Advertisement

Pvt John Mclure Bell

Advertisement

Pvt John Mclure Bell

Birth
Death
15 Apr 1924 (aged 78)
Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Adair County, Oklahoma, USA Add to Map
Plot
289, SEE Tyner's Plat Map in OPAWTR
Memorial ID
View Source
30 NOV 2020, Memorial notes at time of transfer. Added gender. Middle name may actually be McClure. [Plot cite from American Indian Institute's "Our People And Where They Rest," James W. Tyner, et al., Vol. 9, pp. 1-6, 1976]
The medal in the flowers section is the Army Civil War Campaign medal; established by the United States War Department on January 21, 1907, by General Order Number 12. The medal was first authorized in 1905 for the fortieth anniversary of the Civil War's conclusion. The blue and gray ribbon denotes the respective uniform colors of the U.S. and Confederate troops and was awarded to soldiers from both sides. To qualify, a soldier had to serve between April 15, 1861, and April 9, 1865. The award was intended for both Union and Confederate soldiers. When it was discovered that medal qualifications included the words "Active Federal Military Service," the Congressional Act of 1945 had those words removed. Confederate flags would use the campaign streamers with the Gray edge up and the Union flags with the blue edge up. The campaign lettering requires two distinct sets of streamers for each campaign, one set for each side. The closing date was extended to August 20, 1866, date of President Johnson's Proclamation officially ending the war. The corresponding Navy Civil War Medal was established on June 27, 1908, by Navy Department.~Veteran of the Civil War.
30 NOV 2020, Memorial notes at time of transfer. Added gender. Middle name may actually be McClure. [Plot cite from American Indian Institute's "Our People And Where They Rest," James W. Tyner, et al., Vol. 9, pp. 1-6, 1976]
The medal in the flowers section is the Army Civil War Campaign medal; established by the United States War Department on January 21, 1907, by General Order Number 12. The medal was first authorized in 1905 for the fortieth anniversary of the Civil War's conclusion. The blue and gray ribbon denotes the respective uniform colors of the U.S. and Confederate troops and was awarded to soldiers from both sides. To qualify, a soldier had to serve between April 15, 1861, and April 9, 1865. The award was intended for both Union and Confederate soldiers. When it was discovered that medal qualifications included the words "Active Federal Military Service," the Congressional Act of 1945 had those words removed. Confederate flags would use the campaign streamers with the Gray edge up and the Union flags with the blue edge up. The campaign lettering requires two distinct sets of streamers for each campaign, one set for each side. The closing date was extended to August 20, 1866, date of President Johnson's Proclamation officially ending the war. The corresponding Navy Civil War Medal was established on June 27, 1908, by Navy Department.~Veteran of the Civil War.

Inscription

CO. H
12 TENN. CAV.



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement