Home / Civil War Genealogy / Tennessee / 41st Tennessee Infantry
41st Tennessee InfantryCSA Flag
Company Unknown
Thomas Hamilton Janes
- Sergeant
Volunteered for service 3 years December, 1863 at Shelbyville, TN. Shown on a muster roll as a private in Petersburg, Mississippi and later as a non-commissioned officer (nurse)in Jackson's cavalry in Newton, Mississippi in 1864. Stayed with the unit until their release at Guntersville, AL May 10, 1865. Born 27 Apr 1831 Franklin Co, TN d. 6 Feb 1911 and buried in Green Hill, Alabama. Wife's first name was Kizziah. He is my Grandson's ancestor.
Contact Name: Larry Cockerham
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Date Added: 4/13/2008

Company Unknown
thomas h warren
Rank Unknown
No comments
Contact Name: Jason
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Date Added: 9/30/2012

Company A
William H. Bagley
- Private
William was killed at the Battle of Raymond 12 May 1863. He is buried in the Confederate Cemetery in Hinds Co., Mississippi.
This is my wife's relative.
Contact Name: Donnie Stanford
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Contact Homepage: Yahoo
Date Added: 7/10/2010

Company A
James Robert Bunn
- Private
James Robert Bunn was a member of the 41st Tenn.
Contact Name: William Huckabee
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Date Added: 11/8/2018

Company A
Littleberry Leftwich
- 1st Lieutenant
Born 12/23/1819 to John Hopkins 'Jack' Leftwich (b. 05/08/1787, Bedford Virginia) and Janes Stevens Gill (b. 06/16/1792). Married Pauline or Perlina Pruit 12/12/1839. Had a total of 14 known children by two wives. Littleberry Leftwich, being the only son in a family of twelve, inherited the Leftwich home at Charity, TN, as was the custom of the day. He was a planter, owning slaves and maintaining a typical home of the Old South. As all slave holders did, he participated in politics, helping to maintain the supremacy of the slavocrats. He fought for the lost cause as First Lieutenant in the 41st Tennessee Regiment, and was taken prisoner at Fort Donelson, carried to Camp Chase, where he was kept for two and a half years, suffering all the hardships of prison life. However, the chief interest of his life were those of home and church. When a fanatic burned the old church which his father had erected, he replace it with a frame building, which still stands and continues to be known as Charity Church. He was always the chief strength and support of this church. He and his father, his children and many of his grandchildren rest in the old family cemetery in this church yard. He lived in our home when we were little children and always made ours the gayest Christmas of any in the neighborhood. He loved flowers and vegetables, taking great pride in having the rarest plants in the most beautiful garden in the community. He was gentle and good, and loved the higher and better things of life.' (Written by a granddaughter.) M231 roll 25
Contact Name: Donald Steven Smith
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Contact Homepage: http://www.mdscv.org/1388/adopt-a-confederate/
Date Added: 8/14/2006

Company A
David Anderson Luttrell
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: David A. Luttrell
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 5/7/2007

Company A
Mark Pyrdum
- Private
I am seeking information on my G G Grandfather Mark Pyrdum. Enlisted with the 41st Tenn.
Contact Name: Carl Pyrdum
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 1/12/2005

Company B
Jacob W. Wilhoite, IV
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: Larry Wilhoite
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 7/9/2008

Company C
Samuel Hathcock
- Private
Enlisted at Fayetteville Tennessee in 1862. Died of sickness on July 4, 1863 at the Confederate Hospital at Lauderdale Springs, MS and buried there.
Contact Name: John Scales
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 6/10/2011

Company C
William M Todd
- Private
William was born 1832 in NC his family moved to Tenn. He enlisted 4 Nov 1861 in Capt. James D Scott's Co. Tenn. Vol's. which became Co C 41st Tenn. Infantry commanded by Col Robert Farquharson. His regiment was surrendered at Fort Donelson Tenn. 16 Feb 1862 and he was taken as POW to Camp Morton in Indiana. He and another 595 men were exchanged at Aiken's Landing near Vicksburg, Miss. on 30 Sept 1862. He has 9 cards in his archival file the last of which says he was discharged 29 Jan 1863. No reason was given for the discharge. His initial training was at Camp of Instruction at Camp Trousdale, located in Portland, Sumner Co. Tenn. We are related by a distant marriage.
Contact Name: Phillip Thomas
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Date Added: 11/2/2021

Company E
William D. Gillum
- Private
W. D. Gillum joined the regiment at its organization and was captured only three months later at the Battle of Fort Donelson. He was exchanged from Camp Douglass in ''63 at Vicksburg and medically discharged for a ''rupture'' or hernia. He returned home to plow fields and at some point rejoined the army, perhaps on the Tennessee Campaign at which time the 19th/24th and 41st Tennessee regiments were consolidated. He was paroled with the remnants of the 41st Tennessee at Greensboro, N. C. in April 1865.
Contact Name: Jamie Gillum
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Date Added: 10/30/2004

Company E
jeremia alexander headrick
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: nick headrick
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Date Added: 3/18/2010

Company F
Alexander A. Lingo
Rank Unknown
No comments
Contact Name: Philip
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Date Added: 5/23/2011

Company F
Patrick Terry Murphy
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: Chris Moore
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Date Added: 1/29/2015

Company G
David J Davis
- Private
David J Davis was my G.G.Grandfather born in 1836 in York Distirct South Carolina. He moved with his parents to 1850-1860 Franklin Tennessee then to 1870 Texas where he spent the rest of his life in Bell Co with his wife Sarah F Wiggin
Contact Name: Michelle MIller
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Date Added: 6/18/2007

Company G
Robert P Davis
- Private
This is another Davis brother. Robert applied for and recived a pension from Tennessee for his service in the War.
Contact Name: Michelle MIller
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Date Added: 6/18/2007

Company G
Thomas M Davis
- Private
this is David J Davis brother he was injured and sent home after 1 year
Contact Name: Michelle MIller
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Date Added: 6/18/2007

Company G
William C davis
- Private
William was the last of the Davis brothers to serve in the war. He was killed in Clinton Ky in 1863.
Contact Name: Michelle MIller
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Date Added: 6/18/2007

Company G
I H Hall
Rank Unknown
No comments
Contact Name: John
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 12/2/2007

Company G
William Estes Murrell
- Captain
No comments
Contact Name: Bobby Carter
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Date Added: 1/11/2011

Company G
Peter J Noah
- Private
NOAH, Peter J. - The Texas State Archives contains a copy of Soldier's Application for a Pension in the name of Peter J. NOAH, Tarrant County. The petition was filed on January 8, 1914; Approved on December 1, 1913; and Allowed from March 1, 1914. '....I was honorably discharged in the winter of 1864 after the Battle of Franklin Tennessee.' '....served from December 1862 to January 1864.... Co. G, 41st Tennessee Infantry.' Witness M.W. LYTHE '...I knew Peter J. NOAH before the war. We were boys together and went to war from the same town, Salem, Tenn...' Witness J.M. MAYES '...I known Peter J. NOAH...About 65 years...In Salem Tenn... He served as a private soldier. He served nearly four years. I known that he served honorable until our Regiment was disbanded in Columbia, Tenn.'
Contact Name: Andrew Noah
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Date Added: 6/29/2013

Company G
William H Noah
- Private
I do not have a lot of info on him. The only thing I know is he is the younger brother of Peter J. Noah and that they served together.
Contact Name: Andrew Noah
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Date Added: 6/29/2013

Company G
Abraham Smith
- 2nd Sergeant
Captured at Fort Donelson Feb 16 1862. Oath of Alleginace Feb 4 1865 at Franklin Co, Tn buried near Lexie Crossroads Tn
Contact Name: John
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Date Added: 12/2/2007

Company G
G W Syler
Rank Unknown
No comments
Contact Name: John
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Date Added: 12/2/2007

Company G
George T Wiseman
- Private
Killed 9/19/1863 at Chickamauga
Contact Name: John
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Date Added: 12/2/2007

Company G
Martin V Wiseman
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: John
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 12/2/2007

Company G
R C Wiseman
- Private
From Moore Co tn.
Contact Name: John
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Date Added: 12/2/2007

Company G
Wiley M Wiseman
Rank Unknown
From Moore Co Tn joined with 3 brothers.
Contact Name: John
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Date Added: 12/2/2007

Company H
robert anyone
- Lt. Colonel
No comments
Contact Name: this one
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Date Added: 9/21/2005

Company H
William Marsh Few
- Private
My 3rd great grandfather. Died 1923. Buried in Midlothian City Cemetery, Midlothian, Ellis County, Texas
Contact Name: Larry L. Wilhoite
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 11/23/2017

Company H
David Lafayette Frazier
- Private
Name: David Lafayette FRAZIER
Sex: Male
Father: John Henry FRASER (25 Aug 1788 - 2 Jan 1847)
Mother: Ann S. Cranshaw (CRENSHAW) (5 Jun 1795 - 16 Dec 1852)

Individual Facts
Birth 16 Jan 1831 Tennessee
Land 12 Feb 1892 (age 61) Ozark County , Missouri
Death 26 Mar 1908 (age 77) Ozark County, Missouri
Burial Herndon Cemetery, Ozark County, Missouri
Military Civil War Company H 41st Tennessee Volunteer Infantry Regiment CSA; Tennessee

Marriages/Children
1. Elizabeth DOGGETT
Marriage 23 May 1854 (age 23) Tennessee
Census (fam) 8 Jun 1860 (age 29) Louisburg, Marshall County, Tennessee.
Census (fam) 1 Aug 1870 (age 39) Troy, Obion County, Tennessee
Children Emily Jane FRAZIER (18 Jan 1856 - 22 Apr 1894)
Martha Ann FRAZIER (6 Jan 1858 - 17 Mar 1938)
Hulda Jane (Jennie) FRAZIER (27 Feb 1860 - 31 Mar 1900)
Henry Jefferson FRAZIER (29 Nov 1861 - 4 Apr 1946)
Elihue Washington FRAZIER (20 Nov 1865 - 26 Dec 1932)
Luvenia FRAZIER (30 Sep 1867 - May 1943)
Joseph E. FRAZIER (5 Apr 1869 - )
Robert Lee FRAZIER (5 Apr 1869 - 14 Feb 1880)
Stonewall Jackson FRAZIER (4 Jun 1871 - 2 Feb 1919)

2. Nancy N. GUINN
Marriage 14 Sep 1875 (age 44) Obion County, Tennessee
Children Marion Luther FRAZIER (30 May 1876 - 20 Nov 1960)

3. Margaret E. BENNETT
Marriage 6 Feb 1881 (age 50) at the brides residence in Ozark County, Missouri
Children Allen Buckner FRAZIER (16 Aug 1882 - 1945)
Albert Sidney FRAZIER (29 Mar 1884 - )
Elizabeth (Betty) FRAZIER (16 Mar 1886 - 1 Nov 1979)
Alta FRAZIER (6 Feb 1888 - 10 Oct 1888)
Agnes FRAZIER (6 Feb 1888 - 9 Oct 1888)
Palmer FRAZIER (6 Feb 1888 - 17 Dec 1978)
David Leonard FRAZIER (16 Jan 1892 - )

Notes (Individual)
General: This story was told by 'Spike' Frazier according to Sharon Buck.
David was a confederate veteran in the Civil War. Signed in as a
teamster with an 'X' in 1861. Army records show he deserted in 1864.
When the war was over he left Obion Co., Tennessee and moved to Noble,
Missouri. He couldn't take the dog, so he left it there. The dog swam
the Mississippi River to come to his master. He was very weakened from
exposure and soon died. The family never found out how that dog made
such a long trip to find them.

Land (12 Feb 1892): Homestead Document No.7750
160 Acres
N½SW Section 1/ - Township 24-N - Range 15-W - 5th PM MO Ozark
W½1NW Section 1/ - Township 24-N - Range 15-W - 5th PM MO Ozark
NESE Section 2/ - Township 24-N - Range 15-W - 5th PM MO Ozark
The application number was 10812 and it was recorded in volume 16 Page
158
at the General Land Office on JANUARY 30,1904.
Burial: Herndon Cemetery - Ozark County, Missouri
Coordinates: Latitude: 36.78306° Longitude: -92.53222°
Directions: Two miles north of Almartha near Spring Creek.
Sources: Herndon Cemetery Inscriptions Compiled by J. Vernie Hicks, White River Valley Historical Quarterly.
Notes: Deeded in 1897 to the public by S. C. and Lucinda Herndon for the use of the 'inhabitants of Ozark and Douglas counties.' S. C. Herndon, who died in 1897, several months before the deed was registered, was buried in the cemetery which now carries his family name. The first burial in Herndon Cemetery with a dated stone is of John W. Orcutt, Jan 14, 1868, d. Mar 24, 1870. 'But it has been said that several were buried there before and during the War between the states,' Hicks reports. There are 214 known graves in the cemetery, 138 with headstones and 76 marked with rocks There are 14 burials listed here. This is not a complete inventory of this cemetery.

Military (Civil War): David L. Frazier served in Company H 41st Tennessee Volunteer
Infantry Regt. CSA. He volunteered for the Army on October 15, 1861
for a period of 12 months and was mustered into service November 4,
1861 at Camp Trousdale. He was captured at Fort Donelson on February
16, 1862 by forces commanded by Gen. U.S. Grant and sent to Camp
Morton, Indiana as a prisoner of war. He was later exchanged and
returned to his unit. He was wounded, probably at the battle of
Franklin, TN November 30, 1864 and, according to an article in the
PULASKI CITIZEN, he stayed behind with his family when Genl. John Bell
Hood retreated after the battle of Nashville in December of 1864. He
took his Oath of Amnesty at Pulaski, Giles County, Tennessee on
January 14, 1865.
The 41st fought in the battles of Chickamauga and Missionary Ridge in
Georgia. They also fought during the battle for Atlanta.
After the War David L. Frazier and his family moved to Obion County,
Tn. They lived near Troy, Tn. They were living there when the 1870
census was taken. His wife, Elizabeth Doggett Frazier died and is
buried in Obion County, Tn.

41st Infantry


The officers and men of Company H, 41st Tennessee Infantry were from Brick Church and other Giles County communities and from Cornersville. Cornersville was in Giles County until the northeast section of Giles County was ceded to Marshall County in 1870. Thus, the men and officers of this company were all Giles Countians in 1861. One thousand men in ten companies formed the 41st Tennessee Infantry at its organization at Camp Trousdale, Tennessee, in November, 1861. All were volunteers. Robert Farquarson was elected Colonel of the regiment. The Giles County company was headed by Captain Robert G. McClure, who was elected Lieutenant Colonel of the regiment and replaced by Captain John Osborne. The regiment was ordered first to Bowling Green, Kentucky, where it became part of General Simon B. Buckner's Division of The Central Army of Kentucky. Ordered to Fort Donelson on the Cumberland River on February 12, 1862, the 41st Tennessee Infantry was attached to Colonel John C. Brown's Brigade of Buckner's Division. During the Battle of Fort Donelson the 41st Tennessee took an active part in the fighting and reported 575 engaged, 2 killed, 6 wounded, and 26 missing. The 41st Tennessee was surrendered with the rest of Buckner's Division on February 16, 1862, and sent to various northern prisons. After seven months in prison, the men of the 41st Tennessee were released on parole at Vicksburg, Mississippi, September 18, 1862, and the regiment was reorganized at Clinton, Mississippi, on the 29th of September. The regiment was officially declared exchanged on November 10, 1862. Some members of the 41st Tennessee had not been captured at Fort Donelson, had served in other regiments, and now returned to the 41st Tennessee. On December 27, 1862, the 41st Tennessee was placed in Brigadier General John Gregg's Brigade along with the 3rd Tennessee Infantry and other infantry regiments. The 41st Tennessee reported 526 effectives at that time. Early in January, 1863, Gregg's Brigade moved to Port Hudson, Louisiana, and remained there as a silent spectator during the bombardment until May 2, 1863, when they left for Jackson, Mississippi. On May 12th, 1863, The 41st Tennessee was heavily engaged in the Battle of Raymond, Mississippi. After some severe skirmishing near Jackson, the 41st Tennessee was stationed near Vernon, Mississippi, on June 30th, and was at Yazoo City when Vicksburg fell of the 4th of July, 1863. 'At Yazoo City the men and officers disposed of a large portion of their jewelry, consisting of watches, rings, and chains, to the ever-vigilant and far-sighted Jews. They seemed to know that the surrender of Vicksburg could be delayed only a few days, and then that a ring of the value of two or three dollars would be worth more than two or three hundred dollars of Confederate money.' The 41st Tennessee 'was encamped during the month of August at Enterprise, Mississippi, where it feasted on peaches done in every style, and played poker for the money it had received for its jewelry at YazooCity.' In September, 1863, the 41st Tennessee was transferred to the Army of Tennessee and ordered to north Georgia, where they were soon heavily engaged in the Battle of Chickamauga on the 19th and 20th of September. The regiment reported 325 men engaged in the battle and suffered severely in killed and wounded. Following the Battle of Chickamauga, Gregg's Brigade was broken up and the 41st Tennessee was placed in General George Maney's Brigade. They fought in the Battle of Missionary Ridge on November 25th, 1863. Retreating to the vicinity of Dalton, Georgia, the 41st Tennessee and the rest of the Army of Tennessee went into winter quarters. On December 14, 1863, the 41st Tennessee reported 201 effectives, 226 present, with 151 arms. From there the history of the Army of Tennessee is the history of the 41st Tennessee Infantry. They fought daily under the command of General Joe Johnston during the retreat to Atlanta and fought in the Battle of Jonesboro, Georgia, on August 31, 1863. In June, the 41st Tennessee had been transferred to Brigadier General Otho Strahl's Brigade. General John Bell Hood led the Army of Tennessee across Alabama and home to Tennessee in the latter part of 1864. Hood's ill-fated plans to recapture Nashville resulted in the disasterous battles of Franklin and Nashville. The defeated Army of Tennessee retreated southward from Nashville toward the safety of the Tennessee River, passing through Giles County during the Christmas holidays of 1864. The remnants of the 41st Tennessee Infantry surrendered with the Army of Tennessee on April 26, 1865, at Salisbury, North Carolina, and was paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, on May 1, 1865. 'The 41st Tennessee was ever ready to do, or to attempt to do, whatever was ordered, whether to dig a ditch or cross one in the face of the enemy, to charge a battery or go on picket. It lost more men on picket than in the charge. Its dead are laid away in unmarked graves in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee, and in the prison cemeteries of Camp Douglas, Camp Morton, Rock Island, and Camp Chase.' A roster of Company H, 41st Tennessee Infantry published in the PULASKI CITIZEN (date unknown): OFFICERS. McClure, R. G., Capt., promoted to Lt. Col., not retained in organization. Osborn, J. E., 1st Lt., promoted to Capt., now in prison. Robbins, R. P., 3rd Lt., discharged. Vancleave, J. M., 2nd Lt., promoted to Capt. in 5th TN, wounded and discharged. Edwards, W. R., 1st Sgt., promoted to 2nd Lt., discharged from 5thTN. Cochran, J. C., 2nd Sgt., discharged at Clinton, MS. Ewing, A. L., 3rd Sgt., Regt. mlt. commissionary Supt., now in prison. Vancleave, N. J., 5th Sgt., promoted to 2nd Sgt., wounded at Franklin, TN. Boyd, Jesse, 1st Corp., discharged at Trousdale, TN. McKnight, James, 2nd Corp., discharged at Port Hudson, LA. McCorkle, J. J., 3rd Corp., promoted to Sgt. in 5th TN, killed in Perryville, KY. Walker, J. T., 4th Corp., discharged at Judson, MS. PRIVATES. Allen, Jack, died at Columbia, TN. Alexander, W. R., wounded at Raymond, MS, died at hospital in GA. Beasley, Archer, promoted to 1st Sgt., wounded. Beasley, D. H., wounded at Richmond, KY, discharged. Beasley, W. S., promoted to rank 1st Lt. Ensign, wounded, in prison. Beasley, D. B., died at Clinton, MS. Bills, T. N., promoted to ensign, wounded. Brown, J. W., promoted to 3rd Sgt., died at Marion, MS. Brents, W. T., captured at Nashville, in prison. Bryant, Richard, prisoner of war from 17th TN. Boyd, Sy, discharged at Trousdale, TN. Cowden, J. C., discharged at Port Hudson, LA, wounded. Cowden, W. M., promoted to Capt. in Commissionary Dept., resigned. Cochran, E. A., killed at Perryville, KY. Cochran, L. N., present. Cochran, Dubin, discharged at Port Hudson, LA. Collins, W. N., died in prison. Cooper, W. H., promoted to Capt., present. Cole, T. N., promoted to 1st Corp., killed by accident at Dalton, GA. Compton, A. D., promoted to Cpl., killed at Franklin, TN. Cooke, J. D., captured, wounded at Missionary Ridge, in prison. Cooke, W. J., died at Lauderdale Springs, MS. Claxton, A. C., at hospital, Augusta, GA. Cox, R. B., transferred to 5th TN, promoted to Ordinance Supt. Cox, Jackson, died at Port Hudson, LA. Doggett, Newton, wounded, teamster in supply train. Duncan, W. E., left sick at Russellville, KY, went to 11th TN Cavalry. Duncan, J. W., discharged at Trousdale, TN. Downing, J. G., discharged at Port Hudson, LA. Ewing, I. A., musician in 5th TN band. Ewing, Robert, killed at Missionary Ridge. Edmondson, J. W., promoted to 1st Lt. in 7th TN Cavalry. Eakin, Abraham, discharged at Clinton, MS. Fitzpatrick, M. J., wounded at Perryville, KY, in 11th TN Cavalry. Fowler, A. L., promoted to Corp., discharged at Clinton, MS. Fowler, A. C., died in prison. Frazier, D. L., remained in TN on Hood's retreat, wounded. Few, W. M., discharged by Sectr. War at Port Hudson, LA. Few, A. M., died at Tupelo, MS. Garrett, W. G., died at Port Hudson, LA. Holley, W. M., died at Clinton, MS. Hopwood, M. J., bugler for Regt., wounded at Rocky Face, in hospital. Haislip, A. J., died near Port Hudson, LA. Jordan, T. B., killed in Nashville, TN. Jordan, W. H., mortally wounded at Resaca, Ga, and died. Jones, J. J., severely wounded at Perryville, KY. James, W. C., died at Clinton, MS. Job, Stephen, died at Vicksburg, MS. Kelly, J. W., captured at Missionary Ridge. London, W. T., died in Covington, LA. Little, Sumpter, died in prison. Liles, Joe, died in prison. Logston, Thos. L., discharged at Jackson, MS. Lane, J. S., discharged at Port Hudson, LA. McCrory, Jas., killed in MS. McGaugh, W. W., promoted to 5th Sgt., killed at Franklin. McGaugh, T. J., captured at Missionary Ridge. Matthews, Marquis, died in prison. Morton, S. D., present. McCandless, A. J., discharged at Port Hudson, LA. Nix, W. H., died in prison. Morton, E. A., discharged at Tippers Ford, MS. Nix, Newton, went to 5th TN, captured. Oliver, T. J., wounded and died in prison. Park, G. M., wounded, prisoner of war. Park, T. Z., died in prison. Park, Jerome, died in prison. Park, F. M., wounded, prisoner of war. Park, A. J., wounded, prisoner of war. Paxton, J. A., transferred to 3rd TN, Port Hudson, LA. Paxton, Z. Z., transferred to 3rd TN, Port Hudson, LA. Pearson, T. H., wounded at Resaca, now at hospital in Alabama. Phillips, B. F., went to 11th TN Cavalry. Phillips, W. A., killed at Jackson, MS. Robinson, W. C., died at Canton, MS. Rosson, J. G., discharged at Jackson, MS. Reid, Jones, discharged from 5th TN at Corinth. Reid, Enoch, discharged at Trousdale, TN. Samson, James, discharged at Jackson, MS. Slaughter, R. M., captured at Nashville, wounded. Tillman, W. R., killed at Chickamauga. Tillman, T. T., died at Perryville, KY. This roster must have been compiled in early 1865 since Hood's retreat was mentioned (Hood's retreat took place in December, 1864) and 3 members of the company were present at the time the roster was compiled. Numerous members of this company were listed as prisoners of war, further indication that the war was still in progress. Of the 94 men listed on this roster, 35 were listed as dead.



Notes (Family #1)
Census (fam) (8 Jun 1860): David's brother Eldridge was living with him when this census was taken,




Prepared by:
Norman D. Price
1898 Cumberland Rd.
Bates City, Missouri 64011
krieger@accessmo.us
Contact Name: Norman D. Price
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 2/2/2008

Company H
GEORGE C. GLENN
- Corporal
George C. Glenn was my great grandfather and was from Giles county at the time of the war. The area he resided in would later became Marshall county. The 41st was made up of men from Lincoln, Bedford, Marshall and Franklin counties. Its organization was completed at Camp Trousdale, Tn. in Nov. 1861 and moved to Bowling Green, Ky. The 41st served at Fort Donelson, Raymond, Chickamauga and Atlanta.
Contact Name: TOM GLENN
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 9/3/2013

Company H
Levi Osburn
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: Melissa Massey
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 5/14/2007

Company H
James Edmiston Sansom
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: Steve Sansom
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 9/11/2010

Company I
David Lafayette Lynch
- 1st Lieutenant
Application: Association of Confederate Soldiers, Tennessee Division

No. 10 on Roll Book
Bivouac No. 13
David Lynch
Co. I, 41st Tennessee Regiment
to Bivouac No. 13
Located at Winchster
Date of Admis'n 19 July, 1889
W. H. Brannon President
J. J. Martin Recording Sec'ty

Born - March 19, 1840, Franklin County
Enlisted Confederate Army Sept. 1861
Company I, 41st Tenn. Regiment
Rank at time of enlisting 1st Seargent
Army of Tennessee

Wounded slightly several times in different battles, but not sufficient to leave
the battle field

Captured at Fort Donaldson (sic) 16 Sept. 1862
Released Sept. 1862

Paroled May 1865

Rank at close of War 1st Lieutenant

Occupation, Clerk of Chancery Court

Remarks, I do not remember the day I was sworn into service. I was ass(igned)
Post duty at Atlanta Georgia, where the Confederate Army surrendered, and was
forced to remain there until May 1865.

Recommended by J. R. Murrell
Isaac Vanzant, Jr.

B. G. Slaughter
T. B. Terry
Committee
Contact Name: John Lynch
Contact Email: Show Email
Contact Homepage: http://www.sherwoodtenn.com
Date Added: 3/7/2007

Company I
thomas g miller
- Lt. Colonel
No comments
Contact Name: jim dotson
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 9/21/2005

Company K
James Franklin Farrar
- Private
Uncle James was over forty at age of enlistment at Trousdale TN on Nov. 26, 1861.
The records I have show him as being sickly most of the time with an unspecified illness. He was discharged for medical reasons in Port Hudson LA March 18, 1863. And returned home to Franklin TN.
Contact Name: Floyd Farrar
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 7/25/2009

Company K
David Mullins
- Private
From New Hermon, 22nd District of Bedford Co., TN. Captured at Dover, TN. Interned at Camp Morton, Indiana. Released from POW October 1862. Died Nov 1863 at battle of Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga, TN.
Contact Name: Patricia Mullins Haggarty
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 6/22/2009

Company K
william valentine mullins
- Private
No comments
Contact Name: cherianderton@hotmail.com
Contact Email: Show Email
Date Added: 2/2/2011

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