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Jesse Ransom Shelton

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Jesse Ransom Shelton

Birth
Death
14 May 1940 (aged 96)
Burial
Rutherford County, Tennessee, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Jesse R. Shelton,
4th Tennessee Cavalry

From the Murfreesboro Daily News Joumal of May 14, 1940:

The ninety-six year old veteran, who enlisted at 18 at Hoover's Gap, was a member of Starnes' Regiment, of the Fourth Tennessee Cavalry. He participated in the pursuit and capture of Federal Colonel Streight at Rome, Ga., and during one engagement his horse was shot from under him. Falling a victim to typhoid fever he was mustered out of the army in 1864.

Shelton often said of the fearless Forrest, "He'd rather be in than out of a fight."

His parents were John and Emmeline Hamby Shelton. In 1868, he married Martha Jane Eaton. Jesse Ransom Shelton joined Co. E of the 4th (Starnes') Tennessee Cavalry (Confederate) in September 1862 at Hoover's Gap, Rutherford County, Tennessee.

The regiment was sent to Columbia, Tennessee, and became part of the group of regiments known as Forrest's "Old Brigade." In December 1862, Shelton participated in Forrest's first West Tennessee campaign, fighting at Jackson, Humboldt, and Trenton.

He was also part of the pursuit and capture of Col. Abel D. Streight (April-May 1863). The Fourth Tennessee Cavalry, now under McLemore, was one of the units left behind in East Tennessee when Forrest was dispatched West in October 1863. While campaigning in East Tennessee, Shelton was disabled by typhoid fever, and was left by his command in the care of a Union-sympathizing but friendly family. Two months of recovery time separated the young soldier from his command, so he set out on foot from about 40 miles east of Pikeville for his home in Middle Tennessee.

As he later wrote with "very little left of me but skin and bone, hardly able to travel, I started for home.... alone and afoot, across the mountains, infested with theives [sic] and Bushwhacters [sic], a distance of 100-125 miles (the lonesomes' [sic] trip of my life)." Shelton returned to farming and stock raising, and as he later wrote "never followed any thing else."
Jesse R. Shelton,
4th Tennessee Cavalry

From the Murfreesboro Daily News Joumal of May 14, 1940:

The ninety-six year old veteran, who enlisted at 18 at Hoover's Gap, was a member of Starnes' Regiment, of the Fourth Tennessee Cavalry. He participated in the pursuit and capture of Federal Colonel Streight at Rome, Ga., and during one engagement his horse was shot from under him. Falling a victim to typhoid fever he was mustered out of the army in 1864.

Shelton often said of the fearless Forrest, "He'd rather be in than out of a fight."

His parents were John and Emmeline Hamby Shelton. In 1868, he married Martha Jane Eaton. Jesse Ransom Shelton joined Co. E of the 4th (Starnes') Tennessee Cavalry (Confederate) in September 1862 at Hoover's Gap, Rutherford County, Tennessee.

The regiment was sent to Columbia, Tennessee, and became part of the group of regiments known as Forrest's "Old Brigade." In December 1862, Shelton participated in Forrest's first West Tennessee campaign, fighting at Jackson, Humboldt, and Trenton.

He was also part of the pursuit and capture of Col. Abel D. Streight (April-May 1863). The Fourth Tennessee Cavalry, now under McLemore, was one of the units left behind in East Tennessee when Forrest was dispatched West in October 1863. While campaigning in East Tennessee, Shelton was disabled by typhoid fever, and was left by his command in the care of a Union-sympathizing but friendly family. Two months of recovery time separated the young soldier from his command, so he set out on foot from about 40 miles east of Pikeville for his home in Middle Tennessee.

As he later wrote with "very little left of me but skin and bone, hardly able to travel, I started for home.... alone and afoot, across the mountains, infested with theives [sic] and Bushwhacters [sic], a distance of 100-125 miles (the lonesomes' [sic] trip of my life)." Shelton returned to farming and stock raising, and as he later wrote "never followed any thing else."


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