when the Merrimac (CSS Virginia) and the Monitor met in Hampton Roads. His post was at Hot Shot Battery No. 9. After the Merrimac was scuttled, he was assigned to other duties and lost a leg which incapacitated him for further service. By some means he procured a piece of the wreck of the Merrimac, a black walnut post from the stair rail leading to the Captain's cabin, and made a walking stick that he used as long as he lived. His wife was Mary F. Higgins (02/10/1840-06/15/1904). He died December 19, 1924 and is buried at Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery in Crittenden. Coleman Hines 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Hines enlisted in 1862 and was captured after the battle at Johnson's Farm in 1864. He was taken to Point Lookout, Md., where he died of scurvy on February 24, 1865. James Lewis Hines 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Hines was born Sep. 15, 1840* in Isle of Wight Co., the son of John L. and Sallie Roberts Hines. After the war he was a farmer, resident of Cypress District, Nansemond Co. He married widow "Nannie" Nancy Jane Gwinn/Gwynn Munford/Mumford November 28, 1889, and they had two children. He died August 10, 1917, of dysentery, and was buried at Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery - Lot 193; *his gravestone shows "1841 - 1917." Julian C. Hines 16th Virginia Infantry, Co.B, 3rd Corp. Julian C. Hines was the son of Dr. Thomas Colgate and Sarah Augusta Eppes Hines. He was a medical student and school teacher when the war broke out. In the 16th Va. Infantry he served as a druggist, nurse and hospital steward. He was wounded at the Battle of the Crater. Thomas Hamlin Hines 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Hines was born in 1845, the son of Dr. Thomas Colgate and Sarah Augusta Eppes Hines. He married Florine Augusta Wellons and was postmaster of Suffolk after the war. He died December 21, 1884 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 64. After his death, his wife became postmaster and remarried in 1892 to Henry A. Brewer. William E. Hines 61st Virginia Infantry, Company G, Private Hines was born in 1843. He was discharged on account of sickness, about October 1864. LaFayette W. Hodges 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Hodges was born ca. 1845 in Suffolk. He was student before the war. He was 5'6" tall, blue eyes, light hair and light complexion. He was discharged on December 9, 1862 for being under 18 years old. Robert Bruce Hodsden Roy's Scouts Hodsden was the son of Joseph Bridger and Mary Mears Lawrence Hodsden. He married on December 2, 1874 Mary Edmund Batten of Isle of Wight Co., daughter of Edmund and Mary Ann Bunkley Batten. After the war the Hodsdens raised two children on a farm in the Chuckatuck District. In 1902 he was elected chairman of the Nansemond Co. Pension Board. Wilfred Ivanhoe Hodsden 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Hodsden was born 02/09/1845, the son of Joseph Bridger and Mary Mears Lawrence Hodsden. He was wounded at Gettysburg. His wife was Mary Virginia Cutchin Hodsden (1845-1901). Wilfred died 01/18/1925. Alto Francis Holladay 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 1st Sergeant Holladay was born June 26, 1844, the son of Francis David and Emily Susan Pinner Holladay. He was a student before the war. He married Judith Beverly Hunter Copeland (08/16/1848-06/10/1906), daughter of Col. John R. and Judith Ann Hunter Copeland, on February 16, 1866. He was a merchant and hotel keeper after the war. Holladay died December 3, 1908 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 39. Francis David Holladay 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Major Holladay was born in Suffolk on June 8, 1817. He was a hotel keeper before the war and ran the Washington Hotel. He married Emily Susannah Pinner (1817-1900), daughter of Dixon and Emily Pinner. Holladay died July 3, 1868 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 39. Augustus H. Holland, Jr. Holland was born January 4, 1832, the son of Augustus H. and Ann Winborne Holland. He was killed in action on July 1st, 1862. Brother of Zachary Taylor Holland. Beverly Holland 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F Holland was born about 1839. He was a farmer. He married Mary Elizabeth Holland, March 11, 1858 in Gates Co., NC. Holland died September 27, 1877, and was buried in a family cemetery, near Carrsville. His daughter Lillie J. Holland, of Carrsville, applied to the War Dept. for his headstone December 12, 1930. His widow, daughter Lillie & son "Jobie" Joseph Beverly Holland are buried in Holland Cemetery. David Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Holland was born in 1843. His father owned 130 acres of land sixteen miles west of Suffolk. Holland died August 10, 1862 at Division Field Hospital, Falling Creek, Chesterfield Co., Va. Dixon Howell Holland 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K, Private Holland was born February 1, 1825, the son of Zachariah and Matilda Ann Howell Holland. He married Mary Eliza Sumner (1825-1906), daughter of Jethro and Nancy Ann Norfleet Sumner, on February 12, 1846. Holland carried the first dispatch back beyond the Blackwater when General Longstreet beseiged Suffolk in April 1863, and on May 4, 1863, he was dispatched to Col. Talliaferro to tell him to withdraw the rear guard from the vicinity of Suffolk. He was with General Pryor at the Battle of Kelley's Store in Nansemond Co. Holland died February 17, 1901. Both he and his wife are buried in a family cemetery. Eldred Holland 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Holland was born ca. 1834 and lived in Nansemond Co. Eldred Holland was a farmer. His wife was Mary A. Holland. Exum Holland 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Holland was born ca. 1838, in Isle of Wight Co., the son of Hardy & Polly Holland. He married on Sep. 27, 1865 Anna V. Green, daughter of William G. and Esther Green. Granville Sharpe Patterson Holland 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Holland was born December 8, 1838, the son of Dr. Lemuel Carr and Catherine Bryant Woodley Holland. He was a student before the war. He was captured in the Battle of the Crater, escaped and walked from Petersburg to Suffolk down the Norfolk and Western Railroad at night and hid in his father's house. His first wife was Moninia Pinner (1849-1911), whom he married in March 1866. Holland married second Augetta Hall "Nettie", daughter of Thomas and Nancy Hall on September 22, 1879. He died December 4, 1912 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 44. Hardy Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Holland was born June 5, 1836. He was a farm laborer for Joseph Jones, father of Private Robert Jones in the Regiment. They lived 14 miles west of Suffolk before the war. His wife was Louise Holland (3/2/1834-10/30/1918). He was wounded in the right ankle during the war. Hardy Holland died August 9, 1909 and was buried in Holland Cemetery. James G. Holland 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Holland was born about 1833, and a boatman & oysterman. He was 5' 4", with a light complexion, light sandy hair & blue eyes. He and his wife Rebecca appear in the 1860 Census in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co. He enlisted at Chuckatuck, on or before May 19, 1861. He was discharged October 15, 1861, with chronic liver disease and rheumatism. James R. Holland 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Holland was born in 1813. James Richard Holland 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Holland was born November 14, 1836, the son of John and ---- Turner Holland. His first wife was Pennie Matthews, his second was Martha Cofer, and his third wife was Sarah Ann Dixon (1847-1942), daughter of George and Nancy Matthews Dixon. Holland died August 8, 1918 and was buried in Oakland Christian Church Cemetery, Chuckatuck. James Solomon Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private "Jim" was born in April 1844, the son of Elijah & Nancy Holland. His father was a tenant farmer. He enlisted in Nansemond Co. in June 1861. He was captured at Burgess' Mill, Dinwiddie Co., in 1864, and parolled a few days before Lee's surrender. He married Martha Sarah Holland, May 26, 1866 in Nansemond County, and they raised six children. He owned a farm (#49) in Holy Neck District in 1900, but by 1910 he was widowed & living on a son's rented farm, working as a railroad laborer. He applied for a pension July 3, 1916; Buckhorn P.O. Jason P. Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private - promoted to Sergeant Holland was born September 29, 1846. His father owned 218 acres ten miles west of Suffolk. Promoted to Sergeant October 1, 1864. He married Marcella Ann, daughter of Hilliard B. & Martha Eliza Lee Holland, Nov. 16, 1865*, at Isaac Lee's in Nansemond County. Holland, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond Co.); it gives 4th Sergeant, enlisted May, 1861; discharged April 9, 1865; served 3 years, 11 months; resident of Elwood. He died at Elwood, Nansemond Co., October 8, 1910, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk - Block M, Lot 3. His widow applied for a pension July 20, 1928; *application gives Nov. 15, 1855 [transcribed Nov. 15, 1856]. John Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Holland was born in 1841. He was at Appomattox when the war ended and received a pension after the war. John Thomas Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, 1st Sergeant Holland was born circa 1835, the son of John D. and Elizabeth Daughtrey Holland. He married Lucy Louise, daughter of Joseph & Nancy Lee Vaughan, May 13, 1858, in Nansemond County. His widow, as a Confederate widow, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted May, 1861; discharged 1864; served 4 years; she was resident of Carrsville. John Thomas Holland 6th Virginia Infantry, Corporal Holland was the son of A. and Annie Susan Aries Holland. He was killed on August 30, 1862 at Second Manassas. Joseph G. Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Holland was born in 1832. He was a day laborer, before the war. He married Martha A. Howell, May 18, 1865 in Suffolk. Holland, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted June, 1861; discharged April 9, 1865; served 4 years; resident of Elwood, farmer. He died August 29, 1912 in Norfolk, and is buried in Poplar Spring Cemetery, Franklin - Section I, Plot 61B. Meredith Dawson Holland 59th Virginia Militia (Infantry), Capt. Roberson's Co.; transferred to 14th Virginia Infantry, Company A Holland was born April 19, 1830, son of Jordan and Margaret Elizabeth Butler Holland. He married Mary Virginia Holland Apr. 8, 1858, and they had nine children. He enlisted May 5, 1862, and was hospitalized at Huguenot Springs June 5, 1862. He died June 18, 1912, in Buckhorn, and was buried in Holland. Richard Holland Holland was the son of A. and Annie Susan Aries Holland. He was wounded in the war. Richard Goodman Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Holland was born in 1835 in Nansemond County, the son of Patrick F. and Nancy Holland. He enlisted Feb. 6, 1864 at Orange C.H., and was shot in the left breast & bayonetted in the mouth, losing two teeth, July 30, 1864, in the Battle of the Crater. He married Sophia Jane Odom on November 8, 1866. He farmed in Isle of Wight County, in Gates County, NC, and finally in the Cypress section of Nansemond Co. He applied for a pension May 25, 1900 for his war service - the bullet still in his body, causing much pain & shortness of breath. Richard Henry Holland 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Holland was born in 1838 in Nansemond Co. He was wounded in the arm and hand during the war. He received at pension for his war service. He died in Norfolk Co. in 1913. Solomon Cyrus Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private - promoted to Sergeant Holland was born July 28, 1842. He was 6' tall, black hair and brown eyes. He was promoted to Sergeant. He married Mary Virginia Holland (12/3/1850-1/4/1927), Feb. 3, 1867 in Gates Co., NC. They had a 59-acre farm near Holland, Va. He died June 9, 1905, from a fall. Mary Virginia applied for a pension in 1916. Both are buried in a family cemetery on the Rufus Holland farm near Holland, Va. Solomon J. Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Holland was born in July 4, 1842 and died October 19, 1933. He is buried in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery. William C. Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Holland was born in 1838. He was a farm laborer for his father, who owned 73 acres of land 15 miles west of Suffolk. Holland died at the General Hospital at Liberty, Va. on September 1, 1862 of tuberculosis. William H. Holland 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Holland was born in 1833. He was a farmer living at Elwood in Nansemond Co. in 1905 and received a pension for his war service. Zachary Taylor Holland 14th Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Private Holland was born January, 1836, the son of Augustus H. and Ann Winborne Holland. The 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County) gives enlisted April, 1861; discharged 9 Apr 186_; served 3 years, 8 months. After the war he was a farmer and money lender. He died February 6, 1908, and was buried in a Holland family cemetery, just east of Holland. Brother of Augustus H. Holland, Jr. Leonidas Drew Holt 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company H, Private [see also H/4th VA Cav] transferred as carpenter to QM Dept. for War. Holt was born in 1834. In 1850 he was apprenticed to coach-maker John C. Clements in Sussex Co. After the war he was in business in Suffolk and Norfolk. He married Annie Jenkins of Nansemond County. He died May 3, 1900 in Hampton and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk. David Robert Horton 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Horton was born in 1839. He lost a hand at Chancellorsville. His wife was Sarah E. Horton. Moses E. Horton 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Horton was born ca. 1836. His wife was Elizabeth Horton. He was a farmer in Nansemond Co., Va. Richard Hosier Mosby's Partisan Rangers 43rd Battalion of Virginia Cavalry Hosier was born August 14, 1818 in Nansemond County, the son of Sampson and Elizabeth Hosier. He obituary states that, too old for regular service, he was among those issued shot guns, "harassed the enemy by a sort of guerilla warfare"; that he "was better acquainted with the Dismal Swamp than any contemporary"; that he was captured three times - once sentenced to death (commuted to hard labor); and that he escaped by swimming across Lake Drummond. After the war he was a member of the Tom Smith Camp of the United Confederate Veterans. He and his first wife Sarah Duke Hosier had seven children. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery - Block F, Lot 113 or Block D, Lot 32. No dates are given on his stone, only the word "Mosby". His photograph is posted with Find a Grave Memorial #9797996, which gives Richard James Hosier. Julius Franklin Howell 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K. Howell was born January 17, 1846. He enlisted at the age of 15 in the Confederate army. He served as a courier on the staffs of General Roger A. Pryor, of Virginia and General John Braxton, of North Carolina. He was captured three days before the surrender at Appomattox and spent three months as a Union prisoner at Point Lookout, Maryland. He was discharged as a Corporal at Fort Monroe. Howell attended both Harvard University and University of Pennsylvania. He married twice; his first wife was Ida C. Hinton (d. 6/20/1933), married in 1870, and his second was Maude Sharpe of South Carolina, whom he married in 1936, when he was 90. His title as general stems from his two terms as National Commander-in-Chief of the United Confederate Veterans in 1939 and 1940. "General Howell, former President of Virginia Intermont College was known as the last survivor of Longstreet's Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia." Howell died June 19, 1948, 102 years old, and was buried in Glenwood Cemetery, Bristol, Tennessee. Neverson Howell 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Howell was born in Nansemond County February 4, 1834, the son of Abram and Elizabeth Glover Howell. He was captured May 3, 1863, at the Second Battle of Fredericksburg - a rear-guard action during Chancellorsville - and exchanged May 21, 1863. Howell, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond Co.); it gives enlisted April, 1861; discharged June 11, 1865; served 4 years, 2 months, 15 days; resident of South Quay. He was a large-scale tenant farmer at South Quay, Nansemond Co. in 1902. He married three times, all in Nansemond Co.: October 31, 1865 to Sarah E. Daughtrey, daughter of William B. & Pamelia; December 10, 1867 to Mary A. Howell, daughter of Elizabeth; and February 9, 1899 to widow Sarah A. Haslett Davidson, daughter of Jethro & Sophia Ann Odom Haslett. He applied for a pension Nov. 21, 1902. In 1916, he was living in Franklin, Va. He died May 5, 1918 of heart failure and was buried in South Quay Baptist Church Cemetery. Richard Howell 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Howell was born in Nansemond County in 1837, a son of Richard and Anna Howell. He owned a 30-acre farm 17 miles west of Suffolk. He married Lucinda "Lucy" Jones Dec. 30, 1858 in Nansemond County. He furnished a substitute, Marion E. Luke. Howell had brother, William Howell, in the Company. William Howell 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Howell was born in Nansemond County in 1835, a son of Richard and Anna Howell. He and his wife Jerusha Ralws Howell raised two children on a 25-acre farm 15 miles south of Suffolk. Howell was a farmer in Cypress Chapel District near Whaleyville after the war. He was a constable of the County. His brother Richard was in the Company. He died Sep. 27, 1901. He & his wife are buried in the Holland Municipal Cemetery. William Henry Harrison Howell 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 2nd Corporal Howell was born July 11, 1840 in Gates Co., N.C., the son of Michael and Elizabeth Howell Howell. They moved to Nansemond Co. in 1852. He was wounded at Burgess Mill below Petersburg in 1865, and was captured at Chesterfield C.H. He married Worthy Ann Henderson (1841- 1931), daughter of Stephen and Jane Henderson, Dec. 20, 1866 at Cherry Grove, Nansemond Co. Together they raised five children. He was the first Postmaster of Whaleyville in July 1884. His daughter's 1895 obituary states that he had been Sheriff. In later years he lived at 112 North Street in Suffolk. Howell died March 15, 1914 in Suffolk and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 78. His widow applied for a pension Sep. 29, 1928. Lepron Hubbard Washington Artillery, Smith's Hampton Battery, 1st Company K, 6th Corporal Hubbard was born May 9, 1838. He married Lauretta Frances (1841-1910). Hubbard died January 16, 1918 and was buried in Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery. John Thomas Humphlet 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private - later 4th Sergeant Humphlet was born in Nansemond Co. December 10, 1847, the son of William and Penrinah Humphlet. His parents moved to Virginia in 1824. Upon entering the war, John was 5'6" tall, had a light complexion, light hair and blue eyes. After the war he was Constable for Nansemond Co. Humphlet married Ann Rebecca Fanny (1852- ) on February 23, 1871, and together they had five children, near Cartwright's Wharf. Humphlet died July 7, 1885 near Driver, Va. Beverly Baker Hunter 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private - later elected Captain Hunter was born in Kemper Co., Mississippi on March 15, 1839, the son of Benjamin Blake Baker and Caroline Hunter. When he was twelve years old he came to Virginia to live with his grandfather. He attended school at South Quay Church and later in North Carolina. He studied medicine with Dr. Thomas Barnes and paid his way by teaching school. In 1858 he attended the University of Virginia and entered the medical class there. He received his degree in 2 years as Doctor of Medicine. In the 41st Virginia his nickname was "Brave Baker Hunter." Hunter was killed at the Battle of the Crater June 30, 1864. Edward Hunter 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private; transferred to the 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Hunter was born in 1846, the son of a wheelwright. He was 5'8" tall, had a fair complexion, blue eyes and light brown hair. On April 18, 1864, he transferred to the 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private. Hunter was captured at Burgess' Mill and sent to Point Lookout, Md. Fred W. Hunter 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Sergeant Major Hunter was born ca. 1832. James T. Hunter ? Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Hunter, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County) gives enlisted June, 1861; discharged 1865; served 3 years; resident of Carrsville. William H. Hunter 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A; later 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, 2nd Lieutenant. Hunter was born in 1842, the son of Benjamin Blake Baker and Caroline Hunter. He was killed at the Battle of Cumberland Church on April 7, 1865. Abram Jenkins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Jenkins was born in Nansemond Co. in 1807. He was 5'8" tall, had a reddish complexion, blue eyes and red hair. He was a farmer. Jenkins was discharged because he was over-age and ill. James Edward Jenkins 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Secretary to General Dearing Jenkins was born in 1824, a son of John Cole and Elizabeth Madden Jenkins. He attended William and Mary College and became a lawyer. He married Mary Virginia Briggs about 1849; they had at least two daughters and six sons. They were living in St. Louis, MO, in 1860. Jenkins died September 15, 1868 and was given a Masonic funeral at the Methodist Church in Suffolk. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 54. Henry Jernigan 13th Virginia Regiment, Company I, Private His widow Nancy [Holland] Jernigan, as a Confederate widow, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County), which gives enlisted 1861; discharged 1863; served 2 years; she was a resident of South Quay. Charles Wilmer Jester 17th NC Infantry, Company C & D, Private Jester was born circa 1846, in Cecil County, Maryland, the son of Emanuel and Eliza J. Burbage Jester. He was living with his mother in Murfreesboro, North Carolina in 1860. He enlisted May 22, 1861 in Hertford County, North Carolina in Company D, then re-enlisted March 24, 1862 in Company C, serving until November 2, 1862. He married Lois Virginia Swett. They are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 7. [no dates are given on his stone, which shows "Capt." (Find a Grave Mem. #9798495); Ancestry.com gives died 1896] John E. Jett 6th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Sergeant Jett was born in 1829. He was a carpenter before the war. His wife was Elizabeth Jett. Benjamin Devaney Johnson 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Johnson was born Sep. 18, 1838, the son of Lawrence and Lucy McClenny Johnson. His father owned 200 acres of land 19 miles west of Suffolk. Before the war, Johnson was a carpenter. He was later an architect and builder. He married Harriet Cross Apr. 9, 1863 in Gates Co., NC. Johnson died October 9, 1915, in Winton, Hertford Co., NC, and was buried there at Winton Baptist Church. Cornelius M. Johnson CSA Scout Johnson was born December 17, 1845. He died May 13, 1900 in Richmond and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 135. His footstone reads, "C.M. Johnson, CSA Scout." Eli B. Johnson 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Johnson was born June 24, 1824. He was a resident of Myrtle, Va. His widow Kiseah Johnson (1840-08/16/1921) received a pension in 1907 for his war service. Eli died September 19, 1905 and was buried in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery - Lot 118. Fabius C. Johnson 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Johnson was born in 1843. He died of pneumonia in 1914 in Suffolk. George A. Johnson 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Johnson was born in about 1843. He served as a nurse during the war from 1863 to 1864. George Washington Johnson 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Cpl. George Johnson was born about 1843, the son of Lawrence and Lucy McClenny Johnson. He enlisted in the "South Quay Guards" at age 18, and was captured near Petersburg, Oct. 1864. His wife was Margaret Jane Carson Johnson (02/01/1845-11/19/1925); they married Jan. 10, 1869. He died Mar. 14, 1936 in Carrsville, and both are buried in Beaver Dam Baptist Church Cemetery, Isle of Wight Co. Gustavus A. Johnson 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Johnson was born in Nansemond Co. in 1834. He was a carpenter before the war. He was 6' tall, had a ruddy complexion, blue eyes and brown hair. James Timothy Johnson 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Johnson was born August 31, 1845 in Nansemond Co., the son of Lawrence and Lucy McClenny Johnson. He enlisted February, 1864 at Orange C.H., was captured October 27, 1864 at Burgess' Mill, and imprisoned at Pt. Lookout, MD, until eschanged March 28, 1865. Johnson, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted February, 1864; discharged April, 1865; served 1 year, 3 months; resident of South Quay. He was living in Franklin in February of 1911. He died July 17, 1927 in Carrsville, Isle of Wight Co. James W. Johnson 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private; transferred to CS Navy Johnson was born December 9, 1830. He was robbed September 1895, while attending a reunion in Chattanooga, TN ("Norfolk Virginia," Sep. 24, 1895) He died November 11, 1899 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 20. His stone reads, "CSA Navy." Jesse P. Johnson Jr. 59th Virginia Militia, Arnold's Company, Private Johnson was born in Nansemond Co. about 1829, the son of Jesse P. and Chasey Johnson. He was a farmer in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co. He married Margaret Ann F. Roberts (1833-1882) December 22, 1853 in Isle of Wight Co. He married Evelina Lee Holland (1862-1891) January 28, 1885 in Isle of Wight Co.; she is buried with her mother in Beaver Dam Baptist Church Cemetery, near Carrsville. John J. Johnson Johnson was born October 10, 1828. After the war, he became a prominent contractor in Suffolk. He built some of the early bridges over the river at the foot of North Main Street. Richard Johnson 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Johnson was born in 1830. He was a plantation overseer before the war. Johnson lived 20 miles southwest of Suffolk. In April 1863 the muster roll says that he died, but date of death is unknown. Robert Junius Johnson 14th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Johnson was born in Nansemond Co. on February 22, 1833, the son of Lawrence and Lucy McClenny Johnson. Johnson married Virginia Frances Vaughan on January 31, 1856. They owned a farm one mile east of South Quay, Va. Robert J. Johnson died November 27, 1910 and is buried in a family cemetery on Quaker Road, near O'Kelly Drive, in Suffolk, Va. (see Nan.Vol. 2) Samuel Johnson 9th North Carolina Infantry, Company B, Private Johnson was born February 25, 1836. He married [Mary] Louvenia Beverly (1853- 1929). Johnson died June 23, 1901 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block V, Lot 5N 1/2. Francis E. Jones 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, 3rd Sergeant; transferred to Company A, 4th Sergeant. Jones was born 1833. He was an engineer before the war. He was killed June 22, 1864 at Wilcox Farm and buried in Blandford Cemetery, Petersburg, Va. There is a marker in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 42. He was brother to William A. Jones. Hilery T. Jones Surry Company Artillery, Private Jones received a pension in Suffolk on September 6, 1900. Isaac Jones 41st Virginia Infantry (2nd Corps), Company K, Private Jones was born April 22, 1837 near Holy Neck Church, the son of John and Patsey Jones. On Feb. 11, 1868, he married "Hattie" Harriet M. Davidson Beale - the widow of Robert Beale, who was killed at Spotsylvania Court House. Jones, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted May, 1861; served 3 years, 11 months; Elwood P.O. He died Nov. 22, 1910 and is buried in the George's Bend cemetery. James Eldridge Jones 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, 2nd Lieutenant. Jones was born on July 26, 1841, to Adolphus H. & Martha E. Williams Jones. He was a medical student before the war, attending University of Virginia in 1859 and 1860. He was elected Captain in 1862. He became a Baptist minister before 1880. Jones, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives Captain, enlisted May, 1861; discharged June, 1863; served 12 years; resident of Elwood. He was a farmer living near South Quay in Nansemond Co. in 1911. He married Eugenia D. Gardner, daughter of Abram & Susan A. Gardner (12/04/1847-08/26/1892), Feb. 2, 1866 in Nansemond Co. He died April 1, 1912 and both are buried in South Quay Baptist Church Cemetery. [We previously had him confused with James R., b. Nov. 5, 1843, to Joseph David Jones & his first wife Margaret Holland; brother of Sgt. William T. Jones {same Regiment}.] Marmaduke Jones 14th Virginia Infantry, transferred to 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Sergeant Jones was born February 14, 1830. He was commissary sergeant in the 41st. His wife was Susanna Jones (05/16/1836-12/24/1872). Jones died June 15, 1892 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 100. Rev. Richard H. Jones North Carolina Regiment, Chaplain Jones was born in 1826 in Nansemond Co. He died in 1902. Robert Jones 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Jones was born in 1844. His father Joseph Jones owned 400 acres of land 14 miles west of Suffolk. William A. Jones 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private William A. Jones was born about 1825, brother of Francis E. Jones. His wife was Priscilla E. Jones (b. about 1830 in N.C.). His only Civil War record is a claim on April 11, 1864 of his widow to the Confederate government saying he died in Richmond. He died about 1864 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 42. (no dates given on his stone) William Henry Jones 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Sergeant Jones was born March 14, 1816, the son of Andrew and Mary Johnson Jones. He married Jennette Copeland (1820-1850), daughter of Thomas and Mary Shepherd Copeland on February 22, 1842. His second wife was Emma Copeland (1822-1882), sister of his first wife; they married January 23, 1851. He was a judge in Georgia (1863-1864). Jones died August 28, 1895 and is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery. William M. Jones 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Transferred in 1861 to 5th Virginia Cavalry Jones was born January 21, 1840. He was a railroad agent. Jones died April 15, 1909 and is buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Norfolk, Va. [Elmwood list gives: Jones, William M., b. January 21, 1840, d. April 15, 1908; Plot 5AE-L37-S10] William Thomas Jones 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Orderly Sergeant Jones was born December 5, 1836* in Holland, Va., to Joseph David Jones & his first wife Margaret Holland. His father, a wheel-wright & blacksmith, owned a 277-acre farm 20 miles west of Suffolk. Joseph had a sword broken over his head by Yankee bummers. He married widow Angeline Holland Nixon (08/22/1836 - 03/01/1916). He died February 2, 1914 of pneumonia; both are buried in Holland Cemetery. *The old family record gives b. Dec. 5, 1838. Isaac Jordan 41st Virginia Regiment, Company K, Private Jordan, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted May, 1861; discharged April 10, 1865; served 3 years, 11 months; resident of Elwood. Louis Walton Jordan Scout CSA - POW Jordan was born November 24, 1847, the son of William Henry and Mary B. Wrenn Jordan. He lived in Smithfield, Isle of Wight County, 1850-70. He married Emma Eugenia Hall July 11, 1878 in Suffolk. They were living in his sister's boarding house in Norfolk in 1880 - Louis and two brothers working in a clothing store. He died January 30, 1900 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 60. William Turner Jordan 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, 1st Lieutenant; transferred to an Independent Scout Unit Jordan was born November 13, 1835, the son of William Edmund and Martha J.D. Gary Jordan. He attended University of Virginia medical school from 1855 to 1857. He married Amanda Charlotte Arthur (1841-1900), daughter of James S. and Charlotte Ward Arthur in 1861. Jordan was a physician and farmer in Belleville, Virginia. Around 1907, he wrote an historical sketch of the farms and their owners in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co., which has been published by the Nansemond-Suffolk Historical Society. Jordan died March 14, 1922 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 59. Josiah Joyner 6th Virginia Infantry, 2nd Company E, Private Joyner was born January 1, 1839. After the war, he was a farmer in Nansemond Co. He was married on February 15, 1866 to Nancy Monroe Pruden (06/11/1843-07/09/1945). He died January 26, 1923 and is buried in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery. His wife received a pension for his war service. Lemuel Joyner 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I Joseph Thomas Judkins 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Judkins was born about 1827 in Surry Co., the son of Joel and Mary Judkins. He married Rebecca Frances Williford, daughter of Robinson C. and Anna Williford, January 6, 1859 in Isle of Wight Co. He was a mechanic before the war. He enlisted April 21, 1861 at Hargrove's Tavern, and was detailed for two years as a teamster. He died April 5, 1897? in Nansemond Co. His widow applied for a pension for his war service in 1900, claiming they married in Nottoway Co. Hugh B. Kelley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Kelley was born December 17, 1841, the son of Col. Hugh H. and Elizabeth A.L. Jordan Kelley. His wife was Lucey Anne Kelley (1844-1918). Kelley died April 11, 1923 and is buried at Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. Tazewell Kelley 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Kelley was born in 1842. He died in Nansemond Co. on December 11, 1918. Thomas H. Kellum 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, 2nd Lieutenant Records seem to indicate Kellum retired. Ezekiel Powell Kelly 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Kelly was born in 1839, the son of Jacob Holland and Susan Powell Kelly. His first wife was Mary C. Flynn (b. 1838); his second, Mary Connally Williamson (b. 1849). Kelly is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 33. (no dates on his stone) Jacob Eley Kelly 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private 5th Virginia Cavalry, Company G, Private 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, 2nd Lieutenant Kelly was born February 24, 1836, the son of Jacob Holland and Elizabeth Eley Kelly. He attended the University of Virginia from 1855 to 1856. He married Lucy Edith Ballard Holladay (10/05/1839-02/15/1882) on January 12, 1859. His second wife was Hattie B. Rives (d. 06/10/1908), whom he married on Sept. 10, 1884. Kelly was a merchant. He enlisted in the 16th Infantry April 27, 1861, at Suffolk, and transferred to the Cavalry August 31, 1861. He was elected 2nd Lieutenant May 25, 1862. He was captured July 12, 1863, at Hagerstown, MD, and held as a POW until after the war. Jacob Kelly died January 13, 1888, and is marked in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk. William L. Kemp 10th Virginia Artillery, Company C, Private Mrs. E.F. Kemp of Crittenden, Virginia received a pension in 1906 for his war service. Abel Upshur Kilby 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Kilby was born in 1844, the son of Thomas Jefferson and Anne Upshur Smith Kilby. He married Eudora Lydia Ballard Eley, daughter of William and Lydia Eley on November 17, 1869. Kilby died August 16, 1897 and is buried on the Portsmouth Waterworks property, off West Washington Street (by Lake Kilby) in Suffolk. John Thompson Kilby 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Captain Transferred to 3rd Georgia Infantry, Surgeon Kilby was born March 19, 1825, the son of John Thompson and Ann Newton Jones Baker Kilby. He attended medical school in Paris. Kilby married Mary H. Benn (06/26/1839-07/28/1887), daughter of Thomas and Nancy Tart Benn on December 23, 1857. Dr. Kilby died July 2, 1895 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 29. Leroy Richardson Kilby 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Captain Kilby was born May 20, 1841, the son of John Richardson and Martha Jane Louisa Smith Kilby. He attended Randolph-Macon College as a law student. He married Kate Bottimore (d. 1922). Kilby died October 12, 1883 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C. Thomas Spotswood Kilby 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Sergeant Kilby was born in 1837, the son of Thomas Jefferson and Ann Upshur Smith Kilby. He married first, Mary Elizabeth Wyatt, daughter of John B. and Sarah W. Wyatt, and second, Annie Hall. He died June 12, 1868 and is buried in the Portsmouth Waterworks property on West Washington Street (by Lake Kilby). On his tombstone is the following: "Consecrated by loved ones to the memory of Thomas S. Kilby, who passed through many battles of the Confederate war with honor untarnished though wounded in the flesh and finally died instantly by explosion June 12, 1868, age 31 years." Virginius Smith Kilby 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 1st Corporal Kilby was born September 18, 1841, the son of Thomas Jefferson and Ann Upshur Smith Kilby. He married Diana Ophelia Eppes Saunders (4/3/1848-7/28/1888), daughter of James Riddick and Diana Ophelia Eppes Saunders on April 17, 1867. They had 3 children. Kilby taught school in Nansemond Co., becoming the second superindendent. He died May 24, 1924 in Greensboro, NC and is buried in the Saunders family cemetery on Desert Road in Suffolk. Wallace Kilby 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private (Courier) Kilby was born February 22, 1843, the son of John Richardson and Martha Jane Louisa Smith Kilby. He married Margaret Alexowina Tynes (1842-1927), daughter of Robert and Anne Caroline Powell Tynes and had 5 children. After the war he was engaged in business in Suffolk for a long time on the northwest corner of Main and Washington Streets- it was called Wallace Kilby's corner. He died May 6, 1899 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C. George King 41st Virginia Infantry, 1st Company G, Private; transferred to 61st Virginia Infantry, Company I King was born in 1842 in Norfolk Co., Va. He was captured at the Battle of the Weldon Railroad and sent to Point Lookout, Md. King was a farmer, listed on the Confederate Roll of Honor and elected to the Stonewall Camp, UCV. He died July 21, 1884 at the age of 42. James E. King 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private King was born February 19, 1836. His wife was Vianna Richardson King (1841-1901). King was an oysterman by profession. He died November 25, 1900 and is buried in Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery. Jesse King 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 2nd Corporal King was a resident of Nansemond Co. before the war. He was 5'11" tall, had a fair complexion, grey eyes and light hair. After the war he was a cooper/farmer and listed his residence as 207 Ferguson Avenue, Norfolk, Va. He died in 1904. Joseph King 41st Virginia Infantry, Company G, Private King was born April 17, 1851. He enlisted in the army sometime in 1861, but was discharged in December of 1861 because he was only ten years old. He was in the Pickett-Buchanan Camp. His wife said he died February 10, 1881 but other records say August 4, 1907. King is buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Norfolk, Va. [Plot 5AE-L34-S3N] Joseph Oliver Lancaster 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private and Clerk Lancaster was born in Nansemond Co. on December 4, 1846, a son of Henry G. and Martha S. Lancaster. He enlisted April 21, 1861 at Hargroves Tavern. He was captured April 4, 1865 at Amelia C.H., and was imprisoned at Pt. Lookout, MD, until released June 14, 1865, having taken the oath of allegiance. He was a store clerk after the war, and later a farm laborer & harness maker. He married Sarah E. Griffin (ca. 1846 - 3/7/1878), daughter of Brinkley & Sophia Ann Griffin, Dec. 21 1870. He married "Nannie" Mary Lee Mathews (6/10/1861 - 6/15/1938), daughter of Edward Joseph & Margaret Ramsey Mathews, Jan. 7, 1892 at Oakland Christian Church, Chuckatuck. He died of heart trouble in Suffolk June 12, 1909 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 83W 1/2. Nannie applied for a pension in 1934 in Norfolk, where she'd been living for about 15 years; Joseph's unit is given in error as the 4th Virginia Infantry, Company F. Dempsey Langston [Langstun] 5th Virginia Cavalry, Company G, Private; 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Langston was born about 1831, son of John B. and Margaret Langston. He enlisted June 4, 1861 at Suffolk. He was reported AWOL November-December 1864. Before the War he married Ann Elizabeth Everett, by whom he had at least two daughters. He married Roxanna Virginia Riddick Ames, December 19, 1867 in Nansemond County; she was the widow of Benjamin Franklin Ames, killed at Gettysburg. He farmed in Sleepy Hole District, Nansemond County. The 1860-70 Census gives born in North Carolina; 1880, Virginia. Roxanna & their daughter Eunice are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suffolk - Block F, Lot 95. Timothy E. Langston 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, 4th Sergeant Columbus Washington Lassiter 16th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Private; transferred to 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Lassiter was born July 15, 1838, the son of Miles and Mourning Lassiter. His wife was E. Virginia H.. Gay Lassiter (01/27/1847-12/25/1906). He was elected mayor of Suffolk after the war and was member of the Tom Smith Camp of UCV. Lassiter died November 20, 1907 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 24. James Edward Lassiter 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Lassiter was born December 25, 1837 in Nansemond Co., the son of Abram & Allie Lassister. He enlisted June 23, 1861 at Cypress Chapel. He was hospitalized sick three times, and was wounded July 30, 1864 at Petersburg & hospitalized at Chimborazo. He was granted 40 days' sick furlough Aug. 9, and returned to duty Oct. 15, 1864. He was a lifelong laborer and in later years worked in a sawmill. He married Virginia Kelling about 1870. Widowed, he married Sarah E. Benthall, daughter of John & Patsey, Dec. 20, 1877 in Isle of Wight Co. He died Dec. 10, 1910 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 131. Richard Lassiter 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Lassiter was born in 1843 and a resident of Nansemond Co. He had a dark complexion, with dark hair and eyes and stood 5'5½" tall. Richard Lassiter 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Captain Lassiter was born ca. 1821. He served from July 1861 for one year. Riddick Lassiter 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private He was a farmer in 1860 and owned 116 acres, six to nine miles south of Suffolk. He was married and had nine children. W.H. Lassiter 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Lassiter was born ca. 1840. He got a pension in 1900 for his war service. William Jackson Lassiter 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 4th Sergeant Lassiter was born in 1829. He was a carpenter. He married Mary Elizabeth Harrell November 13, 1856 in Suffolk. They had one son, William Amos Lassiter. He enlisted April 17, 1861 in Suffolk as a private. He was a 2nd corporal by July 1861, promoted to 4th Sergeant February 1, 1862. He was in Camp Winder General Hospital with pneumonia April 4, 1862, and returned to his company April 6. He was wounded August 19, 1864, at the Davis farm, as part of the Battle of the Weldon Railroad (Globe Tavern). He died of his wounds on August 28*, 1864 at the 2nd North Carolina Hospital in Petersburg. His widow married Stephen Columbus Bartlett in January 1870 in Nansemond Co. Widowed again, she applied for a pension April 25, 1922; *the application gives William died August 29, 1864 in Petersburg, mortally wounded. She & Columbus are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 36. Henry T. Lawrence 68th North Carolina Infantry, Company I, Private Lawrence was born in 1844. He enlisted in service June 1, 1863. Lawrence died in 1921 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 36 1/2 E. Jonas W. Lawrence 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Captain Lawrence was born in 1831 in Nansemond Co., the son of Joseph Jack and Jane Lawrence. He owned 650 acres of land 22 miles southwest of Suffolk near South Quay. He married Virginia A. Lee (1835-1896) on May 3, 1855 and had seven children. He retired from service May 1, 1862. Lawrence, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted May, 1861; discharged June, 1861; served 1 year, 1 month; resident of South Quay. He died in 1915 and is buried in Poplar Spring Cemetery, Franklin, Va. - Annex 2, Plot 152. Mills Irvin Lawrence 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Lawrence was born in Southampton Co. in 1841. He was a farmer near South Quay. He had blue eyes and blond hair and was 5'6" tall. He received a medical discharge from service on May 26, 1862 because he lost two fingers of his right hand. He married Lucy V. Rawls December 9, 1868 in Nansemond Co. Widowed, he married Fanny Lankford September 10, 1871 in Isle of Wight Co. He died July 18, 1890 in Isle of Wight Co. Robert Lawrence, Jr. 15th Virginia, Co.E, Pvt. - POW Robert was born 08/18/1826, the son of Robert and Elizabeth G. Allen Lawrence. He died 07/09/1892 and is buried in St. John's Church Cemetery, Chuckatuck, Nansemond Co., Va. Virginius Lawrence 9th Va. Inf. Co. F, Private Virginius was born in Nansemond Co., Virginia on October 16, 1836, son of Robert and Elizabeth G. Allen Lawrence. His wife was Marietta Corbell Lawrence, whom he married January 12, 1871. Virginius died November 8, 1883 in Wake Forest, North Carolina. Walter Allen Lawrence 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Lawrence was born April 18, 1840, the son of Robert and Elizabeth G. Allen Lawrence. He attended VMI. Lawrence died of congestive chills October 28, 1862 and was buried in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond. Later he was reburied at St. John's Episcopal Church in Chuckatuck. His tombstone reads, "A patriot who gave his life to save his country's honour." W.W. Leary North Carolina Unit Leary was born in 1842. He died in 1922 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 26 1/2 N. Adonirum Judson Lee 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Lee was born December 22, 1837 in Nansemond Co., the son of John Rochelle and Mary Ann Wise Griffin Everett Lee. He was killed at Brandy Station on June 9, 1863. Alfred Thomas Lee 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Lee was born January 15, 1842 in Nansemond Co., the son of John Rochelle and Mary Ann Wise Griffin Everett Lee. He died in 1898 and is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery. Elisha Everett Lee 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Lee was born April 7, 1828 in Nansemond Co., the son of John Rochelle and Mary Ann Wise Griffin Everett Lee. He married Elizabeth Virginia Gaskins (1845-1915) in April 1862. After the war he was a truck farmer. Lee died March 11, 1897 and is buried in the Gaskins-Lee family cemetery on Bridge Road in Suffolk. Patrick Henry Lee 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Captain Lee was born December 22, 1823 in Nansemond Co., the son of John Rochelle and Mary Ann Wise Griffin Everett Lee. He was a prominent farmer and businessman of the Upper Parish. Lee married Joanna Rawles (1820-1900), daughter of Willis and Nancy Kelly Rawles, on February 27, 1845. His second wife was Willie E. Lee. He died May 30, 1907 and is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery, as are his parents. Willis John Lee 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company F, Private Lee was born January 12, 1846 in Nansemond Co., the son of Patrick Henry and Joanna Rawles Lee. He married Mary Janette Jones, daughter of William Henry and Emma Copeland Jones on May 25, 1869. Lee died May 20, 1919 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block H, Lot 43. His father was also in the Regiment. W.E. Lester 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company K Lester lived in the Holland section of Nansemond Co. James J. Lewes Artillery Lee's Brigade, Captain Lewes was born in 1840. He served the Confederate Army for three years and six months. McKimmy Lewis 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, 1st Sergeant Lewis was born ca. 1833. When he enlisted in the army, he was a resident of Norfolk, Va., had light hair, grey eyes, a light complexion and stood 5'8½" tall. After the war, he lived in Nansemond Co. and was an oysterman. William J. Lewis Lewis lived in Nansemond Co. and died shortly after the war. Joseph H. Little 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Little was born February 28, 1824 in Lancashire Co., England. His first wife was Eliza Little (1832-1856), his second, Martha Jane Little (1829-1904). He was a tinner and businessman before and after the war. Upon entering the war, he was described as 5'6" tall, with a fair complexion, blue eyes and dark hair. He died July 7, 1888 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 57. John Frederick Lotzia 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Lotzia was born in Suffolk on December 16, 1844, the son of John A. and Margaret A. Ward Lotzia. He was a merchant/tailor in Suffolk before the war. After the war, he was a partner in the firm of Lotzia and Caulk, and for years had perhaps the largest trade in their line. He married Eudora C. Jones and had three children. Lotzia was member of the town council, overseer of the poor, chief of the fire department for six years and town treasurer. He died March 7, 1900 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 73. Hilliard W. Luke 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Luke was born in 1831, the son of John V. Luke of the Lower Parish in Nansemond Co. In March 1863, he died in Chimbarazo Hospital of pneumonia. Isaac Pruden Luke 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Luke was born in 1824 in Nansemond Co., the son of James* V. & Sally Luke of the Lower Parish in Nansemond Co. He was a farmer. He married Sarah Folk, daughter of James & Polly Folk, January 20, 1859 in Nansemond Co. He was taken prisoner at Dinwiddie C.H. April 13, 1865. *His CSR gives son of John V.; brother of Hilliard W. Luke. James P. Luke 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Luke was born in 1842. He was a POW at Point Lookout, Md, where he died of dysentery on December 3, 1864. He's buried in the POW graveyard #630. James W. Luke 59th Virginia Militia, Riddick's Company, Private 1st South Carolina Infantry, Company L, Private Luke was born in 1822 in Nansemond Co., the son of John & Peggy Luke. He married Elizabeth F. Norfleet, daughter of Riddick & Sally, Feb. 16, 1854. He was a resident of Myrtle, Nansemond Co., Va., and died July 18, 1911. His son James M. was killed by a tornado Apr. 18, 1887 in Myrtle. James received a pension in 1900 (S- Va.P 05-05-1900, p. 8), but is not found in the state library catalog. His widow Elizabeth applied for a pension, but the War Dept. found only the record of J.W. Luke, 1st South Carolina Infantry, Company L, Private, who died in 1862-63. The state library's digital copy of the application is substantially illegible. Marion E. Luke 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Luke was a substitute for Richard Howell and became the cook for Company K. Washington W. Luke 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Luke was born in 1825. His papers dated March 5, 1862 state he was present on that date but he declined to reenlist in the Confederate service. He was a miller after the war and died in 1892. His wife was Mary A. Luke. William J. Luke 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Luke was a resident of Nansemond Co. He died of fever on July 5, 1862 in a hospital in Richmond, Virginia. On April 13, 1864, Nathaniel Riddick made a claim as the family's attorney. "Nathan" Nathaniel Sidney Lynn 24th North Carolina, Company D, Private Lynn was born June 5, 1845 in Wake County, NC, the son of Jimmie" and Melissa Brassfield Lynn. He married Delia Frances Jones October 23, 1870 in Wake County. He died November 14, 1904, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 64. Albert Benjamin March Capt. Virginius O. Cassell's Company of Heavy Art'y, Company D, 7th Battalion; transferred to the 61st Virginia Infantry, Private March was born in Nansemond Co. in 1841. He died of heart failure in Norfolk on November 13, 1909 and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Norfolk, Va. [Plot EXT 29-L15-S7] Frederick W. March 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private March was the son of John Anthony and Prudy March and a resident of Nansemond Co. before the war. Frederick was dark complected, with black hair, hazel eyes and was 5'5½" tall. March was captured Oct. 27, 1864 at Burgess' Mill, Dinwiddie Co., and held as a POW at Pt. Lookout until after the war. Widowed, he married on March 13, 1874 Catherine Howell, daughter of Abram and Elizabeth Glover Howell. He died January 2, 1909 at the family homeplace "Marcher Mill" in the Somerton section of Nansemond Co. and is buried in Holly Lawn Cemetery. Samuel Hardy Marshall Engineer Corps, Lieutenant Marshall was born May 5, 1827. His wife was Anne Marshall Emoughty Marshall (4/3/1834-5/22/1900). They had two sons and a daughter. He died September 7, 1885 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 20. John G. Martin 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Martin was born August 7, 1826. He died on November 27, 1900 in Chuckatuck and is buried in St. John's Church Cemetery. Allen Mathews 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Mathews was born in 1824. His wife was Ann Mathews and he was a farmer. Joseph Matthews 13th Va. Cavalry, Co. C, Pvt. Joseph was a resident of Nansemond Co. before the war and married Elizabeth Murphy of Isle of Wight Co., Va. He enlisted in Suffolk 03/01/1862 and was present through March 1863. Some records reported he died at Middleburg. William H. Mathias 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Mathias was born in North Carolina in 1839. He was a small farmer and owned 13 acres south of Suffolk. Rev. John McClelland CSA John McClelland was born March 22, 1821 and died June 13, 1899. He was buried in Wesley Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery. Thomas Alphonso McClenny 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Sergeant McClenny was born December 12, 1845* in Nansemond County, the son of James M. and Eliza Caroline Clayton McClenny. He married Dianna "Anna" Lucretia McClenny (1845-1905) December 12, 1867 - *Southampton Co. MB1:223 gives both age 22. McClenny was a farmer. Couple appear in the 1900 Census in Chuckatuck District, Nansemond County - *b. April 1842 & May 1845, respectively. They are buried in Western Branch Baptist Church Cemetery. (no dates given on his stone) Walter M. McClenny McClenny was born in 1845, the son of William Deans and Martha Ann Lankford McClenny- his father, a merchant in Suffolk. He was killed July 3, 1863 at the Battle of Gettysburg. William Stephenson McClenny 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Private McClenny was born in Nansemond Co. on March 4, 1837, the son of James M. and Eliza Caroline Clayton McClenny. He was killed on July 6, 1863 at Hagerstown, Maryland. James Robert McGuire 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 2nd Lieutenant McGuire was born March 9, 1824, the son of James and Emily Riddick McGuire. After McGuire served in the army for a year, he resigned in 1862. He married Georgiana Catherine Godwin (09/29/1822-11/09/1892). He died October 17, 1897 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 46. James William McGuire CSA McGuire was born November 12, 1841, the son of William Henry and Ann Maria Taylor Riddick McGuire. He was admitted to Confederate Soldiers Home in Atlanta, Ga. March 20, 1928. He died there on March 30, 1928 and is buried in Marietta, Georgia Confederate Cemetery. (This was found on an envelope in the McGuire family Bible.) Joseph Benson McGuire 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private; Cohoon's Battalion, Company B, Lieutenant McGuire was born in 1830, the son of James and Emily Riddick McGuire. He married Catherine Bruce Blamire McGuire (b. 1835). He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 59. (no dates given on his stone) Robert Philip McGuire 10th Alabama Regiment, Private McGuire was born March 9, 1835, the son of William Henry and Ann Maria Taylor Riddick McGuire. He was killed May 6, 1864 at the Battle of the Wilderness. "Fell in Defense of Southern Rights" was in the family Bible. William H. McNider Cohoon's Battalion Virginia Infantry, Company B, Lieutenant; transferred to 61st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Lieutenant; then to Co. H McNider was born in 1842. He was killed July 30, 1864 at the Crater and was listed on the Confederate Roll of Honor. --?-- Meacham No dates or first name. Served 1861-1865. Buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 36. (CSA) cf: J.H. Meacham, 41st Virginia Infantry, Company B, 2nd Lieutenant Archie B. Megginson 19th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Private Megginson was born in 1839. He was a grocer in Nansemond Co. and received a pension for his war service. Charles F. Mertig 32nd Virginia Infantry, James City Artillery, Hawkins Battery, 1st Company H Mertig was born August 18, 1834. He died December 17, 1886 and is buried at Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery. His wife, Yarico H. Mertig (1840-1915), received a pension for his war service. Jesse T. Metcalf 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Corporal Metcalf was born ca. 1842. He had dark hair & blue eyes, was light complected and 5'6" tall. Thomas J. Miles 41st Virginia Infantry, Company H, Private Miles was born in Southampton Co. January 1837, the son of John W. and Elizabeth Waller Miles. He was 5'10" tall, and had grey eyes & black hair. He married on Sep. 28, 1859 in Nansemond Co. Delphia F. Look, daughter of Abel & Rozilla. Miles, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted April 17, 1861; discharged June 20, 1865; served 4 years, 1 month, 3 days; wounded in left shoulder & right collarbone; resident of Cleopas. He living in Nansemond Co. in 1898, and was a house carpenter and farmer. He applied for a pension June 2, 1903, being totally disabled by general poor health & heart trouble; he was living then in Suffolk. The application states he enlisted July 1861 in Southampton Co., was captured April 3, 1865, and was a POW at Hart's Island. He was living in Southampton Co. in May 1913. Charles Benjamin Milteer, Sr. 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Corporal Milteer enlisted April 1861, and died June 1863, having served 2 years, 1 month. He married Annie Elizabeth Jenkins, daughter of Henry D. and Sarah Jenkins. Widowed, she married another veteran of Co. I, Elisha T. Cross, August 22, 1867, in Nansemond County. Charles and Annie's son Charles Jr. is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church. Annie appears in the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County). James Neverson Milteer 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Miltier was born in 1833. His wife was Julia Ann Daughtrey Milteer (02/14/1831-01/14/1907). A retired farmer living in Whaleyville, he applied for a pension March 31, 1911, being totally incapacitated from the general infirmities of age. Miltier died in 1920 and is buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. William Francis Milteer 5th Virginia Cavalry, Company G & 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Milteer was born June, 24, 1830, the son of Abraham and Margaret Simons Milteer. He married Mary Ann Byrd (03/14/1834-04/26/1917) on October 24, 1850. William died May 9th, 1905 and was buried in the Milteer Cemetery, Whaleyville, Nansemond Co., Va. (see Nan.Vol. 2) Daniel W. Miltier 9th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Milteer was born September 1, 1843. As a resident of Nansemond Co., he filed for a pension for his war service, Feb. 15, 1894. His application states he was wounded at Gettysburg - "Shot in the right eye by a minnie ball which lodged behind the bone of my forehead near the edge of my hair above my nose and three years later worked its way out through my left nostril. The ball is now in my possession. The right eye was, of course, shot out." Miltier died December 18, 1918 and is buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. James A. Miltier / Milteer 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Miltier was born October 16, 1834 in Nansemond Co., the son of Daniel and Ruthy Miltier. When he enlisted, he was a resident of Suffolk, had a dark complexion, hazel eyes, dark hair and was 5'8¾" tall. He married October 5, 1881 Virginia Ann Rawles Rawles, widow of his comrade Albert J. Rawles [Rawls]. He died April 8, 1920, and was buried with his in-laws in the Rawles-Ellis family cemetery on Manning Rd.; modern CSA gravestone shows Milteer. Mills Ross Minton 13th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Minton was born January 19, 1829 in Nansemond Co., the son of John and Mary E. Minton. He married Sarah Jane Campbell (1832-1885), daughter of William and Eliza Jones Campbell on December 16, 1852. After the war they made their home in Southampton Co., Va. William Parker Mitchell 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Mitchell was born November 25, 1844, the son of Parker and Hester Mitchell. He died February 10, 1905 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 114. Alexander Mizelle 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Mizelle was born in 1842 in North Carolina. He was a farmer and owned 232 acres 8 miles south of Suffolk. He married Addie Lindy Rountree (1848-1938) of Nansemond Co. on December 30, 1869. Mizelle died on September 27, 1874. James Henderson Mizell / Mizelle 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Mizell was born in 1836 in Bertie Co., North Carolina, the son of Joshua and Charlotte Mizell. He was a tenant farmer with black hair, gray eyes and stood 5'6" tall. He married Emeline Frost on May 28, 1857 in Nansemond Co. He was a farmer and received a pension for his war service, applying November 28, 1900. Mizelle died January 13, 1902 on the Pitchkettle Bridge in Nansemond Co., of old age & heart trouble. His widow "Emiline Mizzell" applied for a pension Apr. 1, 1905, stating they married in 1862. Thomas Dun Moody 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Moody was born in 1840 in Albany, N.Y. He was a sailor/oysterman in Nansemond Co. At 19 he joined Col. Phillips' Company. He was severly wounded in the arm at Seven Pines and discharged in 1863. He first married Julia Ann Cooley; he married his second wife, Esther A. Peale on April 15, 1883 in Nansemond Co. They made their home in Crittenden, Virginia. Alexander W. Moore 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 3rd Lieutenant Moore was born October 12, 1831, the son of William Charles and Martha Rawles Moore. He resigned from the army in 1863. Moore married Adeline "Addie" Brown Darden, daughter of Hugh Kelly and Ann Brown Darden. Moore was a farmer in Nansemond Co. He died October 16, 1896 and is buried in Oakland Christian Church Cemetery in Chuckatuck, Virginia. His gravestone shows 1st Lieut. His photograph appeared in the "Suffolk News-Herald," April 9, 1958 (p. 2), identifying him as captain. James B. Moore 10th Virginia Infantry, Company D, 4th Sergeant. Moore was born in 1832. William Amos Moore 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private William was born in February 1842 in Nansemond Co., the son of Amos & Mary Moore. Moore had a light complexion, blue eyes, light hair and was 5'8" tall. He enlisted February 20, 1862 at Cedar Point, Va. He was hospitaltized with bronchitis December 1862, and returned to duty the following March. He was captured at Five Forks, April 1, 1865. He was a POW at Hart's Island, NY before returning to Nansemond Co., Va. He married "Sallie" Sarah K. Purdie February 7, 1867 in Isle of Wight Co. After the war, he was a boat builder in Chuckatuck District, Nansemond Co. William Percy Moore 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, 2nd Lt. Moore was born September 23, 1812. He was with Lee at Appomattox. He died October 7, 1879 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 29 1/2 W. Augustus H. Morgan 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Morgan was born in 1832. He received a pension for his war service and was living in Nurneysville, Nansemond Co., Va in 1902. William H. Morgan 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Morgan's father owned 67 acres of land 12 miles southwest of Suffolk before the war. John F. Morriss 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Morriss was a resident of Suffolk before the war. He was 5'8" tall, and had a light complexion, blue eyes & brown hair. He belonged to A.P. Hill Camp of UCV in Petersburg. Morriss died Apr. 27, 1906 and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Norfolk, Va. [unmarked - gravesite unknown] William H. Murphy 9th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Murphy received a pension in Suffolk in 1900 for his war service. George A. Murray Murray was born February 1, 1830, the eldest son of Dr. Robert and Elmira Wilkerson Godwin Murray (1807-1874). He died July 21, 1883 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 45. William Wilkerson Murray Independent Signal Corps, Company B, Joseph R. Milligan, Commander Murray was born July 20, 1845 in Southampton Co., the son of Dr. Robert A. and Elmira Wilkerson Godwin Murray. His father was a native of County Down, and the family continued close ties to [Northern] Ireland. William married Susan Smith Kilby, daughter of John Richardson and Martha Jane Louise Smith Kilby on March 3, 1870, Suffolk; the union was published in the "Belfast News Letter." He died April 29, 1931 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 39; his parents are in Block D, Lot 45. J.W. Murrell Boden's Command Murrell was born February 21, 1841 in Salisbury, Maryland. He was a doctor in the war and later in Suffolk. He died June 27, 1888 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 39. Joseph Van Holt Nash 13th Virginia Cavalry, Companies F & G, Private Appointed Captain November 2, 1863. Successor as Adjutant for brigade. Nash was born in 1834. He attended University of Virginia and Randolph-Macon College. After the war he lived in Petersburg and Suffolk, Va. and later Atlanta, Ga. John Calvin Nelms, Sr. 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private; transferred to Cohoon's Infantry Battalion as Sergeant Major and then returned to 16th. Nelms was born in Nansemond Co. March 11, 1837, the son of James and Martha Butler Nelms. His mother was the daughter of John Butler. Nelms was a clerk in the mercantile business in Suffolk. He married in 1867 Anna Mary Hodges, daughter of Solomon Hodges and had four children. After the war, he was a lumber inspector for the Suffolk and Carolina Railroad shops and later a bookkeeper for G.G. Dennis Lumber Company in Suffolk. Nelms died October 5, 1907 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 112. Robert E. Nelms 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Nelms was born ca. 1833 in Pine Town, North Carolina. He received a pension for his war service and farmed in Suffolk. His wife was Sarah Nelms. He died October 8, 1901. Stephen John Nelms 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Nelms was born in 1844. His wife was Martha E. Nelms (1840-1923). He was a ambulance driver during the war. Stephen Nelms died in 1898 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 111. John Bridger Newman 9th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Newman was born October 14, 1821, the son of Thomas and Martha Matthews Newman. He had a business in Portsmouth. His first wife was Civilla Ann Gayle, daughter of Alexander and Margaret Gayle. His second wife was Hannah Urquhart (1835-1926), daughter of John and Hannah Shivers Urquhart. Newman was 5'8" tall, and had grey eyes & a light complexion. He was discharged August 11, 1862 under the Conscript Act (too old). After the war, he was a farmer in Isle of Wight and Nansemond Cos. He died September 21, 1909 and is buried at Oakland Christian Church Cemetery in Chuckatuck, Va. Abram T. Norfleet 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Orderly Sergeant Norfleet was born in 1833. Augustus B. Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Norfleet was born in 1839 in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co., the son of Riddick and Sallie Norfleet. He died in January 1864 of wounds received in the Battle of 2nd Manassas. Christopher Columbus Norfleet 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Norfleet was born September 5, 1824 in Nansemond Co., the son of Christopher and Letitia Duke Norfleet. He served throughout the Mexican War. He was a carpenter and shingle inspector. Norfleet stood 5'10½" tall, had a sallow complexion, yellowish-grey eyes and black hair. He was married twice, first to Mary Louise Raby (1834-1869, and second to Mary F. Smith (1849-1902). He died November 9, 1906 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 39. Elisha Adolphus Norfleet 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 3rd Sergeant Norfleet was born in Nansemond Co. on May 25, 1842, the son of Elisha and Sarah Ann Lassiter Norfleet. After the war, he moved with his brother, sister and brother-in-law to Shell Mound, Mississippi. Norfleet died September 18, 1867 and is buried in Shell Mound, MS. Hamlin Lassiter Norfleet 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Lieutenant Norfleet was born October 5, 1836 in Nansemond Co., the son of Elisha and Sarah Ann Lassiter Norfleet. He graduated from V.M.I. in 1858 and as a civil engineer. After the war, he moved with his brother Adolphus, sister Margaret and her husband William K. Brosius to Shell Mound, Mississippi. He moved to Brazil about 1870. On January 5, 1875, he married in Cachocina Do Sul, Brazil, Marcelina De Oliveira Gondret (b. April 16, 1841, in Porto Alegre, Brazil - d. June 7, 1925), daughter of Antoine Gondret of Carcassonne, France and Antonia O. Gondret, the widow of Dr. Lusiano Lopes Pereira. They had six children. Norfleet died June 13, 1928 in Candas, Rio Grande Do Sul, Brazil. [The Brazilian ex-pats were known as Confederados.] Hardy Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Norfleet was born 1812. He was a blacksmith in Suffolk. His wife was Barsha Norfleet (married 1830). They lived in the Upper Parish of Nansemond Co. in 1860. James Andrew Norfleet 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Norfleet was born January 16, 1816. He was a carpenter in Suffolk. James was discharged in 1863 at Winchester, Virginia because of his age. He died May 7, 1896 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 115. James H. Norfleet 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Norfleet was born in 1839. His father owned a 226-acre farm 14 miles southwest of Suffolk. He received a medical discharge from service on January 20, 1862. John Edward Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Norfleet was born February 18, 1838 in Nansemond Co., Va., the son of John A. and Rachel Norfleet. He was a farmer before the war. He married Garopilia Skinner (1851-1907), daughter of William H. and Christian Skinner on November 17, 1870. Norfleet was wounded at Burgess Mill. He died September 1st, 1917 and was buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. John Thomas Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Norfleet was born February 18, 1841. His wife was Julia A. Pierce Norfleet (1857-1934). He died October 19, 1913 and is buried at Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery. Joseph C. Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E(2nd), Private Norfleet was born in 1843, the son of Riddick and Sallie Norfleet, who lived in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co. in 1860. Joseph Norfleet mustered out on March 14, 1864. Justin R. Norfleet 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Norfleet was born in October 21, 1826, son of John and Polly Rawls Norfleet. He was a farmer in Box Elder. During the war, he was detailed to the Quartermaster Department. Justin was listed in the 1870 Nansemond Co. census. Kinsey J. Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Norfleet was born in 1838, the son of Riddick and Sallie Norfleet. He lived in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co. in 1860. He was listed in the 1880 Nansemond Co. Census. Nathaniel Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Ferguson's Company, Private Norfleet was born February 14, 1836 in Nansemond Co. He was a coachmaker employed by Pullem and Pierce Carriages in Nansemond Co. He married on April 14, 1870 Sarah Virginia Camp (06/20/1852-02/11/1934), daughter of George II and Sallie Cutchins Camp. He died March 10, 1892 of tuberculosis and is buried in Poplar Spring Cemetery in Franklin, Va. - Section 1, Plot 60B. Nathaniel George Norfleet 12th Virginia Infantry and Mulligan's Company, Signal Corps Norfleet was born in Nansemond Co. on December 21, 1826, the son of Nathaniel George and Joana Kelly Darder Norfleet. He was a farmer. He married Mary Elizabeth Darden (06/08/1832-05/17/1906) on May 29, 1850. She was the daughter of William and Betsy Cowper Darden. They had eight children. Nathaniel Norfleet died January 10, 1882 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Robert E. Norfleet 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Norfleet was born September 30, 1843, son of Nathaniel George and Sophia Ann Riddick Norfleet. He was 5'6" tall, and had light hair, grey eyes & a florid complexion. After the war, he lived in Suffolk and was a deputy sheriff for 18 years. He was a member of the Tom Smith Camp UCV. Norfleet died September 24, 1908 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 32. Robert J. Norfleet 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Norfleet was born November 2, 1843. His father owned a farm 14 miles southwest of Suffolk. His brother Thomas H. Norfleet was in the Company. He was the son of John and Margaret Ann Rebecca Lee Norfleet and died June 27, 1865. Thomas H. Norfleet 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Norfleet was born in 1842. His father owned a farm 14 miles southwest of Suffolk. His brother Robert J. Norfleet was in the Company. Thomas was killed at the Crater on July 30, 1864. He was the son of John and Margaret Ann Rebecca Lee Norfleet. William Henry Norfleet 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Norfleet was born in Nansemond Co. in 1833, the son of Hardy and Delilah Norfleet. He married his cousin Jerusha Brinkley (1829-1915) April 27, 1858. He died May 17, 1864 and is buried at the Confederate Cemetery at Spotsylvania Court House. He has a cenotaph in Jerusha's lot in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 51. Willis B/P. Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Norfleet was born about 1828, the son of Riddick and Sarah Norfleet. He married Virginia D. Butler in Sep. 4, 1850* in Isle of Wight Co. He enlisted Mar. 11, 1862. He became sick near Fredericksburg in the Winter of 1862-63 and was removed to Chimborazo, where he died March 15, 1863. He was buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Richmond. His daughter Georgie J. (Norfleet; Mrs. John C.W.) Wright was killed by a tornado Apr. 18, 1887, in Myrtle. Virginia applied for a pension Apr. 22, 1892, *saying they married in 1849. Wilson Norfleet 59th Virginia Militia Infantry, Riddick's Company, Private Norfleet was born May 10, 1819, the son of Abram and Elizabeth Norfleet. He married Caroline Virginia McGuire (b. 12/6/1826), daughter of James and Emily McGuire on November 16, 1843. Wilson Norfleet was a Suffolk merchant. Buried Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 35. (no dates on stone) Wright M. Norfleet 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Norfleet was born in 1838, the son of Wright and Catherine Norfleet. He died March 21, 1862 at his home in the Lower Parish of Nansemond Co. of typhoid fever. John Thomas Nurney unit unknown - Home Guard? [undocumented; merely proper age range] Nurney was born December 2, 1839, in Nansemond Co., the son of William and Ann E. Nurney. He married Sarah Cadora Norfleet, daughter of Hardy and Sarah Cadora Ballance Norfleet. He was a merchant after the war. He died August 8, 1897 in Suffolk, and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery - Block E, Lot 47. Dempsey Odom Louisana Zouave Battalion, Private Odom was born December 28, 1845, the son of John W. and Mary Odom. Dempsey Odom and his cousin, Eddie Smith left home, lied about their age and on January 2, 1864 joined the Zouaves. Their uniforms had a wide red stripe down the bright blue trousers. Odom was captured at Somerton, Virginia on January 27, 1864 and was sent to Point Lookout, Maryland. He married "Pattie" Martha Louise Riddick (1845-1881), daughter of Thomas B. and Sarah S. Copeland Riddick on December 29, 1870. He died December 5, 1889 and is buried at Somerton Methodist Church Cemetery; he & Pattie gave the land for the church, Sepptember 26, 1881. George Vernon Odom 19th Virginia, 2nd Cavalry, Company C, Private George Odom enlisted July 24, 1861 and did not return from the war. He was the son of John W. and Mary "Polly" Kittrell Odom and brother of Kenneth Odom. John Fletcher Odom 68th North Carolina Regiment, Private Odom was born in December 5, 1844. He married Cornelia "Cora" Florence Odom (9/27/1857-8/5/1937). Odom died June 25, 1927 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 154 1/2 E. Kenneth Odom 5th North Carolina Regiment, Company U, Private Kenneth Odom enlisted June 4th, 1861 and did not return from the war. He was son of John W. and Mary "Polly" Kittrell Odom and brother of George Vernon Odom. Richard B. Odom 68th North Carolina Regiment, Company I, Lieutenant The 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County) gives enlisted May, 1861; discharged April 1865; served 4 years, 1 month. Alexander Washington Oliver 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private "Al" Oliver was born July 20, 1843 in Nansemond Co., the son of Sylvester and Mary Elizabeth Fluhart Oliver. He was a member of the Tom Smith Camp UVC in Suffolk. He married Lucy "Anna" Nann Johnson (4/23/1849-11/11/1898), daughter of James Edward and Mercelia Pierce Johnson on February 15, 1866 and had ten children. Al Oliver died three days after his wife, November 16, 1898, both of typho-pneumonia; they are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 97. George E. Oliver 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Oliver was born in Nansemond Co. in 1839. He was a merchant in Suffolk. After the war, he was a member of the Stonewall Camp UCV in Portsmouth and was listed on the Confederate Roll of Honor. He died September 27, 1870. John Oliver 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Oliver was born in 1825. He received a pension in Nansemond Co. for his war service. He was living in Suffolk in 1900. Matthew Edward Oliver 12th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Oliver was born in 1834, the son of Elisha and Emily Oliver. He married on Dec. 22, 1853, Emeline Odom, daughter of Jesse and Polly Odom. Widowed by 1870, he married on Apr. 11, 1871, Georgianna Munford, daughter of Dempsey and Lucy Ann Stephens Mountford, and had eight children, six of whom lived to adulthood. He was a Methodist. After the war, he lived in Magnolia, Nansemond Co. He died on February 18, 1913 and is buried in the Oliver (Savage) Family Cemetery, 1/2 mile from Magnolia Church. The grave was unmarked. Cemetery restored 1999-2000 by family members & the Tom Smith Camp 1702, Sons of Confederate Veterans. New stones (family & CSA) give Mathew; dates wrong on both. Thomas Williamson Oliver 18th Mississippi Infantry, Company I, Private Oliver was born April 25, 1837 in Nansemond Co., the son of Calvin and Eliza L. Williamson Oliver. He enlisted May 23, 1861 for 12 months, and reenlisted April 26, 1862. He was captured at Fredericksburg May 3, 1863; paroled June 25, 1863 at Old Capitol Prison in Washington, D.C., and exchanged June 30, 1863 at City Point. He was present August 31, 1864, but absent February 12, 1865 - his widow claimed that he was on furlough and returning from home when Lee surrendered. After the war, he married Alice S. Parker of Suffolk, and they had 10 children, though 5 sons died in infancy. Oliver died on November 18, 1900 in Franklin and is buried in the Wiggins Family Cemetery, on Hwy. 258 in Southampton Co., 1/4 mile south of Hwy. 189. His widow received a pension in Southampton Co. for his war service. William James Oliver 9th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Captain Oliver was born April 13, 1838 in Nansemond Co., Va., the son of Armistead and Priscilla Saunders Oliver. He was a saddler and harness maker. During the war, he was manager of the first peanut factory ever built in Suffolk and later was the Commissioner of Revenue for District No. 2. He married Martha Rodgers (10/5/1846-5/16/1934), the daughter of Jonathan Rodgers, and had six children. He was a farmer, a member of the Tom Smith Camp of UCV and settled just north of Suffolk. William Oliver died September 19, 1923 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 141 1/2 E. Thomas E. Outlaw 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Outland was born in 1834. He died October 16, 1888 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 92. George Washington Paine Paine was born February 2, 1825. His wife was Mary Emily Paine (06/03/1837-08/13/1932). He died December 20, 1908, and both are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 71. Alfred L. Parker 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Boulding Parker 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E(2nd), Private He had a fair complexion, light hair and grey eyes and stood 6' tall. George Thomas Parker 5th North Carolina Infantry, Company H, 1st Sergeant to Captain Parker was born May 6, 1836 in North Carolina, the son of Jordan Williams and Penelope Peninah Walton Parker. He enlisted May 30, 1861, in Gates County, NC, as First Sergeant; three weeks later he was promoted to Sergeant Major. That Fall he became a Second Lieutenant. He was promoted to Captain before Gettysburg, and served until surrendered at Appomattox. He married Eunice Catherine Riddick, daughter of Edward C. and Eunice Riddick, on December 21, 1865, in Nansemond County. He became a sewing machine agent in Suffolk. He died January 18, 1911 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 66. Jesse Parker 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Jesse was born February 22, 1818 in Southampton Co., Virginia. He died in Nansemond Co., Virginia on June 19, 1893. Parker is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 14. Joseph Holiday Parker 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Transferred to 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Parker was born in 1842, the son of Henry and Nancy Harrell Parker of the Liberty Spring community. He married Jennett Emily Norfleet, daughter of John A. Norfleet of Nansemond Co. His father owned 158 acres ten miles south of Suffolk. Parker moved to Chuckatuck in the 1870's. He died in 1907 and is buried at Oakland Christian Church Cemetery in Chuckatuck. Leroy Parker 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Parker was the son of Henry and Nancy Harrell Parker of the Liberty Springs community. He was wounded at the Battle of the Crater on July 30, 1864 and died August 15, 1864 at Chimborazo Hospital #2. Miles Parker 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Parker was born about 1834 in Nansemond Co., Va. His wife was Sarah E. Parker (1836-1930). Miles Parker died about 1902. He and his wife are buried in Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. Robert Parker 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Parker was born in 1841. Willis Parker 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Parker was born in 1826. He was a farmer and owned 55 acres six miles south of Suffolk. He was 5'8" tall, and had blue eyes & light hair. He was discharged for being over-age. His wife was Christian Peele Parker. John Patten 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Private Patten only appears on a Union list of deserters as of April 12, 1865 from Suffolk, Va. James H. Pearce 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Pearce was 5'11" tall, and had blue eyes & brown hair. He was a farmer and owned 36 acres of land 12 miles southwest of Suffolk. He was married and had two children. Christopher Peele (regimental history gives Peel) 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Peele was born ca. 1839. Richard Peele 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Peele was born in 1836. He died in 1916 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 123 1/2 W. Riddick Peele 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private James A. Phelps 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Detached to CS Navy on October 7, 1863. Phelps was born about 1839 in Nansemond Co., to James & Barsheba Phelps. A shipbuilder before the war, Phelps enlisted June 4, 1861 in Suffolk. At some point he was wounded in his mouth by a minie ball. His horse was killed Sep. 9, 1862, at Williamsburg, and he was unable to afford another. He was transferred to the Navy at his own request. He 1m. Ann Virginia King, daughter of Michael & Ann Eliza King, Dec. 3, 1865, in Nansemond Co. Widowed, he 2m. Ann's sister Henrietta King, Dec. 31, 1872 (Nansemond Co. #115). He died June 19, 1877 in Nansemond Co., of concussion of the brain. Claudius Crawley Phillips 3rd Virginia Infantry, Captain, Nansemond Rangers Phillips was born in 1835. He was a professor. Claudius Phillips was killed at Gettysburg on July 3, 1863. Edward Drew Phillips 59th Virginia Infantry, Surgeon served at various Confederate hospitals Phillips was born July 14, 1830 in Nansemond Co., the son of Nathaniel P. Phillips. He went to Hampton Sydney College and graduated in medicine (later called Virginia Medical College). In 1851, he married Virginia Ricks (d. 1852) and second in 1859 Mary Matilda Riddick (1838-1912), daughter of Richard H. Riddick. Edward and Mary had two children. Phillips died November 26, 1905 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block A, Lot 16. James Jasper Phillips 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Colonel Phillips was born January 23, 1832 in Nansemond Co., the son of Elizabeth Phillips. He had a fair complexion, dark hair & grey eyes, and was 5'9" tall. He graduated from VMI in the class of 1853 and became a school teacher. He married Lou Emma Betts January 31, 1856 in Chuckatuck. He started a school in Chuckatuck and at the outbreak of the war, raised a company of men. Many of his former pupils were under his command. He assumed command of the remnants of the regiment at Gettysburg - there were 185 casualties among the 244 in Pickett's Charge. The unit was captured at Sayler's Creek, and he was imprisoned at Johnson's Island until July 25, 1865. After the war, he moved to New York City where he was engaged in the commission business. The firm was known as Phillips and Sons. He also owned Ferry Point farm in Nansemond Co. He died February 11, 1908 in Manhattan, NY, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 48. John Theophilus Phillips Scout Phillips was born in Chuckatuck, Virginia in November of 1829, the son of John and Elizabeth Phillips. He graduated in medicine at Cincinnati in 1852. In 1863, he was a scout for the army. Before the war his hand had received a gunshot wound which rendered him unable to handle a gun, thereby making him ineligible for full army service. He first married Virginia Shoup. He married "Carrie" Carolyn Pretlow Ricks December 13, 1855 in Nansemond Co. Phillips died at his home "Bloomsdale" on April 3, 1881. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 49. William H. Phillips 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private James C. Pierce 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Pierce was born ca. 1832. John S. Pierce 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Pierce was born in 1834. His father owned 170 acres of land nine miles southwest of Suffolk. John T. Pierce 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Sgt. Pierce was born in 1837. After the war, he lived at Savage Crossing. He is buried at Liberty Springs Christian Church Cemetery. Thomas Pierce 6th Virginia Infantry, Co. K (South Quay Guards), Private* Pierce was killed July 1, 1862, at Malvern Hill, Henrico County. *A Rebecca Pierce received a widow pension and lived in Buckhorn in 1909. Her application states that Thomas died from a "Gun Shot Wound near Richmond" and "Gun Shot Wound in the head," "Killed in the Seven days battles around Richmond;" married by Rev. Jacob [Kadar] Daughtrey [pastor of Beaver Dam Baptist Church]. A Thomas Pierce married Rebecca Stephenson, February 1, 1849 in Franklin (Isle of Wight Co. M.Recs.). She appears in the 1870 Census in Hardy District, Isle of Wight County, with six children. She seems most likely the applicant. Another Rebecca Pierce appears in Holy Neck District, Nansemond County, with one son, James R.; she appears as Ann R. Pierce in 1860 - Upper Parish, Nansemond County - both times with Bushrod W. Holland, who married Elizabeth "Stephens" September 1, 1845, in Isle of Wight County. [-on often dropped from Stephenson, Atkinson, &c.] James Robert Pierce's 1935 D.Cert. (9443 {Suffolk #103}) gives s/o Robert & Rebecca (Whitfield) Pierce. His {apparent} brother Jordan Edward Pierce's 1960 D.Cert. (8583, Drum Hill, Gates Co., NC) gives s/o Thomas & Rebecca (Whitfield) Pierce, b. June 21, 1870; sister Sallie Rebecca (Pierce; Mrs. Charlie E.) Jernigan's 1964 D.Cert. (14555 {Suffolk #148}) gives d/o Tom & Rebecca (Whitfield) Pierce, b. November 25, 1872; so their father cannot have been the one killed in the War. William H. Pierce 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Sergeant Pierce was born July 15, 1847, son of Patrick & Lucy A. Pierce. He was dark complected, had dark hair & grey eyes and was 5'6" tall. He married Mary Elizabeth Oliver May 14, 1878. He died September 10, 1894 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 64. William Norfleet Pierce 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Pierce was born in 1841. He was a farmer. He died February 25, 1920 and is buried in Liberty Spring Christian Church Cemetery. Nathaniel Newman Pitt 59th Virginia Militia, Private Pitt was born Sep. 8, 1828 in Nansemond County, the son of Henry and Nancy Pitt. He was a farmer in the Lower Parish of Nansemond County. In 1860 he owned 2 slaves, a girl, age 14, and a man, 30. He married Lavinia Caroline Baker Sep. 27, 1852, in Isle of Wight Co.; they had at least seven children. He died April 6, 1893 near Chuckatuck of unknown cause. He & his wife are buried in a Pitt family cemetery, 696 Cherry Grove Rd. Thomas Richard Pond 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Pond was born October 7, 1841 to Norfleet L. and Elizabeth Prince Pond. He enlisted September 1, 1864 in Stony Creek, Sussex Co. He married Anna Finch Bailey June 23, 1868 in Sussex Co. After the war, he lived in Southampton Co. and later in life moved to Suffolk to be with his children. He died March 31, 1924 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Robert Pope 32nd Virginia Infantry, James City Artillery, Company A, Private Pope was born in Nansemond Co. in 1827. He had a light complexion, light eyes, dark hair and was 5'9" tall. He was a painter. He died 1895. Benjamin G. Porter 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, 1st Sergeant Porter was born November 20, 1843. His mother owned 103 acres of land fourteen miles southwest of Suffolk. His wife was Eugenia M. Porter (7/27/1850-8/12/1911). Benjamin Porter died March 9, 1916 and was buried in Holland Cemetery. James B. Porter 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Porter lived in Nansemond Co. before the war. William Henry Porter 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Porter was born in Nansemond Co. on September 11, 1847. He died in Isle of Wight Co. on June 21, 1935. George W. Post 32nd Virginia Infantry, James City Artillery, Company H, 4th Corporal Post was born February 4, 1839. He married Viva Farthing (1850-1888). Post died October 9, 1920 and is buried in Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery in Crittenden, Virginia. Allen Powell 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Powell was killed at Antietam on June 1, 1864. His wife received a claim after the war of $147.23. She stated that they were married December 15, 1853 in Nansemond Co. [date/location of d. suspect] Henry James Powell 9th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Powell was born November 19, 1839, in Isle of Wight County, the son of William and Sarah Askew Powell. His obituary say he was a member of the Isle of Wight Blues before the war, and was captured shortly before Lee surrendered. The regimental history says he enlisted May 27, 1861, and was captured at Gettysburg July 3, 1863, exchanged May 3, 1864, and captured again April 1, 1865. He married Sarah Griffin about 1865. They lived at Myrtle. He died November 22, 1923, in Portsmouth, and was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Portsmouth. John T. Poyner 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Poyner was born in Norfolk Co. in 1827. In 1850, he was living in Suffolk at an inn and was listed in the census as a tailor. He married Emeline Parker (1832-1869), who was born in Gates Co., N.C., daughter of John Parker, a brickmason in Suffolk. Poyner died April 16, 1883 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 41. Joseph Prentis 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, 2nd Sergeant Prentis was born January 15, 1845, the son of Robert Riddick and Margaret Ann Whitehead Prentis. He died on the 1st day of July 1862 on the field of battle before Richmond at Malvern Hill. He is buried at the University of Virginia Chapel graveyard in Charlottesville, Virginia. James Herman Presson 9th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Sergeant Presson was born about 1833 in Southampton Co., son of Joel and Lucy Ann Clayton Presson. He was 5'10" tall, had a dark complexion, black hair & black eyes. He & Martha J. Holden obtained a marriage license December 15, 1856. He enlisted at Craney Island, Norfolk Co., as a second sergeant. He was wounded July 1, 1862 at Malvern Hill, and again April 1, 1865 at Petersburg, where he was captured. He married "Mollie" Mary Cecelia Deanes Jan. 20, 1869 in Hertford Co., NC. He was a farmer in Berlin & Ivor District, Southampton Co. in the the 1870 Census. He died on May 10, 1877 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 32. Erastus James Pruden CSA Pruden was born in Nansemond Co. in 1830, the son of James and Mary Kelley Pruden. He was a farmer and married Martha Thomas Marshall of Isle of Wight Co. in 1854. He died on March 30, 1894. Frank Pruden 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Pruden was the son of Mills and Sallie (Sarah) Pruden of Nansemond Co. He was killed in the Battle of the Crater July 30, 1864. His name appears on a plaque in Blandford Church, Petersburg, Va. Henry H. Pruden 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Pruden was born March 10, 1827 in Nansemond Co. He was a farmer with dark hair, grey eyes & a fair complexion, and was 5'8" tall. He enlisted March 1, 1863 in Staunton. He was wounded in the Battle of the Crater July 30, 1864; furloughed to Southampton Co. Sep. 27, 1864; given medical discharge Feb. 27, 1865. Pruden died June 12, 1907 and is buried at Beaver Dam Baptist Church in Isle of Wight Co. James Goodman Pruden 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Pruden was born in 1841 and was a farmer in Nansemond Co. He had brown hair, grey eyes & a fair complexion, and was 5'7" tall. His wife was Mourning A. Pruden. He died February 10, 1923. John Pruden 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Pruden lived in Nansemond Co. James P. Pugh 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Pugh was born in 1832. He was a huckster. During the war, he was an ambulance driver. Pugh died January 9, 1889 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 78. Andrew Jackson Rabey 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rabey was born October 19, 1837 in Nansemond Co., the son of Kedar and Elizabeth Knight Rabey. He married Emeline Elizabeth Savage, daughter of John and Rebecca Lentis Savage on February 3, 1859. Rabey was discharged from service because of disability. Soon after, he organized a Guerrilla band and was made the 1st Sergeant. They held the line of the "Blackwater" for several months and had several engagements with the land troops near Holy Neck. Later he assisted in mounting a company that was attached to a Georgia Regiment. He served on detached duty in the Commissary Department until the Surrender. During the war, his house was used for a hospital and then burned by the enemy. His wife was held prisoner within the federal lines for about a month. After the war, Rabey owned a farm about seven miles south of Suffolk. Thomas Miles Rabey 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rabey was born about 1820 in Nansemond Co. He had a ruddy complexion, brown hair & grey eyes, and was 5'5" tall. He married "Bettie" Elizabeth Kelly near Whaleyville December 1, 1853. Rabey died September 3, 1897 and is buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. Bettie applied for a pension October 5, 1903. James Rabey (Raby) 41st Virginia Infantry, 1st Company G, Sergeant; transferred to 61st Virginia Infantry, Company I Rabey had brown hair, blue eyes & a light complexion, and was 5'11" tall. Edwin Cornelius Ramsey 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Ramsey was born September 26, 1838 in Nansemond Co., the son of John and Dianah P. Whitley Ramsey. He married Mary Edward Walraven on December 16, 1868. Ramsey was a merchant in Chuckatuck and appointed Postmaster of Chuckatuck on May 14, 1877. Ramsey died on October 15, 1904 and was buried in St. John's Episcopal Church Cemetery. Albert J. Rawles 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private Rawles was born April 29, 1842. He died March 1, 1892 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 17. Albert J. Rawles / Rawls 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Albert Rawles was born about 1838 in Nansemond Co., the son of James and Margaret Rawles. He married Virginia Ann Rawles (10/4/1838-10/23/1925), the daughter of Wiley and Martha Stalling Rawles. He died January 13, 1877, and was buried with his in-laws in the Rawles-Ellis family cemetery on Manning Rd.; modern CSA gravestone shows Rawls. Andrew Jackson Rawles / Rawls 5th Virginia Cavalry, Company G, Private Andrew Rawles was born July 1826. He first married Emaline Catherine Rawls (ca. 1829-01/20/1857), the daughter of Uriah and Matilda Rawls. He was a farmer. He married second "India" Indiana M. Otelia Goodman November 26, 1863, in Gates Co., NC. He left will March 22, 1900, proved July 9, 1900 (Nansemond Co. WB6:14-16). He has a memorial window in Holy Neck Christian Church. The WPA surveyed the "Andrew Rawls home," 1 mile SE of Box Elder on Rt. 662, Jan. 26, 1938 (VHIR/18/0218). Edwin S. Rawles 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rawles was born June 1, 1838, the son of Stephen and Matilda Rawles. He died April 20, 1906 and is buried in Liberty Spring Christian Church Cemetery. His wife, Cornelia K. Rawles (07/30/1847-07/30/1918), who was from Copeland, Va., received a pension for his war service in 1908. He had brothers James and John T. Rawles in the same company. Francis Rawles 9th Virginia Infantry Rawles was born about 1828 in Nansemond Co., the son of Henry and Celia Keen Rawls. His wife was Mary Rawles (1829-1885). He died in 1896. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 30. Henry A. Rawles CSA Henry A. Rawles was born Qugust 14, 1817, the son of Andrew and Abigail Porter Rawles. He was married three times: first Nancy Ann Eley, 2nd Edith G. Duke Williams, and 3rd Laura E. Jacobs Cobb. Rawles was the father of Judge Richard H. Rawles of Suffolk and a Confederate veteran. James E. Rawles 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private James Rawls was born about 1840, the son of Stephen and Matilda Rawles. His brothers Edwin and John T. Rawles were in the same company. John T. Rawles 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rawles was born August 7th, 1842, the son of Stephen and Matilda Rawles. His wife was Susan Rawles (05/28/1839-03/29/1923). He was a farmer in Nansemond Co. after the war and died February 10, 1925. Both he and his wife are buried in Liberty Spring Christian Church Cemetery. Robert Rawles 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rawles was born in 1843 of Dutch ancestry, the son of Randal and Christian Rawles. He enlisted February, 1862; was discharged June 11, 1865; served 3 years, 3 months, 15 days. After the war he lived in Holland, Va. Rawles, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County), which give wounded in shoulder; resident of South Quay. His brother was Thomas J. Rawles. Thomas J. Rawles 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Thomas J. Rawles was born about 1842, the son of Randal and Christian Rawles. His father owned 202 acres of land 14 miles southwest of Suffolk. He was brother of Robert Rawles. William Rawles CSA William was born September 22, 1820, the son of William and Julia Rawles. His wife was Cassandra Byrd Rawles (04/26/1836-03/27/1917). William Rawles died November 14th 1909. Both are buried in Liberty Springs Cemetery. Sewell W. Rawley 20th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Rawley received a pension for his war services. Charles Cross Rawls CSA, Lieutenant Rawls was born ca. 1833 in Nansemond Co. He graduated from University of Virginia School of Law in 1859. Rawls died July 3, 1863 in Gettysburg, Pa. David Nathaniel Rawls 24th Battalion Heavy Artillery, Company C Rawls was born in April 14, 1844 in the Holy Neck District, a son of Nathaniel and Malissa Rawls. He enlisted at Chaffin's Bluff, on the James River below Richmond. He was hospitalized there with pneumonia, sent home and later discharged. His brother John Rawls died during the war. He and his wife, Annie Oliver Cofer Rawls of Isle of Wight Co., had thirteen children, one of whom was Walter Cecil Rawls, for whom the Courtland library is named. He farmed near Ivor, Sothampton Co. He moved about 1909 to Suffolk, where he applied for a pension June 23, 1922. David was the last surviving member of the Tom Smith Camp of UCV. He died December 3, 1928 in Norfolk and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block P, Lot 11. Elijah W. Rawls 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 4th Sergeant Rawls was born in 1835, the son of Robert and Mary Ann Norfleet Rawls. He was detached January 12, 1863 to a hospital as a steward. Elisha Rawls 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Rawls was born October 14, 1817, the son of William Rawls. He married Sarah Freeman (7/8/1832-7/29/1884) and owned 239 acres of land twelve miles southwest of Suffolk. Rawls was 5'11" tall, and had dark brown hair & blue eyes. He was discharged as over age on September 26, 1862. He died February 18, 1899 and is buried in Beaver Dam Baptist Church Cemetery in Isle of Wight Co. James E. Rawls 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Sergeant Rawls was a resident of Nansemond Co. James E. Rawls 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rawls was born in 1840. His father owned 126 acres of land ten miles southwest of Suffolk. Rawls died of disease on April 29, 1863 at a camp near U.S. ford, Rapphannock River. James Thomas Rawls Rawls died February 10, 1925. He was a farmer and Confederate veteran from the Liberty Springs section of Nansemond Co. John A. Rawls Rawls was born about 1839 in Nansemond County, a son of Nathaniel and Malissa Rawls. He died during the war. Luther Rawls 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Rawls was born June 2, 1835 in Holy Neck section of Nansemond Co., the son of Elisha H. and Margaret Rawls. He was the color bearer of Company K. Rawls died June 9, 1915 and is buried in Holy Neck Christian Church Cemetery. His widow Mary Elizabeth Darden Rawls (1839-1929) applied for a pension in 1928; they were married May 30, 1867, by Rev. Robert Holland. Richard Henry Rawls 24th Virginia Heavy Artillery, Company B, Private Rawls was born October 5, 1845 in Nansemond Co., the son of Robert H. and Mary Ann Norfleet Rawls. He enlisted October 5, 1862 at Chaffin's Bluff, and was paroled July 2, 1865. He married Mary Ann Kilby, daughter of Thaddeus S. and Mary Kilby, January 23, 1868 in Nansemond Co. He married Fannie Taylor Bailey, daughter of Jesse L. and Dorothy A. Blow Bailey, July 13, 1876 in Wake Co., NC. R.H. applied for a pension May 17, 1919, being partially disabled by old age. He died December 28, 1926 in Burkeville, Nottoway Co. and is buried in Ivor Cemetery. Talbert Rawls 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rawls was born in 1844. His father was a farmer and owned 372 acres and a flour mill fifteen miles west of Suffolk. Alexander Carr Rayford 1st Virginia, Richmond Lafayette Artillery Alexander was the son of Eldridge and Cherry Holland Rayford. He married on June 24, 1867 3rd wife Sarah C. Holland, daughter of James M. and Elizabeth M. Holland. Rayford lived in Buckhorn & Suffolk after the war. William H. Reed 68th North Carolina Regiment, Company I Reed was born ca. 1839. William Reid ? ?, Company D, Private Butler, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted 1863; resident of Elwood. Henry S. Reynolds 6th Virginia Infantry, Company H, 2nd Lieutenant Reynolds was born in Nansemond Co. in 1838. He was a mechanic, printer, and merchant in Richmond and Norfolk, Va. He was a member of Pickett-Buchanan Camp of United Confederate Veterans in 1889. John Rhodes 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Rhodes was born in 1839. Richard Rhodes 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Rhodes was born in 1833. George Richardson 14th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Zouave Battalion, General Loving He went in the army as a substitute for James R. Saunders, who paid him to go and bought his uniform, sash and sword. (Saunders was unable to go because of family illness) Archibald Riddick 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 1st Lieutentant Riddick was born September 26, 1820, the son of Robert and Mary Riddick. His wife was Margaret E. Riddick (6/3/1830-9/9/1890). He resigned in April 1862. He died in July 18, 1871 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 36. Charles Henry Riddick 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Captain Riddick was born in 1834. He graduated from VMI. After the war, he was a farmer. He died August 14, 1878 and is buried in St. John's Episcopal Church Cemetery in the Chuckatuck District of Nansemond Co. James Riddick CSA Riddick was born 1816. He served in the Commissary Department. James Riddick died in 1883. Jethro Riddick 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Riddick was born ca. 1832 in Nansemond Co. He died of typhoid fever September 3, 1862 in a Confederate Hospital in Petersburg, and is buried in Blandford Cemetery, Petersburg, Va. His wife Mary A.F. Rountree Riddick lived in Whaleyville, Va. and received a pension in 1900. Jethro Ballentine Riddick 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, 2nd Lieutenant > Captain Riddick was born July 14, 1839, son of Jethro II and Elizabeth Ballentine Vaughan Riddick. He owned 972 acres twelve miles south of Suffolk. Riddick was wounded in battle at Weldon Railroad on August 19, 1864 and was a POW in April of 1865. He reached the rank of Captain. He married Mary Catharine Copeland (1840-1935), daughter of John R. and Judith Ann Hunter Copeland on June 11, 1879. He was a Mason and a merchant in Portsmouth, Va. after the war. Riddick died December 11, 1887 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 31. John Thompson Riddick [not in 13th book] 13th Virginia Cavalry, Aide to Generals Chambliss and Beale, Captain. Riddick was born August 1, 1845, son of Judge Nathaniel and Missouri Ann Jones Kilby Riddick. He attended VMI. Riddick was elected 2nd Lt. in 1863. He was in Beale's Brigade of Cavalry in Northern Va. and a POW 5/2/1865. He died July 18, 1884 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 28. Mills Riddick 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I Riddick was born October 8th, 1843, the son of Judge Nathaniel and Missouri Ann Jones Riddick. He suffered a severe head wound during the Seige of Suffolk, in sight of his home. He was taken to convalesce in the S.C. Hospital in Petersburg, Va. and remained in Petersburg as a passport clerk in the Provost Marshall's office until the end of the war. Riddick died August 7, 1877 and was first buried at the old family burying ground, at the residence of Mills Riddick, Sr. on White Marsh Road. There is also a stone for him in his parents' lot in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 28. (no dates on the stone) Mills Edward Riddick 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I Riddick was born January 23, 1818, the son of Mills and Mary Taylor Riddick. He married Clara Ann Judkins (1825-1902), daughter of Jarratt W. and Content Judkins on February 8, 1844. Mills Riddick died April 15, 1891. Richard Taylor Riddick 5th Virginia Cavalry, Company G Riddick was born ca. 1837, the son of Josiah and Elizabeth Riddick. A farmer, he was 5'5", with a dark complexion, black eyes & dark hair. He enlisted June 4, 1861. and was discharged February 15, 1862. He was married three times: to Alice Mary Kealing, November 25, 1858, in Suffolk; to Marietta Cosby Tynes, February 28, 1871, in Chuckatuck; and to Zuliem Godwin, September 20, 1883, in Nansemond County. He died July 16, 1884. Robert Edward Riddick 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, Pvt. Riddick was born in 1845 in Nansemond Co., the son of Edward Cunningham and Eunice Catherine (Pierce) Riddick. He was wounded June 26, 1862, at Mechanicsville. He was captured May 25, 1864, at Somerton, Nansemond Co., and sent as a POW to Point Lookout, Md. He was transferred for exchange Mar. 14, 1865, and paroled Apr. 21, 1865, in Nansemond Co. After the war he returned to Suffolk and was a member of the Tom Smith Camp of Confederate Veterans. He graduated from University of Virginia Medical School and Baltimore Medical College, where he received his degree in 1869. Riddick married Alice O. Brinkley in 1874 and lived in Whaleyville, Va. Riddick died January of 1907 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block I, Lot 225 1/2. Robert Henry Riddick 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company K, Private Riddick was born ca. 1829, the son of Richard H. and Martha M. Jordan Riddick. He was living in Mississippi before he enlisted in 1861. He died Christmas Day 1866 in Portsmouth, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 13. Washington Lafayette Riddick 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, 2nd Lt. Riddick was born August 15, 1825, the son of Mills and Mary Taylor Riddick. He married Frances Marion Blount (b. 1825) and was a lawyer in New Orleans. Riddick died February 3, 1871. William Archibald Riddick 5th N.C. Regiment, Company B, 2nd Lt. Riddick was born in 1832. He married Elizabeth Brownley. He was in the same company as Captain George Thomas Parker, who was quoted as saying that "Billy Riddick was the life of the camp." Calvin Roberts 59th Virginia Militia, Company A, Private 14th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Robertson was born July 29, 1829 in Nansemond County. He enlisted May 5, 1862, but was mustered out the next day. He first married Elizabeth, daughter of William & "Polly" Mary Gay Archer, about 1853, by whom he had at least two children. He married her sister Melvenia Archer about 1862, and they had nine. He farmed in Chuckatuck District. He died May 2, 1919, and is buried with Melvenia in Western Branch Baptist Church - Row 4, Plot 5. John W. Robertson 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Robertson was born ca. 1817. Robertson, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives Co. F/61st Va. Reg't; enlisted August, 1861; discharged June 18, 1865; served 3 years, 10 months; resident of Elwood. His widow, Mary M. Robertson of Suffolk, Virginia received a pension for his war service in 1901. William D. Rodgers 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Sergeant Rogers was born April 17, 1833. He was wounded at Brandy Station and captured at Amelia Courthouse and taken to Point Lookout as a POW. Rogers died July 2, 1901 and buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 89 E 1/2. James G. Rogers 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rogers was born April 14, 1843, the son of James and Emily Rogers, who owned 183 acres 10 miles southwest of Suffolk. In 1905, he received a pension and was listed as totally blind and living in Harrell, Nansemond Co., Va. Rogers died June 8, 1913 and is buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. Mills Rogers, Jr. 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Sergeant Rogers was born June 10, 1834, son of James and Milly Smith Rogers. He owned 639 acres two miles east of Suffolk. Rogers was wounded in action at Spotsylvania. He returned to the Cypress Chapel area and then was engaged in farming most of his life in the vicinity of Chuckatuck. He married 1st Ellen Duke; 2nd Sarah Eliza Boyett (1838-1907), daughter of David and Abausha Knight Boyett. whom he married on 12/18/1882. Late in life he was almost blind. Rogers died February 3, 1920 and was buried in Wesley Chapel Methodist Church Cemetery. Philip Rogers 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 2nd Corporal Rogers was born about 1831. He married Emaline Riddick Jan. 12, 1850, in Nansemond Co. He was promoted to 2nd Corporal, wounded and captured at Gettysburg and taked to Ft. Delaware, N.J. Rogers died October 12, 1863 and was buried at Finn's Point, N.J. There is a memorial marker for him in Cedar Hill Cemetery. His widow applied for a pension July 7, 1888. She (ca. 1831 - 1897) is buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. Richard H. Rogers 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Rogers was born in 1832. He was married in 1860 and raised two children on a 157-acre farm 10 miles southwest of Suffolk. He enlisted in June 1861 and was discharged in 1863. Augustus S. Rudd 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I Rudd was born in 1818 and lived in Nansemond Co. He died of typhoid June 18, 1862 in a Richmond hospital and was buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Va. George W. Saunders 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Saunders was born ca. 1822 in Nansemond County, son of Joseph and Edith Saunders. His brothers were Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Saunders, Jr. He married widow Judith Priscilla Carr March 22, 1855. He enlisted in June of 1861 and served in the field, and as a nurse after being hospitalized for intermittent fever. He was light complected, had light eyes & dark hair, and stood 5'11" tall. Saunders received a medical discharge in 1863 and collected a pension after the war. James P. Saunders CSA Saunders was born ca. 1837, in Nansemond County, the son of Henry R. and Julia Saunders. He married Caroline, daughter of Spikes and Nancy Beale, January 31, 1867, in Isle of Wight County. Caroline appears in the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County). James Thomas Saunders 16th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Saunders was born ca. 1847, in Isle of Wight County, the son of John and Lavinia Saunders. A farmer, Saunders enlisted April 22, 1861, in Windsor, Isle of Wight County. He was hospitalized with intermittent fever July 8, 1862, in Winder Hospital, Richmond, and returned to duty July 15, 1862. He was captured September 12, 1862, in hospital at Frederick, MD, confined at Ft. Delaware, DE, and exchanged October 10, 1862. He was wounded in the left leg August 19, 1864, at the Davis Farm, Dinwiddie Co., hospitalized three weeks at Chimborazo Hospital, Richmond, and furloughed for 35 days. He was paroled at Appomattox C.H. He married Sarah Oletha, daughter of James J. and Margaret Holland, January 30, 1868, in Nansemond County. Joseph Saunders, Jr. CSA Saunders was born ca. 1825, the son of Joseph and Edith Saunders. He was a farmer and brother of George W. and Thomas Jefferson Saunders. Alexander Savage 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Orderly Sergeant. Savage was born ca. 1831 in Nansemond Co., son of John Savage. Before the war, he was engaged in the Naval Stores trade in North and South Carolina. He married 1st: Sarah Eliza Lee (b. 3/30/1830), daughter of John Rochelle and Mary Ann Wise Griffen Everett Lee on February 22, 1849 and had 5 children. He made Lt. Col in 1864. At Chamberlain's Creek on March 31, 1865 he was struck by a minie ball in the knee joint and it was necessary to amputate his leg. He returned to Nansemond Co. and later married his 2nd wife, "Hattie" Lewis, daughter of Dr. Lewis of Norfolk. Savage died in Norfolk on April 6, 1911. Cornelius F. Savage 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Savage was born in 1839. His father owned 1412 acres of land about 12 miles south of Suffolk. He was a POW sent to Washington in April of 1865 and took his oath to the U.S. there, after which he returned to Virginia. James M. Savage 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Savage was born April 5, 1839 in Nansemond Co., the son of Whitmell and Sophia Haslette Savage. He was a farm laborer for his father, who had a farm 13 miles southwest of Suffolk. His brother was Solomon K. Savage, who was also in the company. He was decribed as a bachelor, 5/8" tall, with gray eyes, brown hair & a light complexion. He was a POW taken to Point Lookout, Md. After the war, Savage returned to Nansemond Co. and became a farmer and carpenter. His wife was Martha C. Savage, married on October 12, 1873 in Gates Co., N.C. Jesse R. Savage 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I Savage was born in 1821 in Nansemond Co. In 1861, he was listed as dark complected, with blue eyes & dark hair. He was discharged from service in 1864. His wife was Martha A. Savage. Jethro Savage 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Savage was born 1834, the son of Sarah Haslett Savage Baker. He was half brother to Beverly P. Baker. Jethro was killed at Shepherdstown, West Virginia. Solomon K. Savage 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Savage was born in 1835 in Nansemond Co., the son of Whitmell and Sophia Haslette Savage. His father owned 125 acres 15 miles southwest of Suffolk. His brother was James M. Savage, also in the company. Solomon was wounded in action at the Battle of the Crater and died July 31, 1864 at the Receiving and Fowarding Hospital, Army of Northern Virginia (in present-day Colonial Heights). He was a bachelor. Thomas Perry Savage 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Savage was born January of 1843. He served in the war from February 1862 until January 1, 1865, mostly in the Quartermaster Department. His horse was KIA at Hagerstown in July of 1863. Savage died December 26, 1890 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 92. Thomas W. Savage 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Savage was born in 1838. He was a wheelwright. His father owned 266 acres 4 miles northeast of Suffolk. During the war, he served all four years and was a POW held in Old Capitol Prison in Washington for a short while. Returning to Nansemond Co., he lived at Savage Crossing. William James Scammell 10th Battalion Virginia Artillery, Company D, Private Scammell was born January 17, 1830 in Surry Co., near the Court House, the son of William H. and Mary Scammell. He married Sarah J. Riggin April 4, 1858 in Surry Co. He enlisted July 1, 1861 in Jamestown. He served nearly four years, being captured April 8, 1865, and paroled after Lee surrendered. He was a blacksmith and wheelwright. Widowed, he married widow Averilla Elizabeth "Bettie" Goodrich Cropper December 18, 1881 in Surry Co.; they lived in Prince George Co. in 1900. He filed for a pension October 27, 1906, being unable to work because of a weak back and age. He died November 3, 1913 in Suffolk and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 143 - his original gravestone [w/o dates] was broken and propped against a tree, and has been replaced. George W. Seley 32nd Virginia Infantry, Company F Seley's wife was Nancy Seley. Charles Wesley Shackleford Shackleford was born February 1851 in Chesterfield Co., the son of P.W.D. and M. Shackleford. He was a blacksmith, and a gunsmith. He married "Sallie" Sarah Bradley Holloway (1856-1935) July 1, 1874, in Suffolk. He died in 1903, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 79. John Shepherd CSA Shepherd was born July 25, 1838 and died March 1, 1901, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 40. John M. Shepherd 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Shepherd was born November 13, 1843, the son of James M. Shepherd, a contractor in Suffolk. He enlisted in April of 1861, was appointed 3rd Corporal in May of 1863 and was at Appomattox Courthouse when the surrender took place. He married in January of 1867 Carrie M. Hall (5/1/1843-6/27/1904), daughter of Thomasand Nancy Hall- her father, Sheriff of Isle of Wight Co. They lived in Suffolk and had four children. John Shepherd was the agent for Norfolk and Western Railroad and Southern Express Company. He was a Sgt. Major in the Tom Smith Camp of UCV. Shepherd died January 31, 1906 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 16. Virginius E. Shepherd CSA, War Department, Clerk Shepherd was born 1827 in Nansemond Co. He attended University of Virginia from 1843 to 1846. Shepherd was chief clerk in the War Department during the Civil War. He was also a Professor and Treasurer at Virginia Agriculture and Mechanical College in Blacksburg, Virginia. William Samuel Shepherd 1st North Carolina Infantry, Company E, Lieutenant Shepherd was born March 30, 1838 at Mintonsville, Nansemond Co., the son of Thomas Swepson and Ann Eliza Browne Shepherd. He married Diana Virginia McGuire (8/19/1838- 12/29/1888) on May 26, 1859. Shepherd was killed leading his company in a bloody charge at the Battle of Sharpsburg (Antietam) on September 17th, 1862 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 71. Samuel Sprigg Shriver 27th Virginia Infantry, Company G Shriver was born January 9, 1843 in Wheeling, West Virginia, son of Jacob Sherman and Eliza Hay McElheran Shriver. He attended VMI and was one of the New Market Cadets and a member of his brother's infantry unit. After the war, he studied law in the office of the Honorable Charles Russell in Baltimore and was admitted to the bar but never practiced. He was a farmer and a member of the Virginia House of Delegates 1877-1878 and died unmarried on 08/17/1881 in Suffolk, Va. He is buried in Greenwood Cemetery, Wheeling, West Virginia. Joseph Skeeter 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Skeeter was born ca. 1841 in Nansemond Co. He enlisted in March of 1862. His horse was KIA in October of 1863 and he was captured. Skeeter was taken to Point Lookout, Md. and held 3 months before being exchanged. After the war, his home was in Norfolk, Va. He died April 8, 1915. James Sketer 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Sketer was born in 1833. His father owned 33 acres of land 6 miles south of Suffolk. Sketer was a shingle maker and bachelor. He enlisted in June of 1861 and was there for the final roll call. Carr Griffen Skinner 24th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Skinner was born October 20, 1843, the son of Abram and Armesia Griffen Skinner. His wife was Virginia Ann Sinton Ellis Skinner (08/20/1842-01/15/1927), whom he married February 17, 1864. Skinner enlisted in January of 1862 and served ten months before he was discharged. He died in the home of his son George W. Skinner on May 22, 1925. They are buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 155. Henry Skinner 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Skinner was born ca. 1838. He and his wife had two children and owned a 21-acre farm 10 miles south of Suffolk. He died in General Hospital No. 1 in Richmond, Va. on April 19, 1863 of disease. Joshua S. Skinner 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Skinner was born March 9, 1839, the son of Abram and Armesia Griffen Skinner. His father owned 50 acres 13 miles south of Suffolk. He was listed a bachelor and was wounded in action at Spotsylvania, but present for the final roll call. His wife was Sarah E. Skinner (1841-1907). Skinner died September 18, 1911 and is buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. William W. Skinner 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private "Willis" Skinner was born about 1837, the son of Abram and Armesia Griffen Skinner. He was a bachelor and farmer in June 1861 when he enlisted. At the Battle of the Crater, he was wounded in the hand by a minie ball. He had returned to service and was present at the Appomattox Surrender. His wife was Sarah E. Skinner (1847-1927). Skinner died in 1906 and both are buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. Willis W. Skinner 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Skinner was born ca. 1837. He and his wife Sarah Skinner (1847-1929) lived on a farm. He died in 1906 and is buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery. Arthur R. Smith CSA Surgeon Smith was born about 1805 in Suffolk. He attended University of Virginia Medical School in 1825-1826. He died in Catonsville, Md. in 1866. Benjamin Smith 5th North Carolina Infantry, Company B Smith was born September 19, 1842 and died March 16, 1912. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 123 E 1/2. Bruce Smith 24th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private. Smith was born ca. 1846. Eddie Smith Louisana Zouave Battalion, Company A, Private When the Louisana Zouave Battalion camped at South Quay near Franklin, Va., in the winter of 1864, Eddie Smith and his first cousin Dempsey Odom, slipped off, lied about their ages, and were enlisted January 2, 1864 as privates in Company A by H.T. Applewhite for the duration of the war. Their uniforms had a wide red stripe down the bright blue trousers. Smith was captured at Somerton, Va. January 27, 1864 and taken to Point Lookout, Md. Henning Ezekiel Smith 13th Virginia Cavalry Company I, Private Smith was born July 23, 1843 in Somerton, Nansemond Co., son of Robert Riddick (member of the legislature) and Sarah Jackson Powell Smith. He enlisted in June of 1861 and was present until January 1, 1865. He married Jennie Wilson Norfleet (9/29/1844- 9/13/1925), daughter of Wilson and Caroline Virginia McGuire Norfleet, on February 13, 1866 in Suffolk. He was treasurer of Nansemond Co. in 1879 and 1883. Smith died June 22, 1913 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 67. James G. Smith 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Smith was born ca. 1832 in Gates, North Carolina. He was a farmer, had light hair & blue eyes and stood 5'11" tall. He served for one year before he was discharged for rheumatism and arthritis. He received a pension in 1902, listing "hip joint knocked out of place at Sewell's Point, also have rupture, double hernia." James T. Smith 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I Smith received a pension. John Smith 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E, Private > Corporal Smith was born ca. 1844. He reached the rank of Corporal during the war. Son of A. Smith. John B. Smith 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F Smith was a resident of Chuckatuck section of Nansemond. He died December 10, 1921. John Newton Smith CSA John N. Smith was born in Nansemond Co. on March 5th, 1843, the son of Burwell Riddick and Sarah Marie Cross Parker Smith. He was killed in action at Hanover Courthouse, Va. on June 9th, 1863. Robert Riddick Smith, Jr. 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I Smith was born December 13, 1845 in Somerton, Nansemond Co., the son of Robert Riddick and Sarah Jackson Powell Smith. His father was a farmer and merchant, who represented Nansemond Co. in the General Assembly. He attended school in Dinwiddie and Amelia Counties. Robert Smith served from 1861 to 1865. He married Laura Boswell Daughtrey (11/18/1846-2/3/1933), daughter of Mills C. and Magaret Patience Beale Daughtrey, March 20, 1866. After the war, he was a farmer and held several important offices in Suffolk and Nansemond Co., including town sergeant for 8 years and clerk of Nansemond Co. Court, president of Farmers Bank, & in 1889 became president of Suffolk National Bank. His pet setter Don died February 1894, age 18. He erected the Confederate Stature in Cedar Hill. Smith died April 17, 1925 at his home, 210 N. Main St., Suffolk, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 67. Thomas L. Smith 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Smith was born ca. 1818 in Nansemond Co. He was dark complected, with gray eyes & dark hair, and stood 6' tall. Smith enlisted in August of 1861 and was discharged in December of 1861 with a hernia. His wife was Elizabeth A. Smith (1816-1904). Thomas died October 26, 1871 and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Norfolk, Va. [S WALL A-L119-S4] Thomas Washington Smith 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, 2nd Lieutenant, Smith was born on June 1, 1832 in Somerton, Nansemond Co., son of Washington and Mary Powell Smith. He was a businessman and clerk in Suffolk and North Carolina. He married Harriett Goodwin Borland (3/18/1838 Murfreesboro, N.C.), daughter of Roscius Cicero and Temperance Ramsay Borland. Smith enlisted in April of 1861, was wounded several times, but present at the Surrender at Appomattox. Returning to Suffolk, he became a businessman in general merchandising, president of Farmer's Bank and Suffolk National Bank, president of Suffolk Cotton Mills, Lt. Col. of the 4th Virginia Militia and a member of the Tom Smith Camp of UCV as it's Commander. He also raised the money to erect the monument to the Confederate dead that stands at the entrance to Cedar Hill Cemetery. Smith died May 9, 1912 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 96. William B. Smith 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, 2nd Lieutenant Smith was born ca. 1842. He was a bachelor working for his father, who owned 485 acres of land 2 miles south of Suffolk. He was discharged from service in 1862. Buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C. (no dates given) William R. Smith 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Smith was born ca. 1844. He was a farmer before the war. He was a POW twice and suffered a broken arm while in service. William Robinson Smith 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private > Captain Smith was born March 14, 1843, son of George Robinson and Judith Elizabeth Kilby Smith. His mother was the only Nansemond Co. civilian killed during the war, while fleeing from a burning house under attack, with her baby in her arms. He moved up in rank while in service from private to Captain and was captured at Weldon Railroad in August 1864. Smith was released from Point Lookout, Md. in March 1865. He died October 27, 1920 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 10. Francis W. Snead 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, 3rd Sergeant Snead was born October 27, 1827. He was a Mason and died of TB at home March 6, 1862. Snead is buried in St. John's Episcopal Churchyard, in Chuckatuck, Va. Edwin Spivey 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Spivey was born ca. 1841. He was a farm laborer working for his mother on land that she owned. He served in the war from June 1861 to April of 1865. Part of that time he was a POW at Point Lookout, Md., having been captured at Hatcher's Run in October of 1864. He lived in Driver, Nansemond Co. after the war and had trouble with rheumatism and severe after effects of typhoid pneumonia. Jethro Spivey 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Spivey served from May 1861 to April 1865. Roll of Honor shows him wounded in 1863. Prentis Spivey 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Spivey enlisted in June 1861 and received a medical discharge in December 1862. Aaron Spragg Portsmouth Light Artillery & Norfolk Light Artillery, Private Spragg was born December 26, 1833, in Manahawkin, Ocean Co., NJ, a son of Charles E. and Julia Ann Cramer Spragg. Standing 5'9", he had a dark complexion, with light hair and grey eyes. He married Charlotte Pippin (1843-1913) July 27, 1857 in Gloucester Co. He enlisted in the Portsmouth Light Artillery March 17, 1862 at Hoffler's Creek. He was transferred to the Norfolk Light Artillery Oct. 15, 1862, and was absent sick Apr. 30, 1863. He came into Federal lines at Yorktown Jan. 30, 1865, and was confined at Ft. Monroe, where he took the oath of allegiance, Feb 28, 1865 - the same day he reported AWOL. He died July 2, 1907 and is buried in Mt. Zion Christian Church Cemetery. J. Van Stallings 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I Stallings was born ca. 1826. He enlisted in February of 1862 from Nansemond Co. and captured on April 1, 1865 at Five Forks. Riddick G. Stallings 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Stallings was born ca. 1835 in Nansemond Co. He served in the war from February of 1862 until May of 1863 when he received a medical discharge for consumption. Stallings was a farmer. Daniel Stewart 16th Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Stewart was born ca. 1839. He was a machinist. John F. Stewart 9th Virginia Infantry, Captain Stewart was born July 15, 1835 in Norfolk County, where he was a deputy sheriff before the war. He enlisted as a Lieutenant in Company A. At the reorganization at Yorktown, April 1862, he was made Adjutant of the regiment. He was wounded twice - at Second Manassas and Gettysburg, where he was on the extreme right of the first line of battle in Pickett's charge. He was captured near the end of the war at Dutch Gap and was imprisoned at Johnson's Island, Ohio, until after Lee's surrender. He moved to Suffolk about 1869, wheere he was a bank cashier, Councilman, and finally an agent for the Old Dominion Steamship Line. He suffered a stroke at work, and died January 12, 1895, and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 22. (CSA) Laurence Augustine Stith 2nd North Carolina, Acting Assistant Surgeon Dr. Stith was born in Mar 1832, a son of Dr. Buckner Dade and Lucinda W. Blackwell Stith. He lost an arm early in the war. He was later in charge of hospitals in Goldsboro, Tarboro & High Point, NC. He married "Fanny" Frances Jarvis January 26, 1876 in Norfolk; they had three sons, all of whom served in the Spanish-American War. He was a practicing physician in Wilson, NC, and later in Suffolk. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 6. M.E. Stokes 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Stokes served from April 1862 until April of 1865 and listed his home as Nansemond Co. John J. Sturgis 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F; transferred to CS Navy Sturgis was born in 1838 in New Jersey. He was decribed as light complected, with blue eyes & light hair, and stood 5'10" tall. He was a sailor, discharged from the infantry February 12, 1862. Transferred to the CSS Virginia {Merrimack}. William John Sullivan 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company F, 3rd Sergeant and Captain. Sullivan was born April 25, 1839 in Boston, Mass., the son of Daniel and Catherine Dawson Sullivan. The family moved to Nansemond Co. in 1844. William Sullivan married 1st Bathsheba Keturah Powell and 2nd Mary James Pitt (b. 12/29/1851), daughter of Samuel James and Ann Rebecca Pitt. He served in Kemper's Brigade, Pickett's Division, Longstreet's Corps. He was wounded twice during the war- his right leg and later his left wrist. He was also a POW, held at Old Point Comfort for 33 days. After the war Sullivan was a farmer and oysterman living in the Chuckatuck District. He died January 2, 1894 and is buried in St. John's Episcopal Church Cemetery. On his stone is written "In Memory of My Beloved Husband" Charles Edward Sumner 13th Virginia Cavalry Sumner was born October 4, 1831 in Nansemond Co., the son of Jethro and Nancy Ann Norfleet Sumner. He married Mary Lee Rawls (b. 01/31/1836), daughter of Albert K. and Eliza A. Hillard Rawls on January 17, 1856. Sumner enlisted in 1861 and served until 1862, when he was discharged in Norfolk. Later he was arrested by the Union Army and held six weeks until the end of the war. Sumner was postmaster of Nurneysville for 13 years and had a farm 6½ miles south of Suffolk. Dempsey Lee Sumner Sr. 13th Virginia Cavalry He is not listed in the 13th's book, but family says he was in the regiment. He was married to Eliza A. Holland, daughter of Fanny D. Holland. His widow Martha C. (Everett) "Sumter," as a Confederate widow, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives Va. Cav, Private; enlisted May, 1861; discharged April 9, 1865; served 4 years, 1 month; she was resident of Elwood. Their son Dempsey Jr. is buried in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery. Charles C. Swett 13th Virginia Infantry, Co. I Swett was born December 21, 1847 and died July 31, 1890. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 45 or Block D, Lot 7. Jesse L. Swett 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private later joined 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company B, Private Swett was born March 14, 1843 in Suffolk, the son of Charles L. and Mary Ann Swett. When he joined the infantry at age 16, he was a student with a dark complexion, bluish gray eyes & black hair, and stood 5'6½" tall. He was discharged in August of 1862 as under age. He later joined the 13th Cavalry and served four months before being wounded. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 45. (no dates given) Frank W. Tatem CSA - Doctor Tatem was born November 17, 1819. He married Harriet Plummer (7/19/1833-4/30/1900), and served four years in the Civil War as a doctor. Dr. Tatem died March 1, 1884 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 30. James D. Taylor 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company ?, 1st Sergeant Taylor was born ca. 1837. He was a farmer living in Nansemond Co. after the war. He died September 25, 1905. Kedar Taylor 9th Virginia Infantry, Company H or I, Private Taylor was born ca. 1838 or 1843. Robert Barrand Taylor CSA - Surgeon Taylor was born ca. 1837 in Norfolk, Virginia. He attended University of Virginia from 1857 until 1859 and received his medical degree. He served as a surgeon during the war and was a physician in Suffolk after the war. [James] Wilson Taylor 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Private Taylor enlisted August of 1861. He had a dark complexion, auburn hair & blue eyes, and stood 5'7" tall. He was a POW, having been captured at the Battle of the Crater. He married "Sallie" Sarah E. Joyner Pruden, widow of James Monroe Pruden, Oct. 13, 1854 in Nansemond Co. They had 2 children, Hry. Tazewell & Karena, in addition to Sallie's 2 daughters from her first marriage. Sallie (1819-1905) applied for a pension May 15, 1888, stating Wilson was struck in the body & right arm by a minie ball, during a skirmish a few days before Seven Pines [May 1862]; he was taken home to Nansemond Co., where he died. Joseph Willis Toney 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private J. W. Tucker CSA, Mahone Brigade, Chaplain Tucker was born July 28, 1836 and died September 21, 1892. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 63. John William Turlington CSA Turlington was born May 13, 1820, the son of William and Elizabeth Williams Turlington. He married Margaret Ann Knight (b. 01/01/1825), daughter of Demsy and Margaret Ann Griffen Knight, on November 15, 1846 in Gates, N.C. He served in the militia 2 or 3 mo. and lived in the Holy Neck District. Turlington died November 27, 1900 and was buried in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery. James Whitfield Turnley Courtney Henrico Artilley, Trambles Brigade, Private Turnley was born May 2, 1837. He enlisted in June of 1861 and remained to the end of the war. He married Sallie A. Jennings (02/8/1839-09/25/1910) on February 4, 1858 and had three children. Whitfield Turnley died July 3, 1899 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 92. James A. Turrentine 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I, Private Turrentine enlisted in June 1861 and served until he was wounded at Bull Run in 1863. He married Louisana Kilby, daughter of Thomas Jefferson and Anne Upshur Smith Kilby and had six children. Elisha Tyler 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, Private Tyler was born ca. 1827. He enlisted in March of 1862 and served until December when he deserted to the Union and took an oath of allegiance, after which he returned home to Nansemond Co. apparently identical with: Elisha E. Tyler 13th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Private Tyler, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted January, 1862; discharged September, 1863; served 1 year, 9 months; resident of South Quay. Josiah H. Underwood 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C & K, Private Underwood was born April 23, 1825. He married Mary Jane Pierce (1838-1914). He enlisted in August 1862 and served three years. Underwood died July 9, 1906 and is buried in Oakland Christian Church Cemetery, in Chuckatuck, Virginia. Caleb Littleton Upshur [II] 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, 1st Lt. Upshur was born ca. 1840 in Nansemond County, the son of Caleb L. and Ann E. Pinner Upshur. He had a light complexion, light hair & gray eyes and stood 5'10" tall. He married Annie Green Riddick February 27, 1868, in Isle of Wight County. Upshur was wounded twice during the war and captured at Petersburg in October of 1864. He was a member of the Pickett-Buchanan Camp of Confederate Veterans. He died September 12, 1886. We have him listed at St. John's Episcopal Church Cemetery, near Chuckatuck, where his mother is buried, but Caleb, Annie, their sons Abel & Caleb III, and Caleb Sr. are all listed as buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Norfolk. Thomas Edmund Upshaw 15th Virginia Cavalry Upshaw married Mary Diana Webb (1830-1903) in 1856. ("Suffolk in Virginia," p. 100) George Spruill Urquhart Drillmaster, 2nd Lieutentant Urquhart was born ca. 1841 in Southampton County, a son of Charles Fox and Eliza Blount Hill Urquhart. A VMI cadet, he was detailed as a drill master at Camp Lee, Richmond, and was paroled at Appomattox. After the war, he farmed in Northampton Co., NC. He married "Sue" Susan Blunt Peebles November 11, 1869, in Northampton Co., NC. He died February 12, 1899, in Suffolk, and was buried with Masonic rites during a blizzard the next day in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 102. His widow applied for a pension June 24, 1926. Murdock Middleton Urquhart Sturdivant's Battery, Virginia Light Artillery Urquhart was born May 16, 1846 in Southampton County, a son of Charles Fox and Eliza Blount Hill Urquhart. He married Henrietta "Hettie" Dillard about 1875. He was a farmer in Newville District, Sussex County, June 5, 1880. He was a clerk at a mill, June 1, 1900, owning a mortgaged house at 6 Cedar St., Suffolk. He died January 16, 1906 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 105. William James Urquhart 9th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Private Urquhart was born in 1838 in Isle of Wight County, the son of John and Hannah Shivers Godwin Urquhart. He enlisted at Craney's Island February 5, 1862. He was wounded and captured during Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg, July 3, 1863. He returned to his unit and was again wounded in the Battle of Drewry's Bluff, May 16, 1864. He was released from Point Lookout, Maryland, June 21, 1865. He married Margaret "Maggie" widow Cartwright December 27, 1866, in Nansemond County. He shot John E. Gay, November 8, 1870, near Magnolia Springs. He fled, spending much of the next twenty-five years along the Texas-Mexico border. He returned and surrendered himself to the authorities in 1895. He was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. He applied for admission to the Soldiers' Home in Richmond, October 1911; his application describes him as a Millwright, age 72, light complexion, 5½' tall. He was admitted to the Home December 18, 1911, and died there May 24, 1927. He is buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond. His parents are marked in Newman Memorial Cemetery, Oakland Christian Church, Chuckatuck. George Curtis Vanderslice D.D. 49th Virginia Infantry, Company D, Captain Vanderslice was born July 30, 1836 in Richmond, Virginia. He attended VMI and Washington and Lee University. Vanderslice became a Methodist Minister in 1859. He enlisted in 1861 and served one year. He resigned and returned to the ministery. He married Susan A. Pettit (1838-1908), daughter of Samuel Pettit. Vanderslice died March 17, 1898 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 42. William H. Vann 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I Vann was born ca. 1840. He enlisted in February of 1862 and was described as a farmer with a fair complexion, black hair & blue eyes, standing 5'11" tall. He received a medical discharged in August of 1862 (ascites) and returned to Nansemond Co. James C. Vaughan 38th? Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Vaughan, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted April, 1862; discharged April 9, 1865; served 3 years; wounded right leg, left knee & chin; resident of Elwood. He married Elizabeth Asbury, and they had four daughters. Frederick Wagoner or Wagner 9th Virginia Infantry, Company F, 1st Sergeant Wagner was born September 6, 1832 in Germany. He married 1st Eliza Dixon, daughter of George Sr. and Nancy Matthews Dixon. His second wife was Joanna Dixon (1850-1883). He served throughout the war. Wagner died July 22, 1922 and is buried in Oakland Christian Church Cemetery in Chuckatuck, Va. James Wagner 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Wagner was born June 10th 1840. He had a light complexion, light hair & blue eyes, and stood 5'7" tall. He was a teamster and farmer. He died January 24, 1907 and was buried in Churchland Baptist Church Cemetery. Bray B. Walters 9th Virginia Infantry, Company K Walters was born ca. 1842. He was a seaman. George Washington Walters 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Walters was born ca. 1842. Sent home to North Carolina on parole. He died April 26, 1887 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 34. James Walters 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company D Walter received a pension for his war services in 1900. Family says he was a 3rd Corporal in the Suffolk Grays. William A. Walters [Waters] CSA Walters is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 305 1/2. (no dates given) He seems identical with William Waters, born 1842-44 in New Jersey, who married Mary A.L. Pinner November 17, 1881 in Suffolk. They appear in the 1900 Census in Cypress District, Nansemond County, where he was a miller. He died before June 5, 1917, when his son William Alfred Walters registered for the draft, noting that he supported his widowed mother. cf: William Waters, 9th Virginia Infantry, Company E (Isle of Wight Blues) on postwar Roster [Benjamin H. Trask. "9th Virginia Infantry"] George B. Walton CSA Walton was born Sep. 13, 1846, in Nashua, Hillsborough Co., NH. He was listed with the Tom Smith Camp of UCV. A manufacturer, he married Bessie S. Thrift Sep. 16, 1902 in Richmond. Walton died April 21, 1929 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block H, Lot 37. Samuel H. Walton 33 North Carolina Infantry, 2nd Lieutenant Walton was born August 21, 1843 and died May 28, 1919. His wife was Ida M. Walton (04/11/1852-10/2/1912). He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block G, Lot 129 W 1/2. Joseph Webb CSA Webb was born January 13, 1846. He was killed July 1, 1862 at Malvern Hill, Va. while serving the Confederate States of America. Joseph Prentis Webb 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, 1st Sergeant Webb was born October 30, 1843 the son of Dr. Robert Henning and Margaret Susan Prentis Webb. He was shot in the right knee during the war and permanently disabled after serving three years. He attended University of Virginia. Webb was a merchant in Suffolk after the war. He married January 27th 1881, Annie Jordan Darden (b. 08/07/1858), daughter of Algernon Sidney and Mary Swepson Darden. He died December 27, 1892. Webb was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 70. His tombstone reads: "Segt. of Co. C, for Gen. Chambliss". Louis Henry Webb 13th Battalion North Carolina Artillery, Co. A, Captain Louis Webb was born about 1827. He married about 1864 Gattie Anna Lawrence (1842-1910). Webb died about 1902. He and his family are buried in Poplar Spring Cemetery, Franklin - Section 1, Plot 63. His daughter Frances Lawrence "Miss Fannie" Webb wrote "Recollections of Franklin and Historic Sketches of Southampton County." Samuel Gibson Webb CSA Webb was born May 9, 1818, the son of H.D. and Celia Robinson Webb. He married Catharine Heath (b. 05/18/1822), daughter of Richard and Baird Heath of Prince George Co., Virginia in November 1838. Webb served Col. Archer in the defences around Petersburg; later on detail with Gen. Page and afterward with Gen. H.A. Wise. He served four years as postmaster in Prince George Co. In 1867, he moved to Nansemond Co. and was a farmer in the Chuckatuck District. He and his wife raised eight children. He is buried in Prince George Co., Va. William Brock Wellons CSA - Chaplain Dr. Wellons was born in Sussex Co. in November 9, 1821. He married Sarah Lewis. Wellons was the founder of the Suffolk Christian Church, the Oakland Christian, Berea Christian and the Bethlehem Christian Church in Suffolk, Virginia and was their minister for many years. Rev. Wellons held every prominent office in the Southern Christian Conference. He published The Christian Sun from 1855 to 1877. Wellons helped establish the Farmers Bank of Nansemond and the Suffolk Collegiate Institute. He was an advocate for the Public markethouse. He died February 16, 1877 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 64. Rives Chapel Wells CSA - Chaplain Wells was born August 8, 1808 Sussex Co., Va. His wife was Julia A.S. Wells (9/21/1823-5/8/1903). He was charter member of the Suffolk Christian Church, on the Board of Trustees and one of it's first deacons and its minister for many years. He died January 7, 1883 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block A, Lot 28. Samuel E. West 13th Virginia Cavalry, Private West, as a Confederate, was struck from the 1890 Veterans Schedule (Holy Neck District, Nansemond County); it gives enlisted May, 1861; discharged April 9, 1865; served 3 years, 11 months. Edgar Francis Whitehead 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private > 2nd Lieutenant Whitehead was born about 1836, the son of Elliott and Catherine S. Flynn Whitehead. His father died in 1837, and is buried in the Whitehead-Flynn family cemetery on Hosier Rd. (Nan.Vol.I) When he enlisted in May of 1861, he was described as 5'10" tall, with light complexion, blue eyes & light hair, a clerk from Nansemond Co. He served throughout the war reaching the rank of 2nd Lieutenant. Whitehead was captured in August of 1864 and held prisoner until June of 1865. "Tim" died in February 16, 1900 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block D, Lot 33. Joseph Boykin Whitehead 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Transferred to 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), 1st Lieutenant Whitehead was born November 3, 1838, the son of William Boykin and Emiline Flynn Riddick Whitehead. He married Olivia Lee Robertson. Whitehead was wounded, first in his right arm at Malvern Hill, and later in his left leg at Sharpsburg. He attended VMI in 1860 and University of Virginia, was a member of Phi Kappa Sigma; and became a doctor. Whitehead was a health officer in Norfolk. He died April 1, 1878 in Norfolk, Va. Richard Owen Whitehead 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Captain > Lt.Col. Whitehead was born December 27, 1830 in Suffolk, Va., the son of Elliott and Catherine S. Flynn Whitehead. He graduated from VMI and attended the University of Virginia Law School in 1851. He enlisted April of 1861 as Captain of Marion's Rangers and was wounded in the right foot at Manassas, and again in the chest at the Battle of the Wilderness. He was promoted several times, finally to the rank of Lieutenant Col. In July of 1864 he captured a Union Stars and Stripes and had his name on the Roll of Honor. He was elected to the Virginia State Senate in August of 1864. After the war he was a lawyer and journalist in Oakland, Ca. (Residence: 571 33rd St.). He died March 4, 1911. Robert E. Whitehead 41st Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private > Sergeant Whitehead was born March 24, 1843 in Southampton Co., Virginia the son of William H. and Ann V. Whitehead. He served throughout the war in Mahone's Brigade reaching the rank of sergeant under Capt. B.F. Jarratt and Colonel Minitree. He married Sue Hall and died July 22, 1907 in Suffolk. He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block A. William Riddick Whitehead 44th Virginia Infantry, Surgeon Whitehead was born December 15, 1831 in Nansemond Co., the son of Col. William Boykin and Emaline Flynn Riddick Whitehead. He graduated from University of Pennsylvania, Class of 1851, went to University of Virginia for one year, graduated from VMI, received his medical degree from University of Paris, Class of 1860, and then became a member of the New York Medical College. He served as staff surgeon in the Russian Army throughout the Crimean War. He was awarded by order of the emperor "The Cross of Knight of the Imperial Russian Order of St. Stanislaus." With the outbreak of the Civil War, he returned to Virginia and served throughout in the Southern Army as surgeon in the 44th Virginia Infantry. He attended Stonewall Jackson when wounded at Chancellorsville, was taken prisoner at Gettysburg, escaped to Bermuda and then returned to Richmond, Va. After the war, he practiced medicine in New York City until 1872. He married in 1863 Eliza Flynn Benton, daughter of Thomas Godwin and Eliza Pitt Flynn Benton. Late in life, he moved to Denver, Colorado, continued his medical practice, founed medical schools at University of Denver and University of Colorado, served Denver on the city council, and improvised a sewage disposal system for that city. He died of heart disease in 1903. Henry James Whitley 16th Virginia Infantry, Company H (2nd), Private transferred to 16th Virginia Infantry, Company G, Drummer Whitley, was born September 6, 1843, the son of Mills and Nancy Matthews Whitley. He was a tinsmith and coachmaker. He joined the service as a private for Company H, and later transferred to Company G as a Drummer. Whitley died in camp on February 26, 1864 near Rapidan Station in Culpeper Co., Va. from congestive chills. Barnes W. Wilkins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Wilkins was born ca. 1824. He was a stationary steam engineer; married with two children and living on a farm 13 miles southwest of Suffolk. He enlisted in the army in June of 1861 and was described as having gray eyes & black hair and stood 5'6" tall. Wilkins was discharged in September of 1862 for being over-age. Edgar Wilkins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Wilkins was born ca. 1815. He died 1890 and is buried in Cypress Chapel Church Cemetery. George Wilkins 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I Wilkins was born ca. 1827. When he enlisted in the service in February 1862, he had a dark complexion, dark hair & gray eyes, and stood 5'4½" tall. He was a POW at Hart's Island, New York from April until June of 1865. Henry Wilkins Sr. 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I Wilkins was born ca. 1828 in Nansemond Co. Upon entering the war, he was light complected, with light hair & brown eyes, and stood 5'10" tall. He was captured at Five Forks and held as a POW at Hart's Island, New York from April until June of 1865. Living in Cypress Chapel, he filed for a pension June 14, 1904 at the age of 76. Jackson Wilkins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Wilkins was born ca. 1829, son of Samuel Wilkins (War of 1812) and his wife Mary Brinkley Wilkins. He enlisted in May 1862 and had two brothers in the regiment. His father owned 167 acres and a mill 12 miles south of Suffolk. Wilkins died October 22, 1862 at a hospital near Winchester. Josiah Wilkins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private (Corporal) Wilkins was born October of 1825 in Nansemond Co., son of Samuel Wilkins (War of 1812) and his wife Mary Brinkley Wilkins. He married Georgianna Skinner (09/30/1834-05/04/1894), daughter of Abram W. and Bathsheba Skinner on November 28, 1852 in Nansemond Co. They raised three children on a 228-acre farm 13 miles southwest of Suffolk. He enlisted in service with 2 brothers and took part in battles in the Wilderness, Spotsylvania Courthouse, Petersburg, Burgess Mill, Shady Grove and others. He was promoted to corporal shprtly after his enlistment, June 20, 1861, but was reduced back to private April 15, 1864. He was paroled in Richmond April 24, 1865. Wilkins died November 20, 1899, and he & his wife are marked in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery in Nansemond Co., Va. [The regimental history gives buried in Holy Neck {Christian} Church Cemetery.] Samuel W. Wilkins 41st Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Wilkins was born April 9, 1844. His father owned 185 acres 11 miles south of Suffolk. He served in the army from June of 1861 until August of 1864, when he was captured at Weldon Railroad and taken to Point Lookout, Md. After being held as a POW for seven months, he was released and returned home to Nansemond Co. His wife was Clarissa Wilkins (12/09/1850-12/21/1914). Samuel Wilkins died March 5, 1920 and is buried in Cypress Chapel Christian Church Cemetery in Nansemond Co., Va. Davison Williams 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Williams was born ca. 1825. He enlisted in July 1861 and was discharged September 26, 1862 for being over-age. He was a farm laborer, had blue eyes, sandy hair and stood 5'8" tall. George T. Williams CSA George Williams was born ca. 1830. He was an Episcopal Minister. "Joe" Joseph Thomas Williams 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company A, Hospital Steward Williams was born June 10, 1850 in Nansemond Co. (or Smithfield, Isle of Wight Co.), the son of Henry and Millie Darden Williams. He entered the service in 1861 at Benns Church, Isle of Wight Co. He was a servant to Dr. Henning K. Darden, helping to hold down patients during operations, and looking them & the doctor's horse. He was sent home a year before the war ended. He married Ella Hilliard, June 10, 1880 in Southampton Co. He was a common laborer, living at Sebrell when he applied for a pension March 24, 1930 - one of three colored applicants in Southampton Co. He had lived there 64 years. He died there October 1933, and was buried there. John H. Williams 19th North Carolina Cavalry, Company C, 2nd Sergeant Williams was a Confederate soldier in his younger days and a surveyor for many years. He died April 6, 1924. Noah Williams CSA Noah Williams died ca. 1933. Richard Williams 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Quartermaster Dept. Williams was assigned special duty in the Quartermaster Department. He died March 27, 1863 from typhoid fever at Smallpox Field Hospital, Anderson's Division, near Fredericksburg, Virginia. Thaddeus G. Williams 6th Virginia Infantry, Company E (2nd), Captain Williams was born ca. 1826 in Nansemond Co., the son of Moses and Mary Williams. He was killed in action, shot in the head at the Wilcox Farm on June 22, 1864. His widow, Mary J. Williams (b. 1829) and three children put a claim in for his pension. Thaddeus and Mary were married March 7, 1847. Thaddeus G. Williams was reburied in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery, after being moved three other times. Samuel J. Williford 3rd Virginia Infantry, Company I, Private Williford was born ca. 1835 in Bertie Co., North Carolina. He married Adeline Powell. Williford received a pension at Reid's Ferry in 1906. He died May 25, 1915 and is buried in Oakland Christian Church Cemetery in Chuckatuck, Va. Abram Edgar Wilroy 41st Virginia Infantry, Company G, Corporal transferred to the 61st Virginia Infantry, Company K Wilroy was born March 22, 1841. He was a Confederate veteran (name only appears in cemetery records), and truck farmer on the Nansemond River, owning a large and well stocked farm that produced all types of crops of this area. It was his family for whom Wilroy Road was named. His wife was Josephine Holloway Wilroy. He died April 14, 1923 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block H, Lot 21. Elijah James Winborne CSA Elijah Winborne was born about 1838 in Nansemond Co., the son of Henry A. and Elizabeth Holland Winborne. He was in the Holmes Brigade and was wounded at the Crater in Petersburg. He married Margaret E. Saunders (1843-07/03/1916), daughter of Louisa Saunders. Elijah Winborne died June 25, 1922, and both are buried in Riverside Memorial Park Cemetery in the Berkley section of Norfolk, Va. [Interment #10280; Oak Hill Section, Lot 553, Space 3] William H. Winborne 41st Virginia Infantry, Company K, Private Winborne was born ca. 1840, the oldest of 8 children. His father owned a 535-acre farm 12 miles west of Suffolk. Winborne enlisted in the army in July of 1861 and died of typhoid fever in a Confederate Hospital on June 26, 1862. Austin Chinn Withers CSA Withers was born December 21, 1841, in Campbell Co., Va., the son of Robert W. and Susan D. Withers. He was a courier for General Jackson 1861-1865. He attended University of Virginia School of Law. He married Missouri Taylor Riddick (8/4/1848-5/26/1924) and was a prominent lawyer and commonwealth's attorney for Suffolk. Withers died May 28, 1883 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 28. William David Wood CSA - Doctor Wood was born January 14, 1848. He married Tallulah Marshall Wise (7/7/1861-4/10/1891), daughter of Marshall Melville and Mary Ellis Wise. Wood is listed with the "Tom Smith Camp of Confederate Veterans". He died August 19, 1918 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block E, Lot 13. Footstone reads: CSA 1861-1865. Joseph W. Woodley 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Woodley was born in Germany ca. 1833. He was a farmer living in the Holy Neck section of Nansemond Co. When he enlisted in May 1861, he was described as 5'7" tall, with a light complexion, blue eyes and light hair. He was wounded in August of 1862 and discharged in May 30, 1863 (disabled by wounds) near Fredericksburg. James Woodward 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I & K, Private Woodward was born August 27, 1827, the son of James and Mary Vaughan Woodward. He served in the army from March 1862 until July 1864 and was a POW for one month during 1865. Woodward was a grocer in Portsmouth after the war and married Marie Penelope Harrell (7/27/1835-5/11/1900). James Woodward had a brother, Richard L. Woodward, in the Signal Corps. He died January 13, 1875 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 16. Richard Lafayette Woodward Signal Corps Woodward was born October 2, 1824, the son of James and Mary Vaughan Woodward. He married Missouri Lassiter (5/26/1831-2/13/1900), daughter of Miles and Mourning Riddick Lassiter. Richard was killed in action on August 13, 1864 near Petersburg and was buried there. His brother James had his body moved to Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block C, Lot 24, around 1866. Col. James L. Woolford Maryland Infantry Woolford was born May 24, 1843 and died July 27, 1920 He is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block M, Lot 7W1/2. David P. Wright CSA David Wright was held prisoner at Rip Raps by the Federal Forces during the war. Later he was steward at the Nansemond Co. poor farm and held several other offices in the county. He died February 7, 1893. James Edwin Wright 9th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Signal Corps James Wright was born ca. 1844, the son of William Joseph and Martha Eley Wright. He enlisted in May of 1861 and served the entire war. Wright died September 20, 1882 in Suffolk and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block B, Lot 33. John Henry Wright 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I; transferred to the Secret Service, Captain John Wright was born November 19, 1839 in Norfolk Co., Va., the son of William Joseph and Martha Eley Wright. John surrendered at Suffolk April 22, 1865, having served the two previous years assigned to duty in Secret Service and located near the base of operations of the Federal Army at the mouth of the James River. He attended University of Virginia's School of Law and graduated in 1859. He married Martha Virginia Johnson in Petersburg on March 20, 1862. After the war John and Martha lived in Suffolk, where he was a lawyer and commonwealth's attorney. Joseph A. Wright, Sr. 6th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Private Joseph A. Wright, Sr. was born ca. 1818. He was a mechanic, with a dark complexion, dark hair & grey eyes, and stood 5'7" tall when he enlisted in April of 1861. He was discharged in July of 1862 as over-age. His son Joseph, Jr. was in the same company. Joseph A. Wright, Jr. 6th Virginia Infantry, Company C, Private Joseph A. Wright, Jr. was born ca. 1841, the son of Joseph A. Wright, Sr., also in the company. He was a bookbinder and served throughout the war. After the war, he was a contractor, living on North Street, Norfolk and a member of the Pickett-Buchanan Camp of Confederate Veterans in 1884. Joseph Soloman Wright 9th Virginia Infantry, Company I; transferred to the Signal Corps Joseph S. Wright was born ca. 1837, the son of William Joseph and Martha Eley Wright. He was a farmer. Nathaniel Wright 9th Virginia Infantry Nathaniel Wright was born December 16th, 1826. His wife was "Sallie" Sarah E. Powell Wright (09/20/1826-05/01/1865). He died December 13th, 1900 and is buried in Bethlehem Christian Church Cemetery. Stephen B. Wright 16th Virginia Infantry, Company A, Private Stephen B. Wright was born May 10, 1840, the son of Benson H. and Lucy Nelms Wright. He was a farmer and resident of Nansemond Co., stood 5'7¾" tall, had a light complexion, grey eyes, & brown hair. He was wounded three times in the Civil War. After the war he lived in North Carolina for 7 years, and in 1871 was living in Norfolk, where he married Willie B. Turner. He was a merchant and lived on a farm 3 miles from Suffolk. Wright died April 20, 1905 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block F, Lot 161 S 1/2. Thomas Jefferson Wright 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, 4th Corporal Thomas J. Wright was born September 29, 1843, the son of David Pierce and Elizabeth Parker Wright. He was a merchant before the war. He died of a mortal wound inflicted at the Battle of Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. According to the family Bible record, he was removed from Gettysburg and reburied in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Va. William Aaron P. Wright Private, 24th Virginia Cavalry, Company I William Aaron P. Wright was born September 3, 1843, the son of Sylvester and Mary Jane Pruden Wright. He was a farmer and resident of Nansemond Co. Unfortunately, his compiled service record is not legible in the online image of his widow's 1923 pension application, beyond that he enlisted in Franklin, was captured in Amelia Co., & was held at Pt. Lookout, MD. He first married Caroline Hedgebeth of Isle of Wight Co., February 12, 1867. He was apparently widowed by September 9, 1870, when he appears in the Census in Chuckatuck District in the household of his father - though with his own real & personal estate. He remarried December 22, 1870, to Missouri Frances Johnson of Isle of Wight Co. Her pension application states Aaron died April 4, 1884, of rheumatism. She is marked in Beaver Dam Baptist Church Cemetery, near Carrsville, as are two of their sons, but her Death Certificate says she was buried in Western Branch Baptist Church Cemetery, Nansemond Co. Aaron's name has been added to the Beaver Dam cemetery list, though he may be buried elsewhere. William P. Wright 16th Virginia Infantry, Company B, Private Wright was born February 17th, 1825, the son of Nathaniel and Mary Wright. William P. Wright's 1st wife was Margaret (12/22/1829-10/30/1852); his 2nd, Marina D. Gay (06/30/1834-02/03/1859), and his 3rd, Amanda Ann Richardson (08/12/1833-02/05/1924; m. 12/12/1860). He was killed in action on June 22, 1864 at Wilcox Farm, shot in the forehead by a minie ball. He left seven children to mourn his death. Amanda A. Wright applied for a pension July 9, 1888, as a resident of Suffolk. William Stephen Wright 9th Virginia Infantry, Company K transferred to 61st Virginia Infantry, Adjutant William S. Wright was born March 26, 1841, the son of William Joseph and Martha Eley Wright. He had a light complexion, red hair & blue eyes, and stood 5'9" tall. He attended Gates Free School graduated from University of Virginia, Columbian College in Washington, D.C., and wrote for the University Magazine. He was wounded in the arm at Seven Pines in June of 1862. Transferred to 61st Va. Inf. as Adj. in July of 1862. Wright died November 16 or 17, 1863 of congestive chills and is buried in Blandford Cemetery in Petersburg, Va. He is listed on the Confederate Roll of Honor. William Wynn 61st Virginia Infantry, Company F, Private Wynn was born in England in 1817. He joined the Isle of Wight Avengers in August of 1861. Wynn was discharged in October of 1862 as over-age. He died ca. 1890 in Nansemond Co. His widow, Ann Wynn, received a pension August 1, 1901. John Z.T. Yates Ordinance Department, Private Yates was born in 1848. Although only a lad, he enlisted in the Confederate Army. He was assigned to the ordinance department, where he helped make cannon ammunition for the army in the field. After the war, he owned a large farm in Nansemond Co., and later moved to Suffolk and engaged in the fertilizer and meat business. Yates died November 12, 1921 and is buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Block I, Lot 29 1/2. 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company I - "the Nansemond Cavalry" (Surrendered 129 men at Appomattox) Officers: Captain - Patrick Henry Lee 1st Lt. - Jesse B. Brewer 2nd Lt. - Washington LaFayette Riddick 3rd Lt. - Washington C. Smith 1st Sgt. - Alex Savage 2nd Sgt. - Thomas E. Kilby 3rd Sgt. - Charles Rawls 4th Sgt. - Timothy E. Langston 1st Corp. - J.E. Rawles 2nd Corp. - Robert C. Daughtrey 3rd Corp. - Charles B. Milteer Privates: Beverly A. Armistead Nathaniel Babb Samuel Brittain Calvin Brittain George W. Brittain Richard H. Brinkley J.E. Bembery W.T. Bacus John W. Clark Elisha T. Cross Charles T. Cross Francis Capps John Cartwright Hugh Collins Edwin T. Collins Henry Cowper Richard Cox James Carr Darien Parker Daughtrey Talbot G. Daughtrey Jacob H. Daughtrey T.J. Daughtrey J.A. Doughtie Robert Jones Darden Jethro Darden R. R. Darden Elisha H. Darden E. Dunford V. Dunford R.L.M. Everett Charles Everett I. Edwards Miles Elliott Richard Seth Eley H. Eley Joseph Freeman Richard Freeman John L. Fulgham J.M. Goodwin Thomas Harrell J.H. Harrell Dempsey Harrell Frank Holland Joel P. Holland Washington Holland Frederick W. Hunter Walker Hunter J.D. House Dempsey Jones W.A. Jones Jacob E. Kelly Ezekiel Kelly John Knight Abel Upshur Kilby Jacob H. Keeling James W. King Dempsey Langstun Samuel Leanolir Elisha E. Lee A.T. Lee Thomas J. Lee Willis J. Lee G.W. Langstun John S. Milteer William F. Milteer James Neverson Milteer Frank Morris Dr. J.F. Mitchell Alex Norfleet Justin Norfleet John Oberry James E. Oberry Jesse Oberry Paul Palmer Benjamin Parker J.T. Parker Charles B. Parker A.L. Parker J.T. Parker James A. Phelps James B. Porter William H. Porter John Poyner Frank Pierce Jackson Rawls Elisha Rawls James Rogers William D. Rogers Asa Rogers Robert Riddick Richard T. Riddick Charles Riddick Mills E. Riddick Samuel Sneed Thomas Perry Savage Samuel Simpson Charles E. Sumner Dempsey Sumner Charles C. Swett Robert R. Smith Henning E. Smith J.C. Savage J. Newton Smith James A. Turrentine N.R. Wilkerson James Woodward George W. Whitley Alphus Wilson 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C - "Randolph's Dragoons" Officers: Major - R.H. Rush Captain - Charles H. Riddick Captain - Thomas E. Upshaw 2nd Lt. - W.F. Wise 2nd Lt. - Elisha L. Ballard 1st Sgt. - Kelly Harrison 1st Sgt. - Joseph P. Webb 2nd Sgt. - Q.O. Ivey 3rd Sgt. - W.W. Dennis 4th Sgt. - Robert Ridley Privates: C.A. Applewhite Robert Riddick Allen Edward Archibald Allen Lloyd Bunting Frederick Batt W.H. Brothop Edward D. Byrd Andrew J. Capps J.C. Capps Thomas Corbell John Coggsdale Henry Duke Hardy Duke Elliott J. Driver Samuel Dunford William W. Draper Eldred Holland Elisha Tyler James E. Benton Joseph H. Fulgham William Ford George Gay B.W.L. Gould D.H. Grimstead George Hall Charles H. Holt James Hosier R.M. Jones Thomas Kelly Elvington Knott Columbus Washington Lassiter William Parker Mitchell J.S. Miller Joseph Matthews Richard Peel Christopher Peel Robert Parker Jethro Riddick R.H. Rush Henry Spivey Jethro Spivey William B. Simmons Henry L. Smith Joseph Skeeter Lemuel Stokes V.A. Savadge J.E. Underwood Andrew J. Wilson 13th Virginia Cavalry, other companies William Russell [not in the book] John B. Hines (Co. A - "the Southampton Cavalry") Lemuel H. Gardner (Co. K) [book gives A. Lemuel Gardner, Co. C] John Holland (Co. B) [book gives John Holland (Holler), Co. C] Bibliography: Kilby, Tynes, Riddick, Smith, Glazebrook ECT. Suffolk Journal Vol. I by Carol Maguire Family Bibles Suffolk Deaths Bible Records by Fillmore Norfleet History of Suffolk by Ann Burton Suffolk - Nansemond Festival - 1958 Sketch Book - City of Suffolk - 1886 The Law - 200 Years by Marion Watson and Lucy Garnett Suffolk - A Pictoral History by Kermit Hobbs Summary of Events During Federal Occupation by Dr. Reginal Holland 13th Virginia Cavalry 16th Virginia Infantry 41st Virginia Infantry Cohoon Brigade 6th Virginia Infantry 9th Virginia Infantry 61st Virginia Infantry History of Nansemond County by Dunn 3rd Virginia Infantry 32nd Virginia Infantry Appomattox: Philip B. Baker - Surgeon 41st Virginia Infantry 12th Virginia Infantry George W. Briggs Cox's Brig 30th N.C. 44th Virginia Infantry George W. Brinkley 16th Virginia Regiment Co. B Philip Brinkley Sgt. 41st Virginia Regiment Co. I Richard H. Brinkley Beale's Cavalry Brig. 13th Regiment Co. I Caleb R. Busby Musician 18th Virginia Regiment Co. A Signal Corps and Scouts: 2nd Co. Independent Signal Corps Joseph F. Milligan - Commander Company B: Dr. W. W. Murray Nathaniel G. Norfleet Richard L. Woodward Virginia left Union April 17, 1861 Readmitted to the Union January 27, 1870 Army Confederates named armies for states or regions - 23 armies on Confederate side. Corps Have two or more division Division sometimes around 8700 men 3 Brigades to a division Brigade named after commanders or former ones 3-5 Regiments in a Brigade Regiments Confederates had 764, later 1009 1/2 Infantry Regiments - 10 Companies Artillery Regiments - 12 Companies Cavalry Regiments - 12 Companies Companies nominal strength of 100 men 32 officers and men per company at Gettysburg Companies named by letters Battles: Harper's Ferry - April 18, 1861 Big Bethel - June 10, 1861 1st Battle of Manassas - July 21, 1861 Williamsburg - May 5, 1862 Mechanicsville - June 26, 1862 1st Cold Harbor - June 27-28, 1862 Savage Station - June 29, 1862 Malvern Hill - July 1, 1862 2nd Battle of Manassas - August 29-30,1862 Crampton's Gap - September 14, 1862 Battle of Sharpsburg - September 17,1862 Fredericksburg - december 13, 1862 Chancellorsville - May 3, 1863 Brandy Station - June 9, 1863 Gettysburg - July 3, 1863 Battle of the Wilderness - May 6, 1864 Spotsylvania - May 12, 1864 Drewry's Bluff - May 16, 1864 Oxford - May 24, 1864 Cold Harbor - June 1-4, 1864 Jerusalem Plank Road - June 22, 1864 Battle of the Crater - July 30, 1864 Weldon Railroad - August 19, 1864 Burgess' Mill - October 27, 1864 Hatcher's Run - February 7, 1865 Five Forks - April 1, 1865 Cumberland Church - April 7, 1865 List of 2000 men at Blandford Church, Petersburg, Virginia - 30,000 graves Those from (known) Nansemond Co., VA.: Pvt. Jethro Riddick - Co. C, 13th Va. Inf. 9-13-1862 (9-3-1862) Nansemond County Pvt. L. N. Savage - Co. C, 19th N.C. Reg. 10-18-1862 Nansemond County Francis E. Jones - Died of Wounds 6-23-1864 Nansemond County Capt. T.I. Williams - Killed in Battle 1864 Nansemond County N.H. Arthur - Died of Wounds July 1, 1864 R.L. Woodward - Killed in Battle July 7, 1864 Battle of the Crater Those (known) that died from Nansemond Co., Va.: William F. Bracey - 16th Virginia Infantry J.T. Brinkley - 41st Virginia Infantry James E. Ellis - 41st Virginia Infantry Hamlin Lee Eppes Franklin - 16th Va. Inf. Beverly Baker Hunter - 41st Va. Inf. William Jackson Lassiter - 16th Va. Inf. William Stephen Wright - 9th Va. Frank R. Pruden - 16th Va. Inf. Jethro Riddick - 13th Va. Inf. William Babb Jim Duke J. Luke Henry Owen Bob Purves George Smith J.E. Styran Leroy Parker Solomon Savage Capt. B.B. Hunter Potential Civil War Veterans of Nansemond Co., Va. Census of 1870 William Ayres (age 50) Chuckatuck, Va. Richard Arline (age 28) Cypress Chapel John W. Arline (age 54) Cypress Chapel Benjamin Farcher (age 24) Chuckatuck, Va. Hiliard Archer (age 48) Chuckatuck, Va. Stephen Archer (age 35) Chuckatuck, Va. Aaron Archer (age 48) Chuckatuck, Va. William J. Arthur (age43) Sleepy Hole William Almond (age 33) Westward Armstead (age 28) Chuckatuck, Va. Hyran T. Artman (age 40) Born Penn. - Suffolk, Va. James Arnold (age 22) Cypress Chapel John W. Ames (age 48) Sleepy Hole Levi D. Ames (age 45) Sleepy Hole Richard B. Ames (age 33) Sleepy Hole Thomas Applewhite (age 40) Chuckatuck, Va. John Austin (age 40) Holy Neck, Va. John Austin (age 64) Holy Neck, Va. Jacob Austin (age 40) Holy Neck, Va. Henry Austin (age 50) Suffolk, Va. William H. Austin (age 44) Born N.C. - Cypress Chapel Sylvester K. Ashburn (age 53) Henry Ashburn (age 31) Chuckatuck, Va. John Q. Adams (age 62) Chuckatuck, Va. Joseph M. Askew (age 30) Chuckatuck, Va. John W. Adison (age 37) Chuckatuck, Va. Richard Ashley (age 22) Sleepy Hole, Va. Eley Austin (age 47) Holy Neck, Va. Benjamin Babb (age 49) Holy Neck, Va. Dempsey Babb (age 50) Cypress Chapel Civil War: Confederate Deaths - 94,000 estimated Died of Wounds - 21,570 Died of Disease - 59,297 Surrendered in 1865 - 174,223 men In our research of different regiments that served in the Civil War, we found that there were many men of the right age group and names in the various cemeteries but they did not have CSA markers on their graves. In Nansemond county some of these men could have served in North Carolina, Isle of Wight, Southampton, and Norfolk County regiments. Some of the men listed with serious wounds and contagious diseases and died at home. Other records of transfer were destroyed during the war. Thieves over the last 20 years have stolen the CSA markers and the triangles of cannon balls on the grave sights. Modern developers have bulldozed graves to make way for new housing developments. The Suffolk - Nansemond Historical Society feels that if a record is not kept now the names and sites will be lost forever. 24th Virginia Cavalry Those (known) from Nansemond Co.: W.H. Lester - Co. K John Byrd, Jr. Jacob E. Daughtrey Albriston Edwards Robert C. Ellis W. G. Goodman Dixon H. Holland John T. Harrell Miles Parker wife Sarah Elizabeth Richard B. Smith - Mary Louise Bruce Smith Benjamin B. Saunders Julius Franklin Howell J. J. Baker L. Parker Brinkley Carr D. Butler Allen Daughtrey Robert Eley James E. Jenkins Nicknames: 16th Va. Inf., Co. A - Marion's Rangers 16th Va. Inf., Co. B - Continentals 13th Va. Cav., Co. C - Randolph's Dragoons 13th Va. Cav., Co. I - Nansemond Cavalry 9th Va. Inf., Co. F - Chuckatuck Light Artillery 9th Va. Inf., Co. I - Craney Island Light Artillery 3rd Va. Inf., Co. F - Nansemond Rangers 6th Va. Inf., Co. E - Rice Button Co.(peculliar character of uniform buttons) or Nansemond Guard 41st Va. Inf., Co. I - Cypress Sharpshooters 41st Va. Inf., Co. K - South Quay Guards 24th Va. Cav., Co. K - Wise Legion 61st Va. Inf., - Cohoon's Battalion (Capt. Herbert's Co.) Signal Corps - Joseph F. Milligan Commander Roy's Scouts 9th Va. Inf., Co. K - Old Dominion Guard Reorganized May 9, 1862. 15 members of this company in March and April 1862 are reported to have been transfered to Capt. James F. Milligan's Signal Corps, and 14 of them are identified on rolls of July and August 1862 for Capt. Nathaniel W. Smith's 1st Company. Independent Signal Corps, which served under the command of Capt. (afterwards Major) James F. Milligan. 1st Regiment Va. Art. - Co. A., Washington Artillery (also Hampton Art.) Elizabeth City Co. formerly Co. K (1st) 32nd Reg. Va. Inf. - disbanded in June 1862; men assigned to other companies. Co. B, James City Artillery, James City Company - also called Co. A formerly Co. H, 32nd Regiment Va. Inf., Co. B., 1st Battalion Virginia Light Artillery and finally Capt Lucien W. Richardson's Battery; Va. Art. assigned 1st Battalion Va. Light Art. Captains: Alex Hamilton, Hankins, and Lucien W. Richardson 38th Battalion Va. Light art. organized June 1863 - Major James Dearing, Battalion B, 1st Corps Art. - Army of Northern Va. Capt. James DeWitt Hankins Company, Va. Light Art. Surry Light Art. Thomas W. Ruffins, 3rd Regiment, Va. Inf. Pamunkey Art. New Kent Capt Joseph D. Moore's Company Va. Light Art. Huger Battery Norfolk, Va. formerly Capt. Frank Huger's Company; afterwards 16th Va. Inf. 1st Regiment Virginia Artillery Co. A - Washington Artillery (also Hampton Artillery) Portsmouth Light Artillery Carey F. Grimes Battery Elizabeth City Co. formerly Co. K (1st) 32nd Regiment Virginia Infantry (disbanded in June 1862 - men assigned to other units) Co. B James City Artillery James City Co. also called Co. A. formerly Co. H 32 Regiment Virginia Infantry Co. B 1st Battalion Virginia Light Infantry and finally Capt Lucien W. Richardson's Battery Virginia Artillery assigned 1st Battalion Virginia Light Artillery Captains: Alex Hamilton, Hankins, Lucien W. Richardson 38th Battalion Virginia Light Artillery orgainzed June 1863 Major James Dearing Battalion B 1st Corps Artillery Army Northern Virginia Captain James DeWitt Hankins Company Virginia Light Artillery Surry Light Artillery formerly Captain Thomas W. Ruffins 3rd Regiment Virginia Infantry Pamunkey Artillery New Kent Captain Joseph D. Moore's Company Virginia Light Artillery Huger Battery Norfolk, Virginia formerly Captain Frank Huger's Company afterwards 16th Virginia Infantry January 26, 1870 Virginia was readmitted to the Union. The State had been out of the Union since 1861. March 19, 1872 a new charter was granted Suffolk but it had to be ratified by the people before it became effective. Nansemond County - Home Guards Company A Company of Home Guards was reported on parade May 1, 1861, with 100 strong under Captain Flynn. Isaac Ridgeway Trimble - Col. CSA Engineers, then Brig. General under Ewell, later Major General. Shenandoah Valley - 1st major battle of the war - Manassas on July 21, 1861 - surrender at Appomattox on April 9, 1865. Virginia - 200,000 males of military age - 20 to 30 thousand were dead - thousands more were disabled for life. Roster of Ex-Confederate Soldiers & Sailors - January 25, 1898 - act of 1-25-1898 1st District - T.W. Artman took this list in Nansemond County AGE. . . . . .DATE. . LENGTH in. . . . . of . of 1898 NAME . RANK . UNIT . ENLISTMENT. SERVICE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 59 Almond, W.A. Pvt. C 9th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 52 Allen, Robert R. Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 1/1/1864 1.6 yrs. 67 Alfred, Frank M. Pvt. Eastern Shore Co4/1861 4 yrs. (Alfred was stationed at Naval Hospital - Portsmouth, Va.) 60 Allmond, William J. Pvt. A 9th Va.Inf. 5/1861 1.6 yrs. 68 Artman, H.T. Pvt. - Ord. Dept. 4/1861 4 yrs. 58 Arthur, Dr. P.H. Capt. F 3rd Va.Inf 6/1861 4 yrs. 55 Ashburn, Benj. F. Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf 4/1861 4 yrs. 70 Austin, Jacob Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 68 Baker, Gen. L.S. Brig.Gen. 1-5 N.C.Reg. 5/1861 4 yrs. -- Baker, John J. 58 Baker, Beverly P. Sgt. I 41st Va.Inf. 5/1861 4 yrs. (Wounded at Gettysburg) 72 Babb, Nathaniel Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 6/1861 2 yrs. 61 Babb, George W. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 3.8 yrs. 60 Ballard, Elisha L. 1st.Lt. C 13th Va.Cav. 4/1861 4 yrs. (promoted to Capt.) Barnes, W.H. 65 Bartlett, Robert J. 2nd Sgt. E 6th Va.Inf. 8/1861 4 yrs. 54 Benton, John L. Pvt. E 33 N.C.Inf. 3/1862 3 yrs. 52 Boykin, R.S. Pvt. A 18 Va.BatArt 10/1864 9 mos. 58 Brinkley, Jackson R. Sgt. I 41st Va.Inf. 5/1862 3 yrs. 63 Brinkley, James H. Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 5/1863 2 yrs. 53 Brinkley, L.Parke Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 5/1863 2 yrs. 56 Brinkley, Frederick Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 3.10 yrs. (Wounded at Petersburg) 53 Brinkley, Phillip B. Ord.Sgt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 3.10 yrs. 67 Britt, Exum B. Capt B 16th Va.Inf. 5/1861 2 yrs. (Resigned - health broke down) 61 Brittain, George W. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 5/1861 4 yrs. 53 Brothers, Wm. H. Sgt. C 2nd N.C.Cav. 6/1861 3.10 yrs. (Twice wounded - N.C. & Culpepper Courthouse) -- Busby, C.R. Pvt. I 16th Va.Inf. 60 Byrd, Edward D. Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 3/1862 3 yrs. 70 Byrd, Richard H. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 7/1861 3.8 yrs. 81 Byrd, John Jr. Pvt. - 24th Va.Cav. 8/1862 2.8 yrs. 59 Cutchens, Benjamin F. Qrt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 69 Cohoon, William J. 2nd Lt. B 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. (transferred to Signal Corps) 67 Cully, Henry R. Sgt. B 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 59 Cropper, Thomas E. Pvt. B 1st Md.Cav. 5/1862 2.5 yrs. -- Coggsdale, William H. 71 Cooper, William Pvt. B Mohones Brig 1862 2 yrs. (Sick came home and never returned) 72 Copeland, William T. Pvt. C 59th Va. Reg 2/1862 Discharged at Camp Lee 66 Copeland, Elisha D. Pvt. C 59th Va. Reg 2/1862 Discharged at Petersburg 1863 54 Cross, Charles T. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 2/1862 Discharged fall of 1864 68 Copeland, Elisha R. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 4/1862 3 yrs. 59 Collins, Elliott Pvt. A 14th Va.Inf. 2/1862 3.2 yrs. 60 Collins, Edwin T. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 9/1861 3.7 yrs. Ex-Confederate Soldiers and Sailors con't 67 Darden, Elisha H. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 4/1861 Discharged 1862 just before evacuation of Norfolk 56 Darden, Dempsey L. Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 6/6/1861 4 yrs. 56 Daughtrey, Jesse D. Ord.Sgt B 6th Va.Bat. 65 Daughtrey, Darion P. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 2/1862 3 yrs. 53 Daughtrey, Jacob E. Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 1/1863 2 yrs. 55 Daughtrey, Jacob H. Pvt. A 13th Va.Cav. 4/1861 4 yrs. 55 Daughtrey, Eli Pvt. K 41st Va.Cav. 8/1861 3.6 yrs. -- Daughtrey, Allen Could not see therefore could not date. 58 Daughtrey, T.G. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 4/1861 4 yrs. 63 Doughtie, Henning S. Pvt. E 6th Va.Inf 4/1861 3.6 yrs. 60 Duke, James M. Pvt. I 14th Va.Reg. 4/1861 4 yrs. 50 Duke, L.C. Pvt. I 9th Va.Inf. 3/1862 3 yrs. 64 Duke, William T. Pvt. B 16th Va.Inf. 4/1862 3 yrs. -- Duke, Richard R. 66 Edwards, R.P. 1 Lt. H 7th N.C.Cav. 5/1862 3 yrs. 70 Edwards, Albriston Com.Sgt I 24th Va.Cav. 5/1862 3 yrs. 68 Everett, J.W. Pvt. D 14th Va.Reg. 4/1862 3 yrs. 60 Earley, C.M. Pvt. C 17th N.C.Inf 4/1862 3 yrs. (Wounded at Cold Harbor) 70 Ellis, Robert C. Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 1/1862 3 yrs. (Wounded at Cold Harbor) 60 Farley, Peter F. Music. B 12th Va.Reg. 4/1861 4 yrs. 53 Fowler, Joshua J. Pvt. H 8th Ga.Cav. 10/1863 1.5 yrs. 58 Frost, William J. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 7/1861 3.8 yrs. 76 Griggs, John Pvt. B 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 62 Gomer, Azra P. Capt. F 3rd Va.Inf 4/1861 4 yrs. 70 Gay, William H. Pvt. D 16th Va.Inf. 4/1862 3 yrs. -- Goodwin, L.S. 1 Sgt. B 5th Va.Bat. 4/1861 2.4 yrs. 71 Goodson, Thomas V. Cpl. I 3rd Va.Inf. 2/1862 3 yrs. (Prisoner at the end of the war) 61 Goodman, W.G. Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 8/1861 3.8 yrs. 58 Griffen, Hamline S. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 7/1861 3.8 yrs. 56 Gardner, Lemuel H. Pvt. K 13th Va.Cav. 3/1862 3 yrs. 55 Hall, Joseph P. Pvt. B 16th Va.Inf. 2/1862 3 yrs. 60 Holland, G.S.P. Pvt. B 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 3.6 yrs. (captured twice ) 55 Holland, James S. Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 62 Holland, John of S. Pvt. B 13th Va.Cav. 4/1862 3 yrs. 54 Holland, Jason P. Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 8/1861 3.9 yrs. 64 Holland, William H. Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 66 Holland, Joseph G. Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 73 Holland, Dixon H. Sgt. K 24th Va.Cav. 4/1862 3 yrs. 62 Holland, Hardy Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. (Badly wounded at Melvin Hill) 64 Holland, Eldred Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 2/1862 3 yrs. 57 Holland, Alexander W. Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 56 Holland, Sol.C. Sgt. I 41st Va.Inf. 9/1861 3.7 yrs. -- Holland, S.J. I 41st Va.Inf. 64 Harrell, Robert F. -- A 14th Va.Reg. 5/1862 3 yrs. 59 Harrell, James Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. (Discharged just before the surrender) 73 Harrell, Thomas Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 5/1862 3 yrs. 56 Harrell, Elkanah Pvt. C 9th Va.Inf. 2/1862 3.10 yrs. 52 Harrell, John T. Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 11/1862 2.5 yrs. 55 Hargrove, William E. Pvt. A 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 54 Holladay, Alto F. 1 Sgt. B 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 65 Hines, James L. Pvt. I 61st Va.Inf. 8/1861 3 yrs. (Honorable discharge ca. 7 months before the end.) 55 Hines, William E. Pvt. G 61st Va.Inf. 8/1862 2 yrs. (Discharged of sickness about 10/1864) 64 Howell, William of R. Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 4/1861 1 yr. 64 Howell, Neverson Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 58 Haslett, Thomas K. Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 66 Hunter, Fred W. Sgt.Maj I 13th Va.Cav. 2/1862 3.2 yrs. 62 Horton, Moses E. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 11/1862 3 yrs. 59 Horton, David R. Pvt. E 6th Va.Inf. 9/1861 2 yrs. (Lost hand at Chancelleville) 57 Howell, William H. 2 Corp. A 16TH Va.Inf. 4/17/1861 4 yrs. 66 Johnson, James W. 2 Corp. B 16th Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. (Transferred to Navy) 53 Johnson, James T. 2 Corp. K 41st Va.Inf. 2/1864 1 yr. 65 Johnson, Robert J. 2 Corp. A 14th Va.Inf. 2/1862 3 yrs. (Captured at Battle of Five Forks) 61 Jones, Isaac 2 Corp. K 14th Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 59 Jones, William T. Ord.Sgt K 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 54 Kilby, Virginius S. 1 Cpl. B 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 55 Kilby, Wallace Courier B 16th Va.Inf. 5/1861 4 yrs. 54 Kelly, Hugh B. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 11/1861 3.2 yrs. 56 Kelly, Tazwell Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 3.10 yrs. 60 Lassiter, W. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 4/1861 4 yrs. 63 Milteer, James Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. (Prisoner at Point Lookout at surrender) 51 Milteer, D.W. Pvt. H 9th Va.Inf. 5/1863 2 yrs. 68 Milteer, William E. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 5/1861 2.5 yrs. (Discharged) 65 Milteer, James N. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 4/1861 4 yrs. 66 Morgan, Augustus H. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 7/1861 3.8 yrs. 66 Moore, James B. 4 Sgt. D 10th Va.Bat. 4/1861 3.11 yrs. 59 March, Fred Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 74 Mathews, Allen Pvt. E 6th Va.Inf. 9/1861 3.6 yrs. 54 Norfleet, Robert E. Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 59 Nelms, J. Calvin Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1864 1 yr. -- Norfleet, Christopher --- A 16th Va.Inf. 63 Odom, John Fletcher Pvt. - 68th N.C.Reg 12/1863 1.4 yrs. 73 Oliver, John Pvt. E 6th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 62 Pierce, William c. Sgt. E 6th Va.Inf. 9/14/1861 3.7 yrs. 62 Parker, George T. Capt. E 5th N.C.Reg 5/1861 4 yrs. 68 Phillips, Dr. E.D. Asst.Surgeon 11/1862 2.5 yrs. 66 Pierce, James C. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 64 Parker, Miles Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 7/1861 3.8 yrs. 59 Peele, Christopher --- C 13th Va.Cav. 4/1862 3 yrs. 63 Rawles, Luter Pvt. K 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 55 Rawles, Robert Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 9/1861 3.7 yrs. -- Robertson, John W. Pvt. I 61st Va.Inf. 59 Reed, William H. --- I 68th N.C.Reg 5/1861 4 yrs. (Wounded ) 53 Rodgers, James G. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 5/1862 3 yrs. 55 Rawles, John T. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 60 Rawles, Edwin S. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 59 Russell, William T. Pvt. A 14th Va.Inf. 2/1862 3.2 yrs. 53 Riddick, Dr. Robert e. Pvt. F 3rd Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. (Wounded at Chancellorsville) 65 Smith, Thomas W. 1 lt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 54 Smith, Henning E. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 5/14/1861 4 yrs. 52 Smith, Robert R. Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 5/1861 4 yrs. 66 Smith, James G. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 7/1861 4 yrs. 72 Smith, Richard B. Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 4/1861 4 yrs. 52 Smith, Bruce Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 5/1862 3 yrs. 60 Skinner, Willie W. Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. (Wounded at the Crater) 55 Skinner, Carr G. Pvt. I 1/1862 10 mos. (Discharged ) 55 Saunders, Benjamin B. Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 5/1862 3 yrs. 61 Savage, Thomas W. Corp. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 54 Shepherd, John M. Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf. 4/1861 4 yrs. 56 Stith, Dr. L.A. Asst.Surgeon 2nd N.C.Reg 5/1861 4 yrs. 61 Tyler, Elisha Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 4/1862 2 yrs. 61 Turnley, J.W. Pvt. - Art.Brig. 6/1861 4 yrs. 60 Taylor, Kadiei Pvt. H 9th Va.Inf. 2/1862 4 mos. (Discharged ) -- Urguhart, M.M. 56 Urguhart, George F. 2 Lt. Drill Master 5/1861 4 yrs. 54 Williams, John H. 2 Sgt. C 2nd N.C.Cav 6/1861 4 yrs. 55 Whitehead, Robert E. Sgt. A 41st Va.Inf. 8/1861 4 yrs. 62 Whitehead, E.F. 2 Lt. A 16th Va.Inf. 5/1861 4 yrs. 55 Walton, Samuel H. 2 Lt. E 33rd N.C.Inf 1/1862 1.2 yrs. (Wounded in 1863, discharged 3/1864 ) 55 Wilkins, Samuel Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 6/1861 4 yrs. 67 Wilkins, Henry Pvt. I 9th Va.Inf. 2/1862 3 yrs. 75 Wilkins, George Pvt. I 9th Va.Inf. 2/1862 3 yrs. 70 Wilkins, Edgar Pvt. I 41st Va.Inf. 2/1862 5 mos. (discharged ) -- Whitehead, Tim 50 Yates, John Z. Pvt. Ordinance Dept. 11/1863 1.5 yrs. ROSTER OF EX-CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS & SAILORS JANUARY 25, 1898 District #2 AGE . in . . . DATE OF . LENGTH OF 1898 NAME . . RANK . CO. REG. . ENLISTMENT . SERVICE ___________________________________________________________________________________ 66 Ashborne, Peter Pvt. K 13th Va.Cav. 11-1861 11 mo. 59 Ashburn, Henry O.Sgt E 6th Va.Inf 11-18-1861 4yrs 5 mo. 61 Butler, Benjamin Pvt. L 1st S.C.Inf. 7-1-1861 3yrs 9 mo. 54 Butler, Carr D. Pvt. I 62nd Ga.Inf. 7-22-1863 55 Butts, George Pvt. B 13th Va.Cav. 4-13-1862 63 Bagnell, Charles Pvt. ? 4th Va.Inf. 5-12-1862 65 Benton, Thomas E. Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 6-3-1862 57 Corbell, John D. Pvt. B 13th Va. Cav. 4-20-1861 57 Cartwright, John Pvt. I 13th Va.Cav. 12-9-1861 64 Carson, N. B. Pvt. I 4th Va.Art. 4-20-1861 53 Dixon, John H. Pvt. H 9th Va.Inf. 5-3-1861 58 Driver, Elliott,Jr. Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 4-20-1862 61 Duke, Ben Pvt. B 16th Va.Inf. 4-20-1862 54 Edwards, Edwin N. Pvt. E 19th Va. Bat. 4-18-1862 63 Gaskins, Thomas R. Lt. F 3rd Va. Inf. 4-21-1861 70 Gray, Horace L. Lt. F 9th Va. Inf. 5-18-1861 59 Hazelwood, Pvt. B 53rd Va.Art. 4-20-1861 58 Hicks, W. O.Sgt. ? 4th Va.Art. 4-20-186? 52 Hodsden, Va. Scout 6-1861 63 Higgins, John F. Pvt. F 9th Va.Inf. 5-2-1861 56 Hargraves, Willie W. 2 Sgt. G 9th Va.Inf. 4-18-1861 61 Hargraves, Albert B. Pvt. H. 2nd N.C. 6-2-1861 60 Holland, Richard H. Pvt. E 6th Va.Inf. 5-20-1861 60 Holland, James R. Pvt. F 9th Va.Inf. 5-1-1861 62 Jordan, William T. 2 Lt. F 3rd Va. Inf. 4-25-1861 65 Johnson, Eli B. Pvt. B 6th Va. Inf. 5-20-1861 54 Kitchens, Wesley M. Pvt. ? Daren Cav.N.C.6-1-1862 50 Lancaster, Joseph O. Pvt. F 3rd Va.Inf. 5-20-1862 54 Lawrence, Henry T. Pvt. I 68th N.C.Inf. 6-1-1863 52 Lee, Willis J. Pvt. I 13th Va. Cav. 6-9-1862 76 Luke, James W. Pvt. I 1st S.C.Inf. 2-3-1862 58 Moody, Thomas D. Pvt. F 9th Va.Inf 5-3-1861 68 Morris, Joseph T. Pvt. ? 61st N.C.Inf. 4-9-1864 65 Moore, William A. Pvt. F 9th Va.Inf. 5-3-1861 53 McClenny, Thomas H. 2 Sgt. 55 Oliver, Alex. W. Pvt. A 16th Va.Inf 4-17-1861 61 Oliver, William F. Pvt. ? 9th Va. Inf. 4-18-186? 64 Oliver, Matthew Pvt. B 12 Va.Inf. 4-19-1863 58 Norfleet, John T. Pvt. E 6th Va. Inf. 7-7-1861 62 Peel, Richard Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 4-3-1862 -- Powell, William 59 Post, George Pvt. C 4th Va.Art. 4-20-1861 57 Parker, Robert Pvt. C 13th Va.Cav. 4-3-1862 52 Parker, Joseph Pvt. 6th Va. Inf. 4-20-1861 59 Rhodes, John Pvt. C 24th Va.Cav. 2-9-1862 65 Rhodes, Richard Pvt. I 24th Va.Cav. 2-19-1862 60 Ramsey, Edwin C. Pvt. F 9th Va.Inf. 5-18-1861 67 Savage, Alex. Col. ? 13th Va.Cav. 4-20-1861 54 Smith, John Pvt. E 6th Va.Inf. 8-12-1861 57 Sadler, George H. Corp. ? Norf. Art. 6-20-1861 65 Spragg, Aaron Pvt. ? Gaines Art. 5-1-1861 61 Taylor, James D. 1 Sgt. ? 3rd Va.Inf. 5-3-1861 62 Wagner, James Pvt. ? 9th Va.Inf. 4-20-1861 68 Wagner, Frederick 1 Sgt. F 9th Va.Inf. 5-9-1861 55 Wilroy, Abram E. 2 Sgt. G 41st Va.Inf. 5-2-1861 Nansemond County Civil War Veterans This file is the product of many hours by Bruce Saunders and Marion Joyner Watson. We hope it is useful to many. This page may be freely copied, linked to, or used for any non-commericial purpose. It may not be copied for any commercial purpose. Property of Southampton County Historical Society. copyright 1998. See also the Confederate pensions rolls of veterans and widows for Nansemond Co.; file at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/va/nansemond/military/civilwar/pensions/roles.txt Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Mrs. Bruce Saunders (bs4403@verizon.net), and re-formatted by File Manager Matt Harris. file at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/va/nansemond/military/civilwar/cw_vets.txt