Mother: Maria Elizabeth "Mary" HITE |
_____________________ | _________________________________________________| | | | |_____________________ | _George BOWMAN "the Immigrant"_| | (1709 - 1768) m 1729 | | | _____________________ | | | | |_________________________________________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--Sarah BOWMAN | (1741 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _John (Jost, Hans Justus) HITE I "the immigrant"_| | | (1685 - 1760) m 1704 | | | |_____________________ | | |_Maria Elizabeth "Mary" HITE __| (1708 - 1768) m 1729 | | _Abraham MERCKLIN ___ | | (1664 - ....) m 1684 |_Anna Marie MERCKLIN ____________________________| (1687 - 1738) m 1704 | |_Anna Veronica_______ (1664 - ....) m 1684
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Opposing Seymour's force was a Confederate army under the
command of Brigadier General Joseph Finegan, a forty-nine year
old native of Clones, Ireland. A well-known planter, lumberman,
and railroad operator in Florida before the war, Finegan had
attended the secession convention as a delegate from Nassau
County. His political connections within the state helped secure
the three stars and wreath of a brigadier general, and, in April
1862 he assumed command of the District of Middle and East
Florida. In November 1862 the district was divided, with Finegan
maintaining control over the eastern portion of the state.
Finegan's command included all of Florida east of the Suwannee
River, a large land area that, unfortunately, had few troops for
defense. For the next two years he retained Confederate control
over most of the state, notwithstanding occasional Union raids
and skirmishes, and the annual Union occupation and burning of
Jacksonville.
With his limited combat experience, Finegan was not highly
regarded by either Florida Governor John Milton or General
P.G.T. Beauregard, commanding the Department of South Carolina,
Georgia, and Florida. Each would have preferred a more seasoned
officer, but before a replacement could reach Florida, Seymour's
advance precipitated a confrontation, and Finegan found himself
facing the first major action of his military career.
At the time of the Federal invasion, Confederate troops in all
of middle and east Florida combined numbered less than 3,000
effectives, with only 1,500 of this total present in the
District of East Florida. Further complicating the Confederates'
plight was the fact that virtually all of these troops were raw
recruits, who could not be expected to resist the Union advance
without significant reinforcements.
General Beauregard responded to the crisis by significantly
increasing Finegan's strength. As soon as word reached him of
the Union landings, reinforcements were sent to Florida from
locations in Georgia and South Carolina. Additional troops
arrived from positions throughout Florida. These transfers were
complicated by the lack of a connecting line between the
railroads of Florida and the remainder of the Confederacy,
forcing units to make long, fatiguing marches.
Despite these obstacles, by February 19th Finegan had
accumulated between 5,000 and 5,500 men to defend the state. He
organized his force into two brigades, under the command of
Brigadier General Alfred Holt Colquitt and Colonel George P.
Harrison. Colonel Caraway Smith commanded the rebel cavalry,
with Captain Robert H. Gamble's Leon Light Artillery in reserve.
Brig. Gen. Finegan's report prior to the battle, February 13,
1864
Brig. Gen. Finegan's initial report of the battle, February 23,
1864
Brig. Gen. Finegan's reply to Brig. Gen. Seymour's letter,
February 23, 1864
Brig. Gen. Finegan's report on actions after the battle,
February 25, 1864
Brig. Gen. Finegan's final report of the battle, February 26,
1864
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Battle of Olustee Home Page
http://extlab7.entnem.ufl.edu/Olustee/
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Mother: Sarah GRAVES |
_John GRAVES Sr.____________+ | (1712 - 1747) m 1732 _Thomas GRAVES Sr.___________| | (1733 - 1810) m 1756 | | |_Susanna DICKENS ___________+ | (1714 - 1784) m 1732 _Joel A. GRAVES Sr.__| | (1766 - 1818) m 1794| | | _John DELANEY ______________+ | | | (1718 - 1803) m 1739 | |_Sarah DELANEY ______________| | (1740 - 1810) m 1756 | | |_Frances STANTON ___________+ | (1723 - 1804) m 1739 | |--Elizabeth GRAVES | (1805 - ....) | _John GRAVES Sr.____________+ | | (1712 - 1747) m 1732 | _Isaac GRAVES Sr.____________| | | (1741 - 1817) m 1771 | | | |_Susanna DICKENS ___________+ | | (1714 - 1784) m 1732 |_Sarah GRAVES _______| (1773 - 1818) m 1794| | _Johnathan Travis COWHERD I_+ | | (1726 - 1817) m 1749 |_Elizabeth COWHERD (COWARD) _| (1751 - 1791) m 1771 | |_Sarah Frances KIRTLEY _____+ (1733 - 1817) m 1749
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Mother: Dorothy BUCKNER |
_Hugh ROY ______________________+ | (1637 - ....) _Richard ROY "the immigrant"_| | (1659 - 1729) m 1675 | | |________________________________ | _John Guy ROY _______| | (1682 - 1734) m 1711| | | _ROBERT PEYTON of Isleham_______+ | | | (1640 - 1686) m 1656 | |_Dorothy PEYTON OR BUCKNER? _| | (1657 - 1745) m 1675 | | |_Mary KEEBLE? __________________ | (1637 - 1678) m 1656 | |--Elizabeth ROY | (1719 - 1741) | _John BUCKNER I "the Immigrant"_+ | | (1630 - 1695) m 1661 | _Richard BUCKNER I___________| | | (1662 - 1731) m 1689 | | | |_Debra FERRERS _________________ | | (1642 - 1698) m 1661 |_Dorothy BUCKNER ____| (1690 - 1745) m 1711| | _Mordecai COOKE II______________+ | | (1649 - 1718) m 1670 |_Elizabeth COOKE ____________| (1671 - 1748) m 1689 | |_Frances IRONMONGER ____________+ (1654 - ....) m 1670
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Father: Joseph Walker TAYLOR Mother: Lucy Moore Throckmorton BATE |
_Richard TAYLOR ________+ | (1744 - 1829) m 1779 _Hancock TAYLOR _____| | (1781 - 1841) m 1814| | |_Sarah Dabney STROTHER _+ | (1760 - 1822) m 1779 _Joseph Walker TAYLOR _________| | (1820 - ....) | | | ________________________ | | | | |_Anna Hornsby LEWIS _| | (1796 - 1882) m 1814| | |________________________ | | |--Virginia TAYLOR | (1849 - ....) | ________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |________________________ | | |_Lucy Moore Throckmorton BATE _| (1820 - ....) | | ________________________ | | |_____________________| | |________________________
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