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Results for Confederate Monument

Confederate Monument - Jacksonville

Located in Hemming Plaza, the monument was erected in 1898 and paid for by Charles C. Hemming, a wealthy banker and Confederate veteran. Hemming had joined the Jacksonville Light Infantry in 1861, fought in the western theater, and was captured ...

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Confederate Monument-DeFuniak Springs

Located on the lawn of the county courthouse, the Walton County

Confederate monument is apparently Florida's first stone memorial to the Confederacy. The monument was originally erected in 1871 at the Euchee Valley Presbyterian Church by the Walton County Female ...

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Forrest County Confederate Monument

[Northeast Inscription]:

C.S.A.

To the Men and Women of

the Confederacy

1861-1865

[Southwest Inscription]:

When their county called

they held back nothing.

They cheerfully gave their

property and their lives.

Through the devotion and

untiring efforts of the

Hattiesburg Chapter No. 422

of the United Daughters

of the Confederacy, this

monument is erected to

the honor ...

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Barton Street Confederate Monument

This monument is dedicated to honor the memory of the 51 Confederate Soldiers buried here in the Barton Street Cemetery. They died in Fredericksburg, Virginia between the months of October 1861 and March 1862. The Rev. Alfred M. Randolph of ...

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Sussex County Confederate Monument

(front)

Our Confederate Soldiers

“The principles for which they fought live eternally.”

(rear)

List of companies organized in

and sent out from Sussex County:

Co.A, 41st Va. Reg’t, Infantry,

“Sussex Sharp Shooters”;

Co.D, 13th Va. Reg’t, Cavalry;

Co.E, 16th Va. Reg’t, Infantry;

Co.F, 41st Va. Reg’t, Artillery,

Wise’s Legion;

Co.H, 13th Va. ...

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Walton County Confederate Monument

 

Obelisk

To the memory of the Confederate Dead of Walton Co. Florida. Erected by the Ladies of the Walton County Female Memorial Association.

Base

Southwest face

Angus D. McLean, Col., 6th Fla. Vols.

Murdoch M. Gillis, Capt. 6th Fla. ...

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Florida's First Confederate Monument

Shortly after the Civil War, the women of Walton County organized a "Ladies' Memorial Association," with Jeannett I. McKinnon as president, to erect a marble monument honoring Walton County's Confederate dead. The Association raised $250, and the monument was first ...

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The Confederate Monument

This monument created due to the efforts of George B. Payne. In 1875 Payne lived in Topeka, Kansas. During the Civil War Payne was a private in the 4th Kentucky Infantry. He served as a courier for Gen. John C. ...

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Cross Hill Confederate Monument

[North Inscription]:

To Our

Confederate Soldiers

[West Inscription]:

1861 CSA 1865

Confederate

[South Inscription]:

"Who were nor

Terrified by Death

not Dishonored by

Defeat."

Marker is at the intersection of Main Street (State Highway 39) and Church Street on Main Street.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Confederate Soldiers Monument

(Front):

Confederate Soldiers

monument

On these grounds between 1861-1865

over 1500 men from Gaston County

answered the call of their State and

County to Defend the South in the

War between the States.

(Back):

Co. 1-11 87th NC Militia

Co. M 16th NC Troops

Co. H 23rd NC Troops

Co. B 28th ...

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