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CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

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  • CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

    He is said to have enlisted in the last days of March 1864, at age 16; Company D (Brown's), 4th Alabama Cavalry Regiment (Home Guard) at Elba; and to have been honorably discharged at Elba in May 1865, on account of close of war. He moved his family to Laurel Hill in 1890, where he and wife, Mary Jane Lassiter, raised ten children. He was granted a Confederate soldiers pension in Florida, no. 8948, of $600 per annum was awarded to be paid effective from June 12, 1941. At some point the pension increased to $75 per month ($900 per annum), and finally, in 1953, it was increased to $150 per month ($1800 per annum). Source: Florida Pension Records On January 18, 1955, the Boston Traveler published an article, "Reb on T.V.", of which William Allen Lundy was the subject; making mention of the 107 year old Confederate veteran being on television in Pensacola.

    He was the last surviving Confederate soldiers residing in Florida, and one of three (all Confederate) Civil War veterans in the United States.

    At the ostensible age of 109, Private Lundy died at Crestview, Okaloosa County, on September 1, 1957. He is interred at Almarant Cemetery, Laurel Hill. These photos are from 1955 at Eglin AFB, Florida.









    Last edited by OldKingCrow; 10-16-2008, 02:51 PM.

  • #2
    Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

    Awesome pics. Thanks Chris!!!

    Scott Bumpus

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    • #3
      Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

      Did he receive a Confederate headstone ????? It would have been interresting to sit down and talk to him about everthing he went thur during the war and all the histroy he saw during his life time.
      Sean Wilson

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      • #4
        Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

        Wow thanks for sharing the info. Crazy when you think about it, this man fought in a war of blackpowder muskets and cannon and there he is with fighterjet. Goes to show either the speed of human 'progress' or that the war wasn't all that long ago...
        [FONT="Georgia"][B][SIZE="3"]Paul Norris[/SIZE][/B][/FONT]
        [SIZE="2"][B][FONT="Georgia"]19th Alabama Infantry
        [url]http://www.19thal.50webs.com/[/url]
        [/FONT][/B][/SIZE]
        Backwaters 1865 - S.U.G., Company A

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        • #5
          Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

          Great Job !!! It would have been cool to talk with him about the War and other things that happen in history in his life time.
          Sean Wilson

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          • #6
            Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

            The radical changes this man saw during his lifetime will never be repeated!
            Frank Perkin

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            • #7
              Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

              When he was a youngster steam power was probably a wonder to him and there he is posing with a jet. Telegraph to television. Fifty states. Refrigeration. Amazing life. I once read a WW1 veteran's stories about everyone stopping to look up in wonder at airplanes and being fascinated with radio.
              "Bowen's division sustained its reputation by making one of its grand old charges, in which it bored a hole through the Federal army, and finding itself unsupported turned around and bored its way back again" - Gen. Pemberton's chief engineering officer

              Sam Looney
              1st Missouri Battalion
              Trans-Mississippi Brigade

              CWPT

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              • #8
                Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

                Great story!!!!................hmmm, I wonder what became of the musket in th elast photo?
                [FONT=Times New Roman][COLOR=DarkSlateGray][SIZE=3]Michael Phillips, GGG Grandson of
                Pvt Edmond Phillips, 44th NCT, Co E, "The Turtle Paws"[/SIZE]
                [SIZE=2]Mustered in March 1862
                Paroled at Appomattox C.H. Virginia, April 15, 1865[/SIZE][/COLOR][/FONT]

                [FONT=Times New Roman][SIZE=3][COLOR=Navy][B]"Good, now we'll have news from Hell before breakfast."[/B][/COLOR][/SIZE]
                Was Gen Sherman's response upon hearing the capture and execution of 3 reporters who had followed from Atlanta, by the rebels.
                The execution part turned out to be false.[COLOR=DarkRed] [B]Dagg Nabbit![/B][/COLOR][/FONT]

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                • #9
                  Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

                  That man had his fair share of U.S. history, from the Civil War to the closing of the frontier to two World Wars ... and all the other groundbreaking things along the way! What a life.
                  Bene von Bremen

                  German Mess

                  "I had not previously known one could get on, even in this unsatisfactory fashion, with so little brain."
                  Ambrose Bierce "What I Saw of Shiloh"

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                  • #10
                    Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

                    Great Job. He was a walking histroy book with everthing he had seen in his lifetime.
                    Sean Wilson

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                    • #11
                      Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

                      I hesitate to write this, but, tho' not from Missouri, one has to "show me" re: proof of the military status of the last five or six alleged Confederate veterans. To my satisfaction Albert Woolson (who, tho' never serving at Gettysburg, has a monument near the old Cyclorama building, subject of a different thread) was the last bonafide Civil War veteran when he died in 1956, a day I remember, God help me.
                      David Fox

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                      • #12
                        Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

                        Simply a piece of history! awesome pics! thanks for postin
                        Kyle (Cuffie) Pretzl
                        The Tater Mess

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                        • #14
                          Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

                          Mr. Lundy was doubtless a fine man and surely saw many changes in his life. Among those changes were his birth dates, which he appears to have enhanced as he grew older, a common trait among older people in locals where age is admired. By the 1930 censis he'd pushed his birthday back to 1858, too young to have served the Lost Cause (and, significantly, when folks were yet alive to challenge counterfeit Confederates from first person recollections). Only when he applied for his Florida pension in 1941 did he assert a birth year of 1848, squeaking in as a possible boy soldier.
                          The Federal census, under our Constitution, is mandated every year ending in a "0". Mr. Lundy appears in the 1860 census, born in May of that year. That made him actually five years of age the year he claims to have enlisted. Lunday was thus a citizen of the Confederacy, but not a defender of it.
                          As a Civil War besotted boy, I followed with keen interest the last days of the alleged last Civil War vets, including Mr. Lundey. I suffering with them during their last illnesses, memorizing their names and biographies. I've since come to the conclusion memorializing the bogus last veterans merely denies the REAL last survivors their true place in our history and in our hearts. This is why it's now a federal crime to falsely hold oneself out as a winner of the Medal of Honour: the crime is the obscuring of the true merit of those who bled to achieve this award.
                          In the 1970s Germany sought to benefit African native troops who served under German officers in WW I. Many of the old black men who stepped forward to qualify for the pension had no proof of service whatsoever. The method of sorting out the frauds was simple: hand the old guy a Mauser rifle and have him go through the manual of arms. Like riding a bicycle, it was a skill real vets never forget. Pity the Florida pension board didn't think of that.
                          Last edited by David Fox; 10-18-2008, 06:18 AM.
                          David Fox

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                          • #15
                            Re: CS Veteran Photos in 1950's

                            Good point David!
                            Tom "Mingo" Machingo
                            Independent Rifles, Weevil's Mess

                            Vixi Et Didici

                            "I think and highly hope that this war will end this year, and Oh then what a happy time we will have. No need of writing then but we can talk and talk again, and my boy can talk to me and I will never tire of listening to him and he will want to go with me everywhere I go, and I will be certain to let him go if there is any possible chance."
                            Marion Hill Fitzpatrick
                            Company K, 45th Georgia Infantry
                            KIA Petersburg, Virginia

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