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Facts and Events
Name |
John F Kennedy, MD |
Gender |
Male |
Birth[1] |
10 Jun 1826 |
North Carolina_PROOF: proven |
Occupation[3][4] |
From 1850 to 1867 |
Alabama, MississippiMD _PROOF: proven |
Other[5] |
3 Mar 1854 |
Pennsylvania_PROOF: proven Passport |
Census[6] |
4 Jul 1860 |
Lauderdale County, Mississippi_PROOF: proven _SHAR: ROLE: brother _SHAR: ROLE: spouse Beat 2, Lauderdale Station PO |
Census[7][15] |
11 Jul 1860 |
Lauderdale County, Mississippi_PROOF: proven Beat 2 |
Census[8][16] |
14 Jul 1860 |
Lauderdale County, Mississippi_PROOF: proven Beat 2, Markwell PO |
Military[9][10][11][12][13][17] |
From 29 May 1861 to 22 May 1865 |
Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky14th Mississippi Infantry Regiment, CSA |
Marriage |
17 Nov 1863 |
Noxubee County, Mississippi_PROOF: proven to Mary Longstreet LYLES |
Other[14][18] |
10 Apr 1866 |
New Prospect, Lauderdale, Mississippi_PROOF: proven Taxation Division 23, District 2 |
Death[2][1][3] |
10 Sep 1867 |
Lauderdale, Lauderdale, MississippiCause: suicide- overdose of laudanum |
Burial[1] |
11 Sep 1867 |
Lauderdale, Lauderdale, MississippiLauderdale Cemetery |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Rootsweb.com, Lauderdale Cemetery Records (www.usgennet.org/usa/ms/county/lauderdale/cemetery/Lauderdale.htm)
John F. Kennedy~~b: June 10, 1826 ~~d: Sept. 10, 1867.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: John F. Kennedy~~b: June 10, 1826 ~~d: Sept. 10, 1867 _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ William Terrell Lewis, Genealogy of the Lewis Family in America: from the middle of the seventeenth century do
accessed, downloaded; 29 March 2011; page 67.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 29 March 2011 FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: page 67 FIELD: Name: Annotation _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 None given, A Memorial and Biographical History of Johnson and Hill Counties, Texas (Chicago: The Lewis Publis
pg 364-366.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: pg 364-366 _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: S _EVID: D
- ↑ Fred W. Edmiston, Rosters Of Early Volunteer Units From Lauderdale County, Mississippi, In The Civil War (extr.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Passport Applications, 1795-1905; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M1372, 694 rolls); General Records
Source Citation: National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Washington D.C.; Passport Applications, 1795-1905; Microfilm Serial: M1372;Roll #45.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Source Citation: National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Washington D.C.; Passport Applications, 1795-1905; Microfilm Serial: M1372;Roll #45. _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ United States. 1860 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication M653)
Source Citation: Year: 1860; Census Place: Beat 2, Lauderdale, Mississippi; Roll: M653_585; Page: 281; Image: 285; Family History Library Film: 803585.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Source Citation: Year: 1860; Census Place: Beat 2, Lauderdale, Mississippi; Roll: M653_585; Page: 281; Image: 285; Family History Library Film: 803585. _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ "1860 United States Federal Census- Slave Schedules," database, Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com/:
Source Information:Ancestry.com. 1860 U.S. Federal Census - Slave Schedules [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Source Information:Ancestry.com. 1860 U.S. Federal Census - Slave Schedules [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004. _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ United States. 1860 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication M653)
Source Citation: Year: 1860; Census Place: Beat 2, Lauderdale, Mississippi; Roll: M653_585; Page: 306; Image: 310; Family History Library Film: 803585.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Source Citation: Year: 1860; Census Place: Beat 2, Lauderdale, Mississippi; Roll: M653_585; Page: 306; Image: 310; Family History Library Film: 803585. _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Dr. N. B. Kennedy, Dr. N. B. Kennedy letter ("Confederate Veteran" magazine, July 1894).
"My brother, Dr. John F. Kennedy, was surgeon of the Fourteenth Mississippi Regiment of the Confederacy." _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Selected Records of the War Department Relating to Confederate Prisoners of War, 1861-1865; (National Archives
Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll: M598_140Roll Title: Selected Records of the War Department Relating to Confederate Prisoners of War, 1861-1865 (image #1), Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll: M598_78Roll Title: Selected Records of.
Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll: M598_140Roll Title: Selected Records of the War Department Relating to Confederate Prisoners of War, 1861-1865 (image #1), Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll:M598_78Roll Title: Selected Records of Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll: M598_140Roll Title: Selected Records of the War Department Relating to Confederate Prisoners of War, 1861-1865 (image #1), Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll:M598_78Roll Title: Selected Records of John F Kennedy, Surgeon, P.A.C.S. surrendered May 4, 1862 at Citronelle, AL paroled May 22, 1862 at Mobile, AL _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll: M598_140Roll Title: Selected Records of the War Department Relating to Confederate Prisoners of War, 1861-1865 (image #1), Name: John F KennedySide: ConfederateRoll: M598_78Roll Title: Selected Records of _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Fred W. Edmiston, Rosters Of Early Volunteer Units From Lauderdale County, Mississippi, In The Civil War (extr
page 131.
"...surgeon of the 14th Mississippi Regiment..." _TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: page 131 _QUAL: _SOUR: D _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Stephen Smith MD, editor, The American Medical Times: Being a Weekly Series of the New York Journal of Medicin
accessed, downloaded; 29 March 2011; page 130; "Rebel surgeons released from Camp Douglas... John F Kennedy, Surgeon 14th Mississippi...".
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: AccessType VALUE: accessed, downloaded FIELD: Name: AccessDate VALUE: 29 March 2011 FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: page 130 FIELD: Name: Annotation VALUE: "Rebel surgeons released from Camp Douglas... John F Kennedy, Surgeon 14th Mississippi..." _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Fold3, "Compiled Service Records of Confederate Soldiers Who Served in Organizations from the State of Mississ
John F Kennedy, Surgeon.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: ItemOfInterest VALUE: John F Kennedy, Surgeon FIELD: Name: ServiceData FIELD: Name: RollNo _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ National Archives (NARA) microfilm series: M603, M754-M771, M773-M777, M779-M780, M782, M784, M787-M789, M791-
Source Information:Ancestry.com. U.S. IRS Tax Assessment Lists, 1862-1918 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.
_TMPLT: FIELD: Name: Page VALUE: Source Information:Ancestry.com. U.S. IRS Tax Assessment Lists, 1862-1918 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008. _QUAL: _SOUR: O _INFO: P _EVID: D
- ↑ Slave Schedule
- ↑ Second enumeration in 1860 census
- ↑ http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ga/topic/news/CV/cv1894pg8.htm
Confederate Veteran July 1894 pg 8
Dr. N. B. Kennedy writes this interesting letter:
My brother, Dr. John F. Kennedy, was surgeon of the Fourteenth Mississippi Regiment of the Confederacy. He was captured at Fort Pillow, and sent to Camp Chase, Chicago. When he reached St. Louis, on his way to prison, a Northern man named Peter Roberts, who formerly lived at our childhood home and from whom my father had purchased thousands of dollars' worth of goods, recognized him, and after soundly berating him for being on the Confederate side, lent him twenty dollars which enabled him to have cabin passage on the steamboat. On reaching Chicago he was met by a messenger, who, he afterwards learned, was sent by Mrs. Gen. Scott, and was conducted to one of the best hotels in the city and assigned to a splendid suit of rooms. The next morning at the breakfast table he found under his plate three hundred dollars, all in gold, with a note in a lady's handwriting telling him to live well, as he should have all the money he wished. The note was signed " Rebel Sympathizers."
He was placed on parole and allowed the freedom of the city, and was placed on duty in the hospital in which sick Confederates were confined, He soon formed the acquaintance of that noble, chivalric soldier, Col. W. S. Hawkins, colonel of a Tennessee regiment, who had been installed as a nurse in the same hospital. Col. Hawkins was nursing a fellow prisoner who was engaged to be married to a most beautiful young lady. She proved faithless, and her letter came breaking the troth soon after the prisoner died. Col. Hawkins sent the following reply: Your letter came, but came too late,
For heaven had claimed its own.
Ah! sudden change from prison bars
Unto the great white throne.
And yet I think he would have stayed
For one more day of pain,
Could he have read those tardy words
Which you have sent in vain.
------------------ Joined 29 May 1961 as Asst Surgeon Promoted 1 Mar 1863 to Surgeon
- ↑ 2 watches, 1 piano
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