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CS Navy sailors

Eugenious Alexander Jack (surname also shown, in Register1862, as Jacks), born Portsmouth, Virginia,
July 17, 1840; started working at the age of 16, as clerk in a dry goods store, and very shortly after took
an apprenticeship in the Department of Steam Engineering at the Gorport (later Norfolk) Navy Yard,
Virginia; enlisted, April, 1861, in company K (Old Dominion Guard), 9th Virginia Regiment; transferred
to the Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer aboard the CSS Virginia, November 29, 1861;
participated in the engagement at Hampton Roads, Virginia, March, 1862; after the destruction of the
CSS Virginia, he was sent to Drewry's Bluff, James River; appointed, at Wilmington, North Carolina, 2nd
assistant engineer on January 23, 1863; then to the CSS Arkansas on the Mississippi River; promoted 1st
assistant engineer, August 15, 1863; served on the Wilmington station, 1862 - 1864, and on the ironclad
sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina; also served on the CSS Arctic and on the CSS
Tallahassee; later served on the CSS Columbia, CSS Palmetto State and on the CSS Richmond; captured
April 6, 1865, at Sailors Creek, Virginia and sent to Johnsons Island prison; released June 18, 1865; after
the war he served in the Navy of the South American state of Columbia; later returned to the United
States and was employed as a lieutenant in the United States Revenue Cutter service; died Alton,
Illinois, December 18, 1911, and his remains were returned to Portsmouth, Virginia, for burial at the
Cedar Grove Cemetery. [ORN 1, 7, 48 and 2, 1, 276, 293, 295, 296, 308 & 323; Register1862;
Register1863; Register1864; additional information from his biography, "Memoirs of Eugenious
Alexander Jack," details of which are included at web site written by Allen P. Cutchen:
http://members.aol.com/GCRAMVA/JACK.html; Norfolk County Record 99.]

John Jack, Fireman, CSS Alabama; born England; deserted at Cape Town, South Africa, September 18,
1863. [William Marvel.]

---- Jackson, commanded tug Belle Algerine, April, 1862. [ORN 1, 18, 249.]

B. Jackson, original service as private, company D, 3rd (Palmetto) Battalion, South Carolina Light
Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, and enlisted as coal heaver, for three years,
aboard the CSS Huntress, at Charleston, South Carolina, on June 2, 1862. [Civil War Service Records;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 749.]

Charles Jackson, ordinary seaman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay,
Alabama, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308.]

Charles W. Jackson, born New York; crew member of the CSS Bombshell; captured aboard the vessel
during the engagement at 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; had been impressed from the USS Southfield. [ORN 1, 9,
746; deck log entries for 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,
pages 112 and 116.]

E.A. Jackson, appointed captain's clerk in the Confederate States Navy, on April 14, 1862, and ordered
to report aboard the CSS Jackson; also served on the Jackson station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 319;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions;
Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 745.]

E. P. Jackson, 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 407.]

Enoch Jackson, born South Carolina; pre-war occupation, blacksmith; enlisted March 18, 1864, aged 19,
in the Confederate States Navy. [CSN Shipping Articles.]

F.J. Jackson, landsman, side wheeled steamer CSS Pontchartrain, Arkansas waters, 1862 - 1863. [ORN
2, 1, 299.]

J. B. Jackson, born Tampa, Florida, about 1846; previous service in the Army of Tennessee, and was
enlisted by Naval lieutenant W. W. Carnes, on April 8, 1864, at Dalton, Georgia, for service as landsman
aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; transferred, on May 4, 1864, to the CSS
Sampson, Savannah squadron. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements,
rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 538-540; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 585.]

J.J. Jackson, landsman, steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 313.]

Jacob Jackson, served as seaman aboard the CSS Livingstone, in 1862; rated as quarter gunner from
February 24, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 960.]

James Jackson, transferred, 1864, from the Confederate Army to the Confederate States Navy, at
Tuscumbia, Alabama; served as seaman on the CSS Yadkin, Cape Fear River; captured at Burkville
Junction, April 8, 1865, and sent to Point Lookout Prison; paroled and released, May 1865. [ADAH.]

James Jackson, born South Carolina; aged 27; landsman, receiving ship at New Orleans, Louisiana, 1862.
[St. Philip.]

James P. Jackson, appointed first officer aboard the Confederate States gunboat Stonewall Jackson, 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.]

John Jackson, born Ireland, about 1835; no family; has always followed the sea; was in Mobile,
Alabama, when the cruiser CSS Florida was ready for sea, and was pressed on board; was one of the
men who mutinied at Brest, and was put on shore. [Civil War Subversion Investigations - Turner files,
case 942 - Pirate Florida - Statement of four personnel of CSS Florida, arrested in October, 1863 at
Fold3.]

John B. Jackson, born Hillsboro County, Florida, October 23, 1845; enlisted, March 1, 1862, at Tampa,
Florida, in company K, 7th Florida Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, about May,
1864, and served, as landsman, aboard the CSS Macon, at Augusta, Georgia; also served aboard the
CSS Savannah (as claimed in an affidavit in the pension file of Joseph Cardy); discharged at Augusta,
Georgia, 1865; post war occupation, carpenter; resided in Tampa in 1907, and was a member of Camp
No. 1126, United Confederate Veterans. [Florida Confederate Pension File No. A07479; CSS Macon
Rolls.]

John R. Jackson, original service as private, company I, 23rd Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

John W. Jackson, resided at Craven County, North Carolina; enlisted at the age of 30, November 21,
1861, as private, company K, 31st Regiment, North Carolina Troops; failed to report for duty with this
unit, by reason of having joined the Confederate States Navy; served as seaman aboard the screw
steamer CSS Fanny, North Carolina, 1861 - 1862. [NCT 8, 509; ORN 2, 1, 285.]

Joseph Jackson, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, June 15, 1861, as private, company I, 22nd
Louisiana Infantry (consolidated); transferred to the Confederate States Navy, March 1, 1864. [Booth
2, 418.]

Peter Jackson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama; deserted at Cape Town, South Africa, September 19,
1863. [William Marvel.]

Radford Gunn Jackson, born Georgia, January, 1838; son of Wilie and Rebecca Jackson; resided, in
1850, with his parents, at Taliaferro County, Georgia; married in 1860; enlisted March, 1863, at Decatur,
Georgia, in the Confederate States Navy, as gunner's mate; served fourteen months; served as
ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Resolute, in 1863; transferred, on June 12, 1863, to the stern wheeled
gunboat, CSS Isondiga, Savannah squadron, and continued serving on this vessel through 1864;
furloughed and was at home at the close of the war; resided as a farmer, in 1900, with his wife, Nancy,
and grand children, at Dixon, Pike County, Alabama; resided in Pike County, Alabama, in 1907. [ADAH;
ORN 2, 1, 289; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 373.]

T. [or P.] J. Jackson, Wardroom Cook, captured at Arkansas Post, January 12, 1863. [ORN 1, 24, 117.]

T. R. Jackson, 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.]

Thomas Jackson, native of Yorkshire or Liverpool, England; originally shipped at Liverpool, aboard the
steamer Laurel; shipped, at Madeira, as fireman aboard the CSS Shenandoah, 1864; left the vessel at
Melbourne, Australia, January 27, 1865. [Alabama Claims 1, 875-876; Alabama Claims Correspondence
3, 401.]

Thomas Jackson, served as a private in company A, Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the
Georgia and South Carolina stations, 1861; also served in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Resolute, in
1862; later shown on a roll of Confederate States Marines, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 313 & 317; Confederate
Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans -
Yorktown, page 371.]

Thomas Alphonse Jackson, born District of Columbia (Register1864 shows place of birth as
Virginia), about 1831; citizen of, and appointed from, Virginia; previous service in the United
States Navy, from October 31, 1848; resigned at Boston, Massachusetts, April, 1861; original
entry into Confederate States Navy, as engineer, June 11, 1861, at Richmond, Virginia; engineer
aboard the CSS Hampton, James River, in 1862; appointed chief engineer, October 23, 1862;
served on the New Orleans station, 1861; later on the Richmond station, 1861 - 1862, and as
superintendent at the Naval mills and powder works, Atlanta, Georgia, and the Naval Powder
Works at Columbia, South Carolina, 1862 - 1864; stated to be building a steamboat at
Montgomery, Alabama, in April, 1864, for transporting coal from Selma, for the use of the mills
in Atlanta; stationed at Charlotte, North Carolina, 1865; enrolled as major in Semmes' Naval
Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865;
post war occupation, marine engineer; stated to have been widowed by the time he applied for
admission to the R.E. Lee, Camp No. 1, Confederate Veterans' Soldiers' Home, at Richmond,
Virginia, in July, 1894; died May 7, 1898. [ORN 2, 1, 320 & 321; Register1862; Register1863;
Register1864; M1091; LVa; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water - Water
for ships, page 986; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units;
OX - Lines of supply and supply ships; Ships - Miscellaneous, page 542; Confederate Navy
subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PN - Plant; Botetourt
County, Va. - Columbia, pages 874 and 985.]

William Jackson, quartermaster, CSS Georgia, 1863; later indicated to have been warranted a gunner
on the same vessel, 1864. [Alabama Claims 1, 694; ORN 1, 3, 127.]

William Congreve Jackson, born Virginia, about 1842; son of Dr. S.K. Jackson, of Leesburg, Virginia;
member of the Episcopal Church; previous service in the United States Navy, as midshipman; served
as acting midshipman, Confederate States Navy, and assigned the duties of drilling men at one of the
batteries on the Peninsula, Virginia; ordered to report to Commodore Lynch at Albemarle Sound, and
served aboard the CSS Ellis; severely wounded in action, Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February 10,
1862; captured and died, aged 19, aboard the USS Hetzel, twenty hours later, after receiving "every
possible care and attention"; buried at Fort Cobb, (Elizabeth City, North Carolina). [1860 U.S. Census;
ORN 1, 6, 596 - 597 & 608, 610; Richmond Daily Dispatch dated February 20, 1862.]

William Hutcheson Jackson, born Virginia; resident of Maryland; original entry into Confederate States
Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, June 5, 1861; served on the steam sloop CSS McRae, New Orleans
station, 1861; also held the position of 3rd assistant engineer in charge aboard the CSS Jackson, 1862;
later served on the Jackson station, 1862, and aboard the CSS Arkansas; wounded in action, in the
head and hand, on the Yazoo River, July 15, 1862, during the ram's passage through the Federal fleet
above Vicksburg; afterwards on the Richmond station, 1862; appointed 2nd assistant engineer, August
27, 1862; had served as chief engineer aboard the blockade runner Greyhound, at the time she was
captured; reported for duty aboard CSS Florida, October 18, 1862; Maffitt, commander of the CSS
Florida, states: 'a more unfortunate appointment could not have been made'; also described as 'totally
unfit for his position'; sent away from the CSS Florida, at Barbados, February, 1863, to return to the
Confederacy; however, a separate page in the same source indicates that, in July, 1864, he was still
aboard the CSS Florida, and had been dangerously wounded by the falling of a tackle from the
maintop, striking him on the ankle joint; a Naval document indicates that he had been a passenger
aboard the English brig T. H. A. Pitt, from New York to Bermuda, when the boarding officer of the
cruiser CSS Florida informed Jackson that the cruiser was short of an engineer, at which time he
volunteered for duty aboard the cruiser, and was appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer on July 3,
1864;. [ORN 1, 1, 768; 1, 2, 642-642 & 673; 1, 3, 624; 1, 19, 69 and 2, 1, 290, 318, 320 & 321; Register1862;
Register1863; Daily Mississippian (Jackson, Mississippi), dated July 21, 1862; Confederate Navy subject
file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water - Water for ships, page 782; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A -
K), page 624.]

William T. Jackson, resided at Gold Hill, North Carolina; enlisted at Camp Hill, North Carolina,
September 6, 1862, aged 22, as private, company C, 18th Regiment North Carolina Troops; deserted,
August 1, 1863, but returned to duty prior to March 1, 1864; transferred to the Confederate States
Navy on or about April 3, 1864. [NCT 6, 337.]

John Jacob, appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, at Brashear City,
Louisiana, November 6, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Mobile for duty. [Confederate
Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances -
Appointments of officers (A - K), page 626.]

Andrew Jacobs, landsman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay, Alabama,
during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]

B. W. Jacobs, served as landsman 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 1233.]

Benjamin Jacobs, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New
Orleans, January 14, 1862, 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
account, and to then consider himself as being discharged from the service. [ORN 2, 1, 318;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions;
Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 628; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L -
Z) - Revoked commissions, page 963.]

Fred Jacobs, ordinary seaman, ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina,
1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 298.]

Frederick Jacobs, served as ordinary seaman aboard Launch No. 4, New Orleans station, 1861.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New
Orleans - Yorktown, page 51.]

Frederick Jacobs, served as ordinary 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.]

J.C. Jacobs, served as private in company F of the Confederate States Marine Corps, at Mobile, in 1864;
later as 5th corporal in company C of the Corps on the Richmond Station, Virginia, 1864; also served in
the marine guard aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 315; Confederate Navy
subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse,
page 1082; 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; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 680.]

J.L. Jacobs, 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.]

Philip Jacobs, landsman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay, Alabama,
during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]

Matthew Jacques, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile station, 1862.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1064.]

Nicholas Jaeger, served at the Mobile station, in 1863, as a private in the Confederate States Marine
Corps. [Donnelly/Sullivan; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists
of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1061.]

Matthew Jakes, 2nd class fireman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama,
1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 293.]

A.W. James, enlisted as a private (also shown as corporal, at New Orleans), Confederate States Marine
Corps, by captain Benthuysen, at New Orleans, on April 10, 1861, and served aboard the steam sloop
CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861; later in company B, at the Richmond station, and at Drewry's
Bluff, Virginia, 1863 - 1864, and as corporal in the marine guard aboard the CSS Drewry, James River
squadron; attached as orderly sergeant to company H, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April,
1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 291, 314 & 320;
M1091; 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, pages 441 and 466.]

Charles James, served as ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy, 1864; sent to Battery Buchanan
on December 30, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists
of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 118.]

H.L. James, resident of Warren County, North Carolina; served as landsman in the Confederate States
Navy; served aboard the CSS Arctic, 1863, and aboard the CSS Raleigh, 1864. [Information from the
web site, Warren County, North Carolina, Civil War Roster, by Nola Duffy, at URL:
http://www.ncwarren.net/cwar/ab-cw.html; ORN 2, 1, 278 and 302.]

John James, Carpenter's Mate; born England; CSS Shenandoah, 1865. [Alabama Claims, 1, 975.]

John W. James (ord.?), 1st sergeant, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; Drewry's Bluff,
Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314.]

Lawrence James, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, March 19, 1862, as private, company H, 25th
Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, by order of General Joseph E.
Johnston, in accordance with an order from the War Department, about January or February, 1864.
[Booth 2, 427.]

Noel James, served as ordinary seaman aboard the receiving vessel, CSS Indian Chief, about 1864
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 765-766.]

Richard S. James, 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
41.]

Richard S. James, appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans,
October 10, 1861, and ordered to report aboard Launch No. 1 for duty; later served on the Charleston
station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 317; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 630.]

Thomas James
, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama; deserted at Cape Town, South Africa, August 12,
1863. [William Marvel.]

Thomas James, served aboard the cruiser CSS Georgia, in 1863; a list of "boarders" of the cruiser shows
James holding the position of assistant loader at the 2nd gun division. [Confederate Navy subject file N
- Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 604.]

W. James, landsman, 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 H. James, born Pasquotank County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at
Currituck County, North Carolina, May 13, 1861, aged 20, as private, company E, 17th Regiment North
Carolina Troops (1st Organization); transferred to the Confederate States Navy prior to July 28, 1861;
served as landsman on the CSS Fanny, 1861-1862. [NCT 6, 153; ORN 2, 1, 285.]

Y. James, seaman, CSS Georgia, 1863. [Alabama Claims 1, 694.]

James Jameson, served aboard the revenue cutter Pickens, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N
- Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 318.]

Rufus Jameson, indicated to have served as a Confederate marine; buried at Cahill's New Cemetery,
Galveston, Texas. [Galveston Daily News (Texas) dated Tuesday, May 31, 1887, page 1.]

James Jamison (surname also shown as Jamerson and Jemerson), served as seaman at the New
Orleans station, and aboard the CSS Pickens, 1861. [St. Philip; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 62 and
97.]

Thomas Janderson, served as 1st classs fireman 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.]

Thomas Jandron, original service as private, company K, 23rd Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Henry Janes, coal heaver, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South
Carolina), July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS.]
John Janes, 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.]

John Jaques, seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864.
[ORN 2, 1, 293.]
Andrew Jarret, shown as Private aboard Gunboat J.A. Cotton; listed as a deserter, December 9, 1862.
[Information supplied by Arthur Bergeron, Louisiana.]

Jacob Jarret, shown as Private aboard Gunboat J.A. Cotton; listed as a deserter, December 9, 1862.
[Information supplied by Arthur Bergeron, Louisiana.]

F.B. Jarvis, ordinary seaman, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865.
[ORN 2, 1, 311.]

H.B.S. Jarvis, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

H.D. Jarvis, Landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

J.W.A. Jarvis, CSN; died June 27, 1863; buried Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. [Tom Brooks.]

James Jarvis, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

John E. Jarvis, 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.]

W.W. Jarvis, 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 R. Jarvis, born Virginia, about 1837; resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; served as carpenter's
mate aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; also as carpenter aboard
the CSS Richmond, and the CSS Virginia II, 1864; resided as a carpenter, in 1870, with his wife, Almeda,
and four children, at Portsmouth, Virginia. [ORN 1, 10, 671 & 765; 1, 11, 690 and 2, 1, 309; 1870 U.S.
Census; Norfolk County Record 201.]

John Jasper, officers' steward; served aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Winslow, North Carolina
waters, 1861; may have previously served in the United States Navy, as cook at the Portsmouth
(Virginia) Navy Yard, in 1860; race shown as mulatto; age shown as 28, and state of birth as Virginia.
[ORN 2, 1, 312; 1860 U.S. Census.]

Richard K. Jeffers, served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Huntress, Charleston, South Carolina,
1862; later served as carpenter's mate aboard the ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, at Charleston,
1863-1864. [ORN 2, 1, 298; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls,
lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 751 and 753.]

Edward M. Jefferson, appointed acting master in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans,
October 25, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the revenue cutter Pickens for duty; also served at the
Jackson station, 1862; paroled as captain commanding the Naval Brigade, at the close of the war, at
Meridian, Mississippi, on May 13, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 318; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners
and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, 82; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL -
Paroles, A-W, 99; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked
commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 632.]
S. Jefferson, Quartermaster, CSS Chattahoochee, May, 1864. [ORN 1, 17, 700.]

T. Jefferson
, CSN; died June 8, 1863; buried Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. [Tom Brooks.]

Thomas Jefferson, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, March 5, 1862, as private, company B, 14th
(Austin's) Battalion Louisiana Sharp Shooters; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, about
March or April, 1864, under Special Order No. 29, Headquarters, Army of Mississippi (see next entry,
which may be the same person). [Booth 2, 434.]

Thomas Jefferson, seaman, CSS Chattahoochee, 1864 (see previous entry, which may be the same
person). [ORN 2, 1, 283.]

Richard W. Jeffery, born Virginia; resident of Norfolk, Virginia; previous service in the United States
Navy, from October 17, 1839; original entry into Confederate States Navy service, as surgeon, February
8, 1862; in charge of the Office of Medicine and Surgery, in 1862; on special duty, 1862 - 1863; served
on the Savannah station, 1863 - 1864; in command of the Savannah Naval Hospital, June, 1864;
attached to Augusta, Georgia, December, 1864. [ORN 1, 15, 483; 1, 16, 489 and 2, 1, 323; Register1863;
Norfolk County Record 313; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XN- Naval stores afloat, Stores
for ships (April, 1862 - December, 1863), page 882.]

B.F. Jeffrey, shipped, by lieutenant Venable, at Richmond, Virginia, as a private in company C,
Confederate States Marine Corps, in early 1864, and served on the Richmond Station, Virginia. [ORN 2,
1, 315; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps -
Miscellaneous, page 299.]

---- Jenkens, captain's clerk, served aboard the CSS Chickamauga, September-December, 1864. [ORN
1, 3, 710.]

E. Jenkins, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

E. Courtney Jenkins, born Maryland, 1840; son of Edward and Ellen Jenkins, of Baltimore, Maryland;
appointed, by flag officer William F. Lynch, of the Mississippi station, as his secretary, on June 13, 1862,
and was then ordered to proceed to Liberty, Bedford County, Virginia, to await further orders;
discharged from these duties about October, 1862; subsequently appointed flag officer's secretary on
the North Carolina station, on October 29, 1862; served at Wilmington, North Carolina, and aboard the
CSS Arctic, 1862 - 1864; resided his position in the Navy, on February 5, 1864; resided as a merchant, in
1880, with his adopted parents, William A. and Annabelle Jenkins, at Richmond, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 276
& 323; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked
commissions, pages 747, 748 and 1034; Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy
Yards and Stations; PB - Administration of stations; Columbia - Pensacola, page 246.]

Elijah Byrd Jenkins, born Alabama, 1842; enlisted at Montgomery, Alabama, November, 1862, in
company K, 1st Alabama Artillery Battalion (or 1st Alabama Regiment?); surrendered at the fall of Port
Hudson, Louisiana, July, 1863; paroled; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, March, 1864;
captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, aboard the CSS Selma, and sent to Ship Island; resided, in
1880, with his wife, Susan, and 7 children, at Pine Apple, Wilcox County, Alabama. [Information
supplied by great grandson, Curtis Wayne Jenkins, of Augusta, Georgia, in an e-mail
(cwaynej53@yahoo.com) dated May 8, 2005; 1880 US Census.]

H. C. Jenkins, served as master at arms 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.]

Ira Jenkins, native of Knoxville, Tennessee; served in the Confederate States Navy; post war service as
a locomotive engineer on the railway between Vera Cruz and Mexico City, Mexico; involved in an
accident on that railroad, in which a Mexican was killed, on June 5, 1884, and he was placed in a
Mexican jail for eleven months, and escaped, to return to the United States, in May, 1885. [Galveston
Daily News (Houston, Texas) dated May 24, 1885.]

Israel B. Jenkins, born North Carolina, 1828; served in the Confederate States Navy; resided as a farm
laborer, in 1880, with his wife Patsy Jane Jenkins, and six children (eldest child born 1871) at Mineral
Springs, Richmond County, North Carolina; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Richmond
County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; 1880 U.S. Census.]

J.S. Jenkins, served as ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; attached as private to company C,
Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26,
1865 [see entry for Joseph S. Jenkins, who may be the same peron]. [M1091.]

Joab J. Jenkins, indicated to have been a private (?) in the Navy Department of the Confederate
States; paroled at Albany, Georgia, May 7, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 661.]

Joe Jenkins, deckhand (?), side wheeled steamer CSS Talomico, Savannah, Georgia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN
2, 1, 307.]

John G. (or J.) Jenkins, Seaman and Ship's Cook, CSS Sumter, deserted at Gibraltar, February, 1862.
[ORN 1, 1, 661 and CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]

Joseph S. Jenkins, resided in Brunswick County, North Carolina; enlisted at Camp Howard, North
Carolina, July 18, 1861, aged 18, as private, company C, 30th Regiment North Carolina Troops;
transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 5, 1864. [NCT 8, 346.]

M.C. Jenkins, resident of Georgia; private, company E, Confederate States Marine Corps, Savannah,
Georgia, 1864; attached to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at
Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 315; M1091.]

M.M. Jenkins, served in company E, Confederate States Marine Corps; filed for a post war
Confederate pension from Jenkins County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 520.]

Neil Jenkins, landsman, steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1862 - 1864.
[ORN 2, 1, 302; DANFS.]

Oliver L. Jenkins, born in Baltimore, Maryland; resided in Baltimore; appoint acting master's mate in
the Confederate States Navy, at Richmond, Virginia, on November 18, 1863 (another Naval document
shows date of appointment as November 20, 1863), and reported for duty aboard the CSS Raleigh, at
Wilmington, North Carolina; also served on the CSS Arctic, and on the ironclad sloop CSS North
Carolina, Wilmington station, 1863 - 1864; also served at Battery Buchanan, Fort Fisher, November,
1864; captured with five other personnel of the Confederate Navy, by Union sailors from the USS
Pequot, on the Cape Fear River, North Carolina, February 19, 1865; confined at Fortress Monroe,
Virginia. [ORN 1, 10, 767; 1, 11, 772; 1, 12, 42 and 2, 1, 275, 295, 296, 301 & 323;
Register1864[Confederate Navy subject file, N - Personnel, NN - Acceptances, applications,
appointments, etc., Acceptances - appointments of officers (A-K), page 22; Confederate Navy subject
file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RV - Miscellaneous, page 84; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A -
K), page 633.]

Paul Jenkins, seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]

Tom Jenkins, cook, side wheeled steamer CSS Talomico, Savannah, Georgia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1,
307.]

Tony Jenkins, deckhand (?), side wheeled steamer CSS Talomico, Savannah, Georgia, 1861 - 1862.
[ORN 2, 1, 307.]

James Jenkinson
, served as fireman aboard the CSS Lady Davis, and was involved in the capture of the
prize A.B. Thompson, on May 19, 1861; received the sum of $85.63 as his share in the capture of that
vessel. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of
prize money - Miscellaneous, page 2.]

N. F. Jenks, served as seaman aboard the Confederate States schooner, Dodge, in 1861.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.;
CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 289.]

J.W. Jennett
, original service as private, company C, Murphy's Battalion, Alabama Cavalry; transferred
to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

John Jennings, served as 1st class boy aboard the CSS Carondelet, New Orleans station, 1862.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 123.]

J.H. Jernigan, Landsman, CSS Webb, April, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 170.]

C.P. Jervey, indicated to have been an acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy; held as a
prisoner of war at Fort Lafayette, New York, October, 1864. [ORA 2, 7, 929.]

George W. Jeter, seaman and ordinary seaman, ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River,
North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 294 - 296; DANFS.]

John W. Jett, born Virginia, April, 1821; pilot, served on the Richmond station, 1861 - 1862; resided as a
steamboat pilot, in 1880, with his wife, Eliza, and four sons, at Georgetown, Washington, District of
Columbia; living as a widower, in 1900, at the home of his son, Edward, and family, at Washington, D.C.
[ORN 2, 1, 321; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census.]

Lewis M. Jiggitts, born North Carolina, about 1837; resided as a planter, in 1860, at Madison County,
Mississippi; served aboard CSS Livingston; married Laura Robinson, at Madison County, Mississippi,
October 1, 1866. [Confederate Veteran Volume 18, Number 4, page 188; Mississippi Marriages, 1776 -
1935 at the Ancestry.com web site; 1860 U.S. Census.]

Peter Joanna, seaman, CSS Shenandoah; temporarily transferred to Engineer's Department of the
vessel, January 17, 1865. [CSS Shenandoah Deck Log.]

Joe, served aboard the CSS Shenandoah, 1865. [ORN 1, 3, 783.]

Long Joe, served aboard the CSS Shenandoah, 1865. [ORN 1, 3, 783.]

Cleeland John, born Laurence County, New York, about 1827; enlisted as landsman aboard the CSS
Palmetto State, Charleston, South Carolina, December 17, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 243.]

C.C. Johns, original service as private, company E, 10th Florida Infantry; transferred to the Confederate
States Navy at an unspecified date (see next entry, which may be the same person). [Civil War Service
Records.]

C.C. Johns, shipped as landsman aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, May 4, 1864; previously served in 1st
Florida Battalion (see previous entry, which may be the same person); also served aboard the ironclad
floating battery CSS Georgia (which was also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram),
Savannah station. [ORN 1, 17, 701 and 2, 1, 283 & 287.]

David C. Johns, served in company E, Confederate States Marine Corps; filed for a post war
Confederate pension from Polk County, Georgia; later transferred to Whitfield County, Georgia (may
have been related to W.S. Johns, also of company E, CSMC). [GA Pension Index 523.]

Frederick Mathew Johns, Paymaster's Steward, CSS Alabama; born Liverpool, England, about 1842;
missing in action off Cherbourg, France, June 19, 1864; name inscribed on family memorial at St. James
Churchyard, Liverpool, England. [William Marvel; Chris Old.]

W. L. Johns, recruited at Savannah, Georgia, on April 14, 1863, as a private in company E, Confederate
States Marine Corps (see William L. Johns, who may be the same person). [Confederate Navy subject
file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page
683.]

William Johns, enlisted September 9, 1861, at St. Vincent's Island, in Company I, Fourth Florida
Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 11, 1864. [Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 445.]

William L. Johns (middle initial also shown as S.), served as 2nd corporal, Confederate States Marine
Corps, on the Richmond station, in 1863; transferred aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron,
Georgia, about July, 1863; served through 1864; transferred, at an unknown date, to Richmond,
Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 305, 315 & 316; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements,
rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 437.]

William S. Johns, served as 2nd assistant engineer aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Firefly,
Savannah station, 1863; also served aboard the CSS Macon, 1865; his services were dispensed with in
the Confederate States Navy, on the return of 2nd assistant engineer J. L. Fabian to the CSS Macon, on
March 24, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 285; CSS Macon Rolls; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked
commissions, page 914.]

William S. Johns, enlisted, on April 10, 1863, as a private in company E, Confederate States Marine
Corps, and received a bounty of $50; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Polk County,
Georgia (may have been related to David C. Johns, also of company E, CSMC). [GA Pension Index 523;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New
Orleans - Yorktown, page 677.]

A Johnson, served as pilot on the CSS Palmetto State, Charleston station, South Carolina, 1863. [ORN 1,
13, 619.]

A.N. Johnson, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]
Ames C. Johnson, originally served as private in Captain Grandy's Company, Virginia Light Artillery
(Norfolk Light Artillery Blues); indicated to have been appointed an engineer in the Confederate States
Navy; name not registered in the Naval Register. [Norfolk County Record 251.]

Andrew Johnson, seaman, ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 -
1864. [ORN 2, 1, 298.]

Andrew Johnson
, served as seaman aboard the CSS Mobile, in 1861; rated as coxswain on October 31,
1861; later, after the fall of New Orleans in 1862, and when the vessel was stationed off Yazoo City,
Mississippi, Johnson was rated as quartermaster from June 1, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N
- Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1029 and
1041.]

Andrew W. Johnson, previous service in the Confederate States Army; transferred to the Confederate
States Navy, April 11, 1864; appointed acting master's mate at Savannah, Georgia, April 18, 1864;
served aboard the CSS Savannah, CSS Resolute and CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron, 1864; on the
fall of Savannah, reported for duty at Augusta, Georgia, December, 1864; commanded a small boat's
crew, involved in sounding the Savannah River, January, 1865; returned to duty aboard the CSS
Sampson, on completion of this duty; placed in temporary command of the CSS Sampson, on the
absence of its commander, March 13, 1865. [CSN Register; ORN 1, 16, 495 & 510; Confederate Navy
subject file, N - Personnel, NN - Acceptances, applications, appointments, etc., Acceptances -
appointments of officers (A-K), page 23.]

Baner Johnson, indicated as being a Dutchman; captured aboard the bark Alina, October, 1864, by the
CSS Shenandoah; shipped October 30, 1864. [Whittle 231.]

Bartlett S. Johnson, see Bartlett Shipp Johnston.

Ben Johnson, served as landsman and ward room boy aboard the CSS Huntress, Charleston, South
Carolina, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 751.]

Brent Johnson, Boatswain's Mate, later reduced to Seaman, CSS Alabama; born England; wounded in
action, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]

C. Johnson, see John C. Johnson.

C. Johnson, shipped, by lieutenant Venable, at Richmond, Virginia, as a recruit into the Confederate
States Marine Corps, in early 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous;
Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 299.]

C.W. Johnson (Register1862 shows his surname as Johnston), citizen of, and appointed from, Florida;
original entry into Confederate States Navy, as master not in line of promotion, January 11, 1862;
served at St. Marks, Florida, 1862 - 1864, and aboard the CSS Spray; paroled at St. Marks, May 13, 1865.
[Register1862; Register1863; Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 661.]

Charles E. Johnson
, resident of Richmond, Virginia; indicated to have many relatives residing in
Richmond, in 1864; served as seaman aboard the school ship CSS Patrick Henry; deserted and
attempted to cross the lines into enemy territory; arrested, June 20, 1864, and committed to Castle
Thunder, Richmond. [Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 21, 1864.]

Charles Peter Johnson, native of Sweden; shipped as seaman aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, on March
30, 1864; later rated as 1st class fireman on the cruiser; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864;
continued to perform his duties in the engine room of the captured cruiser, until November 14, 1864;
recommended for discharge (from capture) by Union Navy commander, Napoleon Collins, for his good
conduct. [ORN 1, 3, 256 and 272; 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
398.]

David Johnson, ordinary seaman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay,
Alabama, during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]
E.W. Johnson, see Elliott W. Johnston.

Edward B. Johnson, resident of Missouri; appointed acting midshipman in the Confederate States
Navy, November 23, 1864, and ordered to report to lieutenant William H. Parker, aboard the CSS
Patrick Henry, James River, for duty. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 638.]

Edward J. Johnson, see Edward J. Johnston.

Elisha Rockwood Johnson (middle initial also incorrectly shown as A.), born Virginia; appointed from
civil life; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as gunner's mate; served aboard the ironclad ram
CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; later appointed gunner, August 29, 1862; served on the
Charleston station, 1862, and on the CSS Palmetto State, and the ironclad ram CSS Chicora, 1862 - 1864;
also served on the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 283,
299, 309 & 317; Register1863; Register1864; Washington Post (Washington, D.C.) dated December 24,
1939, page 24; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked
commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 640.]

George Johnson
, shipped at New Orleans, for the war, as seaman aboard the Confederate States
floating battery, New Orleans, on November 2, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel;
NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 13.]

George Johnson, served as ship's corporal in the Confederate States Navy, 1862; deserted about
October, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling,
Miscellaneous, page 163.]

H.B. Johnson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

H.B. Johnson (surname also shown as Johnston), ordinary seaman, served aboard the CSS Savannah,
Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863; 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.]

H.F. Johnson, served as ship's steward aboard the receiving vessel CSS Dalman, Mobile Squadron,
1862. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions
(January - June, 1862), page 271.]

Henry Johnson, born Germany; aged 45; seaman, Launch No. 2; discharged from Naval service,
February 8, 1862, after being admitted to the hospital ship, CSS St. Philip, January 6, 1862, for chronic
orchitus [?]. [St. Philip.]

Isaac Johnson, landsman, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll.]

J. Johnson, First Class Fireman, paroled Alexandria, Louisiana, June 3, 1865. [ORN 1, 27, 231.]

J.V. Johnson, originally served as private, company K, 13th Virginia Cavalry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

J.W. Johnson, born Christiana, Norway, about 1841; resident of Georgia; previous service in the Army
of Tennessee, and was enlisted by Naval lieutenant W.W. Carnes, on April 9, 1864, at Dalton, Georgia,
for service as ordinary seaman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron;
transferred as seaman to the CSS Atlanta; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17,
1863; transferred, in July, 1864, to the CSS Macon, aboard which he served 1864-1865. [ORN 1, 14, 268;
CSS Macon Rolls; Daily Morning News (Savannah, Georgia) dated June 27, 1863; Confederate Navy
subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse,
pages 538-540 and 560.]

J.W. Johnson, served as landsman aboard the CSS Selma; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and
sent aboard the USS Ossipee, as prisoner of war. [ORN 1, 21, 841.]

J.W. Johnson, originally served as private, company G, 154th Senior Regiment, Tennessee Infantry;
promoted corporal (see also 38th Tennessee Infantry); transferred to the Confederate States Navy at
an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

Jack Johnson, originally served as private, company F, 35th Texas Cavalry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see also entry for John Johnson of company D, 35th
Texas Cavalry, who may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]

Jacob Johnson, served as seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Missouri, Shreveport, Louisiana, 1863 -
1864; rated as ship's cook from January 15, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 291; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1011.]

James Johnson, appointed, by assistant paymaster A. Tredwell, as paymaster's clerk at Wilmington,
North Carolina, on January 1, 1864; resigned from the Naval service on February 28, 1864. [ORN 2, 1,
323; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions;
Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 749 and 1035.]

James Johnson, shipped at New Orleans, for the war, as landsman aboard the Confederate States
floating battery, New Orleans, on October 29, 1861; rated as 1st class fireman on October 30, 1861.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New
Orleans - Yorktown, pages 13 and 369.]
James Johnson, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS
Richmond, James River, in 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements,
rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 390.]

James F. Johnson (middle initial also shown as T.), enlisted in the Confederate States Navy on August
3, 1863; served as captain of the hold aboard the ironclad floating battery, CSS Georgia, Savannah
Squadron, Georgia, 1863-1864; disrated to seaman from September 1, 1864; stated to have "run"
(deserted) on October 1, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 286; Confederate States Navy subject files - N Personnel -
NI - Promotions; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523 and 668; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 527.]

James L. Johnson, see James L. Johnston.

James V. Johnson (surname shown, in Register1864 as Johnston), born Virginia; previous service in
company K, 13th Virginia Cavalry; commissioned 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy of the Confederate
States, January 7, 1864; served as executive officer aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia
(also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), Savannah, Georgia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 286;
DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.;
CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 498; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 641.]

James V. Johnson, originally served as private, St. Bride's Cavalry, company F, 15th Virginia Cavalry;
transferred to the Confederate States Navy. [Norfolk County Record 208.]

James W. Johnson, born Georgia, 1835; served aboard the Ladies' Gunboat (ironclad ram CSS Georgia,
at Savannah, Georgia); resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife Mary E. Johnson, and six children
(eldest child born 1864) at English, Warren County, Georgia; filed for a post war Confederate pension
from Warren County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 527; 1880 U.S. Census.]

James W. Johnson, born December 9, 1830; originally served as private, company B, 16th Virginia
Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date; died November 11, 1899;
buried at Cedar Hill Cemetery, Virginia, block B, lot 20. [Nansemond.]

Jeffries Johnson, see Jervis Johnson.

Jeremiah Johnson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

Jervis Johnson (first name also shown as Jarvis and Jeffries), resident of Deep Bottom, Virginia; served
as seaman on the CSS Torpedo (also shown as private in the Confederate Submarine Battery Service);
captured at Jones' Point, on the James River, Virginia, May 6, 1864, and sent to Fort Lafayette, New
York Harbor; transferred to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, September 18, 1864; released and sent to
Richmond from City Point, Virginia, October 18, 1864, after being exchanged. [ORN 1, 10, 10; Fort
Warren; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated October 20, 1864.]

Jesse H. Johnson, born Northampton County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at
Northampton County, February 11, 1862, aged 35, as private, company D, 32nd Regiment North
Carolina Troops; wounded in the thigh and captured at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania sometime between
July 1 and 5, 1863; hospitalized at Gettysburg, then transferred to Davids Island, New York Harbor,
between July 17 and 24, 1863; received at City Point, Virginia, August 28, 1863, for exchange;
transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 5, 1864. [NCT 9, 41.]

John Johnson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

John Johnson, seaman, CSS Florida; died of bilious fever, May (17 or) 18, 1863, and buried at Rocas
Island. [ORN 1, 2, 653 and 680; Quinn Journal.]

John Johnson, seaman, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]

John Johnson (Register1862 and Register1864 show name as John Johnston), born Ireland; citizen of,
and appointed from, North Carolina; previous service in the United States Navy, from August 28, 1850;
original entry into Confederate States Navy service, June 21, 1861; commissioned paymaster, October
23, 1862, to rank from March 26, 1861; paymaster and Navy agent at Norfolk, Virginia, in February,
1862; served at the Naval works, Charlotte, North Carolina, 1862 - 1864. [Register1862; Register1863;
Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XA - Accounting and finance, Miscellaneous,
page 97.]

John Johnson, originally served as private, company D, 35th Texas Cavalry (see also, 13th Texas
Volunteers); transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see also entry for

Jack Johnson, who may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]

John B. Johnson, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at
Lawrenceburg, Richmond County, North Carolina, April 13, 1863, and ordered to report to flag officer
Lynch, at Wilmington, for duty; served on the Wilmington station, North Carolina, 1863; resigned
October 24, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 323; 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
644.]

John C. Johnson, born Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer,
September 19, 1862; promoted acting 2nd assistant engineer, May 21, 1863; served aboard the ironclad
ram CSS Palmetto State and the CSS Juno, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1862 - 1864; while
serving aboard the CSS Juno, he was involved in the capture of the 1st launch of the USS Wabash, off
Charleston, on the night of August 6, 1863. [ORN 1, 13, 619; 1, 14, 427 and 2, 1, 298; Register1863;
Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution
of Prize Money - Miscellaneous, page 20.]

John C. Johnson, originally served as private in captain Grandy's Company, Virginia Light Artillery (see
also 16th Virginia Infantry); transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil
War Service Records.]

John H. Johnson, resident of Fredericksburg, Virginia; dismissed from the United States Naval
Academy, and went to California in 1848; lieutenant, served as executive officer, CSS Beaufort, 1862;
drowned at Wilmington, North Carolina. [Parker 242.]

John H. Johnson, served at the Mobile station, 1863, in the Confederate States Marine Corps.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1063.]

Jos. Johnson, served as ordinary 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.]

Joseph Johnson, ship's carpenter, Confederate States Navy; served at Porter's ship yard, Tombigbee
River, Alabama, September, 1864; widow - Tempie Johnson applied for Confederate pension, October,
1913. [ADAH.]

Julius Johnson, boatswain's mate, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama,
1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]

M.W. Johnson (middle initial should be N.), see M. Newton Johnston.

Mark Johnson, ship's cook, side wheeled steamer CSS Rappahannock, Potomac and Rappahannock
Rivers, Virginia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 303; DANFS.]

Napoleon B. Johnson (surname also shown as Johnston), born Alabama, 1840; resided with his
mother, Elizabeth, and brother, William, at Shelby County, Alabama, in 1860; enrolled at Talladega,
Alabama, January 6, 1863, in the Confederate States Marine Corps, and served at the Mobile station, in
1863; transferred, March 15, 1864, as private to CSS Tennessee; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864;
paroled, March 4, 1865, at Ship Island, Mississippi; widow, Mrs. M.A. Johnson, applied for a pension
from Shelby County, Alabama, in 1914. [ADAH; 1860 U.S. Census; 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 680.]

Neill A. Johnson, served as landsman aboard the CSS Arctic, 1863, and on the CSS Neuse, North
Carolina, in 1864; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Robeson County, North Carolina.
[ORN 2, 1, 276; NC State Archives; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements,
rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1232.]

P.H. Johnson, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]

Paul Johnson, shipped as boy (aged between 14 and 17) aboard the CS floating battery New Orleans,
on October 29, 1861; rated as 1st class boy aboard the vessel, then stationed off Columbus, Kentucky,
from January 1, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 6, 9 and 12.]

Richard Johnson, Captain of Hold, CSS Richmond, January, 1865. [ORN 1, 11, 794.]

Richard Johnson, originally served as private, company I, 6th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

Richard Johnson, served as 2nd class fireman 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.]

Robert Johnson (surname also shown as Johnston), served as coxswain aboard the CSS Savannah,
Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1862; disrated to seaman on January 4, 1862, by order of lieutenant
commanding, Thomas P. Pelot; rated again, as coxswain, from December 1, 1862; he was listed as
missing from the vessel from March 15, 1863. [Confederate States Navy subject files - N Personnel -
NI - Promotions; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 589 and 596.]

Robert N. Johnson, seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 -
1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]

S. Johnson
, 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.]
Simeon Johnson, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]

T.F. Johnson
, pre war service as engineer on a Mississippi steamboat; served in both the Confederate
Army and Navy; moved to Waco, Texas, after the war, and conducted a retail grocery business; died,
aged 72, on July 25, 1907, after a brief illness. [DRB quoting an article in the Dallas (Texas) Morning
News, dated July 27, 1907, page 11.]

T.H. Johnson, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]
Theophilas Johnson, see Theophilus Johnston.

Thomas Johnson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]

Thomas Johnson, born Maine, about 1833; served as seaman aboard the CSS Ivy, New Orleans station,
1861-1862; rated as boatswain's mate from August 25, 1861; rated as quartermaster from October 19,
1861, in place of Alexander Miller, who had been disrated on the same day; discharged from Naval
service, February 8, 1862, for disease of the heart, after being admitted to the hospital vessel, CSS St.
Philip, January 23, 1862. [St. Philip; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements,
rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 840 and 848.]

Thomas Johnson, seaman; served aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Winslow, North Carolina
waters, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 312.]

Thomas Johnson, served as seaman aboard the Confederate States floating battery, New Orleans,
about 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons,
etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 14.]

Thomas P. Johnson, appointed carpenter aboard the Confederate States gunboat Colonel Lovell, of
the Mississippi River Defense fleet, on February 9, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 264.]

Tom Johnson, enlisted, February, 1861, at Talladega County, Alabama, in 5th Alabama Infantry;
transferred to Confederate States Navy, February, 1863; served on the floating battery at Mobile Bay,
under Commander Brown; transferred, December, 1863, to the 9th Alabama Infantry. [ADAH.]

W.L. Johnson, originally served as private, company A, 28th Battalion, Georgia Siege Artillery;
transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

W.S. Johnson, Boatswain's Mate, CSS Sampson, based at Savannah, Georgia, June, 1864; involved in
the taking out of the USS Water Witch, at Ossabaw Sound, Georgia, June 3, 1864; recommended for
promotion for his conduct in this expedition, by Secretary Mallory, June 24, 1864; no further official
record of any such promotion. [ORN 1, 15, 500, 502 & 504.]

Watson Johnson, officers' cook, side wheeled steamer CSS Resolute, Savannah river area, Georgia,
1862 - 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 303.]

Wilbur F. Johnson, previously served in the United States Marine Corps; at the outbreak of war,
enlisted in the Macon volunteers; later served as 2nd lieutenant, and then 1st lieutenant, Confederate
States Marine Corps; appointed from Georgia; served at Pensacola, Florida, 1861 - 1862; participated in
the early campaigns, with the Confederate States Army, in Florida, in 1861; acted as aid to Confederate
Army general R.H. Anderson, during the action at Santa Rosa Island, Florida, October 8 and 9, 1861;
resigned July 4, 1862; then entered the Cofederate States Army, as captain of artillery, on the staff of
general Braxton Bragg, and later with general Gideon J. Pillow; after the war, married Lizzie Pillow,
daughter of general Pillow; engaged in business in Atlanta; moved to Arkansas, as a planter; member
of the Episcopal church; died Atlanta, Georgia, March 14, 1879. [Georgia in the War, 1861-1865, page
110; Sheppard - Atlanta Daily Constitution dated March 14, 1879; ORA 1, 6, chapter 16; Daily Dispatch
(Richmond, Virginia) dated October 29, 1861; Charleston (South Carolina) Mercury dated Wednesday,
December 18, 1861; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 329.]

Willard J. Johnson, originally served as private, company B, 2nd Battalion, Georgia Infantry; transferred
to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

William Johnson, Quartermaster, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

William Johnson, aged 30; seaman, CSS Tuscarora; discharged from Naval service, January 1, 1862,
after being hospitalised for paralysis, aboard the hospital ship, CSS St. Philip, on December 18, 1861.
[St. Philip.]

William Johnson, resided and enlisted in New Hanover County, North Carolina, October 28, 1861, aged
30, as private, 2nd company D, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; transferred to the Confederate
States Navy, February 18, 1863. [NCT 1, 241.]

William Johnson
, first class fireman, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster
Roll.]

William Johnson, served as coal heaver aboard the ironclad ram CSS Missouri, Shreveport, Louisiana,
1863 - 1864; rated as 1st class fireman aboard the vessel on January 15, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1013.]

William Johnson, seaman, ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 -
1864. [ORN 2, 1, 298.]

William Johnson
, originally served as private, company E, 1st Texas Heavy Artillery; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
William Johnson, originally served as private, company E, 41st Virginia Infantry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

William Johnson
, served as 1st class fireman aboard the Confederate States floating battery, New
Orleans, about 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 14.]

William Johnson
, enlisted as seaman, and served aboard the CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron, 1864.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New
Orleans - Yorktown, page 581.]

William B. Johnson, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS
Tennessee, 1864; sentenced by a court martial, dated February 4, 1864, to the loss of all pay due him on
that date, and 2/3 of all pay due him for the subsequent twelve months; sent for confinement to
Drewry's Bluff, on June 8, 1864; subsequently returned to Mobile, and was 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. [ORN 1, 21, 841 - 842; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV -
Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, pages 23 and 24.]

William E. Johnson, born Norway, 1829; enlisted at Norfolk, Virginia, April 19, 1861, in company E, 41st
Virginia Infantry; occupation mariner; joined the crew of a privateer fitting out at Norfolk, in the
summer of 1861, but returned to the 41st Virginia, by order of General Huger;; transferred, January 16,
1862, to the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, as gunner's mate. [Information provided by Roy Larsen, of
Norway, in an e-mail (roy@borgerkrigen.info) dated October 15, 2003; ORN 2, 1, 309.]

William F. Johnson, enlisted in New Hanover County, North Carolina, October 28, 1861, aged 27, as
private, 2nd company D, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States
Navy, February 18, 1863; may be the same person in the next entry. [NCT 1, 241.]

William F. Johnson, originally served in the Confederate States Navy; transferred, in 1864, as private,
to 3rd company B, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery, then to company E of the same unit on July
18, 1864; captured at Fort Fisher, January 15, 1865 and confined at Elmira, New York, until exchanged in
early March, 1865; admitted to hospital at Richmond, Virginia, March 9, 1865, where he died on March
21, 1865; may be the same person in the previous entry. [NCT 1, 213 & 251.]

William F. Johnson, landsman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay, Alabama,
during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]

Zaccheus B. Johnson, born in Georgia, February, 1845; Private, Company G, 12th Regiment Georgia
Volunteer Infantry, May 14, 1862; wounded in action at Front Royal, Virginia, May 30, 1862; Cold
Harbor, Virginia, June 17, 1862; Chancellorsville, Virginia, May 2, 1863; detailed as courier to General
Doles; transferred to Navy October, 1864; there was a Zach B. Johnson listed as being a landsman
aboard the CSS Beaufort, however, at an earlier date, in June, 1864; he had apparently applied for a
transfer to the Savannah squadron, and which application was rejected, in the interests of the service,
on June 24, 1864. [Georgia Rosters, 2, 218; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 109.]

Bartlett Shipp Johnston (surname also shown as Johnson), born 1845; citizen of Baltimore, Maryland;
brother of Confederate Army general Robert Daniel Johnston; served as midshipman, side wheeled
steamer CSS Patrick Henry, and the CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865; also served in
Tucker's Naval Regiment, April, 1865; captured at Sailor's Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865; sent to
Johnson's Island, and released in May, 1865; resided in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1907. [ORN 1, 11, 794;
1, 12, 187 and 2, 1, 300; SHC-UNC; 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; News-Observer-
Chronicle (Raleigh, North Carolina) dated August 12, 1893; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated
June 30, 1907, page 2.]

C.W. Johnston, see C.W. Johnson.

David Johnston, ordinary seaman, served aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, Mobile Bay,
Alabama, during July - December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 288; DANFS.]

Edward J. Johnston (surname also shown as Johnston), born in, and appointed from Georgia
(birthplace also shown as Ireland), as first assistant Engineer; married Virginia A. (last name not shown)
at St. Augustine, Florida, July (or January) 9, 1851; previous service in the United States Navy, from
April 29, 1856; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 1st assistant engineer, at Jacksonville,
Florida, April 29, 1862; served on the CSS Savannah, and the CSS Atlanta, 1862 - 1863; captured aboard
the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863, and imprisoned at Fort Warren, Massachusetts; died
October 13, 1863, of pneumonia, contracted from exposure, while in prison, aged 36 years and 9
months. [Georgia in the War, 1861-1865, page 110; Soldiers of Florida, 317; John E. Ellis; Florida
Confederate Pension File No. A03425; CSN Register; Atlanta Medical Journal, see entry for Monday,
April 27, 1863; ORN 1, 14, 268; Register1863.]

Elliott W. Johnston, born Alabama, 1846; appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States
Navy, at Mobile, Alabama, April 13, 1863, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Baltic for duty; paroled
at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; resided as a drug clerk, in 1880, with his wife, Fanny,
and three children, at Mobile, Alabama; still shown as a resident of Mobile, in 1907. [ADAH; 1880 U.S.
Census; Porter's Naval History, 785; Census or Enumeration of Confederate Soldiers Residing in
Alabama, in 1907 at Ancestry.com; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 647.]

Ephraim Johnston, private, company E, Confederate States Marine Corps, Savannah, Georgia, 1864.
[ORN 2, 1, 315.]

F. P. Johnston, served as yeoman 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.]

G. Floyd Johnston, appointed Medical Officer at the Mobile Naval Station, October 19, 1861, and
ordered to attend his medical practise daily aboard the receiving vessel Dalman, for the purpose of
examining recruits for the Naval service, and affording medical aid to the sick on board that vessel.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions;
Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 650.]

George Johnston, served as 1st class boy 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.]

George Seton Johnston (name also shown as George C. Johnson), born Nelson County, Virginia, May
31, 1847; enlisted at Richmond, Virginia, September 1, 1864, as private, company B, Confederate States
Marine Corps; served on the CSS Virginia II, and at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1863 - 1864; attached as 1st
sergeant to company D, 1st Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at
Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; resided in Virginia after the war; died Lyon Park, Arlington
County, Virginia, February 6, 1928; buried Confederate section, Arlington National Cemetery.
["Arlington National Cemetery Website" at URL: http://www.arlingtoncemetery.com/jsjohnston.htm;
Confederate Burials, 69; ORN 2, 1, 314; M1091; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 472.]

H.W. Johnston, resident of Idylwild, Georgia; appointed acting master's mate, Confederate States
Navy, November 1, 1861; served on the CSS General Polk, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1861 - 1862, and on
the Jackson station, 1862; wrote a small pamphlet relating to the war some years after the war.
[CSNRegister; New York Times dated Friday, July 21, 1922; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel;
NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page
652.]

Henry F. Johnston, born South Carolina, where he resided as a farmer, prior to enlisting at
Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, April 3, 1861, aged 17, as private, company B, 13th Regiment
North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 15, 1862, for duty aboard
the Merrimac (CSS Virginia). [NCT 5, 303.]

J. Johnston, see John Johnson.

J.S. Johnston
, Paymaster's Clerk, CSS Albemarle, July, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 718.]

James D. Johnston, born Kentucky, 1818; original service in the United States Navy, from June 30, 1832,
with the final rank of lieutenant; his brother in law was a captain Glasson, in Union service during the
war; entered the Confederate States Navy, April 13, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; served on the New Orleans
station, 1861; later commanded CSS Baltic, Mobile Squadron, 1861 - 1863; promoted commander,
Provisional Navy, to take rank from October 4, 1863; commanded the ram CSS Tennessee, Mobile Bay,
Alabama, aboard which he was taken prisoner, August, 5, 1864; taken, as a prisoner of war, aboard the
USS Ossipee, and then sent aboard the Cowslip to Pensacola, Florida, before being sent north, by the
USS Potomac; released and returned to the Confederate States; paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff,
Alabama, May 10, 1865; at the end of the war he was a resident of Mobile, Alabama, having resided in
that state since 1861; took the oath of allegiance on June 24, 1865; resided as an insurance agent, in
1880, at the home of fellow ex-Confederate Navy officer, Joel Kennard, in Savannah, Georgia; died at
Savannah, May 9, 1896. [ORN 1, 21, 406, 578, 581, 841 - 842 and 2, 1, 280 & 320; ORA 1, 6; Register1863;
1880 U.S. Census; JCC 4, 121; Porter's Naval History, 785; Sheppard - Atlanta Constitution dated May
10, 1896; Presidential pardons.]

James G. Johnston, served as a private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; stationed
aboard the CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, April-June, 1864; later stationed at Drewry's
Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 280 & 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 680.]

James L. Johnston (surname also shown as Johnson), born Virginia; citizen of, and appointed from,
Mississippi; original entry into Confederate States Navy service, October 15, 1861; promoted
lieutenant for the war, November 1, 1862; served on the Jackson station, 1862; later served on the CSS
Arctic, and aboard the steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, and at the Wilmington station, North Carolina, 1862
- 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; drowned, while
serving aboard the CSS Arctic, on June 6, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 276, 313, 318 & 323; Register1863; JCC 4, 122;
Confederate Navy Subject File, N - Personnel, NA - Complements, rolls, etc., page 998; Confederate
Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges,
page 150.]

Jefferson Johnston, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard
the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 278 & 302.]

John Johnston
(surname also shown, in Register1864, as Johnson), born North Carolina; original entry
into Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, May 2, 1863; served on the steam gunboat CSS Yadkin,
Wilmington station, North Carolina, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 313 & 323; Register1864.]

M. Newton Johnston (middle initial also incorrectly shown as W.), born South Carolina; pre-war
occupation, farmer; enlisted at the Naval Rendezvous, Raleigh, North Carolina, March 21 or 25, 1864,
aged 38, in the Confederate States Navy; served as landsman, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station,
1864; his widow, J.B. Johnston, applied for a post war Confederate pension from Burke County, North
Carolina. [CSN Shipping Articles; ORN 2, 1, 274; NC State Archives; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 407.]

Oscar F. Johnston, born Virginia; citizen of, and appointed from, Tennessee; original service in the
United States Navy, from August 14, 1846; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy,
April 22, 1861; entered the Confederate States Navy, May 23, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; served aboard
the CSS Resolute, and was involved in the defense of Port Royal, South Carolina, November, 1861;
served on the Savannah station, and aboard the steamer CSS Georgia, and the side wheeled steamer
CSS Savannah, Savannah River, Georgia, 1861 - 1863; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to
rank from January 6, 1864; also served aboard the CSS Virginia II, James River squadron, 1864;
commanded CSS Peedee, Peedee River, South Carolina, 1864 - 1865; filed for a post war Confederate
pension from Oconee County, Georgia. [ORN 1, 10, 671; 1, 12, 298; 1, 15, 732; 1, 16, 511 and 2, 1, 304 &
322; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861; GA Pension
Index 532.]

Robert Johnston, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia.
[ORN 2, 1, 301.]

Robert Johnston, served as seaman in the Savannah squadron, 1863; deserted about March, 1863.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 529-530.]

Theophilus Johnston, pre war occupation as painter; originally enlisted as private, company G, 9th
Virginia Infantry, April 20, 1861; captured at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July, 1863; exchanged
September, 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; died at East Orange, July 13, 1912. [Civil War
Service Records; American Civil War Soldiers database at the Ancestry.com web site; Confederate
States Navy subject file.]

Thomas Johnston, served 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 115.]
Thomas Johnston, Gunner's Mate, captured and paroled at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February,
1862. [Scharf, 392.]

Thomas P. Johnston, enlisted at Raleigh, North Carolina, September 15, 1863, in the Confederate
States Navy; served as ship's steward, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864; claimed (in a
document in the Florida Confederate Pension File of Thomas Jefferson Appleyard, No. A08865) that he
was appointed acting paymaster aboard the CSS Albemarle, May 15, 1864; honorably discharged at
Guilford County, North Carolina, at the close of the war; paroled at Salisbury, North Carolina, May 22,
1865; a member of the United Confederate Veterans; resident of Florida, September, 1929. [ORN 2, 1,
274; Confederate Sailor 19; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists
of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 661.]

William Johnston, 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
41.]

William Johnston, seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]

William Johnston, boatswain's mate, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 -
1865. [ORN 2, 1, 312.]

William F. Johnston, seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; in 1864 served on the
ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River. [ORN 2, 1, 279 & 293.]
John Joice, 2nd class fireman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia,
1862. [ORN 2, 1, 309.]

William Joice (surname also shown as Joyce), private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps;
stationed at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1863 - 1864; also served on the ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia
II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 312 & 314.]
B. Joince, Seaman, steamer Arrow, died on March 4, 1865, at the Elmira Prison Camp, New York and is
buried at Woodlawn Cemetery. [Elmira Prison; Tom Brooks.]

C. L. Joiner, served as clerk to commandant Thomas W. Brent, who commanded the Naval stations of
Georgia and South Carolina, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy
Yards and Stations; PB - Administration of stations; Columbia - Pensacola, page 149.]

George A. Joiner, born Alabama, about 1843; son of publisher (of the Watch Tower) James H. and
Caroline E. Joiner; resided with his parents, in 1860, at Talladega, Alabama; original entry into
Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, 3rd class, January 22, 1863; served aboard the school ship
CSS Patrick Henry, Richmond station, Virginia, 1863-1864; also aboard the CSS Richmond, May, 1864;
ordered back to CSS Patrick Henry, June 26, 1864; later on the Mobile station; surrendered May 4,
1865, and paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; resided as editor and publisher of a
local newspaper, in 1870, at Talladega; later, in 1880, a retail grocer, residing with his wife, Jennie, and
child, Enfield, at Talladega; still shown as a resident of Talladega, in 1907. [ORN 1, 10, 644 and 2, 1, 322;
Register1864; Porter's Naval History, 785; ADAH; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated August 11,
1864; 1860 U.S. Census; 1870 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated
June 30, 1907, page 2.]

Thomas Joiner (or Joyner), Landsman; previously served as Private, Company B, First Regiment
Georgia Regulars, March, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 4, 1864; served, as
landsman, aboard CSS Chattahoochee and then transferred to Savannah Naval Station. [ORN 1, 17, 701
and 2, 1, 283; Georgia Rosters, 1, 317.]

John Joliff, previous service as seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, at Hampton Roads,
Virginia, 1862; sent from Drewry's Bluff, James River, to Saffold, Georgia, in November, 1862, for
service aboard the CSS Chattahoochee; killed in boiler explosion aboard CSS Chattahoochee,
Apalachicola River, Florida, May 27, 1863; buried at the First United Methodist Church cemetery,
Chattahoochee, Florida. [ORN 1, 17, 864 & 869 and 2, 1, 309; John E. Ellis; Confederate Navy subject file
N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 244.]

Edward Jollie, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans,
January 22, 1862, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Mason for duty; also served on the Jackson
station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 319; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 654.]

James Jolly, served as coal heaver 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 87.]

John Moorehead Jolly, born Anderson County, South Carolina, August 9, 1838; son of James and
Nancy (Kennedy) Jolly; pre- war occupation, farmer; later apprenticed as a shoemaker; enlisted at
Anderson County, April 14, 1861, as private, company K, 4th South Carolina Infantry; wounded in action,
in the left leg, at First Manassas, Virginia, 1861; confined in hospital until February, 1862; also fought at
Charlottsville and Culpeper, Virginia; discharged because of ill health and returned home; later enlisted
in the Confederate States Navy, as ordinary seaman; served on the ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina,
Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; later, as master at arms, on the ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which
operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), 1863 - 1865; evacuated from Charleston, South
Carolina, February, 1865, and sent to Richmond, Virginia, as a member of the Naval Brigade, Army of
Northern Virginia; surrendered at Appomattox, Virginia, April, 1865; after the close of hostilities,
returned to South Carolina; employed as a farmer; moved to Texas, 1871; settled at Marlin, Falls
County, Texas, where he took employment as a clerk and book keeper, and once again, as a farmer;
married Clara B. Cooley, April, 1882, at Milam County, Texas; elected county clerk of Falls County, 1888;
member of Marlin Lodge, No. 152, A.F. & A.M.; also a member of Waco Lodge, No. 10, Knight Templar;
member of the Baptist Church; died December 19, 1915; buried at Calvary Cemetery, Marlin, Texas.
[ORN 2, 1, 284, 294 & 295; DANFS; Appomattox Paroles; DRB - Dallas Morning News, April 16, 1902;
John E. Ellis; much additional biographical data from the volume, Memorial and Biographical History of
McLennan, Falls, Bell and Coryell Counties, Texas, published 1893, by the Lewis Publishing Company,
Chicago, Illinois; reprinted 1984, by Ingmire Publications, St. Louis, Missouri, and supplied by Peggy
Duty, a volunteer for the Central Texas Genealogical Society, Waco-McLennan County Library, Waco,
Texas, in e-mail (pasd@mindspring.com) dated March 26, 2006.]

A. Jones, served as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, and aboard the CSS Fredericksburg,
James River squadron, 1865; died at the Naval Hospital, Richmond, on January 16, 1865; buried
Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. [Tom Brooks; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical;
MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 152.]

A.O. Jones, indicated as having served in the James River Squadron (possibly on the CSS Hampton).
[LVa - application of Charles R. Long for admission to the R.E. Lee, Camp 1, Confederate Veterans'
Soldiers' Home, Richmond, Virginia, dated December, 1903.]

Albert Jones, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862.
[ORN 2, 1, 310.]

Charles Lucian Jones (middle name also shown as Lucien), born Washington, D.C., April 20, 1835; son
of major general Roger Jones, of the United States Army, and his wife, Mary Ann Mason Page;
previous service in the "Independent Scouts"; appointed from Georgia, as flag officer's secretary and
clerk, April 13, 1863 (however, an official Navy document shows he was appointed commandant's
clerk, by flag officer Josiah Tattnall, at Savannah, on October 25, 1861); served aboard the side
wheeled steamer CSS Savannah, and the CSS Resolute, Georgia; resigned December 7, 1863; later
appointed as assistant paymaster, Confederate States Navy, December, 1863; served on the CSS
North Carolina, North Carolina, 1863-4; appointed assistant paymaster, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864;
also served at Battery Buchanan, Fort Fisher, North Carolina, 1864; then on the CSS Tallahassee, 1864;
mentioned (in an affidavit in the pension file of William A. Austin) that he had been a paymaster on
the CSS Atlanta; later sent to Richmond, Virginia; attached as lieutenant to Semmes' Naval Brigade,
April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; after the war,
worked in the Naval stores business at Savannah, Georgia; first marriage was to Mary Ann Anderson,
of Wilmington, North Carolina; second marriage to Sallie N. Mills, of Savannah, April 12, 1887; served as
senior warden of Christ Episcopal Church, Savannah; filed for a post war Confederate pension from
Chatham County, Georgia; shown as one of the few members of the Association of Survivors of the
Confederate States Navy, when they met up at Murphy's Hotel, in Richmond, Virginia, in May, 1907;
died at Savannah, October 27, 1920. [Georgia in the War, 1861-1865, page 110; ORN 1, 10, 767; 1, 11,
772; 1, 14, 689 and 2, 1, 293, 295, 304 & 322; Georgia Confederate Pension file for William W. Austin,
Chatham County; GA Pension Index 535; Georgia State Archives; CSN Register; Register1864; JCC 4, 122;
M1091; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 1, 1907, page 3; Sheppard - Atlanta
Constitution dated October 28, 1920; Confederate Veteran 29, 27; Confederate Navy subject file, X -
Supplies, XN- Naval stores afloat, Stores for ships (April, 1862 - December, 1863), page 443;
Confederate Veteran magazine, volume 29 (1921), page 27; Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases,
Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PL - Labor and civil personnel; Savannah - Transfers place to
place, page 3.]

Catesby ap Roger Jones born Clark County, Virginia, April 15, 1821; son of general Roger Jones, of the
United States Army (before the war); nephew of Confederate Navy officer (and later Confederate
Army officer) Richard Lucian Page; previous service in the United States Navy, from June 18, 1836;
resigned April 17, 1861; appointed captain, Virginia State Navy, April 20, 1861; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy, June 10, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; served on the Richmond station, and aboard
the CSS Virginia, 1861 - 1862; involved in the engagement with the USS Monitor at Hampton Roads,
March 8 - 9, 1862; assumed command of the CSS Virginia, when his commander was wounded in the
action, March 8; on the final destruction of the Virginia, in May, 1862, sent to Chaffin's Bluff (1 ½ miles
below Drewry's Bluff), James River, Virginia, to establish a battery; ordered to report to the Ordnance
Bureau, July 16, 1862, for duty; stated, in July, 1862, to be "a most accomplished artillery officer and a
gentleman of the highest skill in his profession"; promoted for distinguished valor and skill, April 25,
1863; detached from ordnance duty, and ordered to assume command of the CSS Chattahoochee, at
Columbus, Georgia, July 22, 1862; served on that vessel until 1863; ordered January 26, 1863 to report
for duty at Galveston, Texas; later in command of the Naval Works at Charlotte, North Carolina;
detached, May, 1863 and sent to take command of the Naval Ordnance Works at Selma, Alabama; also
on the Mobile Squadron, 1865; paroled May 9, 1865, off Mobile, Alabama, on board the USS Stockdale;
married Getrude T. Tartt; killed in a quarrel at Selma, Alabama, June 21, 1877; buried at the Live Oak
Cemetery. [John E. Ellis; ADAH; SHC-UNC; ORN 1, 4, 399; 1, 7, 799 & 803; 1, 9, 795; 1, 13, 820; 1, 17, 864;
1, 21, 885; 1, 23, 701 and 2, 1, 308 & 321; ORA 1, 49/1; Register1863; Boston Daily Advertiser dated July 3,
1877.]

Charles Jones, served as 2nd class fireman at the New Orleans station, 1862. [Confederate Navy
subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans -
Yorktown, pages 123 - 124.]

D. Jones, originally served as private, company I, 11th Florida Infantry; transferred to the Confederate
States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

D.C. Jones, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the steam
gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 277-278 & 302.]

Daniel F. Jones, originally served as private, company H, 14th Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

David Jones, born Wales, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, sailor; marital status,
single; enlisted at New Orleans, July 18, 1861, aged 28, as private, company D, 15th Louisiana Infantry;
transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February, 1862 (see next entry, which may be the same
person). [Booth 2, 467.]

David Jones
, recruited as seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862,
receiving a bounty of $50 (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 309;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New
Orleans - Yorktown, page 878.]

David Jones, served as seaman 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 661.]

E. Holt Jones, appointed a temporary medical officer in the Confederate States Navy (with pay, rations
and position of an assistant surgeon), December 17, 1861, and ordered to proceed to Norfolk, Virginia
and report to flag officer Lynch for duty; served as acting assistant surgeon on the Richmond station,
1861 - 1862; captured Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February 10, 1862 and paroled; served on the
Savannah station, 1864; involved in the taking out of the USS Water Witch, at Ossabaw Sound, Georgia,
June 3, 1864. [Scharf, 391; ORN 1, 15, 501 and 2, 1, 321; ORA 2, 3; Register1862; Confederate Navy
subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments
of officers (A - K), page 662.]

E.M. Jones, born Missouri; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, April 4, 1863;
served at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1863; served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, 1863 - 1864.
[Register1864; CSN Register.]

Ed. Jones, born Maryland; aged 40; landsman, CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861; later rated as
seaman; discharged from the service, January 1, 1862, after being hospitalised on the CSS St. Philip,
November 20, 1861, for rheumatism. [St. Philip; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 37.]
Edwin Jones, Seaman, CSS Alabama, 1863; born England (1907 Confederate Census for Jefferson
County, Alabama, shows date and place of birth as February 6, 1837, at Nerthup, Flinthead County,
North Wales); transferred to CSS Tuscaloosa, June 21, 1863, as Quartermaster (1907 Jefferson County,
Alabama census shows he first entered service as Fireman on CSS Alabama, on the Mersey River);
landed in France after the sinking of the CSS Alabama off Cherbourg, then went to Liverpool, England;
was listed in the 1907 Confederate Census as a resident of Johns, Jefferson County, Alabama. [ORN 1,
2, 713; William Marvel; census information provided September 15, 2000, by Mr. George Wright, of
Birmingham, Alabama (e-mail: gbw01@bellsouth.net).]

Edwin T.R. Jones (1860 U.S. Census shows his first name as Edmondson), born Maryland, 1840; son of
Susan Jones; resided as a carpenter, in 1860, with his mother at Baltimore, Maryland; served as
carpenter's mate in the Confederate States Navy; captured aboard the CSS Sea Bird and paroled at
Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February, 1862; resided as a carpenter, in 1880, with his wife, E.J., and
son, Thomas, at Norfolk, Virginia. [Scharf, 392; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 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.]

Elijah Jones
, indicated to have served as landsman in the Confederate States Army; paroled at
Greensboro, North Carolina, May 17, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 661.]

F. P. Jones, enlisted at Jackson, July 15, 1862, as private, Captain Fenner's Battery Louisiana Light
Artillery; detached at an unknown date in 1863, as engineer on the Confederate States boat Grover, by
order of General Beale, at Port Hudson; appointed 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States
Navy, at Shreveport, Louisiana, February 19, 1864, and served aboard the CSS Cotton, at Shreveport,
Louisiana; paroled Alexandria, Louisiana, June 3, 1865. [Booth 2, 468; ORN 1, 27, 231; Confederate Navy
subject file, X - Supplies, XN- Naval stores afloat, Stores for ships (1864), page 160; Confederate Navy
subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments
of officers (A - K), page 664.]

Felix Jones, born North Carolina, January, 1841; previous service as private, 1st company H, 32nd
Regiment North Carolina Troops; enlisted July 7, 1863, as corporal, company B, 68th Regiment North
Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 8, 1864 (shipped, on that date, by
2nd lieutenant F. M. Roby, as ordinary seaman, and sent for duty aboard the CSS Albemarle, at
Plymouth Sound); married in 1866; resided as a farmer, in 1900, with his wife, Susan, and two children,
at Shiloh township, Camden County, North Carolina. [NCT 15, 537; 1900 U.S. Census; ORN 2, 1, 274;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 37-38.]

George M. Jones, born 1832; appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy,
at New Orleans, January 18, 1862, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Slidell, for duty; also served on
the Jackson station, 1862; served aboard the CSS Maurepas, 1862; indicated to have absented himself,
without permission, in the action at St Charles, White River, Arkansas, June 17, 1862; his appointment
in the Naval service was revoked on June 30, 1862; died May 24, 1885; buried at St. Tammany
Cemetery, Madisonville, Louisiana. [ORN 1, 23, 204 and 2, 1, 319; Wayne Cosby; Young Sanders;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions;
Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 666; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L -
Z) - Revoked commissions, page 1123.]

George T. Jones, pilot, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1862 - 1863.
[ORN 2, 1, 292.]

George T. Jones, served as ordinary seaman aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry,
James River, Virginia, 1861; deserted from the vessel, off Jamestown, about August 17, 1861. [ORN 2,
1, 301; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous,
page 167.]

George W. Jones, resided in, and enlisted at Craven County, North Carolina, June 14, 1861, aged 29, as
private, company K, 2nd Regiment North Carolina State Troops; transferred to the Confederate States
Navy, May 7, 1862; served as seaman on the CSS Arctic, 1862; also served as seaman on the CSS Fanny,
in 1862. [NCT 3, 474; ORN 1, 23, 703 and 2, 1, 285.]

George W. Jones, ship's steward, steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1864 (see
previous entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 313.]
George W. Jones, served aboard the Confederate States floating battery, New Orleans, about 1861.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New
Orleans - Yorktown, page 11.]

George W.N. Jones, born in Perquimans County, North Carolina, 1837; pre-war occupation, farmer;
enlisted in Pasquotank County, North Carolina, May 4, 1861, as private, company L, 17th Regiment
North Carolina Troops (1st Organization); captured at Roanoke Island, February 8, 1862; paroled at
Elizabeth City, February 21, 1862, and exchanged, August, 1862; transferred to company C, 2nd
Regiment North Carolina Cavalry, prior to September 1, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States
Navy, April 21, 1864; served as landsman aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864. [NCT 2, 126
& 6, 196; 1860 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists
of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 849.]

Gilbert Jones, seaman, CSS Florida, 1861. [St. Philip.]

Griffin Jones, seaman, steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1862 - 1864.
[ORN 2, 1, 301; DANFS.]

Griffith Jones, served as ordinary 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, pages 60-61.]

Henry Jones, landsman, ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN
2, 1, 294, 295 & 297; DANFS.]

Henry Isaac Jones (middle initial also incorrectly shown as J.), born at Tramadoc, Carnarvonshire, North
Wales, in September, 1844; sent to Glasgow University to learn medical science; shortly after his
graduation he served as surgeon's steward aboard the CSS Florida, and then transferred to the CSS
Georgia, 1863; later served as a surgeon in the British army and spent most of his service in India; after
leaving the British Army he went to America; married Mary Amelia Boardman at Bridgeport,
Connecticut, and settled at Scranton, Pennsylvania; resident physician, for 15 years, of one of the
largest American coal companies, having his office at Scranton; moved to Oakland, California, about
1889, and was a well known specialist of San Francisco, who practiced in the diseases of the ear, eye,
nose and throat, before the great fire of San Francisco; had followed his profession in several
countries and states; served as senior warden of the Episcopal Church of the Advent, at East Oakland;
member of the Knights Templar, the Mystic Shrines, and was a Scottish Rite Mason; also a member of
the Bohemian club; died at his home on 5th Avenue and East 16th Street, Oakland, California, of spleen
and liver trouble, March 7, 1909; his health was also affected by financial reverses; remains interred at
Mountain View Cemetery. [Alabama Claims 1, 694; San Francisco Call (California) dated March 9, 1909,
page 8; Los Angeles Times (California) dated March 10, 1909, page 14.]

J. Jones, served as quarter gunner 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.]

J.W. Jones, Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]

Jack Jones, served as seaman aboard the CSS Curlew, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 278.]

James Jones, served as landsman (rank also shown as private [?]), aboard the CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile
Bay, Alabama; widow, Matilda Jones, applied for a Confederate pension from Calhoun County,
Alabama, August 2, 1899. [ORN 2, 1, 308; ADAH.]

James Jones, served as a private in company G, 16th Mississippi 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.]

James Jones, listed as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Beaufort, in a muster roll of the vessel, dated
March 31, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 108.]

James H. Jones, Landsman, resident of Florida; killed in boiler explosion aboard CSS Chattahoochee,
Apalachicola River, Florida, May 27, 1863; buried at the First United Methodist Church cemetery,
Chattahoochee, Florida. [ORN 1, 17, 869; John E. Ellis]

James S. Jones, assistant paymaster, served on the Richmond station, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 321.]

James S. Jones, born Virginia (Register1864 shows place of birth as North Carolina), appointed from
Florida; served as chief clerk, Office of Orders and Details, Confederate States Navy Department, 1862
- 1863; later served as register clerk, Office of Orders and Detail, CSN, 1864. [Register1862;
Register1863; Register1864.]

John Jones, seaman, side-wheeled gunboat CSS Selma, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 306.]

John Jones, born Ireland, resident of New York; ran the blockade from Havana to Galveston, Texas,
where he was arrested and then inducted into the Confederate States Navy; served as a boatswain's
mate, and was aboard the CSS Savannah, when the city of Savannah was evacuated; was on picket
duty outside Battery Buchanan, in early January, 1865, when he, together with five others, stole a
boat, and deserted; they were taken aboard the USS Pontoosuc, off New Inlet, on January 2, 1865.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, pages
539 - 540.]

John Jones, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862
(may be the same person listed in the next entry). [ORN 2, 1, 309.]

John Jones, captain of after guard, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 -
1865 (may be the same person listed in the previous entry). [ORN 2, 1, 311.]

John Jones, private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the ironclad steam sloop
CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865; also stationed at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN
2, 1, 312 & 314.]

John Jones, resident of Norfolk County, Virginia; served as seaman in the Confederate States Navy.
[Norfolk County Record 205.]

John Jones, served as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, and was ordered, in April, 1862, from
Norfolk, Virginia, to report aboard the CSS Gaines, at Mobile, Alabama, for duty, and aboard which he
reported on April 29, 1862. [ Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls,
lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 466.]

John Jones, enlisted as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile squadron, June 15, 1862.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and
Registers, page 110.]

John P. Jones, served as a private in company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; served at the
Richmond station in 1863, 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 441.]

John Pembroke Jones, born Virginia, 1825; original service in the United States Navy, from October 19,
1841; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy, April 29, 1861; entered the Confederate
States Navy, May 2, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; served on the South Carolina and Savannah stations, 1861 -
1862; commanded the CSS Resolute, in defense of Port Royal, South Carolina, November, 1861; then
sent aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; returned to the Savannah
station, and served aboard the steamer CSS Georgia, and the ironclad ram CSS Savannah, Savannah
River, Georgia, 1862 - 1863; also served aboard the CSS Nansemond, 1863 - 1864; appointed 1st
lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; later commanded ironclad sloop CSS North
Carolina, and the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864; also served
aboard the CSS Raleigh and the CSS Torpedo, 1864 - 1865; married Mary Willis Jones; died 1910; buried
at St. John's Episcopal Church Cemetery, Hampton, Virginia. [ORN 1, 12, 295 and 2, 1, 275, 296, 301, 304,
308 & 322; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861;
Confederate Burials, 6; Sheppard - Atlanta Constitution dated January 16, 1898.]

John William Jones, born Wales, shipped aboard the CSS Shenandoah, October 18, 1864; rated
quartermaster; reshipped May 8, 1865. [Alabama Claims, 1, 975; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log; ORN 1, 3,
783; Whittle 148 & 235.]

Joseph S. Jones
, served at the Mobile station, in 1863-1864, as a private in company A, Confederate
States Marine Corps; also served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station,
1864. [ORN 2, 1, 313; 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.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 850; Confederate Navy
subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page
680.]

Joshua Jones, served as 3rd 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.]

M.L. Jones, originally served as private, company B, 24th Battalion, Georgia Cavalry; transferred to the
Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see next entry, which may be the same person).
[Civil War Service Records.]

M.L. Jones, served as seaman 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, indicate that he
also served aboard that vessel, as captain of afterguard, at Savannah, Georgia, in 1863; later served
aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22,
1865 (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 1, 14, 268 & 2, 1, 286-287;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271 and 521.]

M. W. Jones, served as a clerk in the Navy Department at Richmond, Virginia, March, 1864.
[Confederate Navy subject file, V - Governmental relationships, VA - Administration, etc.,
Miscellaneous, page 27.]

Minor S. Jones, born at Lake City, Florida, in 1849; son of James and Mary Jones; resided, in 1850, with
his parents, at Alligator, Calhoun County, Florida; wife's pension application claimed that he had been
sworn as Master's Mate, into the Confederate States Navy by Judge Henry J. Stewart, at Hamilton
County, Florida, in 1864; mustered out at Wilmington, North Carolina; married in 1872; wife, Gertrude,
claimed that his commission and discharged papers had been destroyed by rats or mice, about 1887;
married at St. Lucie, Florida, in 1873; practiced law at Titusville, Florida, after the war; became judge of
the circuit court; attended Confederate reunions at Jacksonville, Florida and Marietta, Georgia; died
July 20, 1922. [Florida Confederate Pension File No. A02854; 1850 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census.]

Patrick Jones, born Ireland, about 1840 (birthplace also shown as Louisiana); served as private,
Confederate States Marine Corps; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863;
after his release he served on the tender, CSS Sampson, 1863; muster roll and a Naval document of
the CSS Georgia, indicate that he also served aboard that vessel, at Savannah, Georgia, in 1863. [ORN
1, 14, 268 & 2, 1, 287 & 304; Atlanta Medical Journal, see entries for Monday, December 1, 1862, and
Thursday, December 18, 1862; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls,
lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523.].]

Robert Jones, seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, which operated in Alabama waters; served during, or
between the period, August, 1862 and June, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 280.]

Rufus Jones, shipped and rated as cook aboard the revenue cutter Morgan, Mobile, Alabama, on
September 18, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1162.]

Rufus Jones, served as landsman aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile squadron, 1862; died about June 7,
1862. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths;
Deaths - discharges, page 154.]

Samuel Jones, 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.]

Samuel Jones, enlisted for the war; served as 1st class fireman aboard the CSS Beaufort, and also
aboard ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; involved in the expedition to capture
the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23,
1863. [ORN 2, 1, 309; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc.,
Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 319.]
Samuel Jones, served as acting boatswain aboard the CSS Louisiana; captured at the fall of New
Orleans, April, 1862 and taken aboard the USS Clifton; took the oath of allegiance to the United States.
[Register1862; ORN 1, 18, 300.]

Samuel L. Jones
, previously served as Private, Company G, 2nd Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry;
transferred to Confederate States Navy and appointed Midshipman, 1862; served aboard CSS Selma.
[Georgia Rosters, 1, 415.]

Thomas Jones
, born South Carolina; Pilot, CSS Nashville, 1861 (see also, next entry). [ORN 1, 1, 752;
Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133.]

Thomas Jones, seaman, CSS Georgia, 1863 (see previous entry, which may be the same person who
served as pilot on the CSS Nashville; several others from the Nashville later served aboard the cruiser
CSS Georgia). [Alabama Claims 1, 694.]

Thomas Jones, private, Confederate States Marine Corps, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia,
Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; also served in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Richmond, James
River, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 310 & 315; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA -
Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 386 and 387.]

Thomas H. Jones, appointed second officer aboard the Confederate States gunboat Resolute, of the
Mississippi River Defense fleet, on March 16, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA
- Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 264.]

Thomas W. Jones, originally served as private, company F, 1st South Carolina Artillery; transferred to
the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

Thomas W. Jones, served as seaman 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 83 and 115.]

Thomas W. Jones, 3rd class boy, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2,
1, 300.]

Virgil J. Jones, served aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, about 1864.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS
Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 644.]

W. Jones, Seaman, CSS Alabama; transferred to CSS Tuscaloosa, June 22, 1863. [ORN 1, 2, 713.]

W.B. Jones, landsman, Provisional Navy of the Confederate States; attached as private to company G,
2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North
Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091.]

W.B. Jones, coxswain, ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and
Ladies' Ram), Savannah, Georgia; served sometime between September, 1861 and December, 1864.
[ORN 2, 1, 287; DANFS.]

W.L. Jones, served as ordinary seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama,
1863; deserted about July, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ -
Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 173.]

W.R. Jones, originally served as private, company A, Waul's Texas Legion; later served in the
Confederate States Marine Corps. [Civil War Service Records.]

W.T. Jones, 1st class fireman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia,
1862. [ORN 2, 1, 309.]

Washington S. Jones, born Georgia, 1841; son of Aaron and Harriet Jones; resided as a student, in
1860, with his parents, at Lauderdale County, Mississippi; originally served as private, company H, 14th
Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War
Service Records; 1860 U.S. Census.]

Wiley Jones, born Johnston County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Johnston
County, March 18 or 21, 1864, aged 43, in the Confederate States Navy; served as landsman, CSS
Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864. [CSN Shipping Articles; ORN 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject
file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 407.]

Will Jones, f. (fireman?), side wheeled steamer CSS Talomico, Savannah, Georgia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN
2, 1, 307.]

William Jones, enlisted, for one year, as fireman aboard the cruiser CSS Nashville, Charleston, South
Carolina, on October 1, 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.]
William Jones, born England; Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama; missing in action, June 19, 1864, off
Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]

William (Bill) Jones, (colored), appointed in the Confederate States Navy, at Savannah, on February
15, 1864, and served as pilot aboard the stern-wheeled gunboat CSS Isondiga, Savannah Squadron;
condemned by a Medical Board of Survey, and discharged from the Naval service, October 22, 1864.
[ORN 2, 1, 289; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked
commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 973 and
976.]

William Jones, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New
Orleans, November 5, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the gunboat General Polk for duty; also
served on the Jackson station, 1862; ordered, on June 27, 1862, to proceed to Jackson, Mississippi, to
settle his account, and to consider himself as being then discharged from the service. [ORN 2, 1, 318;
Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions;
Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 668; Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L -
Z) - Revoked commissions, page 963.]

William Jones, served aboard the cruiser CSS Georgia, in 1863; a list of "boarders" on the cruiser
shows Jones holding the position of handspikeman at the 2nd gun division. [Confederate Navy subject
file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page
604.]

William Jones, served as seaman aboard the CSS Pamlico, New Orleans station, from October 15,
1861; rated as quartermaster on November 1, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA
- Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 54, 265 and 267.]

William B. Jones, born Georgia, about 1839; ordinary seaman, CSS Atlanta, 1863; later served aboard
the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865
(see also, entries for W.B. Jones, who may be the same person). [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated
Saturday, March 21, 1863; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists
of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271.]

William C. Jones
, born Tennessee; appointed from Arkansas as assistant surgeon for the war,
Confederate States Navy, March 26, 1863; served aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Savannah,
Savannah station, Georgia, 1863 - 1864; appointed assistant surgeon, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864;
served aboard the CSS Sampson; involved in the taking out of the USS Water Witch, June 3, 1864;
reported for duty aboard the ironclad floating battery, CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, on
November 1, 1864; transferred to the Mobile station on November 14, 1864; paroled, at the close of
the war, on board the USS Stockdale, off Mobile, Alabama, May 11, 1865. [ORN 1, 15, 491 & 499 and 2,
1, 286 & 304; Register1864; JCC 4, 123; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL -
Paroles, A-W, page 102; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 498; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN-
Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 669.]

William F. Jones, original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, February 2,
1862; a Naval document, dated September 4, 1862, indicates as such, in relation to Jones'
appointment: "At the suggestion of Chief Engineer Williamson, you are hereby reappointed a 3rd
assistant engineer in the C.S. Navy, and you will proceed to Charleston, S.C., and report to captain D.N.
Ingraham for duty on board the 'C.S. Chicora'; served on the ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which
operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), 1862 - 1864; promoted 2nd assistant engineer, May 21,
1863 (see next entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 283; Register1862; Register1863;
Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked
commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 671.]

William F. Jones, born Perquimans County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, draftsman; enlisted at
Perquimans County, May 16, 1861, as sergeant, company F, 27th Regiment North Carolina Troops;
discharged from the Regiment, February 11, 1862, aged 21, because of a "promotion in the Navy" (see
previous entry, which may be the same person) [NCT 8, 56.]

William H.H. Jones, previously served as Private in company H, 3rd Regiment Georgia Volunteer
Infantry, April 25, 1861; transferred, as 2nd class fireman, to the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, at Hampton
Roads, Virginia, on January 13, 1862; also indicated to have served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS
Hampton, 1862; rejoined his company after the destruction of the Virginia, in May, 1862; killed at
Chancellorsville, Virginia, May 3, 1863. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 511; ORN 2, 1, 309; Confederate Navy
subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse,
page 319.]

William John Jones, alias used by William A. Temple when he shipped aboard the CSS Shenandoah,
October, 1864, as Steerage Steward, later as Ordinary Seaman; born Madras, India (another source
indicates that he was a native of London, England); resided at no. 108, Saint James Street, Liverpool, in
1864; punished, January 20, 1865, for calling ship's cook, John Williams "a black scamp"; allowed liberty
at Melbourne, Australia, returning aboard the cruiser, January 31, 1865; later (in 1866) shipped aboard
the vessel Radnagore as able seaman. [Alabama Claims, 1, 966, 976 and 990; Alabama Claims
Correspondence 3, 401; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log; ORN 1, 3, 783; Whittle 106.]

William L. Jones, served as surgeon's steward 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.]

William R. Jones (middle initial also shown as B.), served as coxswain aboard the floating battery CSS
Georgia, Savannah squadron, 1863-1864; killed in action, June 2, 1864 (his headstone shows his date of
death as June 3, 1864), during the expedition which captured the USS Water Witch, near Ossabaw
Sound, Georgia; buried at Laurel Grove Cemetery, Savannah, Georgia. [ORN 1, 15, 495; Honeycutt;
Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths
- discharges, page 339; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of
persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 510 and 644.]

William T. Jones, Seaman, 1864; previously served as Private, Company D, 3rd Regiment Georgia
Volunteer Infantry, April 24, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, January 13, 1862. [Georgia
Rosters, 1, 471.]

John Jonson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama, 1864. [William Marvel.]

Charles W. Jordan (middle initial also shown as M.), born Virginia; previous service in the United States
Navy; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy, May 6, 1861; original entry into
Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, June 11, 1861 (Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia)
dated June 1, 1861 shows him as serving aboard the CSS United States on that date); steam sloop CSS
McRae, New Orleans station, 1861; later served on the Jackson station, 1862; also shown as engineer in
charge aboard the CSS Beaufort, in May, 1862; appointed 2nd assistant engineer, August 27, 1862;
served on the steamer CSS Florida, 1862 - 1863; appointed acting 1st assistant engineer on August 15,
1863; served aboard the CSS Nansemond, 1863 - 1864; Wilmington station, 1864 - 1865; attached, as
lieutenant, to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North
Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 290, 318, 320 & 323; Register1862; Register1863; Register1864;
M1091; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861 and June 1, 1861; Confederate Navy
subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water - Water for ships, page 976; Confederate Navy subject
file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of
officers (A - K), page 673.]

Edward W. Jordan, acting master's mate, Confederate States Navy, 1863 - 1864. [Register1864.]
H.M. Jordan, listed as gunner, Confederate States Navy, in 1862; no other record available.
[Register1862.]

H.W. Jordan, orginally served as private, company B, 28th Battalion, Georgia Siege Artillery; transferred
to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]

John R. Jordan, born Virginia, 1835; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant
engineer, April 29, 1862; served on the Richmond station, 1862; served aboard the steamer CSS
Raleigh, 1862 - 1863; later, as 2nd assistant engineer, aboard the partial ironclad, CSS Huntsville, (which
operated in Mobile Bay, Alabama), 1863 - 1864; promoted 1st assistant engineer, August 15, 1863;
paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; resided as a machinist, in 1880, with his wife,
Ellen, and daughter Jane, at Baltimore, Maryland. [ORN 2, 1, 287 & 322; Register1862; Register1863;
Register1864; Porter's Naval History, 785; 1880 U.S. Census.]

John W. Jordan, appointed first officer aboard the Confederate States gunboat General Earl Van Dorn,
of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, on March 7, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N -
Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 263.]

Marshall P. Jordan, born Virginia; previous service in the United States Navy, from December 24, 1853;
original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 1st assistant engineer, July 6, 1861; served on the
Richmond station, 1861 - 1862, and aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River,
Virginia, 1861, and the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; allotment of part of his
pay made, in 1861, to Ellen F. Jordan; later served on the ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, Charleston
Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 1, 13, 619 and 2, 1, 298, 299, 308, 317 & 321; Register1862;
Register1863; Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet
units; OL - Mobilization and demobilization; Norfolk - Miscellaneous, page 186.]

Samuel B. Jordan, born Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting 3rd assistant
engineer, January 16, 1863 ; served aboard the CSS Nansemond, 1863 - 1864; also aboard the CSS
Virginia II, July, 1864, and the CSS Beaufort, October, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 642, 726 and 765; Register1864.]

Vincent Jordan (first name also shown as Vinson), enlisted at Talladega, on March 6, 1863, as a private
in the Confederate States Marine Corps; later served at the Richmond station, 1863 - 1864.
[Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New
Orleans - Yorktown, pages 441, 452 and 466.]

Peter Jorennsin, captured from aboard the American bark, Delphine, December 29, 1864, and shipped
aboard the CSS Shenandoah. [Whittle 98 and note 2.]

Theodore Jose (surname also shown as Jabah), shipped at New Orleans, for the war, as landsman
aboard the Confederate States floating battery, New Orleans, on October 24, 1861. [Confederate
Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans -
Yorktown, pages 13 and 14.]

A. Joseph, served as landsman 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 38.]

William A. Josslyn, Seaman, Florida Volunteer Coast Guards, mustered in January 1, 1861 [1862?].
[Soldiers of Florida, 49.]

Charles Alexander Joullian, born New York, September 7, 1825; enlisted at Mobile, Alabama, in the
Confederate States Navy, April, 1861, and appointed as third assistant engineer; served aboard the
CSS Nashville, at Mobile; surrendered and paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865;
resided as an engineer, in 1900, at Mobile, Alabama; shown as a widower, in 1900; still a resident of
Mobile in 1907. [Porter's Naval History, 785; ADAH; 1900 U.S. Census; Census or Enumeration of
Confederate Soldiers Residing in Alabama, in 1907 at Ancestry.com.]

Charles Jourdan, see Charles Gordon.

Richard Jourdan, indicated to have served in the Confederate States Marine Corps; captured at
an unspecified date and place. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements,
rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 680.]

William Jowley, C r. M. (?), side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 -
1864. [ORN 2, 1, 293.]

E.W. Joyce, originally served as private, Captain Stuart's Company (Beaufort Volunteer Artillery), South
Carolina Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service
Records.]

J.M. Joyce, seaman, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina),
July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS.]

John Joyce, private, company A, Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the Georgia and South
Carolina stations, 1861; later served as corporal on the ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear
River, North Carolina, to which he had been transferred on January 28, 1864; also served aboard the
CSS Raleigh, and was later stationed in 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 348.]

John M. Joyce, 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.]

Patrick Joyce, private, company C, 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; later corporal aboard the receiving ship CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River,
North Carolina, April-June, 1864, and the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia
waters, 1864; also Richmond Station, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 280, 290, 302, 315 & 316; DANFS.]

William Joyce, see William Joice.

Abraham Joyner, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the
steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 277, 278 & 302.]

James Joseph Joyner, jr. (surname also shown as Joynes), born January 23, 1843, Isle of Wight county,
Virginia; family moved to Norfolk, Virginia, about 1855; enlisted June 23, 1861, at Smithfield, Virginia, in
company I, 3rd Virginia Infantry (in which roster he is listed as a "detail painter"); transferred to the
Confederate Navy, April 11, 1863, by order of the Secretary of War (regimental history shows his name
as James C. Joyner); served as coxswain on the CSS Chicora, Charleston harbor, 1863-1864, where he
became friends with Joseph Ridgaway, who, as one of the crew of the submarine Hunley, died when
the experimental vessel sank, February 17, 1864; quartermaster, CSS Richmond, January, 1865, James
River Squadron; among a group of men from the James River vessels, who, on January 11, 1865, were
sent on a special assignment; employed post war as a painter; travelled to Easton, Maryland, after the
war, to return Joseph Ridgaway's belongings to his father, James; stayed on with the Ridgaway family
and eventually married his friend's sister, Mary Elizabeth "Lizzie" Ridgaway, August 1, 1867; they were
parents of Emma Elizabeth Joyner and Joseph Andrew Joyner; the Joyner family lived in the household
of Captain James Ridgaway for a number of years, before finally settling on a farm of thier own, and
eventually in Baltimore, Maryland; James worked in Baltimore, as a clerk, and was also much in
demand for his painting skills; died of a heart attack, February 13, 1888, in Baltimore; buried at Maxwell
Moor, near Kirkham, Easton, Maryland. [ORN 1, 11, 794; much additional information provided by
Emma Ditman, of Silver Spring, Maryland, in e-mails (ebditman@comcast.net) dated July 12, 2003 and
September 25, 2004, and Mr. Barry Crompton, of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.]

John F. Joyner, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the
steam gunboat CSS Yadkin, Wilmington, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 279 & 313.]

Joseph Joyner, coxswain, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South
Carolina), July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS.]

Mills Joyner, born North Carolina, September, 1840; served in the Confederate States Navy; married
in 1864; resided as a blacksmith and wheelwright, from about 1880 to 1910, with his wife Elisabeth, and
children, at Murfreesboro, Hertford County, North Carolina; applied for a post war Confederate
pension from Hertford County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census;
1910 U.S. Census.]

Don Juan, 1st class boy, side wheeled steamer CSS Rappahannock, Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers,
Virginia, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 303; DANFS.]

Mark Juan, left London, England on January 21, 1864, for Brest, France, where he was shipped for
service aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, as seaman, on January 24, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject
file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page
353.]

John Judge, served in the Confederate States Marine Corps, and aboard the CSS Huntress, 1861;
admitted to the marine hospital at Savannah on June 24, 1861; died of an unspecified cause on June
25, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps -
Miscellaneous, pages 10 and 25.]

Patrick Judge, served as paymaster's steward aboard the CSS Atlanta, 1862-1863; captured aboard
that vessel at Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; after his release he returned to duty at the Savannah
squadron, but died at Savannah, prior to July 28, 1863; buried at the Catholic Cemetery, Savannah.
[ORN 1, 14, 268 & 2, 1, 275; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food,
Clothing and Provisions (March - August, 1863), page 940; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical;
MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 158.]

Peter Judge
, originally served as private, company I, 1st (McCreary's) South Carolina Infantry;
transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see next entry, which may be the
same person). [Civil War Service Records.]

Peter Judge, served as seaman and coxswain aboard the ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James
River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865 (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 1, 11, 794 and 2,
1, 311.]

Giovani Juliani, born Italy, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, peddler; marital
status, single; enlisted at Camp Moore, Louisiana, July 22, 1861, aged 21, as private, company I, 10th
Louisiana Infantry; deserted his regiment at an unspecified date, and joined the Confederate States
Navy. [Booth 2, 492.]

Marcus D. Justiss, born Morgan County, Georgia, September 24, 1834; son of William L. and Lavigna
(Burton) Justiss; family moved to Alabama, but Marcus moved back to Georgia in 1848, where he
farmed as an occupation; married Frances Powledge, in December, 1856, then settled in Claiborne
Parish, Louisiana; moved back to Georgia with his family, at the start of the war; joined the ordnance
department of the Confederate Navy, and remained there until the fall of Atlanta; captured on his
way to Augusta, Georgia, August 4, 1864, and sent to Tunnel Hill, Georgia, thence to Chattanooga,
Tennessee, and on to Indianapolis, Indiana; released on parole, September 5, 1864; returned home to
Georgia after the war, and then moved to Louisiana; moved to Atlanta, Columbia County, Arkansas, in
January, 1870, and finally settled in Union County, Arkansas, in 1873; served as justice of the peace
from 1876 to 1882, and later as school director. [Information from page 847 of The Goodspeed
Biographical and Historical memoirs of Southern Arkansas, reprint edition published 1978 by Southern
Historical Press, Easley, South Carolina 29640.]






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