Sgt. Company B 13th Battallion Virginia Light Artillery
Samuel Southard Berger served in the Confederate Army during the entire War, under the Captaincy of his brother-in-law, Dr. Crispin Dickenson. He ran a tobacco warehouse at Danville, VA until 1890 when he moved to Rocky Mount, NC as a pioneer in the new Eastern Tobacco Belt. He later moved to Timmonsville, SC where he died and was buried in 1929. Samuel was prominent in the tobacco business, and was well known throughout the tobacco producing states. He was a staunch Methodist and was active in both church and Sunday School.
Sgt. Company B 13th Battallion Virginia Light Artillery
Samuel Southard Berger served in the Confederate Army during the entire War, under the Captaincy of his brother-in-law, Dr. Crispin Dickenson. He ran a tobacco warehouse at Danville, VA until 1890 when he moved to Rocky Mount, NC as a pioneer in the new Eastern Tobacco Belt. He later moved to Timmonsville, SC where he died and was buried in 1929. Samuel was prominent in the tobacco business, and was well known throughout the tobacco producing states. He was a staunch Methodist and was active in both church and Sunday School.
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