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Jeremiah Drowns Slocum

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Jeremiah Drowns Slocum Veteran

Birth
Georgiaville, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Death
12 Mar 1907 (aged 69)
Staten Island, Richmond County, New York, USA
Burial
Hastings-on-Hudson, Westchester County, New York, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.9896056, Longitude: -73.8609083
Plot
Section 24
Memorial ID
View Source
Jeremiah Slocum enlisted as First Lieutenant in Company B of the Fourth Michigan Volunteer Infantry on June 20, 1861 at Adrian, Michigan, for a three year term of service. He was commissioned to date May 16, 1861 and mustered into Federal service on June 20, 1861. Jeremiah was commissioned to the rank of Captain of Company I shortly afterward. He resigned and was honorably discharged on September 28, 1862.

Jeremiah and his wife, Cleone Taylor Day Slocum, had eight children. They were Beach Crowell , Ernest Foster, Ellery Maxwell, Clarence Day, Natalie, Marguerite Soper, Herbert Spencer, and Dorothy.
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Sources: " Record of Service of Michigan Volunteers in the Civil War 1861 -1865, vol. 4, also known as the "Brown Book" and personal research from the soldier's Compiled Military Service Records and Pension Application file from the National Archives.

For Further information on the Fourth Michigan infantry please visit:

4thmichigan.wordpress.com (copy and paste to your browser's window).
Jeremiah Slocum enlisted as First Lieutenant in Company B of the Fourth Michigan Volunteer Infantry on June 20, 1861 at Adrian, Michigan, for a three year term of service. He was commissioned to date May 16, 1861 and mustered into Federal service on June 20, 1861. Jeremiah was commissioned to the rank of Captain of Company I shortly afterward. He resigned and was honorably discharged on September 28, 1862.

Jeremiah and his wife, Cleone Taylor Day Slocum, had eight children. They were Beach Crowell , Ernest Foster, Ellery Maxwell, Clarence Day, Natalie, Marguerite Soper, Herbert Spencer, and Dorothy.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sources: " Record of Service of Michigan Volunteers in the Civil War 1861 -1865, vol. 4, also known as the "Brown Book" and personal research from the soldier's Compiled Military Service Records and Pension Application file from the National Archives.

For Further information on the Fourth Michigan infantry please visit:

4thmichigan.wordpress.com (copy and paste to your browser's window).


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