Attention: Il a les mêmes parents que sa femme (Mary Jane Overstreet).
Il avait une relation avec Mary Jane Overstreet.
Enfant(s):
1870
GULLY, SAML (1870 U.S. Census) Farmer 1500 1400MISSISSIPPI , KEMPER, DEKALB P OAge: 40, Male, Race: WHITE, Born: ALSeries: M593 Roll: 733 Page: 259
Gully, Sam'l
-- Jane 32 Keeping House
-- Minnie 16
-- Virgil 15 At School
-- Henry 9 "
-- Mary 6 At home
Samuel Kittrell Gully (1828-1870) son of Ezekiel and Penelope Hodges Gully, 2nd Lt., Co. K, 43rd Miss. Inf., murdered by a scalawag (Ben Rush) on the streets of DeKalb during reconstruction.
CHILDREN of (6) Samuel Kittrell Gully and Mary Jane Overstreeta. Minnie Gullyb. Virgil Samuel Gully b. July 21, 1854. Virgil was the father of Dr. Champ Mitchell Gullyc. Penelope W. Gullyd. Henry J. Gullye. Mary Jane A. Gullyf. William P. Gully
From: http://us-gen.org/ms/kemper/military/43rdcok.htm
2nd Lieutenant Samuel Kittrell Gully -- 5-8/62 absent on unspecified detached service; 11-12/62 present and commanding company; 5-12/63 absent sick; 1-4/64 present; 5-6/64 present; 6-8/64 absent sick; 2nd Lt. Gully was chronically sick and wholly unfit for infantry service, but he wished to continue to serve the Confederacy; consequently, he was promoted to Captain of infantry and transferred to Co. F, 3rd Regiment, MS Cavalry Reserves, in which capacity he was paroled at Columbus, MS, at war’s end
________________
43rd Mississippi Infantry, Co. K Roster-- "Kemper Fencibles"
The 43rd Regiment, Mississippi Infantry Volunteers, CSA, was also known as "Moore’s Regiment," "Harrison’s Regiment," "the Camel Regiment," and "the Bloody Forty-third."
Organized 15 May 1862. The 43rd Mississippi Infantry saw service at Iuka, fought at 2nd Corinth, resisted Grant’s Central Mississippi Railroad Campaign, repulsed Sherman at 2nd Chickasaw Bayou, served in Deer Creek Expedition (Pound’s detachment), nobly endured the Siege of Vicksburg, fought at the Siege of Jackson (Pound’s detachment), campaigned at Chickamauga (Pound’s detachment), helped turn back Sooy Smith’s Meridian Expedition, fought in the 100 Day’s Battles all the way from Resaca to Atlanta, endured the Siege of Atlanta, skirmished at Decatur, made a famous charge on Franklin’s bloody fields of glory, was shattered at Nashville, but, undaunted, rose from the ashes to fight again at Kinston and, finally, took part in the last great Confederate charge at Bentonville.
The pages you now hold bear the hallowed names of the noble, courageous Sons of the South who did these mighty deeds of valor. Cherish their memory. Laud their bravery. Celebrate their Heritage of Honor.
"Though men deserve, they may not win success; the brave will honor the brave, vanquished nonetheless."
Deo Vindice
("God Vindicates")
Company K
"Kemper Fencibles"
DeKalb, Kemper County
11 May 1862
Captain William Augustus "Gus" Love
1st Lieutenant/Acting Captain Henry James "H.J." Gully
2nd Lieutenant Robert Adcock
2nd Lieutenant Robert C. Farrar
2nd Lieutenant Samuel Kittrell Gully
Samuel Kittrell Gully | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mary Jane Overstreet |
Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.