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Scotland County history

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  • Scotland County history

    As I mentioned in a previous post almost all of the men from Co. I were from Scotland County. The following is information taken from a book titled "History of Lewis, Clark, Knox and Scotland Counties Missouri" published in 1887:

    Presidential election results for Scotland County:

    1860 -
    Stephen A. Douglas, Dem..................741
    John Bell, Amer................................436
    John C. Breckinridge, Dem..................187
    Abraham Lincoln, Rep.........................197


    Also of note the election of 64' was not a landslide for Lincoln

    1864 -
    Abraham Lincoln, Rep...................612
    George B. McClellan, Dem..............533


    Some of the towns of the county included:

    Memphis(county seat)
    Edinburg
    Pleasant Retreat
    Bible Grove(Site of an 1862 battle)
    Etna
    Arbela
    Uniontown
    South Upton


    The "Memphis Journal" was the only newspaper established by 1864.


    Something interesting of note also"

    "At the November term, 1864, of the county court of Scotland, it was "ordered that a bounty of $200 be issued to each single man, and $300 to each married man, under the call for 300,000 men,"to fill the quota of the county. In accordance with this order, bounty warrants were afterward issued, and paid to recruitsto the amount of $33,450, as shown by the register of warrants paid. No draft was enforced during the war in Scotland County." Page 536.

    I realize this is several weeks after the date we are portraying but wanted to share it with you.

    Greg Colvin
    great-great-Grandson of David B. Cravens
    Company I, 21st Missouri

  • #2
    Re: Scotland County history

    The 21st Missouri voted the following in the '64 election:

    Abraham Lincoln 472
    George McClellan 2
    (Twenty-First Missouri Leslie Anders pg. 199)
    Last edited by Hairy Nation Boys; 07-31-2009, 09:06 AM.
    Nathan Hellwig
    AKA Harrison "Holler" Holloway
    "It was the Union armies west of the Appalachians that struck the death knell of the Confederacy." Leslie Anders ,Preface, The Twenty-First Missouri

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    • #3
      Re: Scotland County history

      Here is a nice piece of info I found while going through the 21st MO Co I roster.

      A Corporal Albert Anderson destered in St Louis on October 1, 1864.

      Since this happened just a couple of days before reaching Gray Summit I thought it might come in hand for some firper conversation.
      Respectfully,

      Jeremy Bevard
      Moderator
      Civil War Digital Digest
      Sally Port Mess

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