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Sgt Robert T. Bean

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Sgt Robert T. Bean

Birth
Montgomery County, Kentucky, USA
Death
14 Jul 1921 (aged 79)
Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, USA GPS-Latitude: 37.703236, Longitude: -97.2965463
Memorial ID
View Source
CSA, Sergeant, Company I, 8th Kentucky Cavalry

Enlisted in the Confederates States Army on 10 September 1862 at Shelby County, Kentucky. He was 20 years old and mustered the same day as a Private into Company I, 8th Kentucky Cavalry. He was promoted to Sergeant and listed as a Prisoner of War 26 July 1863 (place not stated) and confined for 18 months.


The Wichita Beacon, Wichita, Kansasm Saturday, July 16, 1921, pg. 2

COL. BEAN DEAD; PIONEER CITIZEN.

One of Most Widely Known Civil War Veterans In Kansas

Col. R. T. Bean, aged 79, for many years in the real estate business here, died at 2:45 a. m. today at his home 342 North Lawrence Avenue. Heart disease was given as the cause of death.

He was stricken ill at 6 o'clock last night while on his way to the rooming house where he lived. He sat down to rest on a curb near his home. John Puls passed by and saw Col. Bean was ill and helped him home. He was unable to get upstairs to his room so he was given a room downstairs and a physician was called. Shortly after midnight it was seen that he was getting worse and W. R. Dulaney and Joseph Brubacher, old friends were sent for. He recognized them after they arrived and was conscious almost up to the time of his death.

Three Children Survive - Col. Bean's wife died twenty years ago and is buried in Maple Grove Cemetery. Three children survive. They are Richard, president of the Louisville National Bank of Louisville, Ky., Robert, who lives in Texas, and Mary, who lives in North Carolina. He has no relatives living in the city, but his children all lived here formerly.

Col. Bean was a member of Gen. John Morgan's famous cavalry, which was the terror of the Union forces west of the mountains during the war. He always attended reunions of the Confederate Veterans.

Col. Bean was president of the Southern Society which held annual meetings here in May. Every May he used to send for country hams back to his old home in Mt. Sterling, Ky.

In Grocery Business - Prior to coming to Wichita Col. Bean was in the wholesale grocery business at Mount Sterling. He came here in 1886 to engage in real estate business. For a time he was in the commission business, at the stock yards with the firm of Bean and Bleakmore, but returned to the live stock business.

He was a member of the First Baptist Church.
CSA, Sergeant, Company I, 8th Kentucky Cavalry

Enlisted in the Confederates States Army on 10 September 1862 at Shelby County, Kentucky. He was 20 years old and mustered the same day as a Private into Company I, 8th Kentucky Cavalry. He was promoted to Sergeant and listed as a Prisoner of War 26 July 1863 (place not stated) and confined for 18 months.


The Wichita Beacon, Wichita, Kansasm Saturday, July 16, 1921, pg. 2

COL. BEAN DEAD; PIONEER CITIZEN.

One of Most Widely Known Civil War Veterans In Kansas

Col. R. T. Bean, aged 79, for many years in the real estate business here, died at 2:45 a. m. today at his home 342 North Lawrence Avenue. Heart disease was given as the cause of death.

He was stricken ill at 6 o'clock last night while on his way to the rooming house where he lived. He sat down to rest on a curb near his home. John Puls passed by and saw Col. Bean was ill and helped him home. He was unable to get upstairs to his room so he was given a room downstairs and a physician was called. Shortly after midnight it was seen that he was getting worse and W. R. Dulaney and Joseph Brubacher, old friends were sent for. He recognized them after they arrived and was conscious almost up to the time of his death.

Three Children Survive - Col. Bean's wife died twenty years ago and is buried in Maple Grove Cemetery. Three children survive. They are Richard, president of the Louisville National Bank of Louisville, Ky., Robert, who lives in Texas, and Mary, who lives in North Carolina. He has no relatives living in the city, but his children all lived here formerly.

Col. Bean was a member of Gen. John Morgan's famous cavalry, which was the terror of the Union forces west of the mountains during the war. He always attended reunions of the Confederate Veterans.

Col. Bean was president of the Southern Society which held annual meetings here in May. Every May he used to send for country hams back to his old home in Mt. Sterling, Ky.

In Grocery Business - Prior to coming to Wichita Col. Bean was in the wholesale grocery business at Mount Sterling. He came here in 1886 to engage in real estate business. For a time he was in the commission business, at the stock yards with the firm of Bean and Bleakmore, but returned to the live stock business.

He was a member of the First Baptist Church.


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