June 20, 2013 from 11am to 3pm – Country Club of Asheville
June 20, 2013 from 7pm to 9pm – Malaprop's Bookstore/Cafe
June 21, 2013 at 8:30am to June 22, 2013 at 4pm – Tweetsie Railroad, Watauga High School
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Comment by terrell garren on March 30, 2011 at 9:22am Hello Kathi,
I have a blasphemy alarm system on my computer. When I went to this site and opened your email my alarms started going off everywhere, my computer started smoking and then it blew up ! I could also hear graves rolling over out in the western counties. Just kidding, of course.
No, double no, Bryson City is not named after Tilman Bryson who may have been a brother to the notorious outlaw Goldman Bryson.
Bryson City is named after Thadeous "Thad" Dillard Bryson, a distinguished Confederate officer. Thad was apparently loved and respected in the Western part of North Carolina. His portrait hangs in the current Swain County Court House.
If Tilman Bryson was the brother of Goldman Bryson then he was from Tennessee. He may have been like his brother, not in any regular unit. If he shows up in any unit it will probably be the 3rd Tenn. Mounted Inf. I'll see if I can find him Monday. I searched NC Confederate records and Tilman is not there.
TG
Comment by Kathi Bobb on March 29, 2011 at 7:30pm
Comment by terrell garren on March 28, 2011 at 9:52pm Jewish Film Festival in Asheville
The film Jewish Soldiers in Blue and Gray was shown at the Fine Arts Theater in Asheville tonight. It was a very good movie and I recommend it to all. It was an exellent representation of Jewish participants in the American Civil War. The story is well documented and well presented.
TG
Comment by terrell garren on March 28, 2011 at 9:47pm Hello Kathi,
Thanks for the tips. I'll look for them when I'm there. As for Bryson, there are so many it's hard to sort them all out. It does appear that all or most of the ones from NC were related. As for Tillman Bryson, I suspect he was from Tennessee. Anyway, I'll find out next week.
TG
Comment by Kathi Bobb on March 28, 2011 at 9:06pm
Comment by Kathi Bobb on March 28, 2011 at 8:56pm
Comment by Kathi Bobb on March 28, 2011 at 7:45pm There may have been another of the Stewart brothers in the 5th. They had a brother William. After the war was over William, James Arch Stewart and father John all moved to Polk Co TN. In 1875 Williams was a bodyguard to a revenuer and while he accompanied him in Blairsville GA they were bushwhacked and William was killed. This was written in the newspaper and my distant cousin Caleb who is descended from William found a copy of the newspaper article recounting his death. They never determined who the shooter was.
Comment by Kathi Bobb on March 28, 2011 at 5:27pm
Comment by terrell garren on March 28, 2011 at 8:12am Hello Kathi,
I'll be back at Tennessee Archives next week. I'm going to read through all the records of every man in the 1st through the 5th Tennessee Mounted Infantry (Union). I intend to find all the NC men and troll for interesting facts. I have reviewed the Compiled Service Records for the 3rd TMI in the past but I'm going to look at it again. As we've disucssed in the past, the 3rd TMI did not exist during the war. It was concocted in 1869 in order to sweep a large group of pension applicants into eligibility.
It should be interesting.
Comment by Kathi Bobb on March 13, 2011 at 3:09pm I did find this information regarding the 5th TN Mounted Infantry. My ancestor, James "Arch" Stewart, his brother Van, brother-in-law Thomas Henderson, and cousin John Chandler joined this one, late in the war. September 23, 1864.
Organized at Cleveland,
Nashville, Calhoun and Chattanooga, Tenn., September 23, 1864. Attached to
District of the Etowah, Dept. of the Cumberland, and garrison duty in that
District and at Dalton and Marietta, Ga., until July, 1865. Skirmish at
McLemore's Cove, Ga., February 1, 1865. Expedition from Dalton to Coosawattie
River and Spring Place, Ga., April 1-4. Mustered out July 17,
1865.
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