Sam Davis.
Confederate hero, 1842-1863.
Description
- Language(s)
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English
- Published
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[Nashville?] 1947.
- Summary
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"During the War Between the States, there lived in Tennessee a lad named Sam Davis, who was born on a farm near Smyrna in Rutherford County, October 6, 1842, the eldest son of Charles Lewis Davis and his second wife, Jane Simmons. His ancestors were of good steady Virginia and North Carolina Stock ..."--Page 13. Young Sam Davis was a soldier in the Confederate Army serving under Captain H.B. Shaw's "Coleman's Scouts". He was captured by Union soldiers, tried by military court and sentenced to death. He " ... died by hanging as "Spy" at Pulaski, Giles County, Tennessee, November 27, 1863, unmarried. He is known as the "Hero of Tennessee" in the war of 1863-1865."--Page 101. This record includes the genealogical record of the of the family of Sam Davis. "Since this outline is only to show the lineage of one particular branch, that of Sam Davis, the Tennessee hero, and not treating the Davis name in general, all other brances will be eliminated. No effort has been made to trace this lineage beyond David Davis of Middlesex County, Virginia, who apparently was the progenitor. David Davis died in Middlesex County, leaving a will dated Feb. 3, 1712 probated 3 March 1712 ..."--P. 83. Descendants and relatives of David Davis lived in Tennessee, Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Texas and elsewhere
- Note
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Includes the Davis, Simmons, Collier and Gee families.
- Physical Description
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147 pages
illustrations, portraits, maps
24 cm
Viewability
Item Link |
Original Source |
Full view
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University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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