Friday, February 26, 2010

Workday

The workday at the Old Zion Church Cemetery on Saturday, February 27, has been cancelled due to the weather. We will reschedule this for a later date.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Looking for these soldiers.

All of these men were from the Toe River Valley area and served in Company B, 29th North Carolina Troops. A few transferred to Company K. If you know where any of these men are buried, please drop us line.

Thomas Calloway Pvt.
John L. Case Pvt.
Thomas Elkins Pvt.
Mark England Pvt.
Allen Fender Pvt.
Isaham Fender Pvt.
Samuel Grant Pvt.
James Greene Pvt.
James W. Harris Pvt.
Nathan M. Harris Pvt.
Nelson Harris Pvt.
Thomas D. Harris Pvt.
W.A. Harris Pvt.
Abram Hensley Pvt.
Andrew J. Hensley Pvt.
Bacchus S. Hensley 2Lt.
G.M Hensley Pvt.
Howard Hensley Pvt.
James B. Hensley Pvt.
Jesse Hensley Pvt.
John A. Hensley Pvt.
Lewis W. Hensley Pvt.
Silas Hensley Pvt.
W.M. Hicks Pvt.
William Hubbard Pvt.
D. V. Hunter Pvt.
D.M. Ingle Pvt.
A.L Johnson Pvt.
Emory Jones Pvt.
James B. Kaiser Pvt.
James W. Kendrick Pvt.
Robert E. King Pvt

Monday, February 1, 2010

Lt. Col. Samuel M. SIlver

Sometimes, you just can’t believe what you read. A few months back, I had a discussion with someone at one of our local historical festivals, involving who commanded the 58th NCT during the battle of Bentonville. Standing on the square in the town of Burnsville, without any notes, I was quite certain that it was Maj. G. W. F. Harper. My friend was sure he had read it was Lt. Col. Samuel M. Silver. I now understand where my friend got his information.

Samuel Marion Silver was born on December 30, 1833, in present-day Mitchell County. He enlisted in Capt. John Keener’s Company on June 25, 1862. Keener’s company became Company K of the 58th North Carolina Troops on July 29, 1862. Silver rose through the ranks, being elected a lieutenant, and when Keener was promoted, Captain, of Company K.

In 1864, with a high rate of attrition of field officers in the 58th NCT, the position of Major was open. Colonel Palmer, who was no longer assigned to the regiment, but remained its colonel, recommended Captain Silver. One of Silver’s fellow line officers, Captain A. T. Stewart (Company E), believed that the promotion should be his. Stewart would get the promotion, but was killed on August 31, 1864, at the battle of Jonesboro. Silver was promoted to lieutenant colonel on October 29, 1864, and commanded the 58th North Carolina Troops. He served in this position un March 16, 1865, when he submitted his resignation, claiming that he was “sufficiently educated to perform the executive duties of the office” he had, and that the situation of his family in western North Carolina, subjected to “tories and deserters,” necessitated his presence. Interestingly, Silver’s application was rejected. However, he had left the regiment.

In 1901, in response to a query for histories of various regiments, Isaac Bailey, a former Captain of Company B, sent in some notes, mostly about the battle of Chickamauga. Bailey was wounded during the battle of Chickamauga and would eventually retire. He was not present during the battle of Bentonville. Concerning the battle, Bailey wrote: “On 19-21 March at Bentonville, the last battle ever fought by our war-worn soldiers, [the 58th NCT] was a part of General Jos. B, Palmer’s Brigade and commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Silver, fought with accustomed valor. (Clark’s NC Troops)

However, this is not what those who participated in the battle wrote. On March 29, 1865, just a few days after the battle, Brig. Gen. Joseph Palmer praised the 58th NCT, writing that “Capt. G. W. F. Harper, commanding Fifty-eighth North Carolina… handled [his] command with ability and bore [himself] handsomely through the day…” (Official Records, vol. 47, pt. 1:1101) One of the first things you are taught regarding historical research, is to put more credence in what was written at the time, not what was written forty years later by someone who was not there.

Following the War, Samuel Silver moved around. He lived in Mitchell County and McDowell Count; he then went to Texas, and finally settled in Oregon where he died in 1922.