Camp 1275, Sons of Confederate Veterans Memorial #74524991∼Captain Isaac New Moreland Turner, Confederate States Army
Isaac Newton Moreland (Ike) Turner was born in Putnam County, Georgia. His father Joseph A Sidney Turner, was a plantation owner with Texas land holdings in Polk and Liberty Counties. The Turner family moved to Texas prior to the outbreak of the Civil War.
Ike Turner helped to organize and train a mounted artillery company of 80 Polk County volunteers for the Confederacy. Turner, who was elected Captain, assembled his company at the county courthouse in Livingston on Sep 3, 1861. He led them to serve in Virginia as a Company K, 5th Texas Infantry, in General John Bell Hood's Texas Brigade. The youngest company commander in Hood's Texas Brigade, Captain Turner led his troops in 26 battles, mostly in Virginia. He was injured twice before suffering a fatal wound near Suffolk, Virginia.
Captain Turner's brother, Charles, took his body by train to be buried at the family's former plantation "Turnwold" near Milledgeville, Georgia. Family legend has maintained that it was Captain Turner's wish to be buried in his family's cemetery in Texas. In 1994 his remains were disinterred and transported from Georgia to Texas and reburied here among his family members.
Source: Texas Historical Marker located at the J A S Turner Cemetery in Polk County, Texas.
Camp 1275, Sons of Confederate Veterans Memorial #74524991∼Captain Isaac New Moreland Turner, Confederate States Army
Isaac Newton Moreland (Ike) Turner was born in Putnam County, Georgia. His father Joseph A Sidney Turner, was a plantation owner with Texas land holdings in Polk and Liberty Counties. The Turner family moved to Texas prior to the outbreak of the Civil War.
Ike Turner helped to organize and train a mounted artillery company of 80 Polk County volunteers for the Confederacy. Turner, who was elected Captain, assembled his company at the county courthouse in Livingston on Sep 3, 1861. He led them to serve in Virginia as a Company K, 5th Texas Infantry, in General John Bell Hood's Texas Brigade. The youngest company commander in Hood's Texas Brigade, Captain Turner led his troops in 26 battles, mostly in Virginia. He was injured twice before suffering a fatal wound near Suffolk, Virginia.
Captain Turner's brother, Charles, took his body by train to be buried at the family's former plantation "Turnwold" near Milledgeville, Georgia. Family legend has maintained that it was Captain Turner's wish to be buried in his family's cemetery in Texas. In 1994 his remains were disinterred and transported from Georgia to Texas and reburied here among his family members.
Source: Texas Historical Marker located at the J A S Turner Cemetery in Polk County, Texas.
Inscription
Captain, Company K
Hood's Brigade
5th Regiment, Texas Infantry
Confederate States Army
Killed at Suffolk, Virginia
Gravesite Details
CSA Veteran
Family Members
Advertisement
Advertisement