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There is no other legend quite like the Confederate fighting man. He reached the end of his haunted road long ago. He fought for a star-crossed cause and in the end he was beaten, but as he carried his slashed red battle flag into the dusky twilight of the Lost Cause he marched straight into a legend that will live as long as the American people care to remember anything about the American past.
…. Bruce Canton ….
Leonard Travis Cranford
Company B, 12th Regiment of Alabama Infantry, wounded at Petersburg, finished war in Union Hospital at Point Lockout, MD as POW.
James A. Cranford
2nd Battalion Hilliard’s Legion (later merged to 59th Alabama Infantry Regiment) in 1862, died at the Division Hospital, Fair Ground #2, Atlanta, GA October 1863
George W. Haile
Company A, 11th Regiment of Tennessee Infantry, captured at Missionary Ridge, POW for 18 months at Rock Island, IL.
Hyrum T. Jackson
10th Regiment of Arkansas Infantry, wounded at Shiloh, furloughed to AR, didn’t return
B. F. Jackson
10th Regiment of Arkansas Infantry, later reformed as10th Regiment of Arkansas Cavalry
Jacob A Kever
Co F, 37th Regiment of North Carolina Infantry
Isaac Logan
63d Regiment of Alabama Infantry, less than 17 years old
James Logan
Co G, 2d Regiment of Alabama Cavalry
John Logan
Co C, 59th Regiment of Alabama Infantry
Sidney Norton
Co A, 6th Regiment of North Carolina Cavalry
William Alexander Norton
Wounded 5-5-1864 at Wilderness, VA, died of wounds 5-8-1864, 38th Regiment of North Carolina Infantry