Showing posts with label Walton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walton. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Tombstone Tuesday - Chas. Walton



Memory of
Chas. Walton
Died Nov. 8th 1845
Aged 31 [34?] years 

Buried Smithland Cemetery, Smithland, Kentucky. Tombstone photographed 8 October 2014. Note the weeping willow tree, the universal symbol of mourning,  at the top of the tombstone.  If there was ever an epitaph, it is now below ground level. 

Charles Walton and Mrs. Elizabeth Seldon were married 16 January 1840 by James McCawley, JP.   S.Y. Fletcher gave consent in the following note: "I do hereby cirtify that Mrs. Elisabeth Seldon is under my protection & has my consent to marry Mr. Chas. Walton."[1]

 Charles Walton appears on the 1840-1845 Livingston County Tax lists. He is listed as a white male age 21 and over. Apparently, he owned neither land nor horse.

 Elizabeth Walton, age 30 and born North Carolina, was living in the household of Caroline Hall on the 1850 Livingston County census.[2] It is unknown if she was the widow of Charles Walton.



[1] Joyce McCandless Woodyard. Livingston County, Kentucky Marriage Records Including Marriages of Freedmen Vol. II (Aug 1839 - Dec 1871), (Evansville, IN: Evansville Bindery, 1994)  6.
[2] 1850 Livingston County, Kentucky census, roll M432_210, page 387A, Household of Caroline Hall, age 23 born Indiana, Ancestry.com, accessed 6 July 2018.

Published 25 September 2018, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/

Friday, August 15, 2014

Veteran of Two Wars - George W. Walton


When George W. Walton died in May 1923 in Henderson, Kentucky, he had witnessed two wars and many changes in this country. Born in New Jersey 11 April 1823, he attended school until the age of 15 years and when 23 years old he enlisted in the Mexican War and served through campaigns in Mexico.

When the Civil War broke out, Walton enlisted in Cobbs Battery (CSA) and was severely wounded when a Union soldier ran a bayonet through his shoulder. He spent months in the hospital and was told he would never be able to fight again as he had little use of his arm and shoulder. However, he returned to his regiment and remained until the surrender.  Walton was granted a pension (#1094)  for his service in the Civil War on 17 July 1912.

Walton came to Henderson around the time of the Civil War and followed the trade of a plasterer. The last 18 years or so of his life he was not been able to perform manual labor and was cared for by his friends at his home on Ingram Street.  He had only one known relative, a niece in Baltimore, Maryland.

Funeral services for George A. Walton were conducted by the pastor of Immanuel Baptist church and burial was in Fernwood Cemetery, Henderson.


Pvt.
George W. Walton
Cobbs Btry
CSA
Apr. 14, 1823
Mar. 4, 1924

Notice the Southern Cross of Honor and the pointed tombstone, both of which identify this as a CSA veteran of the Civil War.


References:
"Oldest Man in County is Ill," Henderson Gleaner, 4 October 1922.
"Veteran of Two Wars Succumbs," Henderson Gleaner, 6 March 1923.


Published 15 August 2014, Western Kentucky Genealogy Blog,  http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/