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BG Adam Rankin “Stovepipe” Johnson

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BG Adam Rankin “Stovepipe” Johnson Famous memorial Veteran

Birth
Henderson, Henderson County, Kentucky, USA
Death
20 Oct 1922 (aged 88)
Burnet, Burnet County, Texas, USA
Burial
Austin, Travis County, Texas, USA GPS-Latitude: 30.2652092, Longitude: -97.7268982
Plot
Republic Hill Section 1 Row C Number 14
Memorial ID
View Source
Civil War Confederate Brigadier General. Adam Johnson was born on February 8, 1834, in Henderson, Kentucky. He started working at the age of twelve in a drugstore, leaving his job in 1854 to move to Burnet County, Texas to work as a surveyor. He married Josephine Eastland in January of 1861 and gained a reputation as an expert Indian fighter and stagecoach driver for Butterfield Overland Mail. When the Civil War broke out, he returned to his home state of Kentucky in 1861 and enlisted in Nathan Bedford Forrest's company as a scout; his skill in the military being such that he was given command of the 10th Kentucky Partisan Rangers and promoted to colonel by June, 1862. He was well respected for his bravado, once capturing the town of Newburgh, Indiana from a large Union unit with only twelve men and a length of stovepipe mounted to a wagon. The Union soldiers, fearing the "cannon" surrendered, and Stovepipe Johnson acquired his nickname. However, his service was cut short quickly: during a dawn attack on the Union camp at Grubbs Crossroads, Johnson was accidentally shot in the face by his own men; he was then captured and imprisoned at Fort Warren until the end of the Civil War. After the armistice, he was released and returned to Texas, now totally blind, but his drive never diminished. He founded the town of Marble Falls and the Texas Mining Improvement Company; wrote his memoirs The Partisan Rangers of the Confederate States Army and continued his pre-war work with Overland Mail until his death on October 23, 1922. He was honored by having his funeral services held in the Texas Senate chamber and was laid to rest in the Texas State Cemetery in Austin.
Civil War Confederate Brigadier General. Adam Johnson was born on February 8, 1834, in Henderson, Kentucky. He started working at the age of twelve in a drugstore, leaving his job in 1854 to move to Burnet County, Texas to work as a surveyor. He married Josephine Eastland in January of 1861 and gained a reputation as an expert Indian fighter and stagecoach driver for Butterfield Overland Mail. When the Civil War broke out, he returned to his home state of Kentucky in 1861 and enlisted in Nathan Bedford Forrest's company as a scout; his skill in the military being such that he was given command of the 10th Kentucky Partisan Rangers and promoted to colonel by June, 1862. He was well respected for his bravado, once capturing the town of Newburgh, Indiana from a large Union unit with only twelve men and a length of stovepipe mounted to a wagon. The Union soldiers, fearing the "cannon" surrendered, and Stovepipe Johnson acquired his nickname. However, his service was cut short quickly: during a dawn attack on the Union camp at Grubbs Crossroads, Johnson was accidentally shot in the face by his own men; he was then captured and imprisoned at Fort Warren until the end of the Civil War. After the armistice, he was released and returned to Texas, now totally blind, but his drive never diminished. He founded the town of Marble Falls and the Texas Mining Improvement Company; wrote his memoirs The Partisan Rangers of the Confederate States Army and continued his pre-war work with Overland Mail until his death on October 23, 1922. He was honored by having his funeral services held in the Texas Senate chamber and was laid to rest in the Texas State Cemetery in Austin.

Bio by: Screwtape



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Jul 14, 2000
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/11000/adam_rankin-johnson: accessed ), memorial page for BG Adam Rankin “Stovepipe” Johnson (8 Feb 1834–20 Oct 1922), Find a Grave Memorial ID 11000, citing Texas State Cemetery, Austin, Travis County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.