James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
Note 1:
Father listed as Peter 'Bartile'
Note 2:
GodParents listed
1. Friedrich Bertalg
2. Cristian _____
3. Sophia Schumanns
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
Spelling of last name questionable.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
Spelling of last name in register 'Bertallin'
Note:
Godparents listed as:
1. Martin Panten
2. Samuel ______
3. Dorthe. Bertallin
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
Note 1:
Last name listed as 'Bretalg'
Note 2:
Godparents listed as:
1. Johannes Lange
2. ________ Rubow
3. Regina Krueger
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
James Kraft 1999. All material is the sole property of James Kraft. All rights reserved.
The Baptism of Wainwright Giggleman is duly noted in the Baptismal register of the St. Stephens Episcopal Church, St. Stephens, S.C. April 22, 1845. It's presumed that his birth was that day or one or two days before. His parents are not noted in the register.
Born into a plantation family, Wainwright enlisted in the Confederate Army at the onset of the Civil War September 3, 1861. He was a Private in Company K., 10th South Carolina Infantry, throughout the war. A listing of the actions he participated in follows:
1. Operations against the Union advance on, and the siege of Corinth, Mississippi
(April 29 - May 30, 1862).
2. Retreat to Booneville, Mississippi (May 30 - June 12, 1862).
3. Munfordville, Kentucky (September 14 - September 17, 1862).
4. Operations against the Union advance on Murfreesborough, Tennessee
(December 26 - 30, 1862).
5. Battle, Stone's River, Murfreesborough, Tennessee
(December 30, 1862 - January 3, 1863).
6. Campaign in Middle Tennessee (Tullahoma Campaign) (June 23 - July 7, 1863.
7. Operations of Middle Temessee, Passage of the Cumberland Mountains and Chickamauga, Georgia campaign
(August 16 - September 22, 1863).
8. Skirmishes near Lee and Gordon's Mill. Georgia (September 16 - 18, 1863).
9. Battle of Chickamauga. Georgia (September 19 - 21, 1863).
10. Siege of Chattanooga, Tennessee (September 24 - November 23, 1863).
11. Campaign. Chattanooga, Tennessee and Ringgold, Georgia
(November 23 - November 27, 1863).
12. Assault and Capture of Missionary Ridge, Tennessee (November 24 - 25, 1863).
13. Operations against the demonstration on Dalton, Georgia (February 22 - 27, 1864).
14. Actions, Tunnell, Buzzard's Roost Gap, and Rocky Faced Ridge, Georgia
(February 23 - 25, 1864).
15. Atlanta Campaign (May, 1 - September 8, 1864).
16. Operations against the demonstration on Rocky Faced Ridge, Georgia
(May 8 - 11, 1864).
17. Combat, Buzzard's Roost Gap (Mill Creek), Georgia (May, 8 - 9, 1864).
18. Battle, Resaca, Georgia (May, 14 - 15, 1864).
19. Operations on the line of Pumpkin Vine Creek and Battles about Dallas, New Hope Church, and Allatoona
Hills, Georgia (May 25 - June 5, 1864).
20. Action, Pickett's Mill, Georgia (May 27,1864).
21. Operations around Marietta and against Kenesaw Mountain, Georgia
(June 10 -July 2, 1864).
22. Combat around Pine Hills, Georgia (June 11 - 14, 1864).
23. Combat around Lost Mountain, Georgia (June 15 - 17, 1864).
24. Combat around Kolb's Farm, Georgia (June 22, 1864).
25. Assault upon Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia (June 27, 1864).
26. Operations on the Iine of Nickajack Creek, Georgia (July 2 - 5, 1864).
27. Operations on the line of the Chattahoochee River, Georgia (July 5 - 17, 1864).
28. Battle of Atlanta, Georgia (July 22, 1364).
29. Siege of Atlanta, Georgia (July 23 - August 25, 1864).
30. Battle of Ezra's Chapel, Georgia (July 25, 1864).
31. Battle of Jonesborough, Georgia (August 31 - September 1, 1864).
32. Engagement at Lovejoy Station, Georgia (September 2 - 5, 1864).
33. Hood's operations in Northern Georgia and Northern Alabama
(September 29 - November 3, 1864).
34. Skirmishes on the line of Shoal Creek, Alabama (November 16 - 20, 1864).
35. Battle of Franklin, Tennessee (November 30, 1864).
36. Battle of Nashville, Tennessee (December 15 - 16, 1864).
37. Campaign of the Carolinas (January 30 - April 26, 1865).
38. Battle of Averysborough (Taylor's Hole Creek), North Carolina
(March 16, 1865).
39. Battle of Bentonville, North Carolina (March 19 - 21, 1865).
40. Surrender, Bennett's House, Durham Station, North Carolina (April 26, 1865).
Wainwright had enlisted with his brother, J.J. Giegelman who apparently was discharged during the early stages of the war.
He's found on the 1910 South Carolina census living in St. Stephens, S.C. and on the 1920 census living as a boarder with his wife and son LeRoy in Little Rock, Arkansas at his sister in law's boarding house. (Emma Darragh)
Amos Lee b. 1861 m.Celia West had a son William Lee b.1791 S.C. he married Massey West? 1816, died union co. S.C. they had Celia Lee Sullivan...Lots of info on her brothers that moved to Matagorda Co. Texasin 1858."History of Matagorda Co."
Amos Lee b. 1861 m.Celia West had a son William Lee b.1791 S.C. he married Massey West? 1816, died union co. S.C. they had Celia Lee Sullivan...Lots of info on her brothers that moved to Matagorda Co. Texasin 1858."History of Matagorda Co."
Glenna Hooks - Aug 19, 2001
Categories: PATILLA EDWARD LEE Patilla Edward Lee
Born: 6 January 1817 in Union County, South Carolina
Died: 19 June 1893 in Sharp County, Arkansas
Wife: Harriet Minerva Williams
Born: 23 February 1838 in Matagorda County, Texas
Died: 29 November 1857 in Matagorda County, TexasPatilla is buried in the "Sullivan" Cemetery in Sharp County, Arkansas. Patilla and Harriet were maried on 27 May 1844 in Matagorda County, the Republic of Texas.
Patilla Lee is first known to have been in Texas on April 17, 1837 when he joined the Army of the Republic of Texas. He was the oldest of four children of William Lee and his wife, Massey. Patilla and his siblings did not stay in South Carolina. They migrated to Tennessee and Arkansas, then on to Texas. Celia Ann, his sister, stayed in Arkansas. This is who he was visiting at the time of his death.
On the 1850 Matagorda County, Texas census, Patilla listed his occupation as a waggoner. He also became a justice of the peace after 1855. He owned land in Matagorda Countyl.
The Texas State Archives in Austin, Texas, has two Second Class "B" Certificates for Patilla Lee. The first is number 4243, a claim for services as a private in Captain Rugeleys Company on the Vasques Campaign in 1842, which paid him $29.25. It was issued on 13 September 1843 as a Public Debt of the Late Republic of Texas. The second one was issued on 6 April 1854, number 5399, a claim for services on the Wall Campaign in the amount of $15.75.
Patilla and Harriet had five children. Harriet died in November of 1857, and Patilla remarried sometime before 1860, as the 1860 Matagorda County census shows him with a wife, Sarah. Sarah is believed to have been Sarah O'Neal Oglethorpe Sojourner, a widow with several children, but none of the children from her previous marriage are listed with her in the census schedules. Sarah and Patilla had four more children.
The nine children of Patilla Lee are as follows:
1. Mary F. Lee, born 10 February 1847. She married her first cousin, Preston P. Sullivan on 22 October 1865 in Matagorda County, and removed to Arkansas to live with her aunt and the family there. Preston was the child of Celia Ann Lee Sullivan, sister of Patilla Lee. Mary died in Arkansas on 6 August 1892.
2. John Edward Lee, born in April 1849. He married first, Elizabeth Hobbs, on 15 March 1871. Elizabeth died, and John married her niece, Jane Wofford. They had a very large family and spent their entire lives in Matagorda County.
3. Celia Ann Lee, born 21 April 1851. She married Jesse Hobbs, brother of Elizabeth Hobbs and Uncle of Jane Wofford. They had seven children. They lived in Matagorda County until 1886 when they removed to Brazoria County. Celia died on Christmas Day, 1903 in an influenza epidemic.
4. Susan E. Lee, born in 1853. The author is not aware what happened to this child after 1860.
5. Laura P. Lee, born in 1857. She was the last of Harriet's children. The author is not aware what happened to this child after 1860.
6. Sarah Emma Lee, born in 1863 was the first of Sarah's children. Matagorda County marriage records show she married to a John Bandy. Nothing more is known about Sarah Emma.
7. Amos Lee, who was born 1866. He married on 13 November 1890, Annie L. Baxter. Nothing more is know about Annie.l
9. Maude Ida Lee, born June 1872. Married 30 May 1892 to John T. Bond. Some of her descendants are also searching for the origin of the Lees, but the author is not acquainted with them.
A descendant of John Edward Lee has been to Calamine and seen the tombstone under which Patilla Lee is buried. It was seen in 1970 by Clinton Joe Bass who stated the stone had the following inscription: Patilla Beloved husband of Sara Lee Born Jan 6, 1817 Died June 19, 1893
(Clinton Joe Bass is the great grandson of John Edward Lee and his wife, Elizabeth Hobbs.)
ALL DESCENDANTS OF PATILLA EDWARD LEE ARE ELIGIBLE FOR APPLICATION TO THE DAUGHTERS OF THE REPUBLIC OF TEXAS (THROUGH PATILLA AND HARRIET'S FATHER BOTH) AND THE SONS/DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION (THROUGH