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John Hacket, served as coal heaver aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1232.]
James Hackett, served as landsman aboard the CSS Livingstone, in 1862; rated as 2nd class fireman from February 10, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 960.]
John Hackett, ordinary seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863; attached to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 276; M1091.]
Samuel C. Hackett, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864; later appointed surgeon's steward aboard the vessel; discharged from the Naval service on December 14, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 850; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 968.]
R.J. Hackley, of Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting 3rd assistant engineer, March 3, 1863; served aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, 1863 - 1864; captured, aboard the CSS Bombshell, in Albemarle Sound, North Carolina, May 5, 1864, and transferred, the same day, from the USS Ceres to the USS Sassacus, then to the steamer Lockwood, on May 10, 1864, for transportation to a prisoner of war facility; sent to Point Lookout, Maryland, then to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, where he was received September 23, 1864; exchanged October 1, 1864. [ORN 1, 9, 745 & 1, 10, 632; Register1864; Fort Warren; deck log of the USS Sassacus dated May 5, 1864 and May 10, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 110.]
William Haddock, enlisted in Beaufort County, North Carolina, July 4, 1861, aged 27, as private, company G, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, March, 1862; also shown as discharged by Lieutenant Nelson under Conscript Act, June, 1862. [NCT 2, 152.]
Augustus Haffner, sent before Judge Lyons, at the city court, Richmond, Virginia, on May 19, 1864, under indictment for theft; because of his youth, he was sent, as an apprentice, into the Confederate States Navy; served at the Confederate States Naval Battery Brooke on the James River, 1864 - 1865; left the Battery on March 16, 1865, and was classified as a deserter on March 31, 1865. [Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 20, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 553.]
P. Hagan, enlisted as private, company B, 3rd (Palmetto) Battalion, South Carolina Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
George W. Hager, born North Carolina, 1839; enlisted in Lincoln County, North Carolina, August 18, 1862, aged 22, as private, company K, 5th Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; captured in Carteret County, North Carolina, May 4, 1863 and confined at Fort Monroe, Virginia; paroled and exchanged at City Point, Virginia, May 28, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 29, 1864; served as landsman aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864, and later aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865; married in 1867; resided as a farmer, in 1900, with his wife, Mary Jane, and three children, at Catawba Springs, Lincoln County, North Carolina; died at Jackson County, North Carolina, July 23, 1916. [NCT 2, 448; 1900 U.S. Census; North Carolina Death Collection, 1908 - 1996 at the Ancestry.com web site; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 849.]
John Haggard, served as coxswain aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863 - 1864; sentenced, by a Naval Court Martial, to be sent to Drewry's Bluff for confinement, in May, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 304; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 238.]
Patrick Haggarty, First Class Fireman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
Jeremiah Haggerty, ship's cook, side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown (operated in James River and Hampton Roads, Virginia area); served sometime between January, 1861 and June, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS.]
John Haggerty (surname also shown as Hagerty), served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the Georgia and South Carolina stations, 1861, and aboard the CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron, 1862; also shown as corporal and sergeant, transferred to the ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, on January 28, 1864; later stationed, as 5th sergeant, company A, at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 294, 296, 297, 313 & 317; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 212 and 573.]
John Haggerty, served as coal heaver aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, 1863; later served, as second class fireman, on CSS Savannah; deserted, but was apprehended by policeman Daniel Clark, and returned to the vessel, on January 16, 1864; Clark was paid a reward of $30. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; ORN 2, 1, 304; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 128.]
Michael Haggerty (surname also shown as Hagerty; first name also shown in one Naval document, as Mikle), served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the Georgia and South Carolina stations, 1861, and aboard the CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron, 1862; lodged in the Savannah jail from March 29, 1862 to April 1, 1862, for an unspecified reason; in an undated letter, sent by a person signing himself as G.A. Mitchell, the following account is given of Haggerty: "Michael Hagerty, company A. C.S. Marine Corps, a native of Ireland; 26 years old; by occupation deck hand on board steamboat; was wounded by a member of the Police Guard on the 31st of May. The ball entered the right shoulder, in front, about one inch below the clavicle, passing directly through the shoulder joint, fracturing the back of the scapula and the glenoid cavity, splintering the head of the humerus and lodging on the dorsum of the scapula just beneath the integument. The patient was taken the same night to the St. Charles Hospital where he says nothing was done in the way either of making an examination or dressing the wound. On the 2nd of June he was admitted into this hospital. An examination was made immediately but owing to the great swelling of the part it was not possible to find the ball. The ordinary cold water, and poultice dressings were applied. About the tenth or twelfth day a small dark looking opening surrounded by considerable induration made its appearance on the dorsum of the scapula near the place where the ball was supposed to be. An incision was made over the part and a search made for the ball, but without success. The same dressings were reapplied. About the 10th of August he came under my care. I found the wound discharging, very profusely, a seropurulent fluid; the patient complaining of great pain in the part which was much swollen, hard, and discoloured. Patient did not re3st well; appeared somewhat emaciated with a troublesome cough, appetite, almost none. I did not think it necessary to change the treatment, only adding iron and quinine. There was little if any visible improvement. On the 16th the ball was discovered, at a point about an inch and a half below and to the inner side of the opening which had been previously made, making its way out by ulcerative action. I immediately made an opening down to the ball and extracted it with the forceps. The ball was battered and flattened from having struck the bones in its passage. From that time up to the present the patient has been steadily improving and seems now to be on a fair way for recovery. Small epiculae of bone continue to be discharged from time to time by the posterior opening. There is still a profuse discharge from the anterior opening of seropurulent matter. The patients general health and appearance are good, appetitie, very good, rests well; is generally free from pain although at times he suffers considerably during one night. Should no untoward event occur the patient will I think finally recover - with a stiff joint though, of course." [ORN 2, 1, 317; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 19; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 573; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 22.]
Pat. Haggerty, boy, CSS General Polk, 1861. [St. Philip.]
Patrick Haggerty, private, Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the Georgia and South Carolina stations, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 317.]
John Haglund (surname also shown, variously, as Hoagland, Heugland and Hengland), originally served in the merchant marine, aboard the American bark, Delphine, which was captured by the CSS Shenandoah, December 29th, 1864; shipped as seaman aboard the cruiser, at the rate of $29.10; placed his mark against his name; triced up, January 28th, 1865, for disobedience of orders; deserted at Melbourne, Australia, January or February, 1865. [Whittle 98 and note 2; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log.]
W.R. Hagood, landsman, Confederate States Navy; attached as 1st sergeant to company D, 1st Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091.]
Christopher Haine, 2nd class boy, side wheeled steamer CSS Pontchartrain, Arkansas waters, 1862 - 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 299.]
Henry Hainsworth, Boy, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
Robert Haith, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]
G.B. Haitly, Landsman, CSS Webb, April, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 170.]
John Halbert, born England, 1839; resided as a painter, in 1860, at a boarding house in Augusta, Richmond County, Georgia; previously enlisted at Macon, Georgia, as Corporal in Confederate Army; Browns Light Infantry; 1st Georgia Battalion; re-enlisted at Pensacola, Florida in Washington Artillery; detached at Rome, Georgia to Scott's Battery of Memphis, Tennessee; detached after Chickamauga to Marshall's Battery, also of Memphis; re-enlisted at Dalton, Georgia, for the war; transferred upon Lieutenant Carney's order to the Confederate States Navy, as landsman; resided as a painter, in 1889, at Savannah, Georgia. [Florida Confederate Card File; 1860 U.S. Census; Savannah, Georgia Directories, 1888 - 1891 at the Ancestry.com web site.]
George Halbrooke, Landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
G.E. Halchrist, commander's clerk, served on the Charleston station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 317.]
William Birch Haldeman (surname also shown as Halderman), born Kentucky, July 27, 1846; originally served as private in company G, 9th Kentucky Infantry, Confederate States Army; wounded in action, September 20, 1863, at Chickamauga, Georgia; later as midshipman in the Confederate States Navy; served at Drewry's Bluff, on the James River, Virginia, and aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, 1864; resigned from the Navy, December, 1864, and returned to the Orphan Brigade of the Confederate Army (in the 1st Kentucky Regiment); post war journalist and newspaper editor of the Louisville, Kentucky, Times and the Courier-Journal; resided with his wife, Lizzie Offutt Haldeman, and three daughters, in 1900, at Jefferson County, Kentucky; served as colonel in the Kentucky National Guard, 1906-1909; adjutant general of Kentucky, 1911-1912; elected commander of the United Confederate Veterans, 1923; died October 27, 1924; buried at Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Kentucky. [Information as included in the Haldeman Family Papers held at Kentucky State Archives; also data provided by correspondent Hayes Lowe, August 13, 2003, through the Civil War Navies Message Board; Confederate Sailor 23; ORN 2, 1, 300; 1900 U.S. Census; Civil War Service Records; New York Times dated Friday, April 13, 1923 and Thursday, September 4, 1930.]
Charles Halder, seaman, side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area; February - July, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 286; DANFS.]
Edward Hale, enlisted in New Hanover County, North Carolina, August 20, 1861, as private, 1st company A, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; detailed on steamer Ben, November 8, 1861; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, July or August, 1862; served as Captain's Steward on the CSS Arctic, 1862 - 1863 (probably the same person listed in the next entry; see also, the entry for Edward Hall, who may be the same person). [NCT 1, 178; ORN 1, 23, 703 and 2, 1, 279.]
Edward Hale, seaman, CSS Caswell (wooden sidewheeled steamer, which operated as a tender on the Wilmington Station, North Carolina); served during, or sometime between the period, July, 1861 to June, 1862 (probably the same person listed in the previous entry). [ORN 2, 1, 282; DANFS.]
George Hale, seaman, ironclad ram CSS Missouri, October - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 291.]
George Hale, resident of Galveston, Texas; served as seaman aboard the CSS Webb, Shreveport, Louisiana, 1864; rated as boatswain's mate from January 1, 1864; later appointed acting boatswain aboard the CSS Webb, 1865; paroled at Shreveport, Louisiana, June 3, 1865; he lost his parole form, and was re-issued another at New Orleans on June 19, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 169 and 1, 27, 235; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, 80; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 960.]
Henry Hale, enlisted as private, company C, 1st Battalion, Alabama Artillery; noted to have entered the Navy Department; no further details. [Civil War Service Records.]
William K. Hale, born Alabama; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, 3rd class, January 28, 1863; served aboard the school ship, CSS Patrick Henry, James River squadron, 1864; later served at Battery Buchanan, Fort Fisher, North Carolina, 1864; later served as acting 1st lieutenant in Tucker's Naval Brigade; paroled at Eutaw, Alabama, on May 17, 1865. [ORN 1, 11, 772; Register1864; ADAH ; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, 82.]
P. Haley, served as ordinary seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 117.]
George Halford, born New Orleans, Louisiana, about 1838; served as quartermaster aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron; treated for tonsillitis on May 1, 1862; on Tuesday, May 13, 1862, he was treated, with a catheter for stricture of the urethra, which was causing him great difficulty when passing water. [CSS Gaines Medical Journal.]
Nicholas Halford, born New Orleans, about 1840; served as seaman aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron; treated for a fever on Tuesday, June 10, 1862; again treated for a fever on Sunday, August 10, 1862, at which time his rating was then shown as ordinary seaman; again treated for a fever on Friday, October 3, 1862; the next day, Saturday, October 4, 1862, Halford was transferred to the hospital on shore, with the notation that he was down with pneumonia. [CSS Gaines Medical Journal.]
William Halford, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama; deserted at Kingston, Jamaica, January 21, 1863. [William Marvel.]
A. Hall, recruited at Savannah, Georgia, on July 31, 1863, as a private in company E of the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 688.]
Albert G. Hall, appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, at Savannah, Georgia, and accepted his appointment on February 2, 1864; served on stern-wheeled gunboat CSS Isondiga, Savannah station, 1863 - 1864, and aboard the CSS Resolute in 1864; later served on the CSS Macon, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 289; CSS Macon Rolls; Confederate Navy subject file, N - Personnel, NN - Acceptances, applications, appointments, etc., Acceptances - appointments of officers (A-K), page 17; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 582.]
Carey J. Hall (first name also shown as Cary), resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; originally served as private, company D (Virginia Artillery), 9th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, 1862; served as landsman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 309; Norfolk County Record 76.]
David Hall, appointed chief engineer aboard the Confederate States gunboat Little Rebel, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, January 29, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
Dennis Hall, born Ireland, about 1838; transferred, on July 25, 1862, as seaman aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron; treated for a contused wound (further description of wound, or cause, not shown), on Wednesday, August 13, 1862; treated for a fever on Tuesday, August 26, 1862; treated for tonsillitis on Wednesday, October 15, 1862; treated for syphilis on Saturday, January 3, 1863; on Sunday, January 4, 1863, the surgeon's report indicated thus: "cauterize chancre. Should be touched with nitric acid, but there is none in the ship". [CSS Gaines Medical Journal; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 468.]
E. Hall, served aboard the CSS Missouri, Shreveport, Louisiana, in 1864; rated as master at arms on April 2, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1015.]
Edward Hall, captain's clerk; served on the Wilmington station, North Carolina, 1862 - 1864 (see also, two entries for Edward Hale, who may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 323.]
Elias Guy Hall (middle initial incorrectly shown, in Register1862, as E.), original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, July 13, 1861; served on the Richmond station, and on the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1861; allotment of part of his pay made, in 1861, to C. V. Hall; promoted 2nd assistant engineer, September 29, 1862; reported for duty aboard the CSS Harriet Lane, Galveston Bay, Texas, February, 1863. [ORN 1, 19, 838 & 840 and 2, 1, 299 & 322; Register1862; Register1863; Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OL - Mobilization and demobilization; Norfolk - Miscellaneous, page 186.]
Elihu W. Hall, shipped, at Shreveport, Louisiana, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, for three years, or the war, on March 2, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 402.]
George Hall, enlisted, for one year, as coal passer aboard the cruiser CSS Nashville, Charleston, South Carolina, on October 5, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1228; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133.]
George Hall, resident of Stockton-on-Tees, England; previous service in the merchant marine, aboard the Ellen, of Sunderland; shipped, for a brief period, aboard the CSS Rappahannock, at Calais, France, as landsman, and fireman, in early 1865. [Alabama Claims Correspondence 2, 192-193.]
Green Hall, born Louisiana, 1835; as captain, commanded the CSS Uncle Ben and CSS Sachem in 1863; later served aboard the CSS John F. Carr, April, 1864; captured off Indianola, Texas, April 6, 1864; resided as a sailor, in 1870, with his wife, Ernestine, and son John, at Calcasieu parish, Louisiana; later, in 1880, employed as a bar room keeper, at the town of Lake Charles, Calcasieu parish; died November 18, 1890; buried at Graceland Orange Grove Cemetery, Lake Charles, Louisiana. [ORN 1, 21, 169; Young Sanders; 1870 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Henry B. Hall, enlisted by lieutenant Venable, at Richmond, on April 23, 1864, as private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps (another document shows that Hall was enrolled as a conscript at Camp Lee on March 17, 1864); served on the Richmond station, and at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 466; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
J.A. Hall, enlisted as private, company K, 28th Battalion, Georgia Siege Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
J. H. Hall, served at the Mobile station, in 1864, as a private in company F of the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1072.]
J.W. Hall, Landsman, CSS Webb, April, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 170.]
James W. Hall, private, company A, Confederate States Marine Corps, December, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 313; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
Lilburn H. Hall, previously served as Private, Company B, First Regiment Georgia Regulars, May, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 4, 1864. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 317.]
Robert Hall, landsman; served aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Winslow, North Carolina waters, 1861; also indicated to have served aboard the CSS Seabird, but escaped when the vessel was captured on February 10, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 312; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 779.]
Samuel P. Hall, resided in, and enlisted at Wilkes County, North Carolina, June 12, 1861, aged 21, as private, company C, 26th Regiment North Carolina Troops; wounded in the right thigh and captured at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on or about July 3, 1863; hospitalized at Gettysburg, then transferred to Davids Island, New York Harbor sometime between July 17 and 24, 1863; sent to City Point, Virginia, September 16, 1863, for exchange; transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about April 15, 1864. [NCT 7, 499.]
Thomas Hall, served as landsman aboard the CSS Pamlico, New Orleans station, from December 4, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 268.]
Thomas Hall, born England; shipped aboard the CSS Shenandoah, October 18, 1864; rated quartermaster; placed in single irons, November 24, 1864, for fighting with fellow crew member, Peter Raymond; released a few hours later; confined in irons, again, and triced up, November 27, 1864, for "scandalous conduct"; released a short time later, and disrated to seaman; punished again, December 2, 1864, for using abusive language to fellow crew member, Louis Rowe; released a short time later; rated quartermaster, again, December 18, 1864; reshipped April 18, 1865. [Alabama Claims, 1, 975; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log; Whittle 76 - 77, 93, 235 - 236; ORN 1, 3, 783.]
Tudor T. Hall, served as Private in Company I, 42nd Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, March 4, 1862; roll to April 30, 1862 shows he was "appointed Sergeant in Confederate States Navy - not transferred." No further record. [Georgia Rosters, 4, 600.]
W.H. Hall, Landsman, CSS Alert, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 275.]
Wilburn B. Hall, born South Carolina, September, 1838; citizen of, and appointed from, Georgia (New York Times of June 13, 1859 indicates he was appointed from Louisiana); original service in the United States Navy, from September 20, 1855; graduated from the United States Naval Academy, 1859; appointed master, Confederate States Navy, July 24, 1861; served aboard the CSS Huntress and the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, Georgia, 1861; later appointed 1st lieutenant, February 8, 1862; served on the Savannah station, 1861 - 1862; served on the Charleston station, 1862, and was in the engagement at Secessionville, James Island, South Carolina, June 16, 1862; served aboard the CSS Charleston, Charleston station; later served aboard the CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile squadron, 1862 - 1863; reported for duty aboard the CSS Harriet Lane, Galveston Bay, Texas, February, 1863; sent, later in 1863, in charge of a detachment of Naval personnel, to Shreveport, Louisiana, for duty aboard the CSS Missouri, under lieutenant J.H. Carter; also served aboard the CSS Webb; later served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, 1863 - 1864; married a daughter of Confederate navy officer, Duncan Ingraham, in 1863; also aboard the CSS Raleigh, CSS Roanoke and the CSS Virginia II, James River squadron; transferred to command of the CSS Drewry on May 19, 1864; transfer revoked May 21, 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; served aboard the CSS Chicora; went to Egypt to reorganize the Egyptian army and served there until 1877; appointed consul at Nice, in October, 1893; resided with his wife, Harriet, and son, Nathaniel Ingraham Hall, at Macon, Bibb County, Georgia, and later, as a former Naval officer, in 1900, with his wife and son at Charleston, South Carolina. [ORN 1, 10, 644 & 647; 1, 19, 840; 1, 20, 817 and 2, 1, 322; ORA 1, 14; Register1863; Georgia in the War, 1861-1865, page 110; JCC 4, 121; 1870 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; New York Times dated June 13, 1859; News Observer Chronicle (Raleigh, North Carolina) dated October 8, 1893; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2.]
William Hall, served as gunner's mate aboard the CSS Selma, Mobile, Bay, Alabama, 1862 - 1864; killed in action, Mobile Bay, Alabama, August 5, 1864. [ORN 1, 21, 578 and 2, 1, 306.]
William Hall, ordinary seaman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308.]
William Hall, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the gunboat General Beauregard. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
William H. Hall, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, April 2, 1862, and ordered to report to captain Lee for duty aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia (see next entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 308; Register1862; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 511.]
William H. Hall, enlisted as private, company K, 12th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]
William O. Hall, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 310.]
James Halley, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, on June 3, 1861; served in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River squadron, in 1862, and later in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Drewry, James River squadron. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 308; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 285.]
John Halley, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 553.]
John Halligan, Officer's Cook, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
J. Halliman, served as landsman aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863; transferred as a conscript, from the command of lieutenant J. H. Rochelle, on October 23, 1863, to the command of lieutenant W. G. Dozier, aboard the receiving vessel, CSS Indian Chief. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 762-764; ORN 2, 1, 305.]
John Halloran (surname also shown as Holloran), served as coal heaver aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown (operated in James River and Hampton Roads, Virginia area); served 1861 - 1862; deserted from the vessel on May 31, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 312; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 442.]
James Hally, born Waterford, Ireland, 1839; resided as a laborer, in 1860, with his wife, Ester, at Nelson County, Virginia; enlisted as private, company C, Confederate States Marine Corps; died Richmond, Virginia, May 8, 1863; buried Hollywood Cemetery. [Confederate Burials, 68; 1860 U.S. Census.]
J. Halsenback, served as coal heaver aboard the CSS Tallahassee, Wilmington station, 1864; deserted from the vessel on October 1, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 130.]
Alexander Halstead, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 309.]
George N. Halstead, born Virginia, April, 1840 (JCC 4, 123 indicates he was appointed from Arkansas; also, Register1864 shows state of birth and appointment, as Arkansas; Halstead himself, in his letter of acceptance, indicates his place of birth as Virginia, and state of appointment as Arkansas); resident of Norfolk City, Virginia; previous service as private, company C, 15th Virginia Cavalry; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as assistant surgeon, July 15, 1863; accepted his appointment on July 21, 1863; served on the steamer, CSS Charleston, 1863 - 1864; appointed assistant surgeon, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; later served on the CSS Richmond, 1864; married in 1866; resided as a physician, in 1880, with his wife Margarett J. Halstead, and five daughters (eldest daughter born 1868), at Washington, Norfolk County, Virginia; later shown as a farmer, in 1900, in Norfolk County. [ORN 1, 10, 766; JCC 4, 123; Register1864; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Civil War Service Records; Norfolk County Record 325; Confederate Navy subject file, N - Personnel, NN - Acceptances, applications, appointments, etc., Acceptances - appointments of officers (A-K), page 19.]
William Halston, ordinary seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 293.]
Allen P. Ham, born Georgia, 1845; recruited at Savannah, Georgia, on July 31, 1863 (another source shows year of enlistment as 1864), as a private in company E, Confederate States Marine Corps; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife Isabelle, and five children (eldest biological child born 1868) at District 85, Jefferson County, Georgia; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Jefferson County, Georgia; died October 28, 1911; buried at Coleman's Chapel Methodist Church, Wadley, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 418; ORN 2, 1, 315; 1880 U.S. Census; death and burial data supplied by Brooks Hamm, of Savannah Georgia, great grandson of Allen P. Ham, in an e-mail (brooks.hamm@comcast.net) message dated Monday, December 31, 2007; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 688.]
Richard Hambly (the Straits Times account shows his surname as Humbley), Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama; deserted at Singapore, December 23, 1863; Hambly, together with two other deserters from the CSS Alabama, Frank Mahoney and John Grady (the Straits Times account shows his surname as Gready), were brought up before the court, in Singapore, on January 23, 1864,charged with assault upon some petty officers and crew of the British warships, the HMS Saracen and HMS Rifleman, and were fined 50 rupees each or the alternative of 2 months imprisonment in the House of Correction with hard labour in default of payment. [William Marvel; Straits Times (Singapore) dated 23 January, 1864.]
Thomas Hambly, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
William Hambrick, served as a landsman in the Confederate States Navy; died on August 10, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 681.]
John Hambry, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station, in 1863; transferred to the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, about July, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 437.]
Edmond Hamershmidt (surname also shown as Hammersmith), left London, England on January 16, 1864, for Brest, France, where he shipped aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, on January 19, 1864, as coal heaver. [Florida Medical Journal, see the list of personnel in the Engineer's Department, CSS Florida, dated at St. George's, Bermuda, June 27, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 351.]
E. A. Hamilton, served as surgeon's steward at the New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 69 and 108.]
Francis Hamilton, enlisted as a seaman in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, in 1861, and later rated as ship's steward, from September 18, 1861, aboard the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area, 1862; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [ORN 2, 1, 286 & 306; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 551; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 420-422 and 427.]
Francis D. Hamilton (middle initial also shown as F., and also as T.), served as landsman, or seaman, aboard the CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; apprehended, for an unspecified reason, by police officer Henry White, on January 30, 1862, and for which White received a reward of $5; Hamilton was wounded in action, April 24-25, 1862, and sent to the Marine Hospital at New Orleans. [Daily Picayune, Tuesday, April 29, 1862; ORN 2, 1, 291; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 423.]
G. Hamilton, born Louisiana, resided in New Orleans; pre-war occupation, mechanic; marital status, single; enlisted at New Orleans, April 28, 1861, as private, company K, 1st (Nelligan's) Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Booth 2, 166.]
G.W. Hamilton, private, Confederate States Marine Corps; stationed aboard CSS Savannah, Georgia; transferred to Richmond, Virginia, no dates shown. [ORN 2, 1, 316.]
James Hamilton, served in the Confederate States Army, and was transferred to the Confederate States Navy, June 30, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NF - Distribution and Transfers.; CSS Atlanta - Miscellaneous, page 88.]
James Hamilton, ordinary seaman, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll.]
John Hamilton, served as 2nd class boy aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown, 1861 - 1862; rated as 1st class boy from April 1, 1862; deserted from the vessel on June 18, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 290; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 312 and 947; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 442.]
John H. Hamilton, born Texas; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 4th class, September 6, 1861; served aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah station 1862 - 1864; service abroad, 1864; captured at Sailor's Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 322; Register1863; Register1864; see also article titled List of Confederate Officers captured at Sailor's Creek, VA., April 6, 1865, published in the New York Herald, dated April 9, 1865.]
John Randolph Hamilton, born South Carolina; previous service in the United States Navy, from September 8, 1845; resigned from the United States Navy, December 1, 1860; entered the Confederate States Navy, March 26, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; served on the Savannah station, 1861 - 1862; also served at Charleston, South Carolina; service abroad, assisting in the fitting out of vessels for the Confederate Navy, 1862; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; shown as still surviving in 1907. [ORN 2, 1, 322; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; Alabama Claims 2, 373; 36th Congress Report 24; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2.]
Oliver Clark Hamilton, born Randolph County, North Carolina, 1839; son of E. Speaks and Frances Hamilton, resident of Oak Grove, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Randolph County, November 4, 1861, as private, company H, 38th Regiment North Carolina Troops; promoted sergeant, April 18, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April, 1864, vide Special Order 89; served as landsman on the CSS Fredericksburg; transferred to the CSS Patrick Henry sometime after May 19, 1864, and the CSS Virginia II, September 16, 1864; second marriage to his war time female correspondent, Lizzie Garner, in 1880; returned to North Carolina after the war, where he remained for the rest of his life, as owner and principal of various colleges in and around Union County; died at Stokes County, North Carolina, July 31, 1918; his son, Oscar A. Hamilton, donated his war-time letters to the collections of the University of North Carolina. [NCT 10, 79; ORN 2, 1, 311; family papers held in the collections of the Division of Archives and History, North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Raleigh, North Carolina; 1910 U.S. Census; North Carolina Death Collection, 1908 - 1996 at the Ancestry.com web site.]
Patrick Hamilton, served as seaman aboard Launch No. 3, New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 47.]
Robert Hamilton, served as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy, 1862; deserted about June, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 132.]
William H. Hamilton, served as acting 2nd assistant engineer aboard the CSS Capitol, 1862; also served aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile station, 1862; resigned, 2nd quarter of 1862. [ORN 1, 23, 698; Register1862; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1064 and 1171.]
William Potter Hamilton, born South Carolina; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, 3rd class, August 5, 1861; served on the Savannah station, 1861, and aboard the CSS Nashville; later on the Charleston station, and aboard the CSS Palmetto State, 1862 - 1863; promoted passed midshipman, January 8, 1864; served on the Charleston squadron and aboard the CSS Chicora, in mid 1864; served aboard the CSS Albemarle during the attack on Plymouth, North Carolina, April 20, 1864; appointed master, in the line of promotion, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; ordered to report to Confederate Army lieutenant general Hardee, at Charleston, South Carolina, for special duty, November, 1864; attached, as captain, commanding company K, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 1, 1, 752; 1, 9, 657; 1, 13, 619 and 2, 1, 317 & 322; ORA 1, 35 (part 2), 649; Register1863; Register1864; JCC 4, 122; M1091; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water - Water for ships, page 160.]
S.W. Hamlet, landsman, ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 294 - 296; DANFS.]
John T. Hamlett, original service as private, company H, 24th Virginia Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, by command of the Confederate Secretary of War, Special Order No. 209 dated at Richmond, September 3, 1863, and ordered to report to flag officer J.R. Tucker, at Charleston, South Carolina (see also, service in the 32nd Battalion, Virginia Cavalry). [Civil War Service Records; Confederate States Navy subject file.]
George W. Hamlin, Carpenter, Captain A.B. Noyes company of Coast Guards, enrolled, October 21, 1861, at St. Marks, Florida. [Soldiers of Florida, 52.]
Michael Hammall, previously served as Private in Company B, 4th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy at Mobile, Alabama, February 15, 1864. [Information supplied by Arthur Bergeron, Louisiana.]
E. Hammersmith, see Edmond Hamershmidt.
G.M. Hammock (surname also shown as Hammack), ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Oconee (originally the CSS Savannah prior to April, 1863), Savannah River, Georgia; served May - June, 1862; also served aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Sampson, Savannah, Georgia, 1863, and the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 297, 303 & 305.]
---- Hammond, commanded CSS W. Burton, April, 1862. [ORN 1, 18, 249.]
Christorf Hammond, served as 2nd class boy at the New Orleans station, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 117.]
W.B. Hammond (middle initial also shown as R.), recruited aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, in 1864, and transferred as landsman, on October 6, 1864, from that vessel to the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), also in the same squadron; transferred to the Richmond station by order of flag officer W.W. Hunter, dated October 19, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 287; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 583; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 648.]
Lorenzo Dow Hamner (surname incorrectly shown, in Register1864, as Harmer), born Shelby County, Tennessee, December 29, 1844; moved to Mississippi, with his family, at the age of 10; appointed from Mississippi; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, September 26, 1863; served on CSS Patrick Henry, James River Squadron, 1863 - 1864; later on the CSS Chicora, Charleston Squadron; attached as 2nd lieutenant to company B, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; returned to live in Tennessee, serving as a democratic senator from Fayette and Tipton; resided as a printer, in 1880, with his wife Annie Shepherd Hamner, and three children (eldest child born Tennessee, 1875), at District 6, Fayette County, Tennessee; later employed in newspaper business, at the office of the Tipton Record; shown as a resident of Covington, Tennessee, in 1911. [Tennessee Confederate pension record of L.D. Hamner, file no. 13284, available from the Tennessee State Library and Archives; Register1864; ORN 2, 1, 299; M1091; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Cornelius Hampton, private, Confederate States Marine Corps, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 311.]
D. Hampton, ordinary seaman, steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1862 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 301; DANFS
William B. Hampton, born and resided in Currituck County, North Carolina, as a farmer, prior to enlisting there, May 13, 1861, aged 17, as private, company E, 17th Regiment North Carolina Troops (1st Organization); transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about July 28, 1861; served as landsman and seaman on the CSS Fanny, 1861-1862. [NCT 6, 152; ORN 2, 1, 285; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 330-332.]
B. W. Hamwick, served aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271.]
Frank Hanagan, see Frank Flanagan.
Shilas Hanalin, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 552.]
John Hance, served as 1st class fireman aboard the CSS Spray, St. Marks, Florida; paroled at St. Marks, May 12, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 659.]
D.B. Hancock, 2nd class boy, ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 298.]
W.A. Hancock, Coal Heaver, CSS Webb, April, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 170.]
Shilas (Silas?) Handlin, served as seaman aboard the CSS Selma, 1864; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; held as a prisoner of war aboard the USS Lackawanna, at Mobile Bay, August 7, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 464.]
Edward Handrahan, see Edward Hanrahan.
---- Handy, indicated to have been chief engineer aboard the ram CSS Manassas, during operations on the Mississippi River, January, 1862; also assistant to flag officer George N. Hollins, New Orleans. [ORN 1, 16, 730a.]
F.A.G. Handy, signal officer, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865; attached, as sergeant, to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 311; M1091.]
John Hanegan, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
William Hanes, recruited as a 2nd class boy in the Confederate States Navy, at the Naval rendezvous, Richmond, Virginia, August 1, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 444.]
John Hanify (surname also shown as Hanily), seaman, side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 286 & 306; DANFS.]
John Hanigan, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 300.]
E.F. Hanks, served as a private in company A, 56th North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, by command of the Confederate Secretary of War, Special Order No. 209 dated at Richmond, September 3, 1863, and ordered to report to flag officer J.R. Tucker, at Charleston, South Carolina. [Confederate States Navy subject file.]
Junius Hanks (first name also shown, in Register1862 and Register1863, as James), born North Carolina, 1830 (1860 U.S. Census shows state of birth as New York); resided as a machinist, in 1860, with his wife, Mary, and three children, at the home of Jeremiah and Mary Swain, in Columbia, Tyrrell County, North Carolina; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting 3rd assistant engineer, August 28, 1861; captured aboard the CSS Sea Bird at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February, 1862, and paroled; paid in full, as being on sea duty, aboard the receiving vessel Plymouth, up to April 30, 1862; served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, 1862 - 1863; later served aboard the ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863 - 1864; promoted 2nd assistant engineer, April 6, 1863; served aboard the steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1864, and aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, James River squadron, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 726 and 2, 1, 293 & 313; Register1862; Register1863; Register1864; Scharf 392; 1860 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 201; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 220.]
William H. Hanks, born North Carolina, 1837; enlisted in Beaufort County, North Carolina, April 22, 1861, as private, company K, 1st Regiment North Carolina Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, July, 1861; appointed third assistant engineer, CSS Beaufort, September, 1861 - April, 1862; vessel operated in North Carolina and Virginia waters; first marriage to Catherine Blunt, at Orange County, North Carolina, December 11, 1867; resided as a machinist, in 1880, at Durham, Orange County, North Carolina; shown as a widower in 1880; married again, about 1881, and shown residing with his wife, Sarah, and son, at Durham, in 1900. [ORN 2, 1, 281; NCT 1, 163; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; North Carolina Marriage Collection, 1741 - 2000 at the Ancestry.com web site.]
Charles Hanlan (surname also shown as Hanlin), seaman (later rated as master at arms), side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 286 & 306; DANFS.]
George Hanley, served as yeoman aboard the CSS Morgan, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Tombigbee River, Alabama, on May 10, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1216 - 1218.]
John Hanley, served as seaman at the Mobile station, 1862; arrested as a deserter at Mobile, by Mobile police, and turned over to the Naval authorities on February 12, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 427.]
Martin Hanley, enlisted, for one year, as 1st pantry man aboard the cruiser CSS Nashville, Charleston, South Carolina, on October 2, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1228; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133.]
Patrick Hanley, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308.]
J.F. Hanlon (middle initial also shown as T.), appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, August 19, 1861; resigned on September 10, 1861; re-appointed and ordered to report aboard the CSS Pamlico for duty; served on the New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; later appointed acting master, November 19, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Manassas for duty; later served on the Jackson station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 318 & 320; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), pages 515 and 517; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 1022.]
Ardle Hanlow, born Ireland; aged 23; coal heaver, CSS Manassas, 1862. [St. Philip.]
John Hanly (surname also shown as Hanley), enlisted as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, in 1861, and later served aboard the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Selma, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1862; deserted about November, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 306; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 420-422; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 134.]
Martin Hanly, pantryman (?), served on the Charleston station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 317.]
J.R. Hanna served in the Confederate States Navy; captured at Matagorda, Texas, April 26, 1864; sent, as a prisoner of war, to New Orleans, Louisiana, where he died of acute diarrhea, July 12, 1864; buried at the Cypress Grove Cemetery, New Orleans, which no longer exists. [Young Sanders; additional data also provided by Terry and Theresa Scriber, of Knoxville, Tennessee, in an e-mail (La27Infantry@wmconnect.com) dated January 14, 2007 (info as obtained from the National Archives Microfilm Roll M-598, relating to Confederate Prisoner of War Deaths, under the title "Federal Rolls of Prisoners of War").]
Joseph P. Hanna, Pilot, CSS J.F. Carr, 1864; captured at Matagorda Bay, off Indianola, Texas, April 6, 1864, by the USS Estrella, and sent to the provost marshall. [ORN 1, 21, 169.]
Samuel Hanna, ordinary seaman and sailmaker, CSS McRae, 1861 - 1862; severely wounded in the head and shoulder, April 24-25, 1862, below New Orleans; sent to the Marine Hospital at New Orleans. [Daily Picayune, Tuesday, April 29, 1862; ORN 2, 1, 291.]
---- Hannah (or Hannon), Acting Third Assistant Engineer, CSS Georgia; resigned at Cherbourg harbour, France, October 31, 1863. [Alabama Claims 1, 694; ORN 1, 2, 818.]
James Hannan, ordinary seaman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862 (see also, entry for James Hannon, who may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 309.]
T.H. Hannan (surname also shown as Haman and Harmon), landsman, CSS Chattahoochee; later served on the CSS Savannah. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; ORN 2, 1, 304; Soldiers of Florida, 317; Maxine Turner.]
James Hannegger, served as 1st class fireman aboard the CSS Maurepas, New Orleans station, in 1862; listed his next of kin as Mary Hannegger. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1005.]
Conrad Hanner, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the gunboat General Price. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
Thomas Hanney, born Ireland, about 1844; transferred from the Confederate States Army, at Dalton, Georgia, to the Confederate States Navy, on April 9, 1864, and served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Savannah; transferred, on April 21, 1864, to the CSS Isondiga, Savannah squadron. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 801; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 642.]
Henry Hannon, shipped, at Shreveport, Louisiana, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, for three years, or the war, on March 2, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 402.]
James Hannon, served as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy, on the Richmond station in 1862; appeared as a defendant in a Naval Court Martial, held at Richmond in July, 1862, specification of charges not shown; later served aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, January, 1865 (see also, entry for James Hannan, who may be the same person). [ORN 1, 11, 794; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 179.]
John Hannon, private, Confederate States Marine Corps, side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown (operated in James River and Hampton Roads, Virginia area); served sometime between January, 1861 and June, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 290; DANFS.]
Thomas Hannon, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 553.]
John Hanod, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 553.]
Edward Hanrahan (surname also shown as Handrahan; first initial also incorrectly shown as D.), sent from the Confederate Navy Yard, to Columbus, Georgia, in November, 1862; served as coal heaver aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, 1863; later served as second class fireman on the CSS Savannah. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; ORN 2, 1, 304; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 242.]
F.D. Hanscom, Seaman, participated in expedition to capture US Army steamer Leviathan, at the mouth of the Mississippi River, September 21, 1863. Recaptured the next day by USS De Soto. [ORN 1, 20, 598.]
Thomas Hansell, recruited as seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862, receiving a bounty of $50. [ORN 2, 1, 310; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 878.]
Jacob Hansen (surname also shown as Hanson, Hansom and Hennson), born Denmark (Whittle states that Hansen was a Swede); served aboard the CSS Shenandoah, 1864-1865; rated quartermaster, November 27, 1864, in place of Thomas Hall, who had been disrated for misconduct; given liberty at Melbourne, Australia, returning on board the vessel January 30, 1865. [Alabama Claims 1, 975; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log; Whittle 71 & 77; ORN 1, 3, 783.]
John Hansen, born Denmark, about 1828; served as seaman aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron; treated for catarrhus on Wednesday, July 1st, 1863, and, again, for the same condition, on Monday, July 13, 1863. [CSS Gaines Medical Journal.]
Andrew Hanson, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 43.]
Andrew Hanson, served as pilot in the Confederate States Navy, in Georgia; in an April, 1865 dispatch sent by flag officer W.W. Hunter, Hanson was stated to be unfit to hold his acting appointment in the Confederate States Navy, as he had deserted while on a leave of absence for one week. [Confederate States Navy subject files - NP.]
C. Hanson, boatswain's mate, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay, Alabama, during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]
Christopher Hanson, served as seaman aboard Launch No. 6, New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 49.]
Francis M. Hanson, served as ordinary seaman aboard the floating battery, CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in 1863; deserted from the vessel on July 30, 1863; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Walton County, Georgia; his widow, Mary B. Hanson, also filed for a pension from the same county. [GA Pension Index 425; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 471.]
George Hanson, Quarter Gunner, CSS Florida; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864; sent to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, for confinement; released February 1, 1865. [ORN 1, 3, 256; Fort Warren.]
Jacob Hanson, see Jacob Hansen.
James F. Hanson, surgeon, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 299.]
John Hanson, served as seaman aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Oconee (originally the CSS Savannah prior to April, 1863), Savannah River, 1862 - 1863; appointed ship's corporal at an unknown date; rated as master at arms aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, from December 1, 1862; rating reduced to seaman on May 17, 1863, and transferred, on May 18, 1863, to the CSS Atlanta. [ORN 2, 1, 297 & 304; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 589, 605 and 608.]
John Hanson, served as landsman aboard the CSS Juno, 1863, and was involved in the capture of the 1st launch of the USS Wabash, off Charleston, South Carolina, on the night of August 6, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of Prize Money - Miscellaneous, page 20.]
John Hanson, served aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271.]
John H. Hanson, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 69.]
Peter Hanson, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, 1864; deserted at Brest, France, January, 1864; apprehended by the French gendarmes, and returned to the vessel on January 20, 1864, for which a reward of $10 was paid; later deserted at Martinique, April 26, 1864. [Florida Medical Journal, entry dated April 26, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 349 and 357; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 136.]
Peter Hanson, ordinary seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]
Peter Hanson, quartermaster, ironclad ram CSS Missouri, October - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]
J. Hansted, original service as private, company B, 1st Texas Heavy Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
J. Hanstock, enlisted in the Confederate States Navy, for three years, or the war, on February 9, 1863; served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Missouri; died of congestive fever, at the government General hospital at Houston, Texas, on September 18, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 120-122.]
C.L. Haraldson, original service as private, company B, 4th Texas Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see next entry, which may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]
Charles L. Haralson (middle initial also shown as S.), born Georgia; appointed from Texas; previous service in the United States Navy; appointed lieutenant, Confederate States Navy, and served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, as well as on the CSS Stono, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 - 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864 (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 298; JCC 4, 122; Texas in the War, 1861 - 1865 56; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water - Water for ships, page 88.]
Jefferson G. Harbin, enlisted November 6, 1862, at Gilpin, Alabama, as private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps, and served, in 1863, at the Mobile station; promoted corporal at an unspecified date; served on CSS Savannah, Savannah station, Georgia, 1863; sent aboard the CSS Tennessee, March 14, 1864; transferred to Richmond, Virginia, at an unspecified date; served on the CSS Macon in 1865; surrendered May 10, 1865, at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Alabama; resided in Alabama after the war, and received a Confederate pension, file no. 2709 (may be the same person in the next entry). [CSS Macon Rolls; ORN 2, 1, 316; ADAH; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1061; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
Jefferson J. Harbin, born Georgia, February 28, 1830; son of John and Sophia Harbin; resided as a shingle maker, in 1850, at the home of his parents, in Cherokee County, Alabama; enlisted September, 1862, at Fayette, Fayette County, Alabama, in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served aboard the CSS Tennessee; captured August 5, 1864, at Mobile Bay, Alabama; married in 1872; resided, in 1900, with his wife, Fannie, at the home of his son, Jack, in Fayette County, Alabama; resided at Winfield, Alabama, in 1908 (may be the same person in the previous entry). [ADAH; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census.]
Jeptha Harbin (surname also shown incorrectly as Harlin), born Georgia, August, 1838; son of Mary Harbin; enlisted, on April 10, 1863, as private in company E, Confederate States Marine Corps (under John F.R. Tattnall), receiving a bounty of $50; married in 1864; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Mary Jane Harbin, and four sons (eldest son born 1868), at Mullins, Cherokee County, Georgia; still shown as a resident of Mullins, Georgia, in 1910; his widow, Mary Jane Harbin, filed for a post war Confederate pension from Cherokee County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 426; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 677.]
William A. Harbin (first name also shown as Wilbur and Wilburn), born Alabama, about 1840; resided Fayette County, Alabama; enlisted as a private, at Mobile, in 1863, and served in company D, Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS Tennessee, at Mobile, Alabama; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and sent aboard the USS Ossipee, as prisoner of war; sent aboard the steamer Stockdale, August 12, 1864; died, as a prisoner of war, of diarrhoea, at the St. Louis Military Hospital, New Orleans, Louisiana, September 30, 1864, aged 26; buried Cypress Grove Cemetery (also shown as Monument Cemetery), New Orleans; his widow was listed as Mrs. M. Harbin, of Fayette County, Alabama. [Confederate Burials, 68; ORN 1, 21, 842; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 126; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1061; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
Jacob DeLamotta Harby, born Mobile, Alabama, March 29, 1848 (1850 U.S. Census shows state of birth as Georgia); son of Levi Charles and Sonora Harby; shown residing with his parents at Chatham County, Georgia, in 1850; appointed 2nd lieutenant of the Neptune, in Texas waters, January, 1863; vessel was commanded by his father, Levi Charles Harby; later joined the 8th Texas Artillery, in which he served for the remainder of the war; resided as a travelling salesman, in 1880, with his wife Sue, and two children, at Houston, Texas; later a resident of Charleston, South Carolina; died October 26, 1916, near Huntingdon, Long Island, New York; remains returned to South Carolina, and buried at Sumter. [Confederate Veteran XXV (1917), page 132; 1850 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Levi Charles Harby, born September 21, 1793; indicated to have served as "Como" [Commodore?] in the Confederate States Navy, and in command of the steamer Neptune, Texas waters; but no listing of such an officer in official sources; died December 3, 1870; buried at the Old Hebrew Cemetery, Broadway & 41st, Galveston, Texas 77551. [U.S. Veterans Gravesites, circa 1775 - 2006 at the Ancestry.com web site; Confederate Veteran magazine, volume 25 (1917), page 132.]
William Harch, (see also the entry for William Hosch, who may be the same person) served in company E, Confederate States Marine Corps; served as witness in the Confederate pension application of J.C. Eades of Dawson County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 426.]
George W. Hardcastle, born New York city, 1810; resided as a carriage maker, in 1850 and 1860, with his wife Ann, and children, at Savannah, Georgia; served as carpenter's mate in the Confederate States Navy; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; muster roll and a Naval document of the CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and the Ladies' Ram), shows that he also served aboard that vessel, in 1863 and 1864. [ORN 1, 14, 268; 2, 1, 275 & 286-287; Scharf, 644n mentions that he later had an article on the battle published in a Savannah, Georgia, newspaper; 1850 U.S. Census; 1860 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523 and 594.]
T.C. Hardcastle, original service as gunner in the 28th (Thomas') Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
William Hardcastle, served as landsman aboard the CSS Morgan, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Tombigbee River, Alabama, on May 10, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1216 - 1218.]
Humphrey Hardder, see Humphrey Hodder.
Charles Hardee, Officer's Steward, CSS Arkansas, wounded in action, July 22, 1862. [ORN 1, 19, 70.]
Alexander Harden, served as landsman aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), Savannah, Georgia, 1863; transferred as a conscript, from the command of lieutenant J. H. Rochelle, on October 23, 1863, to the command of lieutenant W. G. Dozier, aboard the receiving vessel, CSS Indian Chief; transferred to the CSS Columbia, Charleston station in 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 287; DANFS; Confederate Navy Subject file, N - Personnel, NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 608 and 764.]
Thomas Harden (surname also shown as Hardin), served as a seaman (rating also shown as 2nd class fireman) on the CSS Chicora, Charleston Squadron; captured at Morris Island, South Carolina, September 7, 1863; sent to Point Lookout, Maryland, then to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, where he was received, September 23, 1864; exchanged October 1, 1864; released and sent to Richmond from City Point, Virginia, October 18, 1864, after being exchanged (see next entry, which may be the same person); subsequently sent for service aboard the CSS Virginia II, James River Squadron. [Fort Warren; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated October 20, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 145.]
Thomas Harden, landsman, CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863 (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 305.]
W.H. Harden, see William H. Hardin.
William M. Harden, served in the Confederate States Navy; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Randolph County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives.]
Alexander Harder, born North Carolina, 1845; son of O.P. Harder; resided with his family, in 1850, at Greenville district, Pitt County, North Carolina; served as landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276; 1850 U.S. Census.]
James Hardie, served as landsman aboard the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); rated as carpenter's mate from October 9 (another document shows date as October 10), 1861; also indicated to have been rated gunner's mate in 1861; operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 286 & 306; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 427, 431 and 433.]
Samuel Hardige (surname also shown as Hardge), born Texas, about 1845; resident of Hopkins County, Texas; served in the Confederate States Navy; died as a prisoner of war, of chronic diarrhoea, at the St. Louis Military Hospital, New Orleans, Louisiana, on October 19, 1864; buried at the Monument Cemetery, New Orleans; next of kin listed as Mrs. M. Hardge, of Bright Star, P.O., Texas; marital status shown as single. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 128.]
H.D. Hardin, enlisted, August, 1861, at Selma, Alabama, in the Confederate States Navy; discharged 1865; wife, Rena Hardin; wife applied for Alabama Confederate Pension, from Cherokee County; pension no. 25925. [ADAH.]
John Hardin, original service as private, company I, 8th Texas Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see also service in 1st (Yagers') Texas Cavalry). [Civil War Service Records.]
John Hardin, original service as private, company A, 5th Battalion, Alabama Volunteers; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
William Hardin, appointed pilot aboard the Confederate States ram General Sterling Price, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 263.]
William H. Hardin (surname also shown as Harden), born 1837, Gulf of Mexico; enlisted May 9, 1861, at Jacksonville, Florida, in company G, 2nd Florida Infantry; captured June 5, 1863, at Fredericksburg, paroled June 10, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, by command of the Confederate Secretary of War, Special Order No. 209 dated at Richmond, September 3, 1863, and ordered to report to flag officer J.R. Tucker, at Charleston, South Carolina; enlisted for the war, as ordinary seaman, at Charleston, on September 15, 1862; served (rating shown as landsman) aboard the ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, Charleston harbor, 1863-1864. [Confederate States Navy subject file; Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 203; ORN 2, 1, 298; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 186.]
Thomas Harding, landsman, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 311.]
William Thomas Harding (name also shown, in Register1862, as W.F. Hardin, as William J. Harding, in Register1863, and as W.F. Harding in Register1864), born Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, April 29, 1862; served aboard the CSS Beaufort, 1862 - 1864. [Register1862; Register1863; ORN 1, 10, 632.]
---- Hardy, Pilot, CSS Alabama, November, 1862. [ORN 1, 1, 527.]
Charles Hardy, served as landsman and ward room steward aboard the CSS Jackson, New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 880; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 38.]
Henry Hardy, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, September 4, 1861; served on the CSS Mobile, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; later on the Jackson station, 1862; resigned May 9, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 318 & 320; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1031; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 518.]
Joseph Hardy, Private, Company B, 14th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, July 9, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy in 1862; no naval record found. [Georgia Rosters, 2, 351.]
McNeese M.N. Hardy, born Georgia, 1828; son of Armstead and Lucy Hardy; resided as a teacher, in 1850, with his parents and siblings, at Franklin county, Georgia; served as landsman on the CSS Chattahoochee, 1863 - 1864; also served aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (which was also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), Savannah Georgia, in 1864; later served aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1864-1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865; attached as private to company G, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Jane, and nine children, at Banks County, Georgia. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; M1091; 2, 1, 283 & 287; 1850 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271 and 608.]
Peter Hardy, Second Class Boy, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274.]
W. B. Hardy, appointed assistant gunner, Confederate States Navy, at the Yorktown Naval Battery, July 21, 1861; resigned his appointment on August 15, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 519.]
William E. Hardy, appointed acting 1st assistant engineer, Confederate States Navy, October 5, 1861; served aboard the CSS Tuscarora, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; resigned January 4, 1862; later served as civilian engineer aboard the blockade running steamer Noc-Daquy (also known as the Virginia), which was captured by the USS Wachusett, at Havana, December 29, 1862. [CSN Register; some data from the publication Papers Relative to Mexican Affairs, communicated to the Senate June 16, 1864, published 1865, by the Government Printing Office, Washington.]
William H. Hardy, resident of Virginia; appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, April 7, 1864; served aboard the CSS Albemarle, 1864; temporary duty at Drewry's Bluff, James River, February, 1865. [ORN 1, 10, 718; 1, 11, 812 and 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 523.]
James Hargrove (surname also shown as Hargrave and Hargrooves), enlisted in the Confederate States Army, at St. Clair, [Alabama?], February 11, 1863; transferred to company B, Van Benthuysen's Company, Confederate States Marine Corps, March 18, 1863; served at the Richmond station, and at Drewry's Bluff, James River, Virginia, 1864. [ADAH; ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 466; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
E.L. Harley, original service as private, company C, 6th Arkansas Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Robert Harley, landsman/seaman; previously belonged to the CSS Chicora, Charleston Squadron, but was captured September 7, 1863, and sent north as a prisoner of war; exchanged and sent to Richmond, Virginia, on October 26, 1864, then sent aboard the ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 311; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 145.]
Jeptha Harlin, see Jeptha Harbin.
W. A. Harlin, see Wilbur A. Harbin.
James Harlow, enlisted at Richmond, Virginia, July 29, 1861, as private, company I, 1st South Carolina (Gregg's or McCreary's) Volunteer Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, January 17, 1862; served aboard the CSS Virginia, 1862. [SC1st; Civil War Service Records.]
L.D. Harmer, see Lorenzo Dow Hamner.
Henry Harmon, served as landsman aboard the CSS Missouri, 1864; deserted from the vessel, at Shreveport, Louisiana, on June 2, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 510.]
T.H. Harmon, see T.H. Hannan.
Henry Harms, served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile station. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
Henry Harners, served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
N.J. Harness, sergeant, Confederate States Marine Corps, CSS Macon, 1865. [CSS Macon Rolls.]
Robert Harness, served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
J.H. Harnesson, seaman, CSS Sea Bird. [ORN 2, 1, 306.]
Lawrence Harney, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, May 27, 1861, as private, company C, 1st (Nelligan's) Louisiana Infantry; ordered, by the Secretary of War, to proceed to Richmond, Virginia, on the same day; discharged, January or February 1862, and sent, by Special Orders of General Huger, to join the Merrimac (CSS Virginia). [Booth 2, 193.]
Charles Harper, ordinary seaman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay, Alabama, during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]
James Harper, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, November 5, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the CSS General Polk for duty; also served on the Jackson station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 318; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 525.]
John Harper, served as seaman aboard the CSS Ivy, New Orleans station, in 1861; rated as boatswain's mate from October 19, 1861; also served at the Jackson station, in 1862; named his next of kin as Elizabeth Harper. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 848 and 894.]
N.B. Harper, Landsman, CSS Webb, April, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 170.]
William Harper, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, November 5, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Livingston for duty; also served on the Jackson station, 1862; ordered, on June 27, 1862, to proceed to Jackson, Mississippi, to settle his accounts, and to then consider himself as being discharged from the service; buried at East Baton Rouge, Louisiana. [ORN 2, 1, 318; Wayne Cosby; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 527; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 963.]
William A. Harper, served as ordinary seaman aboard the ironclad floating battery, CSS Georgia, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, in 1863; rated as captain of hold as of September 30, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 287; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NI- Promotions......reinstatement; CSS Georgia - Miscellaneous, page 5; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523.].]
S. Harragan, ordinary seaman, ironclad ram CSS Missouri, October - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 291.]
James H. Harrall, landsman, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 311.]
Brice Harralson (surname also shown as Harrolson), born Caswell County, North Carolina, 1831; shown as a clerk, in 1850, residing at the home of merchant Albert Stevens, in Milton, Caswell County; later employed as a merchant, and enlisted at Caswell County, North Carolina, April 29, 1861, as private, company A, 13th Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, for duty on the Merrimac (CSS Virginia), February 19, 1862; served as landsman on that vessel. [NCT 5, 291; ORN 2, 1, 309; 1850 U.S. Census.]
George J. Harrell, resided in Hertford County, North Carolina; enlisted September 12, 1861, aged 21, as private, company G, 31st Regiment North Carolina Troops; captured at Roanoke Island, February 8, 1862; paroled at Elizabeth City, February 21, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, December 30, 1863. [NCT 8, 483.]
Jacob Harrell, Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
James Harrell, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308.]
Wilson Harrell, born 1838; son of Ann Harrell; original service as private, company K, 41st Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy and served as landsman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; returned to service with the Confederate Army, in October, 1863, in his old unit, the 41st Virginia Infantry; post war farmer in Nansemond County, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 309; Nansemond.]
John Harrigan, Fireman, CSS Alabama, 1864; born Ireland; captured in the engagement with USS Kearsarge, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
Daniel Harrington, served as 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, and worked aboard the CSS Jackson, New Orleans station, in June, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 866.]
Daniel B. Harrington, claimed to have been wrecked at sea and escaped in a small boat to Key West, Florida, where he was impressed into the Confederate States Navy; served on Tattnall's command, and deserted about January, 1862, and was taken aboard the USS Wabash, where he took the oath of allegiance; sent to Fort Lafayette, New York harbor, January 21, 1862; released from imprisonment on taking the Oath of Allegiance, February 6, 1862, by order of the United States Secretary of State. [ORA 2, 2.]
E. Harrington, served as seaman aboard the CSS Nashville; paroled at Mobile, Alabama, April 28, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 659.]
Edward Harrington (also shown as Edward Herrington), born Ireland, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, laborer; marital status, married; enlisted in Louisiana, July 22, 1861, aged 38, as private, company C, 10th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, and served as coal heaver aboard the Merrimac (CSS Virginia), January 3, 1862. [Booth 2, 199; ORN 2, 1, 309.]
Edward T. Harrington, originally served as private, company F, 16th Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date; served as seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, 1862 - 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 280; Civil War Service Records.]
John Harrington, private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps, ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864; also stationed at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 297 & 314.]
John Harrington, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Maurepas, New Orleans station, in 1862; listed his next of kin as Regina Dehman (who was also listed as NOK by John Dehman). [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1005.]
John W. Harrington, landsman, ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 294 - 296; DANFS.]
R.B. Harrington, original service as private, company K, 35th Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Robert Harrington, served as landsman aboard the CSS Morgan, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Tombigbee River, Alabama, on May 10, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1216 - 1218.]
---- Harris, killed in action by a pistol shot, while aboard the CSS Albemarle during the attack on Plymouth, North Carolina, April 20, 1864. [ORN 1, 9, 657.]
Alex. Harris, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 277 & 313.]
Benjamin S. Harris (middle initial also shown as L.), served as landsman aboard the CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the CSS Olustee, 1864, and the CSS Columbia, in 1865; deserted January 25, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 279; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 849; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 138.]
Charles Harris, born Ireland, about 1839; came to America about 1850; resided in New York for nine years before the war; later worked on a steamboat on the Mississippi; enlisted, as seaman, Confederate States Navy, at Charleston, South Carolina, 1862; served on the ironclad ram CSS Chicora, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 - 1864; deserted September 6, 1864, and swam to Morris Island. [ORN 1, 15, 677 - 678 and 2, 1, 284; ORA 1, 35.]
Charles Harris, served as seaman aboard the CSS Juno, 1863, and was involved in the capture of the 1st launch of the USS Wabash, off Charleston, South Carolina, on the night of August 6, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of Prize Money - Miscellaneous, page 20.]
Daniel Harris, appointed carpenter aboard the Confederate States gunboat General Beauregard, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, February 24, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
David H. Harris, original service as private in captain Richards' Company, Mississippi Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Edward C. Harris, born Franklin County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Franklin County, March 21 or 25, 1864, aged 23, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy. [CSN Shipping Articles; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 407.]
Frank M. Harris, documentation indicates that he may have been born in, or was a resident of England; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as master not in line of promotion, December 14, 1861; served as executive officer, CSS Manassas, New Orleans station, 1862; captured at New Orleans, April, 1862 and held as prisoner of war at Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, 1862; later on the Jackson station, 1862; on special service, 1862 - 1864; captured, again, aboard the blockade runner Young Republic, off Wilmington, North Carolina, May 6, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 7-8; 1, 18, 303 & 317 and 2, 1, 319; Register1862; ORA 2, 3; Register1863; Register1864.]
G.T. Harris, landsman, steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 313.]
J. C. Harris, resident of Russell County, Alabama; indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps; deserted and took the oath of allegiance, at Cincinnati, Ohio, November 29, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 651.]
J. L. Harris, shown as a Captain, CSS St. Nicholas, amongst a Roll of Prisoners of War paroled at Mobile, Alabama, May 23, 1865; resided at New Orleans, Louisiana. [Booth 2, 202.]
James Harris, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 58-59.]
James Harris, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, April 9, 1862; served aboard the CSS Louisiana, and was captured at New Orleans, April, 1862, and held as prisoner of war, at Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, 1862; later on the Jackson station, 1862. [ORN 1, 18, 318 and 2, 1, 319; ORA 2, 3; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 529.]
Jeptha Vining Harris, born Abbeville district, South Carolina, May 28, 1839; his father, also named Jeptha Vining Harris, was post commander, in the Confederate Army, at Macon, Mississippi, at the end of the war; Jeptha junior enlisted as private, Captain Charles Baskerville's Company of Cavalry, 2nd Mississippi and Alabama Battalion (?); claims, as a sharpshooter, to have killed 78 'Yankees' on the first day of the battle of Shiloh, and the next day, on being appointed surgeon in the Confederate Army, to have amputated arms and legs at Shiloh Church; however, one statement indicates that he was commissioned surgeon on April 5, 1862; appointed, from Mississippi, as assistant surgeon in the Confederate States Navy, January 7, 1864; served on the flagship (ironclad ram) CSS Nashville, which operated off Mobile, and on the Tombigbee River, Alabama; appointed assistant surgeon, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; citizen of Florida since about 1870; practising physician at Key West, Florida, and was a delegate to the National Democratic Convention at Chicago; appointed collector of Customs for the District of Key West, Florida, May 16, 1885; was acting adjutant and later commander of Camp Franklin Buchanan, 1214, U.C.V., 1908; died 1914; buried at the Key West Cemetery, 710 Passover Lane, Key West, Florida 33040. [Porter's Naval History, 785; Florida Confederate Pension File No.A12030; JCC 4, 123; Register1864; U.S. Veterans Gravesites, circa 1775 - 2006 at the Ancestry.com web site; New York Times dated Wednesday, May 17, 1885.]
John Harris, resided in, and enlisted at Pasquotank County, North Carolina, July 8, 1862, aged 28, as private, company A, 8th Regiment North Carolina State Troops; captured at Roanoke Island, February 8, 1862; exchanged August, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, on or about April 18, 1863. [NCT 4, 527.]
John Harris, seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]
John C. Harris, acting 1st assistant engineer, served on the CSS Savannah, Savannah station, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 323; Charleston Courier, Tri-Weekly (Charleston, South Carolina) dated August 13, 1861.]
John H. Harris, served in the Confederate States Navy; his widow, Leonora Harris, applied for an Alabama Confederate Pension, in 1906. [ADAH.]
John K. Harris, quartermaster, Pensacola Navy Yard, Florida, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 320.]
John R. Harris, appointed acting gunner in the Confederate States Navy, July, 1861; served at Pensacola, Florida, 1861, and aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah station, 1861 - 1862; sent to Charleston, South Carolina, in May, 1862, to pick up a deserter from the CSS Savannah, and return him aboard the vessel at Savannah. [CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 261.]
N.J. Harris, private, Confederate States Marine Corps; stationed aboard CSS Savannah, Georgia; transferred to Richmond, Virginia, no dates shown. [ORN 2, 1, 316.]
Patrick Harris, served at the Mobile station, in 1864, as a private in company F of the Confederate States Marine Corps; later served in company B of the Corps at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1072.]
Robert Harris, ordinary seaman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay, Alabama, during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]
W.R. Harris, carpenter, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865 (see also entry for William R. Harris, who may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 311.]
William Harris, ordinary seaman, screw steamer CSS Fanny (which operated in North Carolina waters); served sometime in, or during the period September - December, 1861 and May, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 285; DANFS.]
William Harris, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 83.]
William H. Harris, resident of Georgia; private, company E, Confederate States Marine Corps, Savannah, Georgia, 1864; attached, as corporal, to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; served as witness in the Confederate pension applications of B.E. Weeks, and Allen P. Ham, both of Jefferson County, Georgia. [ORN 2, 1, 315; M1091; GA Pension Index 438.]
William R. Harris, quarter gunner, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 310.]
-- Harrison, landsman, Confederate States Navy; attached as private to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091.]
Albert M. Harrison, born Kentucky, September, 1848; son of James O. and Margaritta P. Harrison; resided, in 1860, with his parents and siblings at Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky; served as midshipman aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1864; after the war continued to reside at Lexington; married Ida Withers about 1880; shown residing, in 1900, as a tax collector, with his wife, Ida, at Lexington; died May 24, 1916, at Fayette County, Kentucky. [ORN 2, 1, 300; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Kentucky Death Index, 1911 - 2000 at the Ancestry.com web site; 1920 U.S. Census.]
B.C. Harrison, original service as private, company C, 9th Alabama Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date, and served as landsman aboard the ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 311; Civil War Service Records.]
Charles Harrison, served as quartermaster aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown, 1861 - 1862; disrated to seaman on April 21, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 947.]
Charles Harrison, served as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
Charles W. Harrison, recruited as ordinary seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862, receiving a bounty of $50. [ORN 2, 1, 310; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 878.]
George W. Harrison, born West Indies; citizen of Virginia; original service in the United States Navy, from January 20, 1832; entered the Confederate States Navy, May 23, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; commanded the batteries at Pinner's Point, Virginia, in 1861 - 1862, with the rank of major (an act of the Confederate Congress allowed army rank to those Naval officers serving with the army); served at the Naval Works, Charlotte, North Carolina, 1862; promoted commander, Provisional Navy, to rank from October 4, 1863; commanded side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864; paroled at the close of the war, aboard the USS Stockdale, at Mobile, Alabama, on May 10, 1865. [ORN 1, 21, 585 and 2, 1, 292; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; Norfolk County Record 24 & 239; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, 83.]
Howell W. Harrison (surname also shown as Harrisson), born Johnston County, North Carolina, where he resided as a cooper; enlisted at Wake County, North Carolina, May 1, 1861, aged 21, as private, company E, 14th Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 15, 1862, for duty on the Merrimac (CSS Virginia); served as landsman on this vessel. [NCT 5, 438; ORN 2, 1, 309.]
James F. Harrison, born Virginia; previous service in the United States Navy, from March 5, 1847; original entry into Confederate States Navy service, as surgeon, June 18, 1861; served at the Naval Hospital, Richmond, and on the Richmond station, 1861 - 1865; served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River, in 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 321; Register1863; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 271.]
John W. Harrison, served as landsman aboard the CSS Charleston, and the CSS Indian Chief, Charleston station, 1864; transferred, by order of flag officer J.R. Tucker, dated September 13, 1864, to the command of flag officer Lynch at the Wilmington station; served as landsman aboard the CSS Albemarle, Wilmington, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 156 and 761.]
John Harrison, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]
John C. Harrison, born Virginia; appointed from Texas, as assistant surgeon, Confederate States Navy, February 26, 1863; served on the Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [Register1864.]
Samuel Harrison, served as quartermaster aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown, James River squadron, 1861 - 1862; disrated to seaman on January 1, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 290; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 947.]
Samuel J. Harrison, source lists him as President of the Virginia Volunteer Navy. [ORN 1, 27, 194.]
Thomas Harrison, original service as private, company B, 2nd Battalion, Alabama Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Thomas Harrison, 2nd class fireman, screw steamer CSS Fanny (which operated in North Carolina waters); served sometime in, or during the period September - December, 1861 and May, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 285; DANFS.]
Thomas Harrison, served as seaman aboard the CSS Selma, 1864; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; held as a prisoner of war aboard the USS Lackawanna, at Mobile Bay, August 7, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 464.]
Thomas Locke Harrison, born Martinsburg, Virginia, September 13, 1839; original service in the United States Navy, as midshipman, from September 29, 1856; entered the Confederate States Navy as midshipman, August 12, 1861, at Richmond, Virginia; later promoted acting master and 2nd lieutenant, February 8, 1862; served on the Richmond station, 1861 - 1862; served as executive officer aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, 1862 - 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; involved in the battle of Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; later served as executive officer aboard the steamer CSS Nashville, at Spanish River, Alabama, 1865; paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; resided in Mobile, Alabama, after the war, and engaged in the rope and bagging business, under the firm name of Fosdick & Harrison; later became United States Commissioner; married Mary Waring of Mobile; died at Mobile, March 18, 1892. [1860 U.S. Census; ORN 1, 21, 585 and 2, 1, 292 & 321; ORA 1, 49/1; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; Porter's Naval History, 785; SHC-UNC; CSN-Museum; New York Times dated March 19, 1892; Daily Picayune (New Orleans) dated March 22, 1892, page 3.]
William Harrison, enlisted for three years or the war, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, aboard the CSS Huntress, at Charleston, South Carolina, on July 8, 1862; received a bonus of $50 at enlistment. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 164 and 747.]
William D. Harrison, appointed from Virginia; previously served in the United States Navy, April 25, 1848, from which he was dismissed, February 3, 1863; appointed surgeon, Confederate States Navy, March 6, 1863; appointed as a member of a board for the examination of midshipmen, at Richmond, Virginia, March - April, 1863; served aboard CSS Richmond, and transferred to the ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, May 18, 1864; appointed surgeon, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; attached as major, to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 1, 10, 644; 1, 11, 690; 2, 1, 311 and 2, 2, 559; Register1864; JCC 4, 123; M1091; Confederate States Navy subject file N - NK - Technical and professional examinations of individuals.]
William H. Harrison, born Norfolk, Virginia, October 6, 1840; served as machinist, Norfolk, Navy Yard, 1861; later on the CSS Neuse, Neuse River, then on the CSS Albemarle, Roanoke River, and later aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, James River; at Richmond, at the close of the war; post war occupation, farmer; wife died in 1912; later resided with his sons in Texas and Tennessee; admitted to the Robert E. Lee, Camp 1, Confederate Veterans' Home, Richmond, Virginia, October 11, 1926; residence at time of admission, Norfolk County, Virginia; died January 25, 1929; buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. [LVa.]
William S. Harrison, originally served as private, company E, 12th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, by command of the Confederate Secretary of War, Special Order No. 209 dated at Richmond, September 3, 1863, and ordered to report to flag officer J.R. Tucker, at Charleston, South Carolina. [Confederate States Navy subject file; Civil War Service Records.]
William T. Harrison, Third Assistant Engineer, CSS Richmond, July, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 726.]
John Harriss, ordinary seaman, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS.]
Howell W. Harrisson, see Howell W. Harrison.
John Harrogan, coal heaver, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 293.]
Jacob Harroll, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 278.]
Brice Harrolson, see Brice Harralson.
Andrew Hart, second class fireman, CSS Atlanta, 1862-1863; captured aboard that vessel at Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; also shown as 1st class fireman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; indicated to have been transferred to Charleston, about August, 1863. [ORN 1, 14, 268 & 2, 1, 275; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523.]
Charles J. Hart, corporal, Confederate States Marine Corps, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862, and at the Richmond Station, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 310; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 435.]
George Hart, sailor, CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia; deserted at Mathias Point, Virginia, and taken aboard the USS Primrose, September 4, 1863. [ORN 1, 5, 331.]
J.H. Hart, acting master's mate, Confederate States Navy, 1863 - 1864. [Register1864.]
Jack Hart (also Jack Hunt), born Ireland, resided at New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, sailor; marital status, single; enlisted, aged 22, as private, company D, 15th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February, 1862. [Booth 2, 212.]
James Hart, Ordinary Seaman and Seaman, CSS Alabama, 1864; killed in action, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
John Hart, original service as private, company A, 28th Battalion, Georgia Siege Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
John Hart, appointed second officer aboard the Confederate States ram General Sterling Price, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, on January 27, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 263.]
Martin Hart, previously served as Private, Company B, First Regiment Georgia Regulars, June, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, June 3, 1864. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 317.]
Patrick Hart, enlisted at Mobile, Alabama, as private, company C, Confederate States Marine Corps, on August 7, 1861; served in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River squadron, in 1862; ; later stationed aboard the receiving ship CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864, and the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 280, 302 & 316; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 285.]
Peter Hart, enlisted at Mobile, Alabama, for the war, as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, on September 3, 1862; transferred from the Mobile station to the CSS Baltic on January 20, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 94 - 95.]
Richard Hart, born England, about 1835; served as seaman on the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron; treated for diarrhoea on Friday, May 30, 1862; treated for catarrh on Friday, June 13, 1862, and again on Monday, June 23, 1862 and Monday, October 20, 1862; treated for paronychia on Tuesday, January 20th, 1863; Sunday, February 10th, 1863, he was treated for furunculus; treated for a fever on Sunday, August 2, 1863, and again, for the same condition on Sunday, August 23, 1863. [CSS Gaines Medical Journal.]
Theodore A. Hart, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, March 18, 1862, and ordered to report for duty aboard the Confederate States battery Louisiana; captured off Forts Jackson and St. Philips, on the Mississippi River, Louisiana, April, 1862, and held as prisoner of war at Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, 1862; took the oath of allegiance to the United States. [ORN 1, 18, 300 & 441 and 2, 1, 319; ORA 2, 3, 641; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 537.]
Edward Harter, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 678.]
Francis Harter, served as landsman at the New Orleans station in 1861, and later as captain of the hold aboard the CSS Arkansas; killed in action, July 22, 1862. [ORN 1, 19, 70; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 85.]
Marion Hartley, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
Patrick Hartley, born Ireland; aged 24; coal heaver, CSS Manassas, 1862. [St. Philip.]
W.H. Hartley, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 278.]
Edward Hartnett, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, in 1862, and aboard the CSS St. Mary, Brashear, Louisiana, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 110 and 545.]
John R. Harts, served in the Confederate States Navy; applied for a post war Confederate pension from New Hanover County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives.]
Tilman Hartsell (first name also shown as Tilmon), born North Carolina, 1821; landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1864; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Mary L. Hartsell, and three children (eldest child born 1867), at Furrs, Stanly County, North Carolina. [ORN 2, 1, 277 & 302; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Henry Julius Hartstene, born North Carolina (another source shows birth state as South Carolina); appointed from South Carolina; original service in the United States Navy, from April 1, 1828; appointed commander in the confederate States Navy, March 26, 1861; served on the Charleston station, 1861 - 1862; served as Naval aide on the staff of brigadier general W.S. Walker, Confederate Army, during the actions near Pocotaligo, South Carolina, in October, 1862; also in command of several steamers in support of the CSS Chicora and CSS Palmetto State, during an action against the blockading squadron off Charleston, South Carolina, January, 1863; commanded CSS Stono, March, 1863; later on the Savannah station, 1863; service abroad, and reported as being very ill, in Munich, in October, 1863; died Paris, France, March 31, 1868. [ORN 2, 1, 317 & 322; ORA 1, 14; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated November 23, 1863; Register1863; Appletons; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water, Coal and Wood for ships, page 102.]
John Harty, Seaman, CSS Georgia; shipped from the prize vessel, Dictator, in April, 1863. [ORN 1, 2, 812.]
Pat. Harty, served as landsman aboard the CSS Manassas, New Orleans station, in 1861; rated as coal heaver from November 7, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 994.]
A.C. Harvey (surname also shown as Harvie), appointed acting second assistant engineer aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, July, 1863, from Bermuda; placed under suspension for neglect of duty, August 8, 1863; resigned at Brest, France, on November 10, 1863. [CSN Register; Quinn Journal; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 1026.]
James Harvey, ordinary seaman, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS.]
James Harvey, landsman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 301.]
James M. Harvey, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 309.]
Lawrence Harvey, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 309.]
Nathan Harvey, enrolled as a conscript, by lieutenant Venable, at Camp Lee, Richmond, Virginia, February 19, 1864, and assigned as a private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps, on March 10, 1864; served at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 679; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 297.]
R. Harvey, jr., served in the "Confederate States Navy Regiment of Richmond"; paroled at Burksville, Virginia, April 26, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 659.]
William Harvey, previously served as Private in Company B, 4th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy at Mobile, Alabama, March 9, 1864. [Information supplied by Arthur Bergeron, Louisiana.]
William Harvey, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 552.]
George Harwood, previously served aboard an English man of war; boatswain's mate, CSS Alabama, August 24, 1862-1864; in action off Cherbourg, France, June 19, 1864; paid off, and honorably discharged at Southampton, England, 1864; later re-enlisted, and was appointed acting boatswain, Confederate States Navy, at sea, aboard the CSS Shenandoah, October 9, 1864, and on which he served through 1865; died at his residence, 5 Kent Square, Liverpool, England, October 5, 1888; buried at St. James Cemetery, Liverpool, under the incorrect surname of Howard; wife's name, Eliza. [Sinclair; some biographical data included in his death certificate, a copy of which is in the possession of the author; burial data provided by Michael Faulkner, Liverpool, England; ORN 1, 3, 751; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 538.]
James Kemp Harwood, born Maryland, 1828; previous service in the United States Navy, from November 24, 1852; original entry into Confederate States Navy service, February 8, 1862; commissioned paymaster, October 23, 1862, to rank from March 26, 1861; served on the James River squadron, Virginia, 1862 - 1864; attached as major and quartermaster, to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; resided as a tax office clerk, in 1880, with his wife Henrietta G. Harwood, and four children (eldest child born 1863), at Baltimore, Maryland. [Register1863; Register1864; M1091; 1880 U.S. Census.]
D. Hascell, see Dorum Hassel.
James F.E. Hasell, born Charleston, South Carolina, about 1839; appointed, by captain D. N. Ingraham, commanding the Naval
defences of South Carolina, as his clerk, at Charleston, on March 25, 1862; post war occupation as a book keeper; died of consumption, at Charleston, September 5, 1875; buried at the St. Philips Church Cemetery, Charleston. [ORN 2, 1, 317; South Carolina Death Records, 1821-1955 at Ancestry.com; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 730.]
H.G. Hashagen, officers' cook, steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 313.]
Charles H. Hasker (surname also shown, incorrectly, as Haskel, in Register1862), born, London, England, 1831; stated to have served, as a youth, in the British Navy; migrated to America about 1848; citizen of, and appointed from, Virginia; previous service in the United States Navy, from March 28, 1857; resided as a boatswain of the United States Navy, in 1860, with his wife, Elizabeth, and two sons, at Portsmouth, Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as boatswain, June 11, 1861; served on the CSS Fanny, 1861; on the New Orleans station, 1861; on the Confederate States recruiting ship CSS United States, 1861; served aboard the CSS Virginia, 1861 - 1862; participated in the engagement at Hampton Roads, Virginia, March, 1862; served at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1862; also served on the CSS Richmond, 1862 - 1863; in a letter dated at Richmond, Virginia, March 4, 1863, and written jointly with gunner Charles B. Oliver, both Hasker and Oliver made a mild protest about their having been outranked in the Confederate service, by midshipmen, who were permitted to take charge of a vessel, while they were not; Hasker stated that, while in the United States service, before the war, he had performed the duties of a lieutenant for some nine months; subsequently, he was promoted lieutenant for the war, May 5, 1863; later served on the Charleston station, South Carolina, and aboard the CSS Chicora, 1863; captured at Morris Island, South Carolina, September 7, 1863, and confined at Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, 1863 - 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, in absentia, to rank from January 6, 1864; paroled September 28, 1864, and exchanged at Cox's Wharf, Virginia, October 18, 1864; served aboard the CSS Peedee, Marion Court House, South Carolina, 1864; attached as lieutenant to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; after the death of his first wife, Hasker married Mrs. Virginia Creekmore in Richmond, Virginia, in 1872; resided as a paper box manufacturer, in 1870, with his family, at Norfolk, Virginia; shown as a tobacco tag manufacturer and printer, residing in Richmond, Virginia, in 1890; died July 8, 1898; buried at the Oakwood Cemetery. [ORN 1, 7, 48; 1, 14, 568 and 2, 1, 308; ORA 1, 28/1; Register1862; Register1863; Register1864; CSN Register; JCC 4, 122; M1091; Parker 231 and 287; 1860 U.S. Census; 1870 U.S. Census; Richmond, Virginia, City Directories, 1889 - 1890 at the Ancestry.com web site; Norfolk County Record 221; Confederate States Navy subject files - NI; Confederate Veteran magazine, volume 26 (1918), page 459.]
Frederick Hassee, served as seaman aboard the CSS Ivy, New Orleans station, in 1861; rated as gunner's mate from August 25, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 840.]
D. Hassel, served as 1st class fireman aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 850.]
Dorum Hassel (surname also shown as Hascell and Hascall; and first name also shown as Douglas in one source, and as Durham in another), born Tyrrell County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, seaman; enlisted at Craven County, North Carolina, June 1, 1861, aged 22, as private, company D, 5th Regiment North Carolina State Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, December, 1861; served as seaman aboard the CSS Beaufort, 1861-1862, and later aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, in 1864. [NCT 4, 176; ORN 2, 1, 281; Civil War Service Records; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1231.]
J.B. Hassel, ordinary seaman, CSS Florida, 1861. [St. Philip.]
John Hassel, served as a seaman in the Confederate States Navy; arrested as a deserter, at New Orleans, by constable Jacob, and delivered aboard the CSS St. Philip, on April 21, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 438.]
Edward Hassell, born South Carolina; Captain's Clerk, CSS Nashville, 1861. [ORN 1, 1, 752; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133.]
Jacob Hasselton, served as armorer in the Confederate States Navy (state of Alabama); paroled at Montgomery, Alabama, May 22, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 660.]
John B. Hassert (surname also shown as Hassett and Hasset), rated as quartermaster aboard the CSS Pontchartrain, from February 4, 1862; rating also shown as gunner's mate; captured at Arkansas Post, January 12, 1863 (see next entry, and also, entry for John B. Hassett, which may be the same person). [ORN 1, 24, 117 and 2, 1, 299; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 340.]
John Hasset, original service in the 28th (Thomas') Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see previous entry, and also entry for John B. Hassett, which may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]
A. Hassett, original service as private, company D, 3rd (Palmetto) Battalion, South Carolina Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Patrick Hassett, original service as private, company F, 1st South Carolina Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Patrick Hassey, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 58-59.]
Henry Haste, resided in, and enlisted at Washington County, North Carolina, June 26, 1861, aged 19, as private, company G, 1st Regiment North Carolina State Troops; discharged February 3, 1862, on being transferred to the Confederate States Navy. [NCT 3, 216.]
T.G. Hatch, served in Confederate States Navy; buried at Charleston Port Society Cemetery, on Ashley River, Charleston. [Name and service status inscribed on granite monument unveiled December 10, 1922, by the Ladies Memorial Association of Charleston, South Carolina.]
Alonzo J. Hathorne, appointed first officer aboard the Confederate States gunboat Little Rebel, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
Hardy Hatly, born Stanly County, North Carolina, 1835; son of Wiley Hatly; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Stanly County, March 14, 1864, aged 28, in the Confederate States Navy; served as landsman, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Malinda (maiden name Hartsell), and three children, at Big Lick township, Stanly County, North Carolina. [CSN Shipping Articles; ORN 2, 1, 274; 1880 U.S. Census.]
John Hatton, landsman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 301.]
William Hatton, enlisted as 2nd class boy in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, in 1861, and later served aboard the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area, 1862 (see next entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 286; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 420-422 and 426.]
William Hatton, served aboard CSS Selma; deserted with two other sailors from CSS Selma, James Carr and Michael Dillon, on February 20; taken aboard USS Clifton, near Horn Island, Alabama, on February 23, 1863 (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 1, 19, 626-627.]
John Haughton, born Ireland; aged 35; fireman, CSS Mason, 1862. [St. Philip.]
John A. Haupt, born South Carolina, 1836; original service in the "Republican Blues"; later appointed 1st assistant engineer, Confederate States Navy, March 12, 1862, while aboard the CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron, due to engineer Joseph D. Willink having been discharged; served through 1863; resided as a machinist, in 1870 and 1880, with his wife Sarah C. Haupt (possibly second wife), and widowed daughter, Emma Beckett (born Florida, 1856), at Savannah, Georgia; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Chatham County, Georgia. [ORN 2, 1, 303; 1870 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; GA Pension Index 445; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 540.]
Alfred Havens, private, Confederate States Marine Corps, side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown (operated in James River and Hampton Roads, Virginia area), about 1861 - 1862; also in company C, Richmond Station, Virginia, 1864; also served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 290 & 315; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 850.]
W. A. Havens, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the gunboat Sterling Price. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 679.]
James E. Haviland, indicated to have been a captain in the Confederate marine service; buried at the City Cemetery, Galveston, Texas. [Galveston Daily News (Texas) dated Wednesday, June 1, 1887.]
George Hawkins, enlisted for three years or the war, as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, at Charleston, South Carolina, on August 13, 1862, and served aboard the CSS Huntress. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 172 and 753.]
John Hawkins, served as ordinary seaman aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown, James River squadron, 1861 - 1862; rated as quartermaster from January 1, 1862; deserted from the vessel on June 11, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 290; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 312 and 947; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 442.]
Richard Hawkins, captain's steward, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS.]
Richard Hawkins, born Ireland, about 1821; served as seaman aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron; treated for diarrhoea on Monday, June 23, 1862; suffered from colic and treated on Tuesday, August 19, 1862; treated with mustard plaster for constipation, on Saturday, January 24th, 1863; on Sunday, February 10th, 1863, he reported to the surgeon, suffering from catarrhus; treated for haemorrhoids on Saturday, April 4th, 1863; treated, on Monday, April 20th, 1863, for chronic rheumatism, with a notation that Hawkins had been a hard drinker all his life; reported for, and treated, on Monday, May 18th, 1863, with constipation, with the surgeon making the notation, as follows: "Is a subject and sufferer for years to this trouble. Occasional attacks of diarrhoea, when there is considerable pain, and burning about the lower portion of rectum. Is generally unhealthy"; transferred to the hospital, on shore, on Saturday, June 6th, 1863 [CSS Gaines Medical Journal.]
William Hawkins, originally served as private, company B (Virginia Riflemen), 3rd Virginia Regiment; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, and killed at Little Washington, North Carolina. [Norfolk County Record 56.]
William R. Hawkins, served as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
William H. Hawks, born Georgia, 1824; enlisted as private in company E, Confederate States Marine Corps; stationed aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah station, Georgia; transferred to Richmond, Virginia, at an unspecified date; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Sarah A. Hawks, and four children (eldest child born 1857), at District 253, Jackson County, Georgia; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Jackson County, Georgia; his widow, Sarah A. Hawks, also later filed for a pension from the same county. [ORN 2, 1, 316; GA Pension Index 447; 1880 U.S. Census.]
George Hawley, yeoman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]
George Hawley, landsman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 301.]
John Hawley, seaman, side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area; February - July, 1862; also served at the Jackson station, 1862; named his next of kin as Mary Hawley. [ORN 2, 1, 286; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 895.]
John Hawthorn, Seaman; born Ireland; CSS Shenandoah, 1865. [Alabama Claims, 1, 976.]
James Hawthorne, served as seaman and captain of hold aboard the cruiser CSS Florida; also served on the tender, Lapwing; returned to Liverpool, England, where he was paid off; returned to service aboard the CSS Florida; deserted briefly, while the vessel was at Brest, France, but was apprehended by the French gendarmes, and returned to the vessel on January 18, 1864; rated as captain of the hold aboard the cruiser on February 20, 1864; he was later captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864, aboard that vessel; sent to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, for confinement; released February 1, 1865. [ORN 1, 2, 661 and 1, 3, 256; Alabama Claims Correspondence 2, 656-657; Fort Warren; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 349 and 190.]
Gilbert Hay, joined, at Wilmington, North Carolina, the Confederate privateer Retribution; had also been in command of the privateer Beauregard. [ORN 1, 2, 66.]
Hampden Pleasants Hay, printer by trade; aged 21, when he enlisted April 21, 1861, as Private in Company B, First Virginia Infantry. Transferred to the Confederate Navy in 1862; served, as captain of the hold, aboard CSS Albemarle, May, 1864; Halifax Station, 1864; highly praised by his commander, James W. Cooke, for his actions aboard the CSS Albemarle, May 5, 1864. [ORN 1, 9, 770 and 2, 1, 274; 1st Virginia, 98; see also article on CSS Albemarle, page 2, Richmond, Virginia, Sentinel, Monday, May 23, 1864.]
Michael Hay, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 679.]
Tido Hay (first name also shown as Dido), served as boy aboard the CSS General Polk in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 479-480 and 496.]
Charles Hayden, original service as private, company E, 2nd Battalion, Alabama Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see next entry, which may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]
Charles Hayden, enlisted as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile squadron, June 15, 1862; rated as officer's cook from June 16, 1862; also indicated to have served as captain's cook. [ORN 2, 1, 280; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 108.]
James Hayden, shipped, on April 24, 1863, for three years or the war, at Savannah, Georgia, as 1st class boy; served on stern-wheeled gunboat CSS Isondiga (which operated around Savannah, Georgia and St. Augustine Creek, Florida), 1863 - 1864; sent to the Naval hospital, after the evacuation of Savannah, on account of being unable to march in the retreat from the city (may be the same person listed in the next entry). [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS.; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 748; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 543.]
James Hayden, surgeon's steward, served on stern-wheeled gunboat CSS Isondiga (which operated around Savannah, Georgia and St. Augustine Creek, Florida), sometime between January, 1863 and September, 1864 (may be the same person listed in the previous entry). [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS.]
P.F. Hayden, original service as private, company A, 5th Georgia Cavalry (see also, service in company D, 22nd Battalion, Georgia Artillery); transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date; served as 1st class boy aboard the CSS Macon, 1865; left in Savannah, at Hospital. [CSS Macon Rolls; Civil War Service Records.]
Samuel Hayden, served as a private in company L, 55th Virginia Volunteers; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, by command of the Confederate Secretary of War, Special Order No. 209 dated at Richmond, September 3, 1863, and ordered to report to flag officer J.R. Tucker, at Charleston, South Carolina. [Confederate States Navy subject file.]
A. B. Hayes, served as landsman aboard the CSS Morgan, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Tombigbee River, Alabama, on May 10, 1865; Hayes was stated to have been sick, and on furlough at the time of the surrender. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1216 - 1218.]
B.F. Hayes, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Resolute, Savannah river area, Georgia, 1862 - 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 303.]
Hugh Hayes, served as 1st class boy aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863; deserted from the vessel about June, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 140.]
I. Hayes, served as seaman on the Savannah squadron, 1863; died prior to June 28, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 333.]
James H. Hayes (surname also shown as Hays), served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, and aboard the CSS Charleston, Charleston station, 1863-1864; died prior to April 1, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 22; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 133 and 136-139.]
John Hayes, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 553.]
John R. Hayes, resident of New York City; personal description shown as hazel eyes, brown hair, light complexion and 5 feet, 8 inches in height; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting 3rd assistant engineer, January 23, 1863; served aboard the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Selma (also known as the CSS Florida), Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863 - 1864; promoted 2nd assistant engineer, May 21, 1863; later served aboard the CSS Tennessee; captured at Mobile Bay, Alabama, August 5, 1864, and sent aboard the USS Richmond, as a prisoner of war; sent to New Orleans, Louisiana, where he was released January 25, 1865, by order of Union General Canby. [ORN 1, 21, 406 & 847 and 2, 1, 286 & 306; Register1864; Scriber.]
Michael Hayes, see Michael Hays.
Patrick Hayes, served as officers' boy aboard the CSS Jackson, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 890; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 113.]
S. Hayes, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 679.]
W. Hayes, served as seaman aboard the cruiser CSS Georgia, 1863. [Alabama Claims 1, 694.]
Whitmell K. Hayes, shipped as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, at the Naval Rendezvous at Raleigh, North Carolina, on March 21, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 408.]
William Hayes, ordinary seaman, CSS Bradford (used as a storeship at Pensacola, Florida). [ORN 2, 1, 282; DANFS.]
A.J. Haygood, served as landsman aboard the CSS Morgan, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Tombigbee River, Alabama, on May 10, 1865; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Fulton County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 448; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1216 - 1218.]
Samuel M.B. Hayman, enlisted in Beaufort County, North Carolina, June 27, 1861, aged 21, as private, company G, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 1, 1862. [NCT 2, 153.]
J.M. Haymond, seaman, steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1862 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 301; DANFS.]
Davanport Hayne, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Rappahannock, Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers, Virginia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 303; DANFS.]
Edward T. Hayne, landsman, side wheeled steamer CSS Rappahannock, Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers, Virginia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 303; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XA - Accounting and finance, Miscellaneous, page 144.]
A.P. Haynes, Ship's Steward, CSS Webb, April, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 170.]
Andrew Haynes, enlisted August 1, 1862, as private in Infantry Battalion, Smith's Legion, Georgia Volunteers; transferred to company H, 65th Regiment Georgia Infantry, March, 1863; delivered over to Captain Anderson of the 1st Regiment Georgia Regulars, he being a member of said regiment (company L), August 17, 1863; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 3, 1864. [Georgia Rosters 1, 364 & 6, 665.]
Giles Henry Haynes, born Connecticut, 1829; married Jane H. Wilson, April 24, 1858, at Craven County, North Carolina; resided as a fisherman, in 1860, with his wife, and son William, at New Bern, Craven County, North Carolina; served as first class fireman, CSS Beaufort, 1861 - 1862; vessel operated in North Carolina and Virginia waters; also served aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, in 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 281; 1860 U.S. Census; North Carolina Marriage Collection, 1741 - 2000 at the Ancestry.com web site; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1231.]
John L. Haynes, appointed acting master carpenter in the Confederate States Navy, October 10, 1861; served at Savannah, Georgia, 1861 - 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PL - Labor and civil personnel; Albany - Richmond, page 729; Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PL - Labor and civil personnel; Savannah - Transfers place to place, page 5.]
William H. Haynes, appointed from civil life; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting gunner, February 14, 1862; served as gunner aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron, 1862-1863; treated for a fever on Monday, July 28, 1862, and again on Saturday, August 16, 1862; also served on the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile station 1863 - 1864; paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865 (see entry for William H. Haynie, which may be the same person). [CSS Gaines Medical Journal; ORN 2, 1, 287; Register1862; Register1863; Register1864; Porter's Naval History, 785.]
Edward T. Haynie, appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, at Richmond, Virginia, December 30, 1863; served aboard the CSS Hampton, James River, 1863, and later at the Wilmington station, North Carolina, 1864, and aboard the CSS Neuse, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 323; Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1232 and 1234; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 542.]
William D. Haynie, recruited as a 1st class boy in the Confederate States Navy, at the Naval rendezvous, Richmond, Virginia, August 1, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 444.]
William H. Haynie, original service as private, company B, 37th Virginia Militia; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see entry for William H. Haynes, which may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]
Andrew J. Hays, born Alabama; previous service in the United States Marine Corps, from December 4, 1847; original entry into Confederate States Marine Corps, as captain, March 29, 1861; served with the Army of Tennessee, 1864; died December 25, 1896; buried at Monroe County, Alabama. [John E. Ellis; Register1864.]
Archer Hays (surname also shown as Hayes), born Alabama, 1832; younger brother of Charles W. Hays, listed below; resided, in 1860, at the home of his brother, at the Warrington Navy Yard, Escambia County, Florida; shown, in 1861, as a resident of Mississippi City, Mississippi; appointed acting assistant surgeon in the Confederate States Navy, September 13, 1861; served on the New Orleans station, 1861; later served on the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma); operated in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana and Mobile Bay, Alabama area, 1862; paroled at the close of the war, at Jackson, Mississippi, on May 12, 1865. [ORN 1, 19, 627 and 2, 1, 286, 306 & 320; 1860 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, 86; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 544.]
Benjamin F. Hays, served as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy, aboard the CSS Oconee; also indicated to have served aboard the CSS Resolute, Savannah squadron, in 1863; discharged by order of a medical survey, 4th quarter of 1863; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Newton County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 449; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 375 and 639.]
Charles H. Hays, served as 1st class fireman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 38 and 97.]
Charles W. Hays, born Alabama, 1822; brother of Archer Hays, listed above; original service in the United States Navy, from March 12, 1838; resided as a United States Naval lieutenant, in 1860, with his wife, and two children, at the Warrington Navy Yard, Escambia County, Florida; entered the Confederate States Navy, July 9, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; served on the New Orleans station, 1861; later commanded the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma), 1862 - 1863; later on the Naval defenses at St. Marks, Florida, 1862 - 1864, and aboard the CSS Spray; sent to take command of the CSS Nansemond, James River squadron, January 1, 1864; however, according to official Confederate States Navy documents, Hays was still aboard the CSS Spray, as commander, and also as acting paymaster, in early, 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; assigned to command of Battery Brooke, James River, October 11, 1864; sent back to the Nansemond, October 26, 1864; paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; married Sallie R. Wood, at Monroe County, Alabama, on October 15, 1865; died at Monroe County, Alabama, August 5 (also shown as 4), 1884. [ORN 1, 10, 591, 727, 780 & 802 and 2, 1, 286 & 320; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; 1860 U.S. Census; Porter's Naval History, 785; Florida Confederate Pension File No. A03420; ADAH; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XN- Naval stores afloat, Stores for ships (1864), page 70.]
Henry Hays, served aboard the cruiser CSS Georgia, in 1863; a list of "boarders" on the cruiser shows Hays at the 2nd gun division. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 604.]
J. Hays, seaman, served on stern-wheeled gunboat CSS Isondiga (which operated around Savannah, Georgia and St. Augustine Creek, Florida), sometime between January, 1863 and September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]
John Hays (surname also shown as Hayes and Hughes), served as landsman and seaman, CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; severely wounded in the head, April 24-25, 1862, below New Orleans; sent to the Marine Hospital at New Orleans. [Daily Picayune, Tuesday, April 29, 1862; ORN 2, 1, 290; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 91.]
John Hays, born Ireland, about 1835; served as fireman aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Squadron; treated for a heavy chill on Monday, June 30, 1862; treated for a fever on Monday, September 1, 1862, and again on Tuesday, October 7, 1862, Tuesday, April 21st, 1863, Wednesday, July 1st, 1863, Monday, July 20, 1863, and Wednesday, August 12, 1863. [CSS Gaines Medical Journal.]
John Hays, served as seaman in the Savannah squadron, 1863; died about May, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 529-530.]
John R. Hays, see John R. Hayes.
Michael Hays (surname also shown as Hayes), served as coal heaver at the New Orleans station, and aboard the CSS Pontchartrain, 1862; rated as 2nd class fireman from February 20, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 123 - 124 and 338.]
W.H. Hays, Landsman, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274.]
W. R. Hays, served as landsman aboard the CSS Arctic, 1864; sent to Battery Buchanan on December 13, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 117.]
William Hays (also W. J. Hays), born Louisiana, resided in New Orleans; pre-war occupation, finisher; marital status, single; enlisted at New Orleans, July 1, 1861, as private, company H, 14th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, about September or October, 1863, but re-transferred back to his company and regiment shortly after; deserted, March 1, 1865. [Booth 2, 236.]
William Hays, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, in the marine guard aboard the CSS Charleston, Charleston harbor, 1864; died prior to June 30, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OV - Miscellaneous; Charleston - Richmond (accounts), page 70.]
Benjamin Hayward, Second Class Boy, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274.]
W. W. Hayward, served as 1st class boy in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
William H. Hayward, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 309.]
---- Haywood, served aboard the CSS Morgan; resided, in 1907, at Atlanta, Georgia. [Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2.]
Philip Drayton Haywood, claimed to have served aboard the CSS Alabama, in an article he wrote for the Century magazine, in April, 1886, but was eventually exposed as a fraud. [See The Century magazine, volume 31, issue 6 (April, 1886), page 901, and volume 33, issue 5 (March 1887), page 805, published by the Century Company, New York.]
Sam Haywood, coal heaver, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]
J.F. Hayworth, landsman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay, Alabama, during July - December, 1863; later served aboard the receiving vessel CSS Indian Chief, at Charleston, South Carolina, October - December, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]
Samuel Hazard (surname also shown as Hazzard), born North Carolina, 1824; enlisted at Lenoir County, North Carolina, April 27, 1861, as private, company D, 27th Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 1, 1864, as landsman; attached, as private, company K, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; resided as a farm laborer, in 1870, with his wife, Harriet, and son, at Kinston, Lenoir County, North Carolina. [NCT 8, 41; M1091; 1870 U.S. Census.]
George Edward Hazlehurst (surname also shown as Hazelhurst), born South Carolina, July 6, 1839; son of George Abbot Hazlehurst, and his wife Mary (maiden name Mortimer); served as commander's secretary, to flag officer Duncan Ingraham, at the Charleston station, 1863 - 1864; delivered naval record of the station to lieutenant George H. Ingraham at Cheraw, South Carolina; captured by Union general Sherman, and drew lots for life or death act of retaliation; another (Army) officer named Miller drew and was shot; resided as a cotton broker, in 1910, at a boarding house on Broad Street, Charleston, South Carolina; shown, in 1910, as a widower; died of chronic myocarditis, at the Riverside Infirmary, Charleston, on January 22, 1913. [CSN Register; 1850 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water, Coal and Wood for ships, page 578; South Carolina Death Records, 1821-1955 at Ancestry.com.]
Thomas Mortimer Hazlehurst, born South Carolina, February, 1843; served in the "Moultrie Guards," company D, 1st South Carolina and later in the Confederate States Navy; served as 2nd lieutenant (Register1864 actually shows appointment as acting master's mate), CSS Charleston, for 2½ years, until evacuation of Charleston, South Carolina, February, 1865; sent to Richmond, Virginia, and joined the Army (Naval Brigade?); sent home on furlough, April, 1865; married in 1865; resided, in 1880, with his wife, Mary F. Hazlehurst, and six children (eldest child born 1866) at District 34, Screven County, Georgia; moved to Georgia from South Carolina about 1879/1880; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Chatham County, Georgia; occupation, in 1900, shown as book keeper; still living in Savannah, in 1910; his widow, Mary F. Hazlehurst later also filed for a pension from the same county. [GA Pension Index 450; Register1864; Georgia State Archives; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census.]