James attended school in Athens, Limestone County, Alabama, and moved with his parents from Athens to Aberdeen, Mississippi, in about 1840.
Most of his descendants did not know this but James was a Mexican War Veteran. On August 1847, James joined the Third Mississippi Rifles, Keys Company as a private (Mississippi Rifle Company Battalion A -Anderson's Captain Keyes' Company).
According to muster rolls, he joined August 1847 in Houston, Mississippi.
November/December 1847 -- he got sick.
January/February 1848--Transferred to Lawrenceburg Hospital in New Orleans.
April 8, 1848, discharged by the surgeon on a Certificate of Disability in New Orleans.
Eventually, he got a pension and a land grant for his service.
He came to Texas in about 1855, settling a few miles south of his brothers John, William, and George on the Hondo Creek. The area they settled in is located about 14 miles west of the present city of Devine, Texas, and about 40 miles southwest of San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas.
James Redus soon began raising cattle and was among the first to drive herds up the Chisolm Trail to Kansas.
He enlisted in the Confederate States Army, on April 18, 1862, in Guadalupe County, Texas. He was a fourth corporal in Captain William L. Foster's company of Texas Mounted Rifleman. He came home from the war in 1864 and resumed his ranching interests.
He became a Master Mason in 1862, having received his degrees in the Medina Valley Lodge No. 252, near New Fountain, Texas (close to Hondo, Medina County, Texas). He served as the Worshipful Master of the Moore Lodge before he passed away.
James attended school in Athens, Limestone County, Alabama, and moved with his parents from Athens to Aberdeen, Mississippi, in about 1840.
Most of his descendants did not know this but James was a Mexican War Veteran. On August 1847, James joined the Third Mississippi Rifles, Keys Company as a private (Mississippi Rifle Company Battalion A -Anderson's Captain Keyes' Company).
According to muster rolls, he joined August 1847 in Houston, Mississippi.
November/December 1847 -- he got sick.
January/February 1848--Transferred to Lawrenceburg Hospital in New Orleans.
April 8, 1848, discharged by the surgeon on a Certificate of Disability in New Orleans.
Eventually, he got a pension and a land grant for his service.
He came to Texas in about 1855, settling a few miles south of his brothers John, William, and George on the Hondo Creek. The area they settled in is located about 14 miles west of the present city of Devine, Texas, and about 40 miles southwest of San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas.
James Redus soon began raising cattle and was among the first to drive herds up the Chisolm Trail to Kansas.
He enlisted in the Confederate States Army, on April 18, 1862, in Guadalupe County, Texas. He was a fourth corporal in Captain William L. Foster's company of Texas Mounted Rifleman. He came home from the war in 1864 and resumed his ranching interests.
He became a Master Mason in 1862, having received his degrees in the Medina Valley Lodge No. 252, near New Fountain, Texas (close to Hondo, Medina County, Texas). He served as the Worshipful Master of the Moore Lodge before he passed away.
Family Members
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Elizabeth Oglesby Redus Hine
1817–1897
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Sarah Chaffin Redus Tanner
1818–1901
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Mary Louise Redus Crawford
1820–1897
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Augustus Franklin Redus
1821–1852
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Silbernia Redus Coats
1823–1856
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Caroline Minerva Redus
1825–1853
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Luther Warren Redus
1827–1878
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Martha Redus
1832–1853
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PVT John Redus
1833–1895
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William Redus
1835–1885
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George Redus
1837–1872
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