Name also appears on records as Pipkin Galloway. Enlisted as a Private on March 1, 1864 at James Island in the 21st South Carolina Infantry, Company H. Captured by the enemy on January 15, 1865 at Fort Fisher. Received at Elmira on January 30, 1865. Died of gangrene of the feet as a POW.
He seved at Ft. Fisher and guarded the mouth of the Cape Fear River which led to Wilmington, North Carolina. He was the son of George and Susannah C. Pipkin Galloway. He was a father to 11 children
Name also appears on records as Pipkin Galloway. Enlisted as a Private on March 1, 1864 at James Island in the 21st South Carolina Infantry, Company H. Captured by the enemy on January 15, 1865 at Fort Fisher. Received at Elmira on January 30, 1865. Died of gangrene of the feet as a POW.
He seved at Ft. Fisher and guarded the mouth of the Cape Fear River which led to Wilmington, North Carolina. He was the son of George and Susannah C. Pipkin Galloway. He was a father to 11 children
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