Married Louisa in 1855
When the war broke out, Jack was in a fever to enlist lest the fighting end before he got to camp. With the help of neighbors, Mrs. Davis hastily made him a gray uniform. The day after the suit was finished he left for war accompanied by a servant on horseback carrying among other things a little cookstove strapped to the saddle so he could prepare his masters meals. The would be soldier returned the next week rejected because of a physical disability. However, Mr. Davis ardor for the Confederacy remained undimmed and his outspoke sympathy for the cause kept him in a bad light with the Federals. Once he was imprisoned three months and was released only after Judge Edward Hazzard East Nashville, a friend of the Davises intervened in his behalf with Union authorities in Columbia, TN.
The Davis family did not move here until around 1880.
Married Louisa in 1855
When the war broke out, Jack was in a fever to enlist lest the fighting end before he got to camp. With the help of neighbors, Mrs. Davis hastily made him a gray uniform. The day after the suit was finished he left for war accompanied by a servant on horseback carrying among other things a little cookstove strapped to the saddle so he could prepare his masters meals. The would be soldier returned the next week rejected because of a physical disability. However, Mr. Davis ardor for the Confederacy remained undimmed and his outspoke sympathy for the cause kept him in a bad light with the Federals. Once he was imprisoned three months and was released only after Judge Edward Hazzard East Nashville, a friend of the Davises intervened in his behalf with Union authorities in Columbia, TN.
The Davis family did not move here until around 1880.
Inscription
Born at Warrington, Va.
Gravesite Details
Husband of Luesa T. Davis - next to this grave is Andrew Jackson Davis Jr.
Family Members
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