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Terror, Looting and Banishment in Tennessee


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Terror, Looting and Banishment in Tennessee

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General Eleazer A. Payne (Paine) was an Ohio lawyer and prewar friend of Abraham Lincoln. Formally reprimanded for brutality toward civilians in western Kentucky, he was known to have allowed Southern prisoners to ride away on old horses to be chased down and killed by his men. After the war Mrs. T.J. Latham became president of the Tennessee Division, United Daughters of the Confederacy and State Agent for the Jefferson Davis Monument Fund. She also raised funds for the Nathan Bedford Forrest Monument.

 

www.Bernhard Thuersam, www.Circa1865.com The Great American Political Divide

 

Terror, Looting and Banishment in Tennessee

 

“Mrs. Latham was married at her home in Memphis just at the beginning of the war to T.J. Latham, a young attorney and Unionist of Dresden, Tenn., their home till the close of war.

 

Dresden was debatable ground, subject to raids by “bushwhackers” and “guerillas,” one week by one side, and the next week by the other. These incursions, frequent and without notice, were sometimes to arrest “disloyal” citizens and always to secure every good horse, or any moveable article they could make available. Scissors-32x32.pnghttp://freenorthcarolina.blogspot.com/2015/09/terror-looting-and-banishment-in.html

 

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