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1st U.S. Colored Cavalry

Private Lives, Public Records

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« “Plan of Fortress Munroe, Va., 1862”
St. John’s AME Church, Norfolk, Virginia »

William Teemer, Company G

November 26, 2018 by leslie1863

The soldier’s marriage to Elizabeth was the third for each of them. The officiant was the minister of St. John’s AME Church, one of Norfolk’s oldest churches.

 

Widow – 372,951 / 339,402, Elizabeth Teemer

General Affidavit, Elizabeth Teemer, 11 June 1890
Betsey, [the widow was] born on Eastern Shore Va., Accomac Co. … [I] became accwaited [sic] with Wm Teemer & lived with Robt. Santos on Main St., Norfolk, Va. … I lived with Robt. Santos up until I married Wm Teemer. I knew him 10 years before I married him. Married Sept 30th 1879 on Falkland St. Norfolk, Va. by Rev. B.G. Lloyd

“[I was] owned by Robins Mapp. He owned me at the time of my marriage with Teemer and had sent me to Norfolk and hired me out to Robt. Santos for a nurse.

“My first name was Elizabeth Mapp, my owner’s name; then Elizabeth Allen; Elizabeth Teemer. I was married to Kiah Allen and Wm Teemer was my last husband and has not been married since his death …

“[I] did not have any children by him. [I] don’t know where Teemer was born and I have forgotten where he lived. He was 57 years old when he died. He was a laborer. He was low in stater [sic] his color dark-skinned. Owned by Mr. Tazwell Taylor of Norfolk Va. on Granby St. Was his butler. He had a wife before I married him. She has been dead long before him.”

 

Deposition, Elizabeth Teemer, 26 June 1894
About 60 years old, laundress, post-office address No. 3 O’Keefe St., Norfolk, Va. …
“The said soldier died on Sunday morning April 1, 1888 at No. 27 Jefferson St. Norfolk, Va. of rheumatism, consumption and asthma.

“I was married to the soldier by the Rev. B.G. Lloyd of the Bute St. AME Church, in my house on Faulkland St., Norfolk, Va. on Sept. 30, 1879. I have a marriage certificate which has been to Washington.

“I was a slave before the war and belonged to Miss Leutherberry [?] who married Robt Mapp. They are both dead. I was married on their place near Eastville, Va., a long time before the war to Henry Winder according to slave custom. He died while a servant for his master John Winder of Eastville in the army. I was told of his death by Mr. Winder the night he came home when the war closed. I was married the second time to Hezekiah Allen in Norfolk, Va. in Sept about 3 years after the war closed. No, his name was not Patrick but Hezekiah. He died about 4 years before I married William Teemer. His death took place in the fall of the year, but don’t know what month in year. No sir I was not married more than 3 times. The soldier was also married twice before he married me. His first wife was named Elizabeth and I think she was a Makey before he married Sarah Collins who was dead about 4 years when I married the soldier.

“The soldier left no child or children surviving him except one girl who was 28 years old at that time. I became acquainted with the soldier about 1870, he was a member of my church.

“He was sick in bed 3 or 4 times before his last illness.

“Philip Bagnall & Willis Quickmore were with him in the army. After his discharge he came back to Norfolk and lived here continuously until he died. He worked in a cook shop with Thornton McCoy (dead) when he got back from the army. Afterwards for Mr. Walke, druggist, & Mr. Davis, fruit dealer. Phillip Bagnall, Willlis Quickmore, Boston Hopper & Mr. Tate knew him from discharge to the date of his death. Drs. Tunstall & Barber were the only Drs. who treated him since discharge. … Yes sir he was in the navy don’t know when or what ship. Magness Riggs also know him well.”

 

Letter from John G. Teicher, Special Commissioner, to William Lochren, 20 July 1894
“The soldier it would appear, also served in the Navy in 1869 and 70, on the ‘USS Countercook’ [sp?] or similar name. the name of said vessel it is claimed was afterwards changed to the ‘Albany.'”

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Posted in Company G, Surname T, Widow | Tagged butlers, laundresses, US Navy | 2 Comments

2 Responses

  1. on December 6, 2018 at 1:51 am Joe Colleen Jenkins

    “He died while a servant for his master John Winder of Eastville in the army.”

    Is the above implying the owner of the slave took his slave to war with him?

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    • on December 6, 2018 at 11:29 am leslie1863

      Hmmmmmm … that’s what it sounds like to me. If John Winder applied for a Confederate pension, he might have mentioned Henry Winder in the application. Virginia began granting Confederate pensions in 1888. They are on microfilm at the Library of Virginia (LVA) ( http://www.lva.virginia.gov/ ). I searched for “Winder” in the “Virginia Confederate Pension Rolls (Veterans and Widows) Database” but got zero matches. The Library of Virginia has other databases about Confederate soldiers and sailors: “Confederate Disability Applications and Receipts (Artificial Limbs),” “Index to Virginia Confederate Rosters,” “Index to Virginians Who Served in the Confederate Navy,” and “Index to Confederate Veteran Magazine, 1893-1932.”

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  • While researching the lives of my great-great-grandfather Edward R. Pitt and his brother William Thomas Pitt of Norfolk County, Virginia, I found fascinating (and sometimes disturbing) details about the civilian and military experiences of those who served in the 1st U.S. Colored Cavalry.

    The regiment included free men, freedmen, freedom-seekers and white officers from the United States and abroad.  It was organized at Camp Hamilton, Virginia in 1863, attached to Fortress Monroe, Virginia in 1864, and mustered out at Brazos Santiago, Texas in 1866.

    Tell the story. Expand the legacy.

    Leslie Anderson, MSLS

    Copyright © Leslie Anderson. All Rights Reserved.

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