My Old Confederate Home (38 page)

Read My Old Confederate Home Online

Authors: Rusty Williams

BOOK: My Old Confederate Home
11.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

McAfee, John J.
Kentucky Politicians—Sketches of Representative Corn-Crackers and Other Miscellany.
Louisville, Ky.: Press of the Courier-Journal Job Printing Co., 1886.

McDowell, Robert E.
City of Conflict: Louisville in the Civil War, 1861–1865.
Louisville, Ky.: Louisville Civil War Roundtable, 1962.

McMeekin, Isabella McLennan.
Louisville, the Gateway City.
A Cities of America Biography. New York: J. Messner, 1946.

Memorial Record of Western Kentucky.
2 vols. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1904.

Morgan, Mrs. Irby.
How It Was: Four Years among the Rebels.
Nashville, Tenn.: Publishing House, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1892.

Mosgrove, George Dallas.
Kentucky Cavaliers in Dixie; or, The Reminiscences of a Confederate Cavalryman.
Louisville, Ky.: Courier Journal Job Printing Co., 1895.

Nicosia, Gerald.
Home to War: A History of the Vietnam Veterans' Movement.
New York: Crown, 2001.

Noble, G. W.
New Age.
Jackson, Ky.: Jackson Times Printing Co., 1928.

Perrin, W. H., J. H. Battle, and G. C. Kniffin.
Kentucky: A History of the State.
6th ed. Louisville, Ky.: F. A. Battey and Co., 1887.

Peter, Robert.
History of Fayette County, Kentucky.
Chicago: O. L. Baskin & Co., 1882.

Plante, Trevor K. “The National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers.” Prologue.
U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
36, no. 1 (Summer 2004): 57-59.

Poems and Songs of the Civil War.
New York: Barnes & Noble, 1996.

Poppenheim, Mary Barnett.
The History of the United Daughters of the Confederacy.
Vol. 1. N.p.: Richmond, Garrett and Massie, 1938.

Prince, Cathryn J.
Burn the Town and Sack the Banks! Confederates Attack Vermont!
New York: Carroll & Graf, 2006.

Richardson, Benjamin Ward.
The Field of Disease: A Book of Preventive Medicine.
Philadelphia: Henry C. Lea's Son & Co., 1884.

Ripley, Amanda.
The Unthinkable: Who Survives When Disaster Strikes—and Why.
New York: Random House, 2008.

Rosen, Marvin.
Understanding Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
New York: Chelsea House, 2003.

Rosenburg, R. B.
Living Monuments: Confederate Soldiers' Homes in the New South.
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1993.

Scott, Anne Firor.
The Southern Lady: From Pedestal to Politics, 1830-1930.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970.

Seekamp, Alwin, and Roger Burlingame, eds.
Who's Who in Louisville.
Louisville, Ky.: Louisville Press Club, 1912.

Short, Joanna. “Confederate Veterans Pensions, Occupation, and Men's Retirement in the New South.”
Social Science History
30, no. 1 (2006): 75-101.

Simpson, Alicia, ed.
Kentucky Confederate Veteran and Widows Pension Index.
Hartford, Ky.: Cook & McDowell, 1979.

Slone, Laurie B., and Matthew J. Friedman.
After the War Zone: A Practical Guide for Returning Troops and Their Families.
Cambrdige, Mass.: Da Capo Press, 2008.

Smith, Suzanne Wooley. “The Tennessee Monument to the Women of the Confederacy: A Study in Conflicting Ideas of Public Commemoration and Collective Memory, 1895-1926.”
Border States: Journal of the Kentucky-Tennessee American Studies Association
, no. 11 (1997): 1-7.

Southard, Mary Young, ed.
Who's Who in Kentucky: A Biographical Assembly of Notable Kentuckians.
Louisville, Ky.: Standard Printing Co., 1936.

Sturgis, Thomas.
Prisoners of War, 1861-65: A Record of Personal Experiences, and a Study of the Condition and Treatment of Prisoners on Both Sides during the War of the Rebellion.
New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1912.

Thompson, Edwin Porter.
History of the Orphan Brigade.
Louisville, Ky.: Lewis N. Thompson, 1898.

Townsend, John Wilson.
Kentucky in American Letters, 1784-1912.
Vol. 1. Cedar Rapids, Ia.: Torch Press, 1913.

Trammell, Jack. “Battles Leave an Army of Disabled.”
Washington Times
, June 21, 2003.

United States Sanitary Commission.
Narrative of Privations and Sufferings of United States Officers and Soldiers while Prisoners of War in the Hands of the Rebel Authorities.
Boston: Littell's Living Age, 1864.

“VA History in Brief.” Washington, D.C.: Department of Veterans Affairs. Online at
http://www1.va.gov/opa/publications/archives/docs/history_in_brief.pdf
.

Vogel, Jeffrey E. “Redefining Reconciliation: Confederate Veterans and the Southern Responses to Federal Civil War Pensions.”
Civil War History
51, no. 1 (2005): 67-93.

Waller, Willard Walter.
The Veteran Comes Back.
New York: Dryden Press, 1944.

Wetherington, Mark V. “Kentucky Joins the Confederacy.”
Kentucky Humanities
, April 1999.

White, A. N.
Cleon Keyes: An Appreciation.
Louisville, Ky.: Published under the Auspices of Kentucky Baptist Historical Society, [1912?].

White, William W.
The Confederate Veteran.
Tuscaloosa, Ala.: Confederate Publishing Co., 1962.

Willis, George Lee.
Kentucky Democracy: A History of the Party and Its Representative Members—Past and Present.
Louisville, Ky.: Democratic Historical Society, 1935.

Wilson, Charles Morrow. “The Hit-and-Run Raid.”
American Heritage
12, issue 5 (August 1961): 28-32.

Wilson, Charles Reagan.
Baptized in Blood: The Religion of the Lost Cause, 1865-1920.
Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1982.

Wines, Frederick H.
Report on Crime, Pauperism and Benevolence in the United States at the Eleventh Census: 1890 (Part 1, Analysis).
Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1896.

Wols, H. D., and J. E. Baker. “Dental Health of Elderly Confederate Veterans: Evidence from the Texas State Cemetery.”
American Journal of Physical Anthropology
124, no. 1 (May 2004): 59-72.

Young, Bennett H.
Confederate Wizards of the Saddle.
Boston: Chapple Publishing Co., 1914.

Young, Lot D.
Reminiscences of a Soldier of the Orphan Brigade.
Louisville, Ky.: Courier-Journal Job Printing Co, 1918.

Index

The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

 

Adams, Peter B.

Alabama soldiers' home.
See
Jefferson Manley Faulkner Soldiers' Home

Anchorage Presbyterian Church

Arkansas Confederate Home (Little Rock)

Arnold, Mrs. James M.

Arnold, Trimble “Trim”

Ashcraft, John N.

Ashford, Stanford P.

Ballard Flour Mills

Barker, T. M.

Barlow, Florence Dudley, biographical information for, complaints about Home by, Mrs. L. Z. Duke's friendship with, Home entertainment arranged by, Home responsibilities of,
Lost Cause
magazine editor

Barlow, Milton

Bascom, Alpheus Washington “A. W.”

Bascom, Mary

Beasley, William W. “Billy,” aid requested by, employment of, family of, funeral of, impairment of, military service by

Beckham, J. C. W., dedication of Home by

Beckham, Julia T. (née Wickliffe)

Beckham, Lee A.

Bellican, Charles E.

benefits for U.S. military service,
See also
pensions

Bennett, D. B.

Bird, J. W.

Blackburn, J. C. S.

black Confederates

Blackley, G. T.

Blanton, Lindsay H.

Booze, George

Bowles, James

Boyd, John, biographical information for, and Confederate Veteran Association of Kentucky, Memorial Hall plans by, retirement of

Breckinridge, John C.

Breckinridge, W. C. P.

Broaddus, Andrew

Browder, Ed

Browder, R. A.

Buckner, Simon Bolivar

Burdette, J. A.

Burns, Timothy

California soldiers' home.
See
Dixie Manor

Calmes, W. T.

Camp Douglas (prison camp)

Camp Henry Knox (WWI)

Camp Nicholls Soldiers' Home (New Orleans, La.)

Camp Zachary Taylor (WWI)

Cantrell, C. C.

Cantrill, James E.

Captain Jack, the Poet Scout.
See
Crawford, Jack

Castleman, John

Castleman, Mrs. John

Cave Hill Cemetery

Chandler, A. B. “Happy”

Clarke, C. J.

Coleman, William Oscar, accusations against, biographical information for, budgetary issues faced by, inmate discipline by, on Home board, resignation of

Confederate Association of Kentucky

Confederate Cemetery (Pewee Valley), dedication of,
See also
Pewee Valley Cemetery Company

Confederate Home Messenger

Confederate Quartet

Confederate Soldiers' Home and Widows and Orphans Asylum (Georgetown, Ky.)

Confederate Veteran
(magazine)

Confederate Veteran Association of Kentucky

Confederate veteran organizations,
See also names of specific organizations

Courier-Journal.
See
Louisville Courier-Journal

Crabtree, H. R.

Crawford, Jack

Crowe, R. T.

Crystal, George

Cummins, Thomas

Cunningham, R. H.

Daughtry, Charles Lawrence, actions during 1920 fire, allegations of impropriety against, biographical information for, inmate discipline by, Women's Advisory Committee and

Davidson, P. A.

Davis Memorial Home.
See
Jefferson Davis Memorial Home for Confederate Soldiers and Sailors

Deering, J. H.

Dixie Manor (Los Angeles, Calif.)

Dow, George W., accusations of impropriety by

Duke, Basil W.

Duke, Henrietta Morgan (Mrs. Basil W. Duke)

Duke, Mrs. L. Z., background investigation of, biographical information for, Duke Hall dedication by, visits to Home by

Duke Hall.
See
L. Z. Duke Hall

Duncan, R. E.

Duncan, Taliaferro Walton

Eastin, George B.

Eastin, Thomas

Elbert, James

Elliott, E. J.

Ellis, William T.

Emery, Reed

Ewing, H. H.

Fain, Tom

Faulkner Soldiers' Home.
See
Jefferson Manley Faulkner Soldiers' Home

Flannery, Mary

Fleming, R. H.

Fleming, William B.

Florida Old Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Home (Jacksonville)

Ford, Salem Holland, biographical information for, Home prepared by, inmates greeted by

Fort Delaware (prison camp)

Foster, S. O.

Fry, Henry

Galt, Laura Talbot

Gatchel, Frank E.

George, Henry, biographical information for, legislative activities of, living in the Home, transforms Home life

George, Martha (Mrs. Henry George)

Georgia Soldiers' Home (Atlanta)

Girand, Mrs. F. N.

Goebel, William

Goodlett, Caroline M.

Gordon, Angus Neil

Gordon, John B.

Grand Army of the Republic (GAR)

Graves, Adeline “Addie”

Graves, James M.

Graves, Polly

Gray, William S.

Green, John W.

Green, E. M.

Gunsaulte, Mr. and Mrs. A.

Haines, J. L.

Haldeman, Walter N.

Haldeman, William B.

Hammond, John W.

Handley, Lizzie,
See also
Duke, Mrs. L. Z.

Hanson, Roger W.

Hanson, Virginia

Hardin, W. R.

Harris, Theodore

Hart, John F.

Hathaway, Leland

Hawkins, Rufus

Haynes, T. J.

Hazelrigg, J. H.

Helm, Ben Hardin

Hemphill, Charles R.

Henley, Lela

Herdt, Ida Ochsner

Herdt, Virginia “Gin”

Herdt, William

Hewitt, Fayette

Hindman, Biscoe

Hindman, Tom

Hoge, Peyton

Holloway, Lorenzo D.

Hourigan, John

Howe, Sarah Elizabeth “Lizzie,”
See also
Duke, Mrs. L. Z.

Humphrey, Ike

Hurley, J. J.

Jackson, W. L.

James, Henry E.

Jefferson Davis Memorial Home for Confederate Soldiers and Sailors (Biloxi, Miss.)

Jefferson Manley Faulkner Soldiers' Home (Mountain Creek, Ala.)

Jenkins, Jeb

Johnson, Annie Fellows

Jones, John T.

Kentucky Confederate Home (Pewee Valley), application for admission to, appropriations for, closing of, conditions within, daily life in, dedication of, descriptions of, donations to, establishment of, finances of, fires in, fundraising for, investigations of, nature of inmates at, overcrowding at, repairs to, rules of, selecting site of

Kentucky Federation of Women's Clubs

Knights of Pythias, Rathbone Lodge No. 12

Laffoon, Ruby

Laws, John Thomas

Lawson, Alexander

Lawton, Mary Craig

Leathers, Charles F.

Leathers, John Hess, biographical information for, on Home board, officer of Confederate Association of Kentucky, organizing Home, statewide Confederate organization

Lee Camp Soldiers' Home (Richmond, Va.)

Leer, Alice (Mrs. C. C. Leer)

Levy Bros.

Lewis, Joseph H.

Lexington Cemetery

Little, Matthew

Lost Cause, The
(magazine)

Lost Cause, the, explanation of, oratory of, rituals of

Lost Cause, The: A New Southern History of the War of the Confederates
(Pollard)

Louisiana soldiers' home.
See
Camp Nicholls Soldiers' Home

Louisville (National) Banking Company

Louisville Courier-Journal

Louisville Herald

Lovely, Andrew Jackson

L. Z. Duke Hall, dedication of, description of, entertainments held in, funeral services in, religious services in, as a tourist attraction

Mann, Mrs. Russell

Marshall, Birdie Parr

Marshall, John

Maryland Line Confederate Soldiers' Home (Pikesville)

Mastin, Mrs. George R.

McAllister, E. C.

McCreary, J. B.

McCreary, John B. (inmate)

McDonald, Harry P., distributes Home applications, political activities of

McFarlan, Alexander S., actions during fire, biographical information for, closes the Home, engineering duties of

Meade, Robert F.

Melbourne, H. C.

Miller, George A.

Miller, Polk

Milliken, George

Milton, William A.

Mississippi soldiers' home.
See
Jefferson Davis Memorial Home for Confederate Soldiers and Sailors

Missouri Confederate Soldiers' Home (Higginsville)

Mocabee, James H.

monument and memorial activities

Morgan, John Hunt

Morris, Charles K.

Morris, Mrs. John R.

Morrow, Edwin P.

Muir, P. B.

Muncey, J. P.

Mundy, Isaac

Nall, Imogene

Nesbitt, John

Nichols, S. R. B.

Noble, George W.

North Carolina Soldiers' Home (Raleigh)

Norvell, Otway Bradfute

O'Brien, Ed

Oklahoma Confederate Home (Ardmore)

Old Soldier Fiddlers

Oliver, M. W.

Osborne, Thomas D.

Parr, Daniel G., biographical information for, gift of property

Patee, John A.,
See also
Old Soldier Fiddlers

Patterson, T. B.

Patton, John B.

pensions, Confederate veteran, Union veteran

Pete, William “Willie”

Pewee Valley, Ky., considered as Home site, description of, residents interact with inmates, residents react to Home closing, residents react to Home location

Pewee Valley Cemetery Company

Pewee Valley Presbyterian Church

Peyton, Alfred N.

Pike, Joe B.

Pillans, Ida (Mrs. O. B. Norvell)

Pirtle, John

Pollard, Edward A.

Poyntz, John

Prewitt, Levi

Pryor, Rowan B.

Raines, Anna D.

Renaker, Buford

Renshaw, Finis

Reynolds, Dudley

Richards, Thomas

Robinson, John “Uncle Josh”

Rogers, James B.

Rural Education Association

Russell, Charles W.

Sale, Virginia (née Parr)

Sampson, Flem D.

Sanders, E. J.

Sea, Andrew

Sewell, Nat B.

Shearin, Lavan M.

Shumate, S. G.

Slemmons, Joe

Smith, Elbert

Smith, Horace

Smith, John Lynn

Smythe, Louisa McLeod

Snapp, Peter

Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV)

South Carolina Confederate Infirmary (Columbia)

Southerland, William

Southgate, E. L.

St. Aloysius Catholic Church (Pewee Valley, Ky.)

Stephan, Fred

Stevens, Thaddeus

St. James Episcopal Church (Pewee Valley, Ky.)

Stoess, Milton A.

Stone, Mrs. H. J.

Stone, W. J.

Tandy, George

Tapp, P. H.

Temple, Evie

Tennessee Soldiers' Home (Nashville)

Texas Confederate Home for Men (Austin)

Thomas, Benjamin

Thomas, Joshua

Thorne, W. P.

Travelin' Tree Man.
See
Duncan, Taliaferro Walton

United Confederate Veterans (UCV), Kentucky camps

United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), activities at Home, concern about Home conditions, Confederate Home chapter, early support of Home, efforts to save the Home, gifts and activities for inmates, and Home management, Kentucky chapters, World War I activities by

Vaughn, Thomas Jefferson

veteran reunions, GAR (Louisville, 1895), Kentucky-Tennessee (Nashville, 1896), Morgan's Men Association, national UCV reunions, origins and meanings of, Orphan Brigade, state UCV reunions, women's role in

Villa Ridge Inn

Virginia soldiers' home.
See
Lee Camp Soldiers' Home

Watkins, John

Webster, M. N.

Weller, John

Wells, George C.

White, Alexander N., arrives at Home, biographical information for, home activities

Wiessinger, Harry

Williams, Nannie H.

Women's Advisory Committee

Wood, George

Woodbury, Charlotte Osborne (Mrs. John L. Woodbury), biographical information for, dissatisfied with conditions at Home, efforts to save Home, serving on Home advisory committee

Woodruff, H. M.

Wooton, Bailey

Yopp, “Ten-Cent Bill”

Yopp, Thomas M.

Young, Bennett Henderson, biographical information for, death of, dedication of infirmary by, dedication of Kentucky Confederate Home by, fundraising efforts by, lobbying efforts by, oratorical skills of, organizational work on behalf of Kentucky Confederate Home by, St. Albans raid

Young, Lot D.

Other books

Gambling on the Bodyguard by Sarah Ballance
Behind the Palace Doors by Michael Farquhar
Washington and Caesar by Christian Cameron
A Perfect Husband by Fiona Brand
Bosom Bodies (Mina's Adventures) by Swan, Maria Grazia