Advertisement

Zachariah P. Hardigree/ Hardegree

Advertisement

Zachariah P. Hardigree/ Hardegree

Birth
Georgia, USA
Death
30 Apr 1902 (aged 79)
Georgia, USA
Burial
Heard County, Georgia, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.3959236, Longitude: -85.0253906
Memorial ID
View Source
Phillipsburg Herald, Phillipsburg, KS, December 21, 1893.
Soldier and Christian.While the annual reunions of the Confederate veterans are being held over the state, says the Haralson (Ga.) Banner, there is a member of Company I of the forty-first Georgia regiment living in this county who was in every battle fought by his regiment, in every skirmish in which his company was engaged, in every charge made by his command, and did not fire a gun. He was then, and is now, a minister of the gospel. He did not believe in killing men, and frequently charged the enemy with a yell, saw his comrades fall by his side, and whether routing the Union soldiers or being routed he would not shoot.He was always ready for duty – stood guard, remained at the picket post, and obeyed implicitly every command of his superior officers except to draw cartridges, load his gun, and shoot. At New Hope church, on the retreat from Dalton, several rounds of cartridges were issued to the soldiers, and he took one, and a short time afterward he was struck by a spent ball, but not hurt. This remarkable man is a successful farmer and a splendid preacher, and is named Zachariah P. Hardigree.

Phillipsburg Herald, Phillipsburg, KS, December 21, 1893.
Soldier and Christian.While the annual reunions of the Confederate veterans are being held over the state, says the Haralson (Ga.) Banner, there is a member of Company I of the forty-first Georgia regiment living in this county who was in every battle fought by his regiment, in every skirmish in which his company was engaged, in every charge made by his command, and did not fire a gun. He was then, and is now, a minister of the gospel. He did not believe in killing men, and frequently charged the enemy with a yell, saw his comrades fall by his side, and whether routing the Union soldiers or being routed he would not shoot.He was always ready for duty – stood guard, remained at the picket post, and obeyed implicitly every command of his superior officers except to draw cartridges, load his gun, and shoot. At New Hope church, on the retreat from Dalton, several rounds of cartridges were issued to the soldiers, and he took one, and a short time afterward he was struck by a spent ball, but not hurt. This remarkable man is a successful farmer and a splendid preacher, and is named Zachariah P. Hardigree.



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement