Making your own Profile Page is easy, free and quick. Join now and start sharing your insights and discoveries.
Contribution Score
13Look below to see what Texhoma has contributed. About
Texhoma
- Member since 10 May 2007
- Oklahoma City
-
Contact me
Watch
What Texhoma is doing on Footnote…
-
I'd very much like to know why this man had an alias. Is one of the names that of a stepfather? Other possibilities?
made a comment on this Image. 16 Jul 2008 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
John served in the Civil War and answered the Tennessee Civil War Questionnaires in 1910. He was living in Washington state at the time. He never married.
made a comment on this Image. 21 Jun 2008 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
Lloyd G. Crabtree is my great-uncle. He was a fabulous person!
made a comment on this Image. 13 May 2008 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
Believe to have died at Pea Ridge. Three other of his brothers also died--two at Camp Douglas (Merriman L. and Elisha F.)--and brother John B. died at the end of the war. Sons of Job and Elizabeth Landrum Cooper of Johnson Co.
made a comment on this Image. 01 Sep 2007 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
Merriman Landrum Cooper, named for his maternal grandfather. He died at Camp Douglas along with his brother Elisha. Brother John B. survived, was paroled, and died at the end of the war. Their brother Jose D. died at Pea Ridge.
made a comment on this Image. 01 Sep 2007 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
Died at Camp Douglas, along with his brother Merriman. Brother John B. survived only to die toward the end of the war--probably the Battle of Atlanta. Brother Jose D. died at Pea Ridge.
made a comment on this Image. 01 Sep 2007 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
John B. Cooper and 3 of his brothers all died in the Civil War. Jose D., Elisha F., and Merriman were his brothers. Their parents were Job and Elizabeth Cooper Landrum who had come to Texas from Tennessee about 1841.
made a comment on this Image. 01 Sep 2007 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
I think James probably died of the measles, which I've read were rampant in his unit about this time. He was the son of Mordecai L. Spindle and Frances Dickenson Spindle, both of whom had died prior to his enlisting.
made a comment on this Image. 01 Sep 2007 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
Lived 1905-1915 in Oklahoma
made an annotation. 06 Aug 2007 See all of Texhoma's Annotations
-
James Anderton
made an annotation. 06 Aug 2007 See all of Texhoma's Annotations
-
Anderton IS the right name for this person. He homesteaded in Beaver County, Oklahoma in 1905, and applied for a Confederate pension there in 1915. He went back to Alabama and is buried in Cochran Cemetery in Marshall County, Alabama. His wife Sarah Davis Anderton died in Beaver County, Oklahoma and is buried there in Blue Mound Cemetery.
made a comment on this Image. 06 Aug 2007 See all of Texhoma's Comments
-
James Anderton obtained his Confederate Pension in Beaver County, Oklahoma, and moved back to Alabama shortly thereafter.
made a comment on this Image. 18 Jul 2007 See all of Texhoma's Comments