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James Abram Ansley

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James Abram Ansley Veteran

Birth
Columbia County, Georgia, USA
Death
29 Mar 1934 (aged 88)
McDuffie County, Georgia, USA
Burial
McDuffie County, Georgia, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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He was a son of Felix Ansley and his wife, Ruth (Isdale) Ansley; and a grandson of Jesse Ansley and his first wife, Sarah (Stanford) Ansley.

"Georgia Deaths, 1928-1943," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QJXM-TZZY : 15 December 2020), James Abram Ansley (Georgia death certificate #10599), 29 Mar 1934; citing Boneville, McDuffie, Georgia, United States, Georgia State Archives, Morrow.

1st Local Troops, Infantry (Augusta)
Company F, Dearing's Cavalry "Wheeler Dragoons"
-Private-Enlisted September 11, 1863 in Augusta. Captured at Salisbury, NC, April 12, 1865 and forwarded to Louisville, KY, April 29, 1865. Sent from there to Camp Chase , Ohio May 4, 1865. This regiment was made up of men who worked in the Confederate Powder Works, the Medical School, and machine shops in Augusta making guns and other parts for the Augusta Arsenal. The regiment was called out for the battle of Griswoldville and served as rear guards for the Battle of Aiken, stationed along the rail lines from Augusta to Aiken protecting the cotton mills and ceramics plant there.
He was a son of Felix Ansley and his wife, Ruth (Isdale) Ansley; and a grandson of Jesse Ansley and his first wife, Sarah (Stanford) Ansley.

"Georgia Deaths, 1928-1943," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QJXM-TZZY : 15 December 2020), James Abram Ansley (Georgia death certificate #10599), 29 Mar 1934; citing Boneville, McDuffie, Georgia, United States, Georgia State Archives, Morrow.

1st Local Troops, Infantry (Augusta)
Company F, Dearing's Cavalry "Wheeler Dragoons"
-Private-Enlisted September 11, 1863 in Augusta. Captured at Salisbury, NC, April 12, 1865 and forwarded to Louisville, KY, April 29, 1865. Sent from there to Camp Chase , Ohio May 4, 1865. This regiment was made up of men who worked in the Confederate Powder Works, the Medical School, and machine shops in Augusta making guns and other parts for the Augusta Arsenal. The regiment was called out for the battle of Griswoldville and served as rear guards for the Battle of Aiken, stationed along the rail lines from Augusta to Aiken protecting the cotton mills and ceramics plant there.


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