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Roster of Company
H, 26th Regiment
South Carolina Volunteers
The
Twenty-Sixth Infantry Regiment was organized at Charleston, South
Carolina
in September, 1862, by consolidating the 6th and 9th Battalions South
Carolina
Infantry because the two regiments were essentially wiped out in the
first
summer of the war in Virginia. After serving in South Carolina, the
Twenty-Sixth
moved to Mississippi, was placed in N.G. Evans' Brigade, and confronted
the enemy at Jackson, Mississippi. The expectation was that they were to
relieve
Vicksburg which was under siege by General Grant. Before dawn on the
7th
of July, news was received that Vicksburg had been surrended on the
4th.
General Evans' brigage was ordered back to South Carolina and arrived
in
Charleston late July of 1863.
On
Morris Island,
At Fort Wagner, the 26th threw back the Federals including the famous
54th
Massachusetts. Abondoning Morris Island, the 26th was transferred to
Fort
Sumter. They repelled the "Boat Attack" in September of 1863 and
continued
to defend Fort Sumter throughout the Fall. They fired upon the Yankees
on Morris Island where the Federals had set up heavy artillery and were
bombarding Fort Sumter.
In October of 1863,
there
were 343 men present for duty in the 26th Regiment.
The
regiment
was sent to Virginia in March of 1864 where they were assigned to
Elliott's
and Wallace's Brigade. They arrived on May 17th. ON the night of the
19th,
they moved across the Appomattox River to Clay's farm or Warebottom
Church
were they met the enemy. On the 18th of June 1864 the Petersburg siege
began and lasted until April 2, 1865. Participating in this long seige
the regiment sustained 72 casualities at the Petersburg mine explosion
and lost many men at Saylor's Creek.
The
Twenty-Sixth
Regiment ended the war at Appomattox surrendering with 8 officers and
113
men having lost 222 men in just one and a half years. The field
officers
of the Twenty-Sixth Regiment were Colonel Alexander D. Smith,
Lieutenant
Colonels Stephen D. M. Byrd, and Joshua H. Hudson, Majors Ceth S. Land,
and Cornelius D. Rowell.

The 26th
Infantry Regiment
participated in the following battles:
-
Jackson Siege,
Mississippi (July
1863)
-
Charleston Harbor,
South Carolina
(August - September 1863)
-
Bermuda Hundred,
Virginia (17
May - 16 June 1864)
-
Petersburg Siege,
Virginia (June
1864 - April 1865)
-
The Crater,
Virginia (30 July
1864)
-
Ft. Stedman,
Virginia (25 March
1865)
-
Five Forks,
Virginia (1 April1865)
-
Appomattox Court
House, Virginia
(9 April 1865)
The following
letter from Colonel
J.H. Hudson to Colonel J.P. Thomas was dated:
"Bennetsville,
South Carolina
July 2, 1898."
My Dear Sir,
The rolls are the same
Except
the name of Capt. Dickenson who must have been the first Capt. before
the
reorganization of the Volunteer Army in May 62 when all enlisted for
the
War. Co. C & H of the 26 S.C.V. originally constituted Byrd's
Battalion.
Located at McClellansville in Dec. 1862. these three companies were
consolidated
with the seven companies of the 9th Battalion and came to us at Church
Flats.
Dickinson must have
evidently
Resigned or were left out upon the reorganization at all events,
Wheeler
was the Capt. when the Co. came to us and became Co. H 26 S.C.V. The
roll
headed by the name of Capt. Dickinson has been made out by me who
mistook
the letters of the Co. whilst the roll headed by Capt. Wheeler was made
out by a different person but who has been correct letter Viz. H.
Therefore
each roll must be lettered H. or Dickerson's roll must be changed from
D. to H.
Yours truly,
J.H. Hudson
 |
Joshua Hilary Hudson
was born on 29 January 1832 at Chester, S.C.
He
married the former
Miss Mary Miller on 4 May 1854.
He
died on
22 July 1909 at Greenville, South Carolina.
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J.H. Hudson was commanding officer
of the
26th SC Regiment at the Battle of Five Forks which was fought on
April 1, 1865. During that battle, he was severely wounded and
transported
to the Pegram House (where the depot agent lived) at Ford's
Station,
about seven miles from the Five Forks battlefield on the South Side
Railroad.
At the Pegram House, Hudson shared
a room
with Willie Pegram, the famous Confederate Colonel of Artillery, who
had
been wounded in a similar fashion- and not too far from where
Colonel
Hudson fell with his wound. The following morning, Col. Hudson awoke
and
inquired about Colonel Pegram. He was told that Pegram had died during
the night and was buried in the yard below.
On the morning of April 4, 1865,
Colonel
Hudson fell into the hands of the Union Army, as they were passing
through
the area. On this day, he was visited by General Grant, who had his
personal
surgeon examine Hudson and left orders with the Guard stationed there
that
Col. Hudson was to remain at the Pegram House, unmolested, until he was
able to get about from his wound.
On May 2, 1865, Colonel Hudson
received his
Parole Papers from a visiting General Joshua L. Chamberlain of Maine.
Of
course, Chamberlain has been made into a post-war hero for his gallant
deeds at the Battle of Gettysburg. After a total of six weeks, Colonel
Hudson
began the trek back home to Bennettsville, South Carolina., where he was restored
to
his family.
His wife, the former Miss Mary
Miller, had
been told that her husband was dead on the field at Five Forks. As we
might imagine, his homecoming was indeed a very special one!
In the years after the war, Colonel
Hudson was
very active across the state of South Carolina. He served as Circuit
Judge
from 1878 to 1894. After that, he maintained a private law practice-
and
was called upon often to help dedicate many Confederate markers and
monuments
across the Palmetto State.
Joshua Hilary Hudson was a brother
to Dabney
Rush Hudson, who was the great-great grandfather of Hudson Alexander of
Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Dabney Hudson served throughout the war
as a member of the 13th SC Regiment. (Hudson Alexander submitted the
photo
and biographical information about his co-lateral ancestor, Colonel
J.H.
Hudson.)
The roster
below, except
where indicated by a *, comes from J.H. Hudson's letter.
If your ancestor is missing from
this roster,
please let me know.
I will be happy to add him after
receiving
a copy of your documentation.

Roll of Company H, 26th Regiment,
South Carolina
Volunteers
If you have any
information to
add to this data, please let me know.

Officers
- Captain Henry S. Dickinson Sumter
County
-
1st Lt. Robert E. Wheeler Clarendon
County,
Killed at Petersburg, Va.
-
2nd Lt. Reece Tomlinson Clarendon
County,
died 1879
-
2nd Lt. Henry Hickson Lancaster
County
-
2nd Lt. Jos. Cosworth Floyd died
July 8,
1863, Jackson, Mississippi #
-
1st Sgt. W.J. Sturgeon Sumter
County, wounded
Petersburg, Va.
-
2nd Sgt. W.J. Gibbons Clarendon
County
-
3rd Sgt. J. T. Chandler Clarendon
County
-
4th Sgt. W.D. McKenzie Clarendon
County
-
1st Corp. T. G. Floyd Clarendon
County
-
2nd Corp. J.C. Floyd Clarendon
County
-
3rd Corp. Ebb P. Truluck Clarendon
County,
wounded Jackson, Mississippi
-
4th Corp. N. B. Barrow Clarendon
County
-
Corp. T.Z.B. Vasser died Aug
1863, Jackson,
Mississippi #
Enlisted Men
- Asher, Nickolas Clarendon
County
-
Baker, M.E.B. Clarendon County
-
Barfield, W. Henry Clarendon
County
-
Barrow, C.L. Clarendon County
-
Barrow, P.M. Clarendon County,
died at Camp
Palmer, S.C.
-
Beard, Joseph H.F. Clarendon
County
-
Brown, WilliamClarendon County
-
Brown, H.E.Clarendon County
-
Carraway, Jesse C.**
-
Carraway, John J.Clarendon
County
-
Cannon, W.T.Clarendon County
-
Chandler, Daniel Clarendon
County
-
Chandler, Samuel Mallory
(Corporal) *** Clarendon
County
died
July 30, 1864, Battle of the Crater ##
-
Coker, R.H.Clarendon County
-
Coker, W.N. Clarendon County
-
Cone, Daniel Sumter County,
wounded at Charlotte,
N.C.
-
Conyers, Robert Sumter County
-
Dennis, Jerimiah Clarendon
County, wounded
at Petersburg, Va., died May 22, 1864, He was born in S.C; enlisted in
Sumter Dist., S.C. ##
-
Driggers, Daniel Clarendon
County
-
DuBose, J.J. Clarendon County
-
DuBose, W.H. Clarendon County
-
Ellis, Jesse B. Williamsburg
County,died
at Jackson, Mississippi July 1863#
-
Evans, John P.R. Clarendon
County, wounded
at Canton, Mississippi July 1863
-
Friese, John F.W. Charleston
County
-
Floyd, James
Clarendon
County
-
Floyd, John C.Clarendon County,
died Mississippi
1863
-
Floyd, Pleasent C.Clarendon
County, died
Mississippi 1863
-
Floyd, Jesse Clarendon County,
died Mississippi
1863
-
Floyd, W. Henry Clarendon
County
-
Gamble, J. Fletcher Clarendon
County
-
Gibbons, M.M. Clarendon
County, killed at
Clay's Farm, Va. May 20, 1864
-
Gibbons, J. Preston Clarendon
County
-
Gowdy, James E.Clarendon County
-
Green, Thomas J.*Sumter
County, died in Mississippi
-
Green, William L.Sumter County,
died in Union
Prison 1864
-
Green, Sidney A. Sumter
County, killed in
battle July 30, 1864
-
Gibbes, Joseph W.Sumter County
-
Goodman, E.B.Sumter County
-
Hicks, James W.Clarendon
County, wounded
at Clay's Farm, Va.
-
Hickson, S.E.B. Darlington
County
-
Hill, Hezikiah Timmonsville,
Florence County
d. 22 Feb. 1907 buried Sparrow Swamp Baptist Church**
-
Jackon, Gabriel Charleston
County
-
Kirby, Evanada Sumter County
-
Lemmon, William O.Clarendon
County
-
McCaskill, John W.Clarendon
County, died
of disease at Camp Palmer 1862
-
McElveen, Adam T.Darlington
County
-
McElveen, William E.Sumter
County
-
McKenzie, James Clarendon
County
-
McKenzie, Lorenzo Sumter County
-
McKnight, Robert J.Clarendon
County
-
McKnight, H.B.
****Captured
March 25, 1865, released June 29, 1865 (moved to Texas)
-
McKnight, John H.**
-
McNeil, James C.Sumter County
-
Miles, Allen Williamsburg
County, died of
disease 1863
-
Millet, Miller - ******* Miller M. Mellett, Co. H, 26th SC died in Wayside
Hospital, Charleston, SC on Sept. 16, 1863 and is buried at Magnolia Cemetery,
Charleston, on row 7, grave # 50.
-
Morris, A. Jackson Clarendon
County
-
Morris, Christopher Clarendon
County
-
Morris, Harvey Clarendon County
-
Oliver, William died May 23,
1864. He was
born in Marion Dist., S.C. ##
-
Osborne, Joseph W. Clarendon
County, died
of disease in Georgia 1863
-
Perkins, John P. (Corp.)
Sumter County, died
at Petersburg, Va. May 23, 1864 ##
-
Piggot, E. Melton Sumter
County, died at
Richmond
-
Player, M.C. Clarendon County
-
Reynolds, Pleasent T. Darlington
County.*******He
was born in November 1836 and died 26 Jan 1920 in Arkansas. His
certificate
of release as a prisoner from the Point Lookout, MD prison camp of war
is dated 17 June 1865.
-
Robertson, Samuel Clarendon
County, discharged
at Camp Palmer
-
Robertson, Ellison Clarendon
County
-
Rolong, Jacob Clarendon County
-
Rush, Alvin W. Clarendon County
-
Scurry, John C.Williamsburg
County
-
Sims, Thomas W.Darlington
County, died of
disease at Jackson, Mississippi ,1863
-
Smiley, James Clarendon County
-
Smith, Samuel E.Clarendon County
-
Smith, Samuel Clarendon County
-
Thornhill, Benjamin B.Clarendon
County
-
Truluck, James Clarendon
County, captured
near Farmville April 6, 1865, sent to Point Lookout Prison, released
July,
1865
-
Truluck, John Thomas Clarendon
County
-
Tomlinson, Ira Sumter County,
died in 1871
-
Tomlinson, William D. Sumter
County
-
Tomlinson, J.C.C. Sumter
County, killed
in action in Virginia ******* (Pay voucher
shows promotion to Lieutenant)
-
Turnstall, William J. Sumter
County
-
Tolson, R.G. Darlington County
-
Vasser, Thomas Z. B. Clarendon
County, died
of disease, Mississippi 1863
-
Welch, Robert J.Clarendon
County, died in
1881
-
Welch, James Clarendon County
-
Welch, Henry Clarendon County
-
Welch, Elijah Clarendon County
-
Welch, Joseph Clarendon County
-
Welch, Joseph W. Clarendon
County
-
Welch, W. H .Clarendon County
-
Wilder, Arthur Clarendon County
-
Wilson, J.J. Clarendon County
-
Yarborough, J.E. Clarendon
County
-
Yarborough, John *****Clarendon
County, killed at Petersburg, June 17, 1864
-
Yarborough, Needam. Clarendon
County
-
Yarborough, William A. Clarendon
County
*This
information provided and documented with muster rolls by Dale Molina, a
descendant of Thomas J. Green.
**This
information ws provided and documented by Frank A. Ward who has an
application
to the Florence County pension board for P. Elixabeth Ward Hill.
***
This information was provided and documented by Rose
Jones who is a descendant of Samuel Chandler.
****This
information was provided and documented by Johnny
McKnight, who is a descendant of H.B. McKnight
*****
This information was provided by Jenny
Londrico , who is a descendant of Yarborough family.
******This
information was provided by Kevin
L. Privette, who is a descendant of Pleasant Reynolds.
******* Information on promotion, provided
by Barry Tomlinson, a
descendant of J.C.C. Tomlinson.
******* Information on Miller Mellette provided by Aldine Owen.
#Confederate
Deaths in Jackson, Mississippi ref:
Volume II of Deaths of
Confederate
Soldiers in Confederate Hospitals by Raymond W. Watkins
## Buried at
Blandford Cemetery,
Petersburg, Va. ref:Confederate Burials Vol VII
If you have any information
to add
to this data, please let me know.
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Mystery of Button Found on Battlefield
In about 1990, Paul Kraft,
who lives in the Gluckstadt, Mississippi, an area just south west of
Canton, Mississippi found a button embossed with the Palmetto tree
insignia. He had been searching for War Between the States relics.
How this button came to be in this area had always puzzled him
until he visited this website, honoring Company H of the 26th Regiment
from Sumter and Clarendon, South Carolina.
Upon discovering that Company H of the 26th Regiment SCV had engaged in battle in
the area where he found the button, he now feels that the mystery
has been solved.
Proudly, as with many folks west of the Mississippi, Paul has
deep roots in South Carolina. His great - great - great grandfather,
Sebastian Kraft was from near Sedalia, in Union County, South Carolina.
Paul's ancestor is buried there, in the family cemetery just north
of his home, the old Minter house.
If
you had an ancestor who served with Company H, you may imagine
that the button possibly belonged to your great-great-great
grandfather. You now know that a man who cherishes our shared history
and southern roots
found this button many years after it was lost by another man who was
from South Carolina. Paul keeps it in
rememberance of men from Sumter and Clarendon Counties, brave men, who
traveled far from
home, to fight and sacrifice for a cause in which they believed.

This information was added on December 2, 2006.
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Return
to Sumter County's Main Page
Company
I 25th Regiment South Carolina Volunteers
Company
I 23rd Regiment South Carolina Volunteers
Company
K 23rd Regiment South Carolina Volunteers
Company
I, 7th Regiment South Carolina Cavalry
20th
South Carolina Militia, Sumter District
Information
on Some of My Confederate Ancestors
Elmira
Prison Camp Listing

John Edward Yarborough,
William A.
Yarborough, Needham Yarborough
1924 Jesup, Georgia
This photo was take of them to
honor
them as Confederate Soldiers.
They were all over 80 years of
age.
They are all buried in Wayne
County,
Georgia
Photograph donated by Jenny
Londrico .

The data
included on the web
pages created by Cynthia Ridgeway Parker may be freely used to further
one's knowledge and understanding of family origins. The information
included
on this page is from the personal research of Cynthia Parker. The
contents
of this web page may not be published or distributed in any form
without
the written permission of the webmaster. You are welcome to print a
copy
for your own personal use or for donation to your local genealogical
society
or library. All printed copies must retain this disclaimer. Please feel
free to link to and share this url. (The reasoning behind the
restrictions
is the hope to deter those who would attempt to sell what I give
freely.)
Old Sumter
District,
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and
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Roots Web
Sites

© 1996 - 2007
Cynthia
Ridgeway Parker
This page was last updated on April 24, 2007
Sumter, South Carolina
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