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Pvt Joseph B. Bradburn

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Pvt Joseph B. Bradburn Veteran

Birth
Death
22 Feb 1881 (aged 56–57)
Alexander County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
Little River, Alexander County, North Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Joseph B. Bradburn was about 1824/1825 in Burke County, NC to Isaac Elledge and Eleanor Starnes Bradburn. He was their third child and was named for his maternal grandfather, Joseph Starnes, who had served in the American Revolution. He was reared on his father's farm near Middle Little River in the section that would become Caldwell County in 1841 and then Alexander County in 1847.

He worked on this father's farm throughout his childhood and early adulthood and he took over the management of his father's farm in the late 1850s. He also served as the Postmaster of the Wittenburg Post Office from May 31, 1848 until it was discontinued on September 23, 1857.

Joseph Bradburn married Nancy Lowdermilk, the daughter of Garner Lowdermilk, about 1855 in Alexander County, NC, and short thereafter began their family. By the 1860 US Federal census they are listed with two sons, Newton C., Walter S., and a daughter, A. C.

When the Civil War began he did not enlist immediately in the Army of the Confederacy as his older brother, Thomas Wesley Bradburn, had done. He waited to enlist until March 31, 1863 in Catawba County, NC and served as a private in Company E, 32 Regiment, NC Infantry. He served faithfully until he was captured at or near Spotsylvania Courthouse on May 10, 1864. He was immediately sent to the prison camp at Belle Plains, VA, transferred to the camp at Point Lookout, MD on May 18, 1864, and finally imprisoned at Elmira, NY on August 3, 1864. He had made the journey with his first cousin, David A. Starnes, who served in Company C, 18 Regiment, NC Infantry . Joseph Bradburn was paroled on October 11, 1864 and arrived at Venus Point, Savannah River, GA on November 15, 1864. He must have made his way home to his family at this time as he is listed as absent in January and February, 1865.

After the war he spent the rest of his life working on his farm and rearing his family. He died on February 22, 1881 and was probably buried in the cemetery of Antioch Baptist Church, Alexander County, NC. Several years later in 1883 Nancy, his wife, and his oldest son, Newton, took the three younger children, Emma, Wesley and Frances, and moved to Texas and then to the Oklahoma Territory where she died in 1908.
Joseph B. Bradburn was about 1824/1825 in Burke County, NC to Isaac Elledge and Eleanor Starnes Bradburn. He was their third child and was named for his maternal grandfather, Joseph Starnes, who had served in the American Revolution. He was reared on his father's farm near Middle Little River in the section that would become Caldwell County in 1841 and then Alexander County in 1847.

He worked on this father's farm throughout his childhood and early adulthood and he took over the management of his father's farm in the late 1850s. He also served as the Postmaster of the Wittenburg Post Office from May 31, 1848 until it was discontinued on September 23, 1857.

Joseph Bradburn married Nancy Lowdermilk, the daughter of Garner Lowdermilk, about 1855 in Alexander County, NC, and short thereafter began their family. By the 1860 US Federal census they are listed with two sons, Newton C., Walter S., and a daughter, A. C.

When the Civil War began he did not enlist immediately in the Army of the Confederacy as his older brother, Thomas Wesley Bradburn, had done. He waited to enlist until March 31, 1863 in Catawba County, NC and served as a private in Company E, 32 Regiment, NC Infantry. He served faithfully until he was captured at or near Spotsylvania Courthouse on May 10, 1864. He was immediately sent to the prison camp at Belle Plains, VA, transferred to the camp at Point Lookout, MD on May 18, 1864, and finally imprisoned at Elmira, NY on August 3, 1864. He had made the journey with his first cousin, David A. Starnes, who served in Company C, 18 Regiment, NC Infantry . Joseph Bradburn was paroled on October 11, 1864 and arrived at Venus Point, Savannah River, GA on November 15, 1864. He must have made his way home to his family at this time as he is listed as absent in January and February, 1865.

After the war he spent the rest of his life working on his farm and rearing his family. He died on February 22, 1881 and was probably buried in the cemetery of Antioch Baptist Church, Alexander County, NC. Several years later in 1883 Nancy, his wife, and his oldest son, Newton, took the three younger children, Emma, Wesley and Frances, and moved to Texas and then to the Oklahoma Territory where she died in 1908.


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  • Created by: MWJ
  • Added: Mar 24, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/67365663/joseph_b-bradburn: accessed ), memorial page for Pvt Joseph B. Bradburn (1824–22 Feb 1881), Find a Grave Memorial ID 67365663, citing Antioch Cemetery, Little River, Alexander County, North Carolina, USA; Maintained by MWJ (contributor 47466153).