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Corpolo Pabolo, second class fireman, CSS Florida, 1864. [Florida Medical Journal, see the list of personnel in the Engineer's Department, CSS Florida, dated at St. George's, Bermuda, June 27, 1864.]
John W. Pace (name also shown as J. M. Paice), recruited at Richmond, Virginia, by lieutenant Venable, on September 30, 1864, and served as private in company A, Confederate States Marine Corps, 1864; paroled at Dover Mine, Virginia, April 30, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 665; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 445.]
Adolphus N. Pacetti (surname also shown as Pacetty), born Camden County, Georgia (Register1864 shows birthplace as Florida), July 10, 1829; appointed acting master, Confederate States Navy, at Richmond, Virginia, October 19, 1861 (one source also shows appointment date as November 5, 1861); commanded CSS Alert, at Mobile Bay, 1861-62; also served aboard the CSS Morgan, 1864; surrendered at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama River, May 10, 1865; married Amelia L. Monson, November 6, 1867, in St. Johns County, Florida; occupation shown, in 1870, as sea captain; was a member of the E. Kirby Smith Camp No. 175, UCV, St. Johns, Florida, in 1907; occupation shown, in 1900, as land agent; died May 10, 1913, at St. Johns County. [ORN 2, 1, 275; Register1862; Register1863; Register1864; Florida Confederate Pension File no. A3868; 1870 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XN- Naval stores afloat, Stores for ships (1864), page 363.]
Thomas A. Pacetti, born May 9, 1840, St. Johns County, Florida; son of Joseph R., and Mary B. Pacetti; resided as a medical student, in 1860, with his parents at St. John's County, Florida; enlisted 1863 at Baltimore, Maryland, in the Confederate States Navy; later served as surgeon's steward aboard CSS Rappahannock, 1864; married in 1869; resided as a steamboat ticket agent, in 1880, with his wife, Emma S. Pacetti and son, Joseph, at St. Augustine, Florida; was a member of the E. Kirby Smith Camp No. 175, UCV; the 1900 U.S. Census shows his occupation as "capitalist"; passed away after 1907, when he was shown to be still residing at St. Augustine. [Florida Confederate Pension File no. A 12054; CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census.]
Thomas Padgett, boy, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 554.]
Joseph Pagan, captain of hold, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863; captured at Apalachicola, Florida, April 20, 1863, by an armed party from the USS Port Royal; sent to Key West, Florida, aboard the USS Circassian, April 25, 1863. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; ORN 1, 17, 421; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 141.]
Albert F. Page, seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 293.]
Hugh Nelson Page, born Virginia, 1789; originally served as captain in the United States Navy; married Elizabeth Plume Holt, at Portsmouth, Virginia, Thursday, July 13, 1848; resided as a United States Naval officer, in 1860, with his wife, Elizabeth P., and five children, at Norfolk, Virginia; resigned from the United States Navy, April 19, 1861; served as captain in the Virginia State Navy, 1861. [CSNRegister; 1860 U.S. Census; Washington Post (D.C.) dated January 31, 1909, page E9; Daily National Intelligencer (Washington, D.C.) dated Thursday, July 20, 1848.]
Richard Lucian Page, born Clarke County, Virginia, December 20, 1807; was an uncle of Catesby ap Roger Jones; entered the United States Navy; March 1, 1824, as midshipman, rising to the rank of commander, in 1855; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy, April 18, 1861; served in the Virginia State Navy; appointed commander, Confederate States Navy, June 10, 1861; served at the Gosport Navy Yard, Virginia, 1861; assigned command of the Naval works, Charlotte, North Carolina; also served on the Savannah station, 1861 - 1862; assisted in the defense of Port Royal, South Carolina, November, 1861; assigned to the command of the Naval works at Charlotte, North Carolina; aboard the CSS Savannah, as his flag ship; later promoted captain; transferred to the Confederate Army, March 1, 1864, as brigadier general; commanded at Fort Morgan, Alabama, 1864; surrendered August 23, 1864, and incarcerated at Fort Delaware; released July 24, 1865; resided as superintendent of public schools, in 1880, with his wife Alexina, three children and several other relatives, at Norfolk, Virginia; died at his summer home in Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania, August 9, 1901; buried at Cedar Hill Cemetery, Norfolk, Virginia. [CDAB, 749; ORN 1, 12, 296; 1, 13, 822; 1, 14, 693 & 707; 1, 21, 885 and 2, 1, 322; 1880 U.S. Census; see also his biography in "Generals in Gray," by Ezra J. Warner, published by the Louisiana State University Press, 1983 edition; Register1863; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861; Norfolk County Record 306; New York Times dated Wednesday, August 10, 1901; Spencer 609.]
Thomas Jefferson Page, born Matthews County, Virginia, January 4, 1808 (his gravestone shows his birthplace as Shelley-Rosewell, Gloucester County, Virginia); previous service in the United States Navy, from October 1, 1827; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy, April 22, 1861; appointed commander, Confederate States Navy, June 10, 1861; commanded Gloucester Point Battery, Virginia, 1861; appointed, additionally, as colonel of artillery, Provisional Army, by Special Order No. 135, dated at Richmond, Virginia, June 12, 1862, and assigned to command of batteries at Chaffin's and Ball's Bluff, Virginia, 1862 - 1863; ordered to report to general Robert E. Lee; sent for service abroad in March, 1863; promoted captain, Provisional Navy, to rank from May 13, 1863; commanded CSS Stonewall, which he joined at Copenhagen, Denmark, January, 1865; surrendered the vessel to the authorities at Havana, Cuba, on learning of the end of the war; after the war, resided mainly in Argentina and Italy; died Rome, Italy, October 26, 1899 (year of death also incorrectly shown as 1889; his gravestone shows his date of death as October 23, 1898); buried at the Rome Protestant Cemetery; his widow and three children survived him. [CDAB, 749; ORN 1, 3, 721; 1, 6, 724 and 2, 1, 321 & 379; ORA 1, 14; Virginia Historical Society; JCC 4, 121; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861; Register1863; Morning Oregonian (Portland, Oregon) dated December 1, 1899, page 11; gravestone photographs provided by Mr. Peter Rossi, commander of the Confederate Society of Italy; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 229.]
William Meade Page, born Virginia, 1837; resident of Millwood, Clarke County, Virginia; previous service in the United States Navy, from October 31, 1855; original entry into Confederate States Navy service, as surgeon, August 28, 1862; awaiting orders, 1862 - 1863; later served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Missouri, 1863 - 1864, and at Shreveport, Louisiana, in 1864; appointed surgeon, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; resided as a physician, in 1880, with his wife, Emily C. Page, and two daughters (eldest daughter born Virginia, 1867) at San Francisco, California. [ORN 2, 1, 291; Register1863; Register1864; 1880 U.S. Census; JCC 4, 123; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; ME - Equipment and supplies; Richmond - Miscellaneous, page 433; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 220.]
Thomas Paget, second class boy, CSS Macon, 1865. [CSS Macon Rolls.]
Thomas W. Pain, originally served as sergeant, company D, 25th Battalion, Virginia Infantry; demoted to private; entered the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see also, 4th Battalion, Virginia Infantry). [Civil War Service Records.]
Daniel Paine, private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314.]
Matthias Paine, born Tyrrell County, North Carolina; resided in Pasquotank County, North Carolina, as a mariner, where he enlisted, July 29, 1861, aged 26, as private, company A, 8th Regiment North Carolina State Troops; captured at Roanoke Island, February 8, 1862; exchanged August, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about April 5, 1864 ( a Naval document shows that Paine was shipped, by 2nd lieutenant F. M. Roby, as landsman, in the Confederate States Navy, on April 1, 1864, and sent for duty aboard the CSS Albemarle, at Plymouth Sound, North Carolina). [NCT 4, 529; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 37-38.]
William Painter, served as landsman aboard the CSS Mobile, New Orleans, in 1861; later, after the fall of New Orleans, in 1862, and when the vessel was stationed off Yazoo City, Mississippi, Painter was rated as coxswain from June 1, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1033 and 1041.]
William Painter, surgeon's steward, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 283; DANFS.]
Hugh S. Paisley, born North Carolina; appointed from Alabama, as assistant surgeon for the war, Confederate States Navy, April 28, 1864; appointed assistant surgeon, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; served at the Naval station, Marion Court House, South Carolina, 1864 - 1865; resided as a dentist, in 1870, with his wife, Mollie and son, at Selma, Alabama. [CSN Register; JCC 4, 123; 1870 U.S. Census.]
Karl Pajorva, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama; killed in action, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
Francis F. Palinquist (surname also shown as Planguist and Palenquest), seaman/coxswain, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863; captured at Apalachicola, Florida, April 20, 1863, at Apalachicola, Florida; sent to Key West, Florida, aboard the USS Circassian, on April 25, 1863, then on to Point Lookout, then transferred, September 23, 1864, to Fort Warren; exchanged October 1, 1864; released and sent to Richmond from City Point, Virginia, October 18, 1864, after being exchanged. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; ORN 1, 17, 421; Fort Warren; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated October 20, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 141.].]
Montrose Anderson Pallen, born Vicksburg, Mississippi, about 1836 (one source shows place of birth as St. Louis, Missouri); studied medicine in London, Paris and Berlin; married Anna Eliza Benoist at St. Louis, Missouri, April 16, 1857; pre-war resident, as a physician, at St. Louis; appointed, from Missouri, as medical director of general Henry A. Wise's legion, 1861, and later of the department of the Mississippi; states, in a letter to the newspaper New Mississippian (of Jackson, Mississippi), that, in the middle of the war, while at Mobile, Alabama, he paid nearly $2000 in Confederate currency, for a pair of boots; later appointed as acting surgeon, Confederate States Navy, March, 1863; sent to Canada, 1863 to report on the condition of Confederate prisoners on Johnson's Island; later sent to Paris, France, to purchase surgical and medical supplies for the Confederate Army; on his return he was captured and held at New York; expelled from the Medical Association, at Boston, June, 1865, for supposed complicity in the Confederate scheme to poison the Croton Dam; the accusation was made by Sandford Conover, but this was eventuall proved false, and Pallen was eventually re-instated; returned, after the war, to St. Louis, where he was shown to be residing with his family, in 1870; resided, in 1880, as a physician, with his wife, Ann E. Pallen, and 2 children, Conde (born Missouri, 1859) and Jannette (born Missouri, 1861) at New York City; professor of gynecology at New York University; visited Europe in 1884, arriving back in New York, from Liverpool, England, on July 28, 1884; died at the Albemarle Hotel, New York, of Bright's disease and valvular disease of the heart, October 5, 1890 (one source shows date of death as October 1, 1890); buried at Calvary Cemetery, New York; also stated to have served with the French Army during the Franco-Prussian War; prolific writer on medical themes, and inventor of several appliances. [JCC Vol. 3, 198; 1860 U.S. Census; 1870 U.S. Census; US 1880 Census; see also The Cyclopaedia of American Biography, volume 10, page 307, edited by J.E. Homans, published 1924, by the Press Association Compilers, Inc., New York; some data also from the New York Passenger Lists, and the St. Louis, Missouri Marriages, 1804 - 76, available at the Ancestry.com web site; Daily Picayune (New Orleans) dated October 9, 1890, page 2; New Mississippian (Jackson, Mississippi) dated February 23, 1886; see also, Missouri Birth and Death Records Database, at the State Archives web site, URL: http://www.sos.mo.gov/archives/resources; Boston Daily Advertiser dated June 14, 1865; Daily National Intelligencer (Washington, D.C.) dated May 3, 1866.]
James Palmer, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
James T. Palmer, (described as being the "Youngest Enlisted Man in the Confederate Army"); although he was stated to have been in the Confederate Army, at the age of six, it is also indicated that he served as a powder monkey on the Confederate steamer Morgan, and was in the action off Fort Blakeley, Mobile Bay, in April, 1865, when he was aged six; died at Mobile, Alabama, on August 14, 1899. [News and Observer (Raleigh, North Carolina) dated Tuesday, August 15, 1899.]
John Palmer, Confederate States Marine Corps; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 554.]
W.G. Palmer, appointed acting master in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on February 1, 1862, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Bienville for duty; also served at 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 222.]
William A. Palmer, served as seaman aboard the CSS Arctic, 1863, and as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, in 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 276; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1232.]
George Palmes, 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.]
J. C. Papy, 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.]
W. H. Parham, shown as a sergeant [?] in the Confederate States Navy, on a Roll of Prisoners of War paroled at Alexandria, Louisiana, June 6, 1865; resided at Rapides Parish, Louisiana. [Booth 3, 66.]
Burdett Paris (first name also shown as Burdette), born Mississippi, 1820 (one source shows native place as Fayette County, Pennsylvania); resided as a pilot, in 1860, at New Orleans, Louisiana; appointed captain aboard the Confederate States gunboat General Lovell, of the Mississippi River Defense Fleet, January 29, 1862; died Wednesday, July 18, 1894, aged 79. [ORN 1, 18, 249; 1860 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 264.]
Edward Paris, second class fireman, CSS Beaufort; September, 1861 - April, 1862; vessel operated in North Carolina and Virginia waters. [ORN 2, 1, 281.]
Hillsman Parish, born in Wake County, North Carolina, 1842; son of William and Charity Parish; pre-war occupation, seaman; resided in, and enlisted at Beaufort County, North Carolina, May 10, 1861, aged 20, as private, company I, 3rd Regiment North Carolina State Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, January 29, 1862; served as ordinary seaman on the CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia; muster roll of this vessel, 1862, shows his name as Hinsman Parrish. [NCT 3, 585; ORN 2, 1, 310; 1850 U.S. Census.]
Lewis Parish (surname also shown as Parrish), born Virginia; before the war Parrish commanded the steamer Yorktown (later to be seized by the Confederates, with the complicity of Parrish, and converted to the CSS Patrick Henry), running between New York and Virginia; also commanded the steamer Jamestown, running between Norfolk, Virginia and New York; original entry in Confederate States Navy, as acting master, June 24, 1861; promoted master not in line of promotion, July 24, 1862; also served as pilot; served on the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1861 - 1863; commanded steamer CSS Drewry, James River squadron, 1864; also served aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, 1865; indicated to have been timid in battle, and of advanced age; post war service commanding the steamer Hatteras, running out of New York, 1865. [ORN 1, 9, 798; 1, 10, 633 & 726; 1, 11, 678 and 2, 1, 284 & 299; Register1863; Register1864; Scharf 193; New Haven Daily Palladium (Connecticut) dated July 11, 1865.]
James A. Park, born Jackson County, Georgia, April 19, 1845; enlisted as private, company B, 16th Regiment, Georgia Volunteer Infantry ("Center Hill Guards"); admitted to hospital at Petersburg, Virginia, April 14, 1862; returned to duty, May 24, 1862; discharged at Winchester, Virginia, October 26, 1862; recruited at Savannah, Georgia, on July 31, 1863, as a private in company E of the Confederate States Marine Corps; also served as sergeant, Marine Guard on the ironclad ram, CSS Georgia; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Fulton County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 736; ORN 2, 1, 287; Georgia Rosters 2, 498; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 688.]
John A. Park, shipped aboard the CSS Shenandoah, April 1, 1865. [ORN 1, 3, 783; Whittle 235.]
William Park, Corporal, CSMC; CSS Shenandoah, 1865. [Alabama Claims 1, 976.]
B.H. Parker, served as landsman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863; deserted about May, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 277.]
C.M. Parker, born Mississippi, 1839; previous service as private, company K, 18th Mississippi Infantry; original entry into the Confederate States Navy, as assistant surgeon, May 1, 1863; served on the Savannah station, 1863 - 1864; ordered by flag officer W.W. Hunter, in April, 1864, to accompany lieutenant W.W. Carnes, on recruiting duty, for Naval volunteers, from the army under General Joseph E. Johnston; returned to Savannah, April 15, 1864; appointed assistant surgeon, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; resided as a physician, in 1880, with his wife, S.J. Parker, at Denver, Arapahoe County, Colorado. [ORN 1, 15, 723 & 726; Civil War Service Records; JCC 4, 123; Register1864; 1880 U.S. Census.]
C. W. Parker, sent from Charleston, South Carolina, to the Richmond station, and received aboard the CSS Hampton, James River squadron, on October 24, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 744.]
Charles Parker, served as cabin boy at the New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862, and as 1st class boy aboard the CSS Pamlico from October 15, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 55, 120, 259 and 268.]
Crawford Parker, born North Carolina, May, 1826; served as landsman aboard the CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1864; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Mary A. Parker, and eight children (eldest child born 1857) at Belews Creek, Forsyth County, North Carolina; applied for a post war Confederate pension; resided, as a widower, in 1900, at the home of his son and family at Belews Creek. [ORN 2, 1, 278 & 302; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; NC State Archives.]
F. F. Parker, appointed, by surgeon L. W. Minor, as surgeon's steward in the Confederate States Navy, aboard the CSS Manassas, New Orleans station, on February 22, 1862, at a remuneration of $40 a month, and a ration, and also with the understanding that, at any time, should a Medical Officer be appointed to the vessel, Parker's pay would be reduced to $24 a month, and a ration. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 782.]
F.R. Parker, served as a private in the 12th North Carolina 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.]
George Parker, served as seaman aboard the receiving vessel, CSS St. Philip, 1862; rated as quartermaster from January 23, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 571.]
George Parker, served as seaman aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile station, 1862; discharged in the 4th quarter of 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1064 and 1200.]
Gilbert Parker, born North Carolina, January, 1833; served in the Confederate States Navy; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Nash County, North Carolina; married in 1898; his widow, Mary Long Parker, also later applied for a pension from Wilson County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; 1900 U.S. Census.]
H. N. Parker, shipped at the Naval Rendezvous, Raleigh, North Carolina, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, on March 21, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 407.]
H.S. Parker (middle initial also shown as T.), born Georgia; ordinary seaman; aged 24; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Monday, June 15, 1863; ORN 1, 14, 268.]
J.H. Parker, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 278.]
J.H. Parker, served as landsman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863; deserted about May, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 279.]
James Parker, born England; aged 27; seaman, CSS McRae, 1861 -1862; discharged from Naval service, February 8, 1862, after being admitted to the hospital vessel, CSS St. Philip, October 29, 1861, for intermittent fever. [St. Philip; ORN 2, 1, 291.]
Jesse L. Parker, born Union County, North Carolina, 1834; son of Matthew and Marina Parker; pre-war occupation, farmer; married in 1861; enlisted at Union County, March 14, 1862, as corporal, company F, 48th Regiment North Carolina Troops; promoted sergeant sometime between November, 1862 and February, 1863; wounded in the left foot at Bristoe Station, Virginia, October 14, 1863; hospitalized at Richmond, Virginia; reduced to private prior to January 1, 1864; transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about April 1, 1864; received a pension from the state of North Carolina after the war; pension records indicate he was wounded in the left eye at Richmond, Virginia, at an unspecified date; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Jemima, and five children at Monroe, Union County, North Carolina. [NCT 11, 439; 1850 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census.]
John Parker, served aboard the CSS Mobile, New Orleans, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1033.]
John H. Parker, original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, January 23, 1862 (Register1864 shows entry date as August 8, 1863); served on the Richmond station, and aboard the CSS Beaufort, 1862 - 1863; also on the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, the CSS Roanoke, CSS Fredericksburg and the CSS Nansemond, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1863 - 1865. [ORN 1, 10, 632 & 766; 1, 11, 692 and 2, 1, 301 & 322; Register1862; Register1863; Register1864.]
John Henry Parker, born Virginia; original service in the United States Navy, from December 30, 1836; resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; entered the Confederate States Navy, January 18, 1862, as 1st lieutenant; served on the Richmond station, 1862 - 1864; on special duty in 1862; married M.E. Lacy, in Lynchburg, Virginia, January 3, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 321; Register1863; Norfolk County Record 221; Daily Richmond Examiner (Richmond, Virginia) dated January 12, 1865.]
John Wesley Parker, served in the Confederate States Navy, as landsman and seaman aboard the ironclad battery CSS Georgia, at Savannah, Georgia, in 1863; left the vessel, on sick leave, on August 2, 1863, but did not report back until June 13, 1864, when he declared that he had a surgeon's certificate of disability; however, lieutenant Gwathmey, commander of the CSS Georgia, decided to classify Parker as a deserter, and reduced his rating to landsman; his widow, Fannie Ann Parker, filed for a post war Confederate pension form Dodge County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 737; ORN 2, 1, 287; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, pages 471 and 512.]
M.G. Parker, captain's clerk, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 300.]
Robert Parker, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 300.]
Thomas L. Parker, Boy, CSS Alabama; born England; captured by USS Kearsarge, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
William B. Parker, resident of Baldwin County, Georgia; originally served as landsman aboard the ironclad battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia, and the Ladies' Gunboat), Savannah squadron, Georgia; transferred to the CSS Atlanta, as ordinary seaman; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; released, but did not report back for Naval duty until June 13, 1864, when he went aboard the CSS Georgia at Savannah; lieutenant Gwathmey, commanding the CSS Georgia classified Parker as a deserter, and reduced his rating to landsman; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Pike County, Georgia. [ORN 1, 14, 268; GA Pension Index 738; ORN 2, 1, 287; Daily Morning News (Savannah, Georgia) dated June 27, 1863; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 512.]
W.H. Parker, Mate (civilian),Queen of the West, February, 1863. [ORN 1, 24, 407.]
W.W. Parker, landsman, served aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863; transferred as a conscript, from the command of lieutenant J. H. Rochelle, on October 23, 1863, to the command of lieutenant W. G. Dozier, aboard the receiving vessel, CSS Indian Chief. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 762-764; ORN 2, 1, 305.]
William F. Parker, served as seaman aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), Savannah, Georgia, in 1863; deserted from the vessel on August 3, 1863, but obviously returned to duty, as he was transferred, at an unspecified date, to the CSS Chicora, Charleston squadron. [ORN 2, 1, 286; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 716; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 471.]
William H. Parker, born England, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, laborer; marital status, single; enlisted at Camp Moore, Louisiana, July 26, 1861, aged 40, as sergeant, company D, 10th Louisiana Infantry; captured before Richmond, Virginia, June 28, 1862; sent to Fort Columbus, New York Harbor, July 3, 1862; transferred to Fort Delaware, Delaware, July 9, 1862; exchanged at Aikens Landing, James River, Virginia, August 5, 1862; deserted his Regiment and joined the Confederate States Navy. [Booth 3, 72.]
William Harwar Parker, born New York City, October 8, 1826; later resided in Virginia; son of Foxhall A. Parker, and brother of Foxhall A. Parker, jr., both of the United States Navy; previous service in the United States Navy, from October 19, 1841; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy, April 20, 1861; commissioned lieutenant in the Virginia State Navy, and then 1st lieutenant in the Confederate States Navy, June 10, 1861; commanded CSS Beaufort, 1861 - 1862, in the defense of Roanoke Island and Elizabeth City, and then at the battle in Hampton Roads, Virginia, March, 1862; then sent to Charleston, as executive officer on the CSS Palmetto State, 1862 - 1863; then appointed superintendent of the Confederate Naval Academy, aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, at Drewry's Bluff, James River, Virginia; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; assigned to the command of the CSS Richmond, in May, 1864; commanded the guard over the Confederate treasury, in the final days of the Confederacy, April, 1865; after the war he captained a Pacific Ocean mail steamer running between Panama City and San Francisco, until 1873; later appointed professor of engineering at Maryland Agricultural College (later the University of Maryland), until his resignation in 1882; resided with his wife, Margaret, at Bladensburg, Prince Georges County, Maryland; appointed Minister to Korea for a very brief period in 1886-1887; author of "Recollections of a Naval Officer" and textbooks for the Naval Academy; died Washington, D.C., December 30, 1896. [ORN 1, 10, 671; 1, 13, 619 and 2, 1, 281 & 299; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; 1880 U.S. Census; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861; CDAB, 756; Parker; CSN-Museum.]
M.C. Parkey, served in the Confederate States Navy; admitted to the General Hospital at Selma, Alabama, May 20, 1863. [ADAH.]
Peter Parkinson, born Ireland; aged 20; seaman, CSS Pickens, 1861-1862. [St. Philip.]
Richard Parkinson, Wardroom Steward, CSS Alabama; captured by USS Kearsarge, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
John W. Parks, employed as superintending engineer, Confederate States Navy, Shreveport, Louisiana, 1863; on September 19, 1863, he was informed that his services at Shreveport were no longer required, and that he was to proceed to Richmond, Virginia, and report to the Secretary of the Navy, Mallory. [Confederate Navy subject file E - Engineering; EM - Machinery plants; Atlanta - Miscellaneous, page 194.]
William Calvin Parks, born North Carolina, about 1830; resided in, and enlisted at Surry County, North Carolina, March 18, 1862, as private, company A, 28th Regiment North Carolina Troops; captured at Hanover Court House, Virginia, May 27, 1862; confined at Fort Monroe, Virginia, and at Fort Columbus, New York Harbor; exchanged at Aiken's Landing, James River, Virginia, August 5, 1862; wounded in the thigh at or near Manassas, Virginia, sometime between August 27 and 30, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about April 3, 1864; resided as a home carpenter, in 1880, with his wife, Polly L. Parks, and three children, at Rockford township, Surry County, North Carolina. [NCT 8, 121; 1880 U.S. Census.]
J.E. Parnell, served in the Confederate States Navy (or Marine Corps); mentioned as a witness in the pension file of Confederate States Marine Corps private, William J. Camp [Alabama Confederate Pension file no. 22498.] [ADAH.]
William Parnell, 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.]
Hinsman Parrish, see Hillman Parish.
Lewis Parrish, see Lewis Parish.
N. G. Parrish, enlisted October 6, 1864, in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served as private in the marine guard aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 266.]
W. W. Parrish, qualified, on May 2, 1864, to serve in the Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station, and at Drewry's Bluff. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 460; ORN 2, 1, 314.]
William J. Parrish, born Virginia, about 1818; resided as a pilot, in 1850, with his wife, Sarah Frances, and three children, at Richmond, Virginia; originally served as 3rd lieutenant, Huger's Battery, Norfolk Light Artillery; later served as acting master aboard the CSS Virginia; participated in the engagement at Hampton Roads, Virginia, March, 1862; shown as a Virginia pilot, in 1880, residing with his family at Washington, Norfolk County, Virginia. [ORN 1, 7, 48 & 2, 1, 308; 1850 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; Norfolk County Record 255.]
C.H. Parsons, served as landsman aboard the CSS Selma; 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.]
D. Parsons, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]
Daniel Parsons, served as a private in company A, Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS Richmond, James River, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 386 and 387.]
Edgar O. Parsons (surname also shown as Parson; middle initial also shown as C.), enlisted in New Hanover County, North Carolina, May 16, 1862, as private, company G, 3rd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, July 16, 1863; served as seaman on the CSS Arctic; appointed acting master's mate, July 24, 1863, and ordered to report to lieutenant W. A. Kerr, at Wilmington, North Carolina, for ordnance duty; served on the Wilmington station, North Carolina, 1863 - 1864, and aboard the CSS Neuse, 1864; appointed acting master's mate, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864. [NCT 2, 233; ORN 2, 1, 276 & 323; Register1864; CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 223.]
Joseph Parsons, served as private, company A, Confederate States Marine Corps, in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Richmond, James River, in 1863; died January 24, 1863; buried Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. [Confederate Burials, 69; ORN 2, 1, 314 (this source indicates that he was in the Corps in 1864, but his date of death contradicts this fact); Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 386.]
Milton T. Parsons (surname also shown as Pawson), appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Madrid, Missouri, on March 9, 1862, and ordered to report to lieutenant William L. Bradford, aboard the CSS Ivy, for duty; captured at the fall of New Orleans, Mississippi River, April, 1862; confined Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, 1862; later served on the Jackson station, 1862. [ORN 1, 18, 318 & 440 and 2, 1, 319; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 235.]
William Parsons, enlisted in Cumberland County, North Carolina, December 15, 1862, as private, 2nd company B, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; transferred, November 4, 1863, to company B, 13th Battalion North Carolina Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, May 18, 1864, and served as landsman aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, in 1864. [NCT 1, 205 & 565; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1232.]
William H. Parsons, served as private, company B (Virginia Riflemen), 3rd Virginia Regiment; transferred to the Confederate States Navy. [Norfolk County Record 56.]
Peter Partee, seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]
William H. Partriage (surname also shown as Partridge), born, resided in as a seaman, and enlisted at Currituck County, North Carolina, August 9, 1861, aged 23, as private, company B, 8th Regiment North Carolina State Troops; shown as a mariner, residing in a boarding house at Elizabeth City, Pasquotank County, North Carolina, in 1860; promoted corporal, October 27, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about February 9, 1863; served as landsman aboard the CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863, and as master at arms aboard the CSS Yadkin in 1864; also shown as having served as seaman aboard the CSS Sea Bird in 1861, and obviously served in this capacity prior to his enlistment in the Confederate Army. [NCT 4, 540; ORN 2, 1, 278, 306 & 313; 1860 U.S. Census.]
William Partridge, captured as quartermaster at Elizabeth City, Pasquotank River, North Carolina, February 10, 1862, but was able to escape. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 548.]
J. A. Paschall (surname also shown as Pascalle), appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, at Halifax, North Carolina, on July 31, 1863; served aboard the CSS Arctic, in 1863, and aboard the CSS Chickamauga, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 710 and 2, 1, 275; Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions (July, 1864 - Miscellaneous), page 773; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 227.]
Jeremiah Pascoe (first initial also incorrectly shown as I. and surname also shown as Pasco; first name also shown as Jerry), originally enlisted April 5, 1862, as private, company E, 36th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry; present and accounted for until June, 1862; transferred to Confederate States Navy, as 2nd class fireman, side wheeled steamer CSS Oconee (originally the CSS Savannah prior to April, 1863), Savannah River, Georgia; served May - June, 1862; also served aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Sampson, Savannah, Georgia, 1863, and aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 297, 303 & 305; DANFS; Georgia Rosters 3, 969.]
Richard Pascoe, Ship's Painter, CSS Virginia II, wounded in action, James River, January 24, 1865. [ORN 1, 11, 689.]
---- Pasquad, served as a sergeant in the Confederate States Army, and was transferred to the Confederate States Navy, June 30, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NF - Distribution and Transfers.; CSS Atlanta - Miscellaneous, page 88.]
William Passmore, resident of Birkenhead, Chester County, United Kingdom, previously served aboard HMS Terrible during the Crimean War; enlisted for service aboard the 290 (original name for the CSS Alabama) in June, 1862, as Seaman, in June, 1862 at Birkenhead, where the vessel was being constructed; remained in the CSN service for just a month before deserting, and giving information to the US Consul in England about the vessel. [ORN 2, 2, 381.]
John A. Pate, served as landsman in company A (?), Naval Battalion of North Carolina (?); paroled at Arvins Ferry, North Carolina, April 27, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 665.]
John R. Pate, born Georgia, 1830 (Atlanta Medical Journal shows age as 22 in 1863); served as ordinary seaman, CSS Atlanta, 1863; also served on the ironclad battery, CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and the Ladies' Ram), at Savannah, Georgia, 1863 - 1864; deserted the vessel, but returned to duty on August 12, 1864; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Mary, and six children, at Hello Or Red Lick, Warren County, Georgia; served as a witness for E.E. Bradshaw and James A. Bradshaw, both of whom filed for a post war Confederate pension from Warren County, Georgia. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Sunday, May 10, 1863; ORN 2, 1, 286; 1880 U.S. Census; GA Pension Index 742; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 520.]
Joseph W. Pate, born in Beaufort County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, seaman; enlisted at Beaufort County, May 8, 1861, aged 21, as private, company K, 1st Regiment North Carolina Artillery; temporarily attached, August, 1861, to company B, 61st Regiment, North Carolina Troops; captured at Fort Hatteras, August 29, 1861; exchanged and returned to his original unit in February, 1862; 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; served as ship's cook or corporal, CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, and later as seaman aboard the CSS Tallahassee, 1864, and on the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865. [NCT 1, 166; ORN 2, 1, 294-296 and 307; Confederate States Navy subject file; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271.]
Solferino Patres (surname also shown as Patria), Ordinary Seaman, CSS Florida; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864; sent to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, for confinement; released February 1, 1865. [ORN 1, 3, 256; Fort Warren.]
Henry C. Patrick, born Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, August 25, 1862; served aboard the CSS Hampton, and the CSS Richmond, James River, Virginia, 1862 - 1864; may have previously served as sergeant, company D, 18th Mississippi Infantry (see also, 1st Virginia Regiment). [Register1863; Register1864; ORN 1, 10, 671; Civil War Service Records.]
James A. Patrick, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 310.]
John Patrick, second class fireman aboard the CSS Baltic, which operated in Alabama waters; served during, or between the period, August, 1862 and June, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 281.]
John B. Patrick, resident of Nashville, Tennessee; pre-war occupation as seaman - sailed from New Orleans to Bermuda and to Galveston; in Confederate service since 1861; originally enlisted in the regulars (Army) in Tennessee and went to Charleston, South Carolina; transferred to the Confederate Navy, as seaman, at Wilmington, North Carolina, about 1863; served on the CSS North Carolina for about seven months; then on the CSS Bombshell and CSS Albemarle, 1864 (indicated to have served as second front leverman at the after gun). [ORN 1, 9, 768 - 770.]
Edwin C. Patten, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on October 8, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Manassas for duty; served on the New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; resigned from Naval service on March 30, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 320; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 229 and 1051.]
Isaac L. Patten, paymaster's clerk, Confederate States Navy; captured aboard a boat from the CSS Oconee, at Ossabaw Sound, Georgia, on August 20, 1863, by the USS Madgie; transferred to the USS Wamsutta on August 21, 1863, to be sent north as a prisoner of war; took the oath of allegiance at Point Lookout, Maryland, and released March 18, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 488; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 135.]
William Patten (surname also shown as Patton), served as seaman aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, 1863-1864; deserted at Brest, France, about January 18, 1864. [ORN 1, 2, 661; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 349 and 364.]
William Patten, served as seaman aboard the CSS Ivy, New Orleans station, in 1861; rated as quartermaster from August 25, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 840.]
A. M. Patterson, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on August 28, 1861; tendered his resignation from the Naval service on February 4, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 231 and 1053.]
Alex. Patterson, served on the CSS Shenandoah, 1865. [ORN 1, 3, 783.]
Ambrose Patterson, born Russia, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, sailor; marital status, single; enlisted at New Orleans, July 18, 1861, aged 21, as private, company D, 15th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy in February, 1862. [Booth 3, 82.]
Edward Patterson, resided in Rowan County, North Carolina; enlisted at Brunswick County, North Carolina, May 31, 1861, aged 28, as private, company K, 4th Regiment North Carolina State Troops; wounded at an unknown date and place, and admitted to hospital in Richmond, Virginia, June 5, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 5, 1864; served as landsman aboard the CSS Virginia II, 1864 - 1865. [NCT 4, 111; ORN 2, 1, 312.]
Frederick Patterson, served as seaman and boatswain's mate, CSS Alert, 1861 - 1862, and aboard the CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama 1863; also served aboard the CSS Gaines; pension application filed by his widow, Mary Patterson, from Mobile County; pension no. 38601, witnessed by Thomas Daley and W.J. Daley. [ORN 2, 1, 275 & 308; ADAH.]
George M. Patterson (middle initial may also have been N.), served in the Confederate States Navy, under captain William Wallace Hunter, Savannah Squadron; shown as ordinary seaman, CSS Oconee, 1862 and C.S. Tender Sampson, Savannah River, Georgia, 1862 - 1863; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Douglas County, Georgia; his widow, Ugenia A. Patterson, also later filed for a pension from the same county (see next entry, which may be the same person, though the pension applications do not coincide). [GA Pension Index 744 & 745; ORN 2, 1, 297 & 303.]
George N. Patterson, born about 1845; enlisted in the Confederate States Navy, May 30, 1863; served aboard the CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron; applied for a Confederate pension from Calhoun county, Alabama, July 4, 1899; address shown as Piedmont, Alabama (see previous entry, which may be the same person, though the pension applications do not coincide). [ADAH.]
Peter Patterson, 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 62.]
Robert T. Patterson, appointed chief engineer aboard the Confederate States ram General Sumter, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, February 5, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
Thomas Patterson, seaman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308.]
W.W. Patterson, served as landsman aboard the CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863-1864; died May 4, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 278; 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 200.]
William Patterson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Fredericksburg, January, 1865. [ORN 1, 11, 794.]
William Patterson, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, November 5, 1861; served on the CSS General Polk, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; also on the Jackson station, 1862; ordered, on June 27, 1862, to proceed to Jackson, Mississippi, to settle his accounts, and then to consider himself as being discharged from the service. [ORN 2, 1, 318; CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 233 and 963.]
William Patterson, appointed first officer (also shown as first assistant engineer) aboard the Confederate States ram General Sumter, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, February 15, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
William B. Patterson, born Alabama; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, July 22, 1863; served aboard the CSS Tuscaloosa and the CSS Tennessee, 1863 - 1864; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; exchanged at Ship Island, Mississippi, March 2, 1865; surrendered May 4, 1865, and paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865. [ORN 1, 21, 406; Register1864; Porter's Naval History, 785; CSN Register.]
William Henry Patterson, born Georgia; previous service in Company M, 26th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, as First Corporal, August 13, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 5, 1864, as seaman; attached as private to company F, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; may have also served in the 37th Battalion Virginia Cavalry; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Chatham County, Georgia. [Georgia Rosters, 3, 272; GA Pension Index 745; M1091.]
C.W.B. Pattesharte, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]
Alexander Pattison, see Alexander Patterson.
George G. Pattison, born New York, about 1815; in 1850, shown residing as a merchant, with his wife and children, at Pensacola, Florida; commandant's clerk; shown on a pay roll of officers stationed at Pensacola Navy Yard, Florida, 1861, and on the gunboat CSS Bradford (used as a storeship at Pensacola), in April, 1862; also served as 1st clerk to the commandant at Pensacola during the month of May, 1862; resided as a store clerk, in 1880, with his wife, Ann, and daughter, Hellen, at Pensacola, Escambia County, Florida. [ORN 2, 1, 282 & 320; 1850 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PB - Administration of stations; Petersburg - Yazoo City, page 296.]
Henry D. Patton, resided in Wilson County, North Carolina; enlisted at Craven County, North Carolina, June 28, 1861, aged 33, as musician, company F, 4th Regiment North Carolina State Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, October 2, 1863. [NCT 4, 72.]
J.P. Patton, original service as corporal, company C, 10th Battalion, Virginia Heavy Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
John Patton, original service as private, company L, 1st Tennessee Heavy Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
M.P. Patton, served as landsman and seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276 & 279.]
Peter B. Patton, born Georgia, 1827; recruited at Savannah, Georgia, on September 1, 1863, as a private in company E of the Confederate States Marine Corps, and later promoted 1st corporal, about 1864; paid a bounty of $50, on October 31, 1863, for enlisting in the Corps; transferred, from the CSS Savannah to Richmond, Virginia, at an unknown date; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Mary E. Patton, at Simston, Oglethorpe County, Georgia. [ORN 2, 1, 315 & 316; 1880 U.S. Census; GA Pension Index 745; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 688; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 240.]
R. E. Patton, resident of McDowell County, North Carolina; served in the Confederate States Navy; paroled at Richmond, Virginia, April 21, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 665.]
William F. Patton, born Virginia, 1803; previous service in the United States Navy, from August 17, 1826; original entry into Confederate States Navy service, as surgeon, June 10, 1861; served on the Charleston station, 1862 - 1864; surrendered at Richmond, Virginia, April 6, 1865; paroled at Richmond, April 18, 1865; resided as a retired Naval officer, in 1880, at the residence of John R. and Nanie G. Cooke, Richmond, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 317; Register1863; Register1864; 1880 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 138.]
George W. Paul, shipped by lieutenant Venable, at Richmond, Virginia, in early 1864, and served as a private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; served at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 299.]
Stephen Paul, private, company C, Confederate States Marine Corps; stationed aboard the receiving ship CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, April-June, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 280 & 316.]
William Pauley, served as seaman aboard the receiving vessel, CSS St. Philip, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 571.]
G.W. Paull, enlisted by lieutenant Venable, at Richmond, Virginia, as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, about March, 1864; served on the ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 312; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 297.]
Antonio Paulsey, seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]
Jacob Paulson (surname also shown as Paulsen and Paulsom), born Holstein, Germany, August 1, 1837; enlisted July 17, 1861, at Apalachicola, Florida, in Company B, 4th Florida Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy, December 12, 1862, and sent from Murfreesboro, Tennessee to Saffold, Georgia, in January, 1863, for service as seaman aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, CSS Savannah, and CSS Palmetto State, 1861 - 1863; resided in Savannah, Georgia, after the war. [Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 383; ORN 2, 1, 304; CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 246.]
Milton Pawson, see Milton T. Parsons.
Daniel Payne, born Carroll County, Virginia, May 26, 1845; qualified, on May 2, 1864, to serve as a private in company B, Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station; died July 15, 1925; buried Crooked Creek Cemetery, Carroll County, Virginia. [Confederate Burials, 70; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 460.]
Edward Payne, ordinary seaman, served aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 305.]
Freeborn Payne, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, in 1862, and later as officer's cook aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Pontchartrain, Arkansas waters, 1862 - 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 299; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 958; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 123 - 124.]
Ira Payne, landsman, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll.]
John Payne (surname also shown as Paine), ordinary seaman, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 293; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1204-1205.]
John A. Payne, born Alabama; master's mate and master not in line of promotion, August 27, 1862; served on the Richmond station, and on the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1862 - 1863; served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), 1863 - 1864; promoted lieutenant for the war, January 7, 1864, to rank from May 25, 1863; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; served as executive officer on the steamer CSS Gaines, at Mobile Bay, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 1, 21, 594 and 2, 1, 283, 301 & 322; ORA 1, 39; Register1863; Register1864; JCC 4, 122.]
John W. Payne, commanded the gunboat Diana of the Texas Marine Department, operating in Sabine Pass, in late 1863; buried at the Catholic Cemetery, Galveston, Texas. [Galveston Daily News (Texas) dated Tuesday, May 31, 1887, page 1; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OD - Distribution, Miscellaneous, page 9.]
M. Payne, served as ship's cook aboard the CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, and later aboard the CSS Arctic, 1864; sent to Battery Buchanan on December 13, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 117.]
Thomas R. Payne, born January 8, 1840; son of steamboat captain, Thomas Payne; resided with his parents at Charleston, South Carolina, in 1860; enlisted in the Confederate States Navy, 1861; appointed pilot, September 25, 1862; served aboard the CSS Chicora, Charleston Station, 1862 - 1863; also served aboard the CSS Stono and the Confederate States torpedo steamer, Antonica; married May 16, 1863; discharged August 20, 1863; died June 12, 1869; wife, Eliza A. Payne, applied for a Confederate widow's pension, from Charleston, South Carolina, in 1919. [South Carolina Confederate pension series S126088, item no. 01896, at "South Carolina Department of Archives and History: ON-LINE RECORDS INDEX," URL: http://www.archivesindex.sc.gov/; CSN Register; 1860 U.S. Census.]
Thomas S. Payne, originally served as private, company L, 2nd Virginia Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
William Henry Payne, appointed midshipman in the Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1864; later appointed acting master's mate in the service; resigned from Confederate States Naval service, December 19, 1864; his widow, Margaret, applied for a Confederate pension from Jackson County, Alabama, May 27, 1927. [ORN 2, 1, 300; CSN Register; ADAH; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 1055.]
William M. Payne, Private, Company E, CSMC; enlisted Savannah, Georgia, March 4, 1864; died at Confederate Naval Hospital, Savannah, Georgia, October 20, 1864; buried, October 21, 1864, at Laurel Grove Cemetery, Savannah. [Confederate Burials, 70; Daily News and Herald (Savannah, Georgia) dated May 19, 1866; Honeycutt.]
E.D. Payner, seaman, steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1862 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 301; DANFS.]
J. A. Payson, served as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, and was transferred as a conscript, from the command of lieutenant J. H. Rochelle, on October 23, 1863, to the command of lieutenant W. G. Dozier, aboard the receiving vessel, CSS Indian Chief. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 762-764.]
J.W. Peabody, served in company C, Whiteside's Naval Battalion (?); his widow, Lizzie Peabody, filed for a post war Confederate pension from Decatur County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 748.]
Thomas Peacock, indicated to have served in the "Florida War and Confederate Marine service"; buried at Cahill's New Cemetery, Galveston, Texas. [Galveston Daily News (Texas) dated Tuesday, May 31, 1887, page 1.]
Henry Peadon, born Johnson County, North Carolina, 1832; son of William and Celia Peadon, of Guilford County, North Carolina; brother of John Peadon, listed below; resided as a farmer, in 1860, with his wife, Susan, and three children, at Guilford County, North Carolina; served as landsman aboard the ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 294 & 295; 1850 U.S. Census; 1860 U.S. Census.]
John Peadon, born Johnson County, North Carolina, about 1835; son of William and Celia Peadon, of Guilford County, North Carolina; brother of Henry Peadon, listed above; resided as a farmer, in 1860, with his wife, Polly Capps Peadon, and daughter, Celia, at Guilford County, North Carolina; served as landsman aboard the ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 294 & 295; 1850 U.S. Census; 1860 U.S. Census.]
Edward D. Pearce, served as seaman aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown, 1861 - 1862; rated as boatswain's mate from January 1, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 947.]
Joseph Pearce, see Joseph Pierce.
Matthew M. Pearce (surname also shown as Pearse), enlisted as landsman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile squadron, June 15, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 281; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 110.]
Sylvester Pearce, see Sylvester Pierce.
John Marshall Pearl, born Tennessee; original entry into Confederate States Navy, October 25, 1863; commissioned assistant paymaster, January 7, 1864, to rank from October 25, 1863; appointed assistant paymaster, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; served aboard the CSS Morgan, and on the Mobile squadron, 1864; paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865. [Porter's Naval History, 785; Register1864; JCC 4, 122; see also Pearl manuscripts, 1863-1865, held at Filson Club Historical Society, Manuscript Department, 1310 South Third Street, Louisville, Kentucky 40208.]
---- Pearson, chief engineer, CSS Georgia; later sent, aboard the Louisa Ann Fanny, February, 1865, to serve aboard the CSS Stonewall. [ORN 1, 3, 738.]
Charles G. Pearson, appointed as Assistant Paymaster, from Florida; served in the James River Squadron, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 766; Florida Confederate Card File.]
George B. Pearson, born South Carolina; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as master not in line of promotion, April 2, 1863; served on the Charleston station, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 317; Register1864.]
James Pearson, served as seaman aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown, 1861 - 1862; rated as quarter gunner from January 1, 1862, and as quartermaster from April 24, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 947.]
James Montgomery Pearson, born Tennessee, April 2, 1844; previous service in the United States Navy, from September 21, 1860, from which he resigned; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 3rd class, July 8, 1861; served aboard the steamer CSS Fanny, in 1861, and on the Jackson station, 1862; later on the Wilmington station, and aboard the steamer CSS Arctic, 1862 - 1863; later served on the ironclad ram CSS Palmetto State, Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 - 1864; promoted passed midshipman, January 8, 1864; appointed master, in line of promotion, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; attached as 1st lieutenant to company D, 1st Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; married Sallie A. Pearson, at Hopkins County, Texas, December 3, 1876; member of the Matt Ashcroft Camp No. 170, United Confederate Veterans, in 1901; died at Sulphur Springs, Hopkins County, Texas, January 10, 1911; buried Sulphur Springs City Cemetery. [ORN 2, 1, 275, 298, 319 & 323; Register1863; Register1864; JCC 4, 122; M1091; Callahan; some biographical data from Texas Confederate pension file of Mrs. Sallie A. Pearson, Hopkins County, Texas; burial details supplied by Ken Jones, in an e-mail (kjones@tarleton.edu) dated May 16, 2005; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 330.]
John Pearson (surname also shown as Pierson), born Virginia, about 1792; citizen of, and appointed from Florida; previous service in the United States Navy; shown as a sailing master, United States Navy, in 1850, residing with his wife, Sarah A., at the United States Navy Yard, Escambia County, Florida; resigned from the United States Navy in January, 1861; indicated to have owned slaves, prior to the war; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as master not in line of promotion, April 16, 1861; shown on a pay roll of officers stationed at Pensacola Navy Yard, Florida, 1861, and on the gunboat CSS Bradford (used as a storeship at Pensacola), in April, 1862; also served on the Naval Works, Selma, and on the Mobile station, 1862 - 1864; waiting orders, 1864; paroled, at the end of the war, at Montgomery, Alabama, May 30, 1865; personal description, at the time of his parole, shown as blue eyes, light hair, fair complexion, and standing 5 feet 7 ½ inches tall. [ORN 2, 1, 282, 319, 320 & 323; Register1863; Register1864; 36th Congress Report 23 & 62; Callahan; 1850 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 140.]
John Pearson, sailmaker's mate, Pensacola Navy Yard, Florida, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 320.]
John A. Pearson, served as ordinary seaman, and captain of hold aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1862; appeared as a defendant in a Naval Court Martial held at Richmond, Virginia, in July, 1862, specification of charges not shown. [ORN 2, 1, 300; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 179.]
John A. Pearson, 2nd lieutenant, company C, Confederate States Marine Corps, Richmond Station, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 315.]
Joseph Pearson, Seaman, CSS Alabama; born Liverpool; rated Coal Trimmer, May 26, 1863; captured by USS Kearsarge, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
William Pearson, enlisted for three years as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, at Charleston, South Carolina, on August 27, 1862, and served aboard the CSS Huntress. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 176 and 753.]
William Peatty, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]
J. R. Peay, served as landsman aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 849.]
Rorer Peay, originally served as private, company M, 23rd Virginia Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Charles S. Peck (surname also shown as Peek), born Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, April 18, 1863; served aboard the ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863 - 1864; also served aboard the CSS Chickamauga, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 710 and 2, 1, 293, 295 & 296; Register1864.]
Frederic Peck, appointed from Alabama; appointed assistant surgeon for the war, April 28, 1864, and as assistant surgeon in the Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; served aboard the CSS Albemarle, and at the Halifax Naval Station, North Carolina, 1864; attached as to Semmes' Naval Brigade, for special service, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 274; JCC 4, 123; M1091; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; ME - Equipment and supplies; Richmond - Miscellaneous, page 285; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 237.]
George M. Peck, see George M. Peek.
William Peck, previously served as Private, Company D, First Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, December, 1861; deserted August 18, 1862; claimed by Confederate States Navy, October 5, 1862; deserted at Causton's Bluff, Georgia, October 31, 1862. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 155.]
George L. Peddie, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Maurepas, in 1862, and also aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Pontchartrain, Arkansas waters, 1862 - 1863; listed his next of kin as Eliza Jane Peddie. [ORN 2, 1, 299; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 958 and 1005.]
David N. Peddy, served in company C, Georgia Naval Battalion (?); filed for a post war Confederate pension from Muscogee County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 750.]
George D. Peddy, served in company C, 5th Georgia Reserves and Georgia Naval Battalion (?); his widow, Sarah Peddy, filed for a post war Confederate pension from Muscogee County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 750.]
Henry Peden, Landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
John Peden, Landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
Dudley Peed (surname also incorrectly shown as Price), born North Carolina, 1825; served aboard the CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Lucy J. Peed, and five children (eldest child born 1855) at Bartons Creek, Wake County, North Carolina; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Wake County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; ORN 2, 1, 312; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Charles S. Peek, born Virginia; appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer, April 18, 1863; served on CSS North Carolina, Wilmington station, 1863 - 1864; later aboard the CSS Chickamauga, 1864; appointed 3rd assistant gengineer, Provisional Navy, June 2, 1864; attached, as 1st lieutenant, company H, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [CSNRegister; M1091.]
George M. Peek (ORN shows surname as Peck), born Virginia; appointed acting master, Confederate States Navy, May 30, 1863; later 1st lieutenant and instructor of mathematics aboard the school ship, CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1863 - 1864; paroled at Charlotte, North Carolina, May 15, 1865; post war service as Superintendent of Public Schools, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 299; CSN Register; Register1864; post war data from page 69 of the publication, Hampton and Its Students, by two of its teachers, Mrs. M.F. Armstrong and Helen W. Ludlow, published 1874, by G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York; Confederate States Navy subject file - N - NE - Training and Education.]
William Peel, shipped as landsman aboard the CSS Jackson, New Orleans station, on November 19, 1861; rated as seaman from November 20, 1861; later served aboard the CSS Maurepas, New Orleans, 1862; rated as ship's cook on March 1, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 886 and 1001.]
William R. Peel, born Gates County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, carpenter; enlisted at Gates County, February 27, 1862, aged 33, as private, company C, 52nd Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 1, 1864. [NCT 12, 444.]
Alonzo Peeling (surname also shown as Peling), enlisted at Rowan County, North Carolina, July 7, 1862, as private, company K, 57th Regiment North Carolina Troops; wounded at Fredericksburg, Virginia, December 13, 1862, and hospitalized at Richmond, Virginia; returned to duty on or about February 28, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, at the Naval rendezvous, Kinston, North Carolina on May 2, 1864 (another source shows date as being prior to May 1, 1864), and sent as seaman (rating also shown as ordinary seaman) aboard the gunboat CSS Neuse. [NCT 14, 208; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 955 and 1233.]
Henry L. Peeples (surname also shown as Peoples), born Georgia, 1847; son of Nance E. Peoples; resided with his mother and siblings, in 1860, at District 407, Gwinnett County, Georgia; appointed acting midshipman, Confederate States Navy, December 24, 1864; served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, 1864 - 1865; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Mary A. Peeples, and six children (eldest children, twins, born 1872) at Lawrenceville, Gwinnett County, Georgia. [CSNRegister; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census.]
James West Pegram, born Virginia, 1843, son of lieutenant Robert B. Pegram, also of the Confederate States Navy (see entry below), and Lucy B. Pegram; resided with his parents and siblings, in 1860, at Norfolk, Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 4th class, July 17, 1861; served on the New Orleans station, 1861, and on the cruiser CSS Nashville; later aboard the CSS Morgan, at Mobile, Alabama, in 1862; transferred to the steamer CSS Richmond, 1862 - 1863; ordered to report for duty at Charleston, South Carolina, May, 1863; later appointed passed midshipman, Provisional Navy of the Confederate States; by order of lieutenant commanding William P.A. Campbell, dated at Charleston, South Carolina, June 8, 1863, he was ordered to proceed to Wilmington, North Carolina, and there board the blockade runner Sirius, for Nassau, at which place he arrived on June 20, 1863; service abroad, 1864; attached as 2nd lieutenant, company F, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; married Eliza Waller Blacknall; resided as the secretary of a life insurance company, in 1880, with his wife and children, at Petersburg, Virginia; shown, in 1900, as a resident of Richmond, Virginia; died 1905. [ORN 1, 1, 752 and 2, 1, 320; Virginia Historical Society; Register1863; M1091; Register1864; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; Richmond Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated April 15, 1900, page 15; Confederate States Navy subject file N - NF - Distribution and Transfers; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 237 and 1178.]
Robert Baker Pegram, born in Dinwiddie County, Virginia, 1811; father of acting midshipman James West Pegram, also of the Confederate States Navy (see entry above); previous service in the United States Navy, from February 2, 1829; shown residing with his wife, Lucy, and children, in 1860, at Norfolk, Virginia; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy, April 17, 1861; appointed captain in the Virginia State Navy, April 18, 1861; assumed command of the Norfolk (Gosport) Navy Yard, on its evacuation by United States Navy sailors, in April, 1861; relieved of this command on April, 22, 1861, by commodore French Forrest; subsequently ordered to the command of the post at Pig Point, at the mouth of the Nansemond River; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, June 10, 1861, as lieutenant; commanded CSS Nashville, 1861; served on the Richmond station, and in command of Pig Point Battery, Virginia, 1861, and again, 1862 - 1864; appointed commander for the war, September 13, 1862; commanded CSS Richmond, 1862 - 1863; promoted commander, Provisional Navy, to rank from May 13, 1863; assigned to the flagship, the ironclad sloop CSS Virginia, in May, 1864; took the oath before the provost marshal in Petersburg, Virginia, September 25, 1865; filed for a presidential pardon, at the close of the war, on October 5, 1865; pardoned by President Johnson on October 21, 1865; his wife and four children were residing in Sussex County, Virginia, in 1862; resided as an insurance agent, in 1880, with his (second?) wife, Sarah F. Pegram, at Norfolk, Virginia; died Norfolk, Virginia, October 24, 1894. [ORN 1, 1, 752; 1, 4, 399; 1, 7, 790; 1, 10, 671 and 2, 1, 322 & 630; ORA 1, 2; Virginia Historical Society; JCC 4, 121; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133; Register1863; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; Reminiscences 36; SHC-UNC; Sheppard - Atlanta Constitution dated October 25, 1894; Norfolk County Record 17 - 18; Daily Richmond Examiner (Virginia) dated May 7, 1864; Presidential pardons at Ancestry.com.]
James C. Peirce (surname also shown as Pierce), 2nd assistant engineer, served on the Savannah station, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 323.]
John Peits (surname also shown as Pretz, Peitz and Piety), served as 2nd class boy aboard the CSS Mobile, New Orleans station 1861-1862; rated as landsman, aboard the vessel, when it was stationed off Yazoo City, Mississippi, on June 1, 1862; later, as seaman, captured off Morris Island, South Carolina, September 7, 1863; sent to Point Lookout, Maryland, then to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, where he was received September 23, 1864; exchanged October 1, 1864; released and sent to Richmond from City Point, Virginia, October 18, 1864, after being exchanged. [Fort Warren; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated October 20, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1033 and 1041; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 85.]
Charles Pelaiz, appointed, by surgeon L. W. Minor, as surgeon's steward in the Confederate States Navy, aboard the CSS Mobile, New Orleans station, on February 12, 1862, at a remuneration of $40 a month, and a ration, and also with the understanding that, at any time, should a Medical Officer be appointed to the vessel, Parker's pay would be reduced, and, also, if Pelaiz desired to leave the service for any other reason or reasons, he would only be discharged as soon as Minor was able to replace him. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 784.]
Alonzo Peling, see Alonzo Peeling.
J. N. Pell, appointed pilot aboard the Confederate States gunboat Little Rebel, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
F. M. Pellegrew, see F. M. Pettigrew.
James M. Pelot (middle initial also shown as W.), born South Carolina, 1833; served as assistant surgeon on the privateer Lady Davis, South Carolina state service, 1861; involved in the capture of the prize vessel, A.B. Thompson, May 19, 1861; awarded the sum of $228.26, as his share in the capture of that vessel; resided as a physician, in 1870 - 1880, with his wife, Elen J. Pelot, and children, at Elmwood and Brownsville, Saline County, Missouri. [CSNRegister; 1870 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; ORN 1, 5, 655; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, page 1.]
Thomas Postell Pelot, born South Carolina, about 1835; previous service in the United States Navy, as lieutenant, from which he resigned, January 7, 1861; shown to be a resident, with his wife Clara T. Pelot, of Norfolk, Virginia, in 1860; appointed 1st lieutenant, Confederate States Navy, March 26, 1861; commanded the CSS Lady Davis, 1861, and was awarded the sum of $1174.07, as his share in the capture of the prize vessel A.B. Thompson, on May 19, 1861; served on the Savannah station, 1861 - 1864; appointed to the command of the side wheeled steamer, CSS Oconee (originally named the CSS Savannah prior to April, 1863), Savannah River, Georgia, 1862 - 1863; placed an ad in the Savannah newspapers in September, 1862, offering a reward for the apprehension for two deserters; ordered, in June, 1863, to take command of the steamer CSS Resolute; also noted to be in command of the ironclad floating battery, CSS Georgia, in June, 1863; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; killed in action, June 2, 1864, during the expedition to take out the USS Water Witch, near Ossabaw Sound, Georgia; buried, June 4, 1864, at Laurel Grove Cemetery, Georgia. [ORN 1, 13, 807; 1, 14, 698, 710, 714 & 715; 1, 15, 495 and 2, 1, 297 & 322; Register1863; 36th Congress Report 24; JCC 4, 121; Robert Watson Diary; Daily News and Herald (Savannah, Georgia) dated May 19, 1866; 1860 U.S. Census; Daily Morning News (Savannah, Georgia) dated Saturday, September 6, 1862; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, page 1.]
Edward Pemberton, served as seaman and coxswain aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River squadron, 1861; indicated to have held a position of responsibility aboard the vessel. [Weber; ORN 2, 1, 300; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 484 - 487.]
John Henry Pemberton, qualified, on June 15, 1864, to serve in the Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 462.]
John H. Pence, ordinary seaman, ironclad sloop CSS North Carolina, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 294 & 295; DANFS.]
John Pender, served as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
John Pendergrast, 2nd class boy, side wheeled steamer CSS Oconee (originally the CSS Savannah prior to April, 1863), Savannah River, Georgia; served May - June, 1862; also served aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Sampson, Savannah, Georgia, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 297 & 303; DANFS.]
William Pendergrast, 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 62.]
William C. Pendleton (middle initial also shown as E.), born Louisiana, about 1814; appointed acting master (rank also shown as master's mate) in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on December 16, 1861; served as 2nd officer aboard the CSS Livingston, 1861; also on the Jackson station, 1862. [St. Philip; ORN 2, 1, 319; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 241.]
John H. Pengally ( surname also shown as Pingally), served as ship's cook on the wooden sidewheeled steamer, CSS Caswell, and on the Wilmington Station, North Carolina, 1861 - 1862; also as ship's cook on the CSS Arctic, 1862; deserted but was apprehended and returned to Naval authorities at Wilmington on May 28, 1863. [ORN 1, 23, 703 and 2, 1, 276, 282 & 323; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 456.]
Thomas R. Penn, born Georgia, 1845; son of William and Mary Penn; resided with his parents and siblings, in 1860, at Jasper County, Georgia; previously served as Private, Company G, 4th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, May 16, 1862; wounded at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 2, 1863, and Mine Run, Virginia, December 2, 1863; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 3, 1864, as Landsman; served aboard CSS Tallahassee; also served aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865, and served aboard the CSS Richmond; attached as private to company E, 1st Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; married in 1869; resided as a store clerk, in 1880, with his wife, Ammie, and five children, at Monticello, Jasper County, Georgia; shown to be still residing with his family at Monticello, in 1900. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 612; M1091; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271.]
David Pennington, born about 1836; resident of Grayson County, Virginia; personal description, shown, in 1861, as dark hair, rather bald and with black whiskers; enlisted, at the fork of Wilson, Grayson County, in company D, 50th Virginia Infantry, and served as a sergeant; captured at Carnifix Ferry, Virginia, and sent as prisoner of war to Camp Chase, Ohio; later sent to the prison facility at Johnson's Island; on November 22, 1862, sent to Vicksburg, Mississippi, for exchange; received for exchange, aboard the steamer Charm, December 8, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 4, 1864, and ordered to report to commander Frederick Chatard of the Confederate Navy, at Orange Court House, Virginia. [Army service data, and transfer details provided by John Chapla, in an e-mail dated Saturday, March 8, 2008.]
Elijah Green Pennington, born 1841, in Vernon, Alabama; son of Benjamin Pennington, jr., and Sarah Luck Pennington; served in the Confederate States Navy; captured on the Mississippi River and sent to Fort Douglas, Chicago; enlisted in Union Navy, May 20, 1864; married Mary Ann Lee; died 1880; buried in the Tucker Cemetery, Campbell, Dunklin County, Missouri. [From Internet site Naval Veterans Buried in Missouri, at http://www.tri.net/~kheidel/mowar/veterans.html]
Benjamin F. Penny, born North Carolina, about 1845; son of William and Elizabeth Penny; resided in Brunswick County, North Carolina; enlisted at Camp Howard, North Carolina, July 18, 1861, as musician (drummer), company C, 30th Regiment North Carolina Troops; reported as absent without leave, December, 1862, but returned to his regiment prior to July 1, 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; served as landsman on the CSS Chicora, 1863-1864, and the CSS North Carolina, 1864; married about 1868; resided as a dry goods merchant, in 1900, with his wife, Mary F. Penny, and four children, at Wilmington, North Carolina; died February, 1918, at Northampton County, North Carolina. [NCT 8, 348; ORN 2, 1, 284, 294, 295 & 297; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; death details from the North Carolina Death Collection, 1908 - 1996, available at the Ancestry.com web site; Confederate States Navy subject file.]
John Penny, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 278.]
Thomas F. Penny, Seaman, CSS Sumter, deserted at Gibraltar, February, 1862. [ORN 1, 1, 661; CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
William Penny, served on the submarine defences of the James River, 1864; rated as gunner's mate from April 14, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 942.]
Antonio Pentz, Coal Heaver, CSS Georgia; shipped from the prize vessel, Dictator, in April, 1863. [ORN 1, 2, 812.]
Gustav A. Peple, born Belgium (Register1864 incorrectly shows place of birth as Virginia) about 1829; shown as a teacher, in 1860, residing at a boarding house in Richmond, Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as master not in line of promotion, July 20, 1863; served aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1863 - 1864; resided as a cotton mill manager, in 1870, with his wife, Sarah and two sons, at Richmond, Virginia; still shown as superintendent of the Marshall Cotton Mills, residing in Richmond, Virginia, in 1889. [ORN 2, 1, 299; Register1864; 1860 U.S. Census; 1870 U.S. Census; Richmond, Virginia City Directories, 1889 - 1890 at the Ancestry.com web site.]
Joseph H. Pepper, born North Carolina, January, 1845; served in the Confederate States Navy, as landsman aboard the CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; married in 1870, and resided as a pilot with his wife Ann and son, Elijah, at Federal Point, New Hanover County, North Carolina; applied for a post war Confederate pension from New Hanover County; still residing, as a fisherman, in 1900, with his family, at Masonboro township, New Hanover County, North Carolina; his widow, Anne E. Pepper, also later applied for a pension from the same county. [NC State Archives; ORN 2, 1, 277; 1870 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census.]
Nicholas Pepper, served in the Confederate States Marine Corps, and in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Resolute, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 371.]
George Percy, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama; captured by USS Kearsarge, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
J. Perkins, served in the Confederate States Navy, Mobile Squadron, 1864; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; detained on the USS Metacomet as being a suspicious character. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 646.]
Edward Perkinson, landsman, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 310.]
Lewis Perres (surname also shown as Perbe), born about 1830; personal description shown as 5 feet, 10 inches high, gray eyes, brown hair and light complexion; served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, at Drewry's Bluff, James River, Virginia, 1862; deserted from Drewry's Bluff, June, 1862; a reward of $30 was offered for his apprehension and delivery to the Marine Camp at Drewry's Bluff, June, 1862. [Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 12 and June 13, 1862.]
Edgar Felicien Perilloux, born Lafourche Parish, Louisiana, March 13, 1844; enlisted April 18, 1862, as private in Company E, 30th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy at Mobile, Alabama, February 15, 1864; served aboard the CSS Tennessee, and was captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; sent, as a prisoner of war, to New Orleans; escaped September 30, 1864, and ran the blockade October 10, 1864; then appointed ordinance sergeant in Frank Powers' Cavalry Regiment; paroled at Clinton, Louisiana, June, 1865; died Slidell, Louisiana, February 22, 1924. [Information supplied by Arthur Bergeron, Louisiana; much additional data supplied by Charles Hallal, in an e-mail message dated June 4, 2003, and obtained from a memorial letter sent by the Association of the Army of Tennessee, Louisiana Division to Perilloux's wife, upon his death.]
William H. Perine (surname also shown as Perrine), born New York, 1834; enlisted as 2nd corporal, company G, 2nd Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, April 16, 1861; detailed for duty at the Naval Department, Columbus, Georgia, January 26 - December 31, 1864; no later record; resided as a house carpenter, in 1880, with his wife, Caroline A. Perrine, and two daughters (eldest daughter born Georgia, 1875; youngest daughter born Alabama, 1877) at Atlanta, Georgia; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Fulton County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 753; Georgia Rosters 1, 411; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Franklin Perkins, served aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, about 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 650.]
John Perkins, resided in, and enlisted at Gaston County, North Carolina, July 30, 1861, aged 22, as private, company B, 28th Regiment North Carolina Troops; deserted on April 27, 1863, but returned to duty on an unspecified date; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 3, 1864. [NCT 8, 135.]
Jean Perres, recruited at Mobile, Alabama, by captain George P. Turner, into the Confederate States Marine Corps, May 24, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1047.]
Henry W. Perrin (first name also shown as Henri), born Louisiana; enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, May 11, 1861, as captain, company K, 2nd Louisiana Infantry; resigned February, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, as master not in line of promotion, February 18, 1862; served on the CSS Baltic, and at the Jackson station, 1862-1863; also served on the receiving vessel, CSS Dalman, 1862 - 1863; detached from duty in Alabama, on September 18, 1863, and was ordered to proceed to Wilmington, North Carolina, and await further orders; sent to Canada and Bermuda, by authority of the Confederate government; participated in the Johnson's Island expedition at the end of 1863; also served on the CSS Tennessee, and was captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; exchanged at New Orleans, March 4, 1865. [Booth 3, 114; ORN 1, 2, 824; 1, 21, 406 & 2, 1, 319; Register1863; Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XN- Naval stores afloat, Stores for ships (April, 1862 - December, 1863), page 922; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions (July, 1864 - Miscellaneous), page 970; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OM - Routine Operations; CSS Atlanta - Miscellaneous, pages 403 - 413.]
Marcus L. Perrin, enlisted at Munford, Alabama, 1862, in company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; discharged at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, June 19, 1863; appointed 2nd lieutenant, company H, 30th Alabama Infantry, at Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia; captured at Newnan, Georgia; paroled at Wedowee, Alabama, March, 1865. [ADAH - personal statement, Census Tax Assessor, St. Clair County, Alabama, 1907.]
W.H. Perrine, see W.H. Perine.
Manod Perris, Second Class Fireman, CSS Florida; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 256.]
Charles Perry, served as officers' steward aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1862 - 1863, and as ordinary seaman; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863. [ORN 1, 14, 268 and 2, 1, 304.]
Elisha R. Perry, born Perquimans County, North Carolina, about 1836; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Perquimans County, May 8, 1861, as private, company I, 17th Regiment North Carolina Troops (1st Organization); transferred to the Confederate States Navy prior to July 30, 1861; captured at Roanoke Island, February 8, 1862; exchanged August, 1862; resided as a farmer, in 1870, with his wife Mary A. Perry, and three children, at Hertford township, Perquimans County, North Carolina. [NCT 6. 185; 1870 U.S. Census.]
George A. Perry, served as private (?) in the Confederate States Navy; paroled at Ashland, Virginia, April 25, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 665.]
H.D. Perry, ordinary seaman, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 312.]
Jake W. Perry, born Shelby County, Alabama, May 7, 1845; enlisted in the Confederate States Navy, at Shelby County, 1864; served until paroled at the close of the war; resided, in 1921, at Calcis, Shelby County. [ADAH - 1921 Census of Confederate Soldiers.]
James Perry, private, Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the Georgia and South Carolina stations, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 317.]
John Perry, recruited as seaman aboard the CSS Virginia, James River, 1862, and received a bounty of $50; participated in the action at Hampton Roads, Virginia, March, 1862; sent from Drewry's Bluff, James River, to Saffold, Georgia, in November, 1862, for service aboard the CSS Chattahoochee; later served as boatswain's mate, aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, 1864; severely wounded in the taking out of the USS Water Witch, June 3, 1864; recommended for promotion by Secretary Mallory, for his part in this action, June 24, 1864; served, as acting boatswain, on CSS Macon, 1864-1865; assigned to the command of the Shell Bluff battery, near Augusta, Georgia, March 20, 1865. [ORN 1 15, 500, 502 & 504; 1, 16, 511; 1, 17, 864 and 2, 1, 304 & 309; CSN Register; CSS Macon Rolls; CSS Chatthoochee Muster Roll; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 244; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 878.]
John Perry, served as 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.]
William Perry, served as 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.]
William Perry, Captain of Forecastle, CSS Arkansas, killed in action, Yazoo River, July 15, 1862. [ORN 1, 19, 69.]
William Perry, served as acting master aboard the steamer CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions (July, 1864 - Miscellaneous), page 170.]
J.H. Pervey (surname also shown as Purvey), served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, in 1864, and also aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), Savannah, Georgia, 1864; transferred to the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, in 1864. [ORN 1, 17, 700; 2, 1, 283 and 286; DANFS; Confederate Navy Subject file, N - Personnel, NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 608.]
Cornelius Pervis, see Cornelius Purvis.
M.A. Peteit (surname also shown as Peteot), served as surgeon's steward aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), Savannah, Georgia, in 1863; transferred, in 1864, to the Wilmington station; also shown as having served on the Charleston station at an unspecified date. [ORN 2, 1, 287; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 235 and 519; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 1005.]
Antone Peter, served on the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 97 - 100.]
Henry Peter, served as landsman aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Pontchartrain, New Orleans station, 1862, and later in Arkansas waters, 1862 - 1863; deserted about February, 1862, but was apprehended by John Spellicy, and returned aboard the vessel on February 19, 1862, and for which Spellicy received a reward of $10 (see entry for Henry Peters, who may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 299; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 281.]
John Peterich, originally served as private, company A, 2nd Battalion, Alabama Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
G. Peters, Coxswain, CSS Chattahoochee, May, 1864. [ORN 1, 17, 700.]
Henry Peters, Landsman, captured at Arkansas Post, January 12, 1863 (see entry for Henry Peter, who may be the same person). [ORN 1, 24, 117.]
James Arthur Peters, born Tennessee; citizen of, and appointed from, Arkansas; previous service in the United States Navy, from September 20, 1860; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 3rd class, July 9, 1861; reported for duty aboard the side wheeled steam tug CSS Ellis, North Carolina, September 14, 1861; captured at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February, 1862 (one source shows captured at Island No. 10), and paroled; later served aboard the CSS Atlanta, Savannah station, 1862 - 1863; captured at Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; paroled at Fort Warren, September 28, 1864; exchanged at Cox's Wharf, Virginia, October 18, 1864; later promoted passed midshipman, Provisional Navy of the Confederate States; on temporary duty at Drewry's Bluff, James River, Virginia, February, 1865; served aboard the CSS Richmond; attached as 1st lieutenant, company I, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 1, 6, 783; 1, 11, 811; 1, 12, 187; 1, 14, 268 and 2, 1, 285; Scharf 391; Register1862; Register1863; CSNRegister; Fort Warren; Callahan; M1091.]
John Peters, enlisted in the Confederate States Navy on April 8, 1864; served as seaman aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, Chattahoochee River, 1864; transferred from the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah River, in September, 1864, to the Naval station at Wilmington, North Carolina. [ORN 2, 1, 283; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 575.]
John Peters, served as seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863; transferred to the Army as a deserter about December, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 308; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 283.]
William H. Peters, resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; appointed from Virginia; original service in the Virginia State Navy, 1861; appointed paymaster, Confederate States Navy; served at the Gosport Navy Yard, Virginia, 1861 - 1862; later Naval storekeeper at Gosport, and at Charlotte, North Carolina, 1862; later agent of the Confederate States Navy Department, at Wilmington, North Carolina, 1863 - 1865; member of Stonewall Camp, United Confederate Veterans, of Portsmouth, Virginia, in 1891. [JCC 2, 177; CSN Register; see also, page 625 of the publication, Reports of Cases in Prize, Argued and Determined in the Circuit and District Courts of the United States, for the Southern District of New York, 1861 - 1865, by Samuel Blatchford, published by the Government Printing Office, Washington, 1866; Norfolk County Record 22; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XN- Naval stores afloat, Stores for ships (April, 1862 - December, 1863), page 524.]
Andrew Peterson, 1st, served as seaman on Launch No. 5, New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 45.]
Andrew Peterson, 2nd, served as seaman on Launch No. 5, New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 45.]
Andrew G. Peterson, native of Finland (the CSS Gaines Medical Journal entry shows his place of birth as being England, about 1835); had served as a soldier of fortune in his native land; went to America at the start of the Civil War, and joined the Confederate States Navy; served as boatswain's mate aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; said to have been the last of the survivors of the battle between the CSS Virginia and the USS Monitor at Hampton Roads, March 9, 1862, when he died at Grass Valley, California, on Tuesday December 29, 1914, at the age of 80. [ORN 2, 1, 309; New York Times dated Thursday, December 31, 1914; CSS Gaines Medical Journal - Confederate States Navy subject file - MM (entry for Monday, August 31, 1863).]
C.J. Peterson, enlisted in the Confederate States Navy on April 8, 1864; served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, 1864; transferred from the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in September, 1864, to the Naval station at Wilmington, North Carolina. [ORN 1, 17, 700 and 2, 1, 283; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 575.]
Charles Peterson, served as 2nd class boy 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 76.]
Charles Peterson, served as seaman aboard the side-wheeled gunboat CSS Florida (later re-named CSS Selma), Mobile station, 1862 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 286 & 306; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1200.]
Christian Peterson, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, July 31, 1861, as private, company B, 20th Louisiana Infantry; was promoted sergeant at an unspecified date, but resigned from this rank, December 12, 1863; transferred to the Navy Department sometime in March or April, 1864, by order of General Johnston. [Booth 3, 122.]
Elijah Peterson, born Virginia, 1842; son of John and Susan Peterson; resided, in 1860, as an iron moulder, with his parents and siblings, at Front Royal, Warren County, Virginia; originally served as private, company I, 35th Battalion, Virginia Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date; continued to reside, as an iron moulder, with his wife Jennie, at Front Royal, after the war. [Civil War Service Records; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Fleet Peterson, born North Carolina, 1833; resided as a farm laborer, in 1860, with his wife, Matilda, and two daughters, at Little Coharie district, Sampson County, North Carolina; served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Arctic, in 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276; 1860 U.S. Census.]
John Peterson, shipped from the prize vessel, Constitution, in June, 1863, and served as seaman on the cruiser CSS Georgia; a list of "boarders" on the cruiser shows Peterson holding the position of tackleman at the 1st gun division. [ORN 1, 2, 815; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 604.]
John A. Peterson, born Norfolk, Virginia, May 25, 1846; enlisted at Savannah, Georgia, April 22, 1861, in the Confederate States Navy; served as 2nd class boy, and personal messenger to Commodores Tattnall and Hunter on the flagship (CSS Savannah), and later on the gunboat, CSS Resolute, Savannah River Squadron, Georgia; honorably discharged at Savannah, at the close of the war; residing in Jacksonville, Florida, in July, 1927; had also previously filed for a post war Confederate pension from Chatham County, Georgia. [Florida Confederate Pension File No. A08798; GA Pension Index 756; ORN 2, 1, 303.]
P.W. Peterson, originally served as private, company A, 1st (Charleston) Battalion, South Carolina Infantry; promoted corporal; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
William Peterson, 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 Peterson, served as surgeon's steward 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 1231.]
William H. Peterson, born in Rockland County, New York; pre-war occupation, dentist; enlisted in Craven County, North Carolina, May 14, 1862, as private, company I, 3rd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, December 26, 1863. [NCT 2, 251.]
M. A. Petite, served as ordinary seaman aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 517.]
Edward Petitory, served in company F of the Confederate States Marine Corps, at Mobile, Alabama, in 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1082.]
John Petrich, enlisted as 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 108.]
Sophianos Petris, served as seaman and ordinary seaman on the cruiser CSS Florida, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 357 and 364.]
Edmond Pettet, recruited as seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862, and received a bounty of $50. [ORN 2, 1, 310; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 878.]
James V. Pettet, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 128.]
F. M. Pettigrew (surname also shown as Pellegrew), served as ordinary seaman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in 1863; deserted from the vessel on March 25, 1863; his clothing and other effects were auctioned off to the rest of the crew on November 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523 and 528; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 471.]
John E. Pettijohn, born Delaware; aged 32 (in 1863); seaman and boatswain's mate, CSS Atlanta, 1862-1863; captured aboard that vessel, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; muster roll of the CSS Charleston, dated October 31, 1863, indicates that he also served aboard that vessel. [ORN 2, 1, 275 & 282; Atlanta Medical Journal, see entry for Friday, June 5, 1863.]
Levi Pevie, enlisted in New Hanover County, North Carolina, April 16, 1861, aged 18, as private, 2nd company H, 3rd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, August 10, 1863. [NCT 1, 486.]
Bartholemew Pexton, seaman, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]
Paley Peyton, shipped at Shreveport, Louisiana, for three years or the war, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, on February 23, 1864; served aboard the CSS Missouri, Shreveport, in 1864; rated as captain of hold from March 26, 1864; deserted at Shreveport on April 24, 1864, but returned aboard on July 1, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1015 and 1017; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 398; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 518.]
Andrew Pfeiffer, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama, 1863-4. [William Marvel.]
Daniel Pfister, see Thomas D. Fister.
Rogino Phalez, see Rofeno Fallos.
William M. Phalon, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 300.]
J.W. Phelps, 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.]
James A. Phelps, originally served as private, company I, 13th Virginia Cavalry; detached to the Confederate States Navy, October 7, 1863. [Nansemond.]
Jefferson Phelps, jr., born Virginia, 1844; son of teacher Elizabeth W. Phelps, who was originally a resident of Shepherdstown, Virginia, and later of Covington, Kentucky; citizen of, and appointed from, Kentucky; previous service in the United States Navy, from September 28, 1860, from which he resigned; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 4th class, July 8, 1861; served on the Richmond station, 1861 - 1862, and on the steamer CSS Patrick Henry, 1862 - 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 321; Register1863; Callahan; 1850 U.S. Census; 1860 U.S. Census; an image of Phelps is held at the United States Military History Institute at Carlisle, Pennsylvania.]
W. Phelps, landsman, Confederate States Navy; attached as 1st sergeant to company D, 1st Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865 (see next entry, which may be the same person). [M1091.]
W.H.M. Phelps, born in Meriwether County, Georgia, in 1836; Fourth Corporal, Company B, 13th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, July 8, 1861; transferred to CSS Alabama, Confederate Navy, December, 1863; naval records show W. Phelps, Landsman Semmes' Naval Brigade, was paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [Georgia Rosters, 2, 259.]
William H. Phelps, served aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864, and aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271.]
A.M. Philips (surname also shown as Phillips), 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.]
James M. Philips, enrolled November 1861; included in the Roll Confederate Navy of Florida. [Soldiers of Florida, 317.]
Felle Phillabert, pilot, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]
C. H. Phillipps (name also shown as C.A. Philips), served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, 1863; died on August 24, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, pages 35-37.]
B.C. Phillips, may have served in the Confederate States Navy; his widow, Martitia M. Waddill (who had later married Confederate States Navy veteran, Edmund Waddill), had applied for a post war Confederate pension from Moore County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives.]
B.F. Phillips, served as landsman aboard the CSS Virginia II, in 1865; was temporarily attached to the CSS Beaufort, but ordered to return to the CSS Virginia II, when the CSS Beaufort was sent to Richmond for repairs, on January 17, 1865; transferred, as seaman, to the steamer CSS Neuse, near Kinston, North Carolina, on February 15, 1865. [ORN 1, 12, 183; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 110.]
B.R. Phillips, landsman, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 312.]
Dan Phillips, indicated to have served as a marine, and on land; buried at the Catholic Cemetery, Galveston, Texas. [Galveston Daily News (Texas) dated Tuesday, May 31, 1887, page 1.]
Dinwiddie B. Phillips, born Virginia, 1826; previous service in the United States Navy, from November 8, 1847; original entry into Confederate States Navy service, as surgeon, June 10, 1861; served on the CSS Nashville, 1861; later served aboard the ironclad CSS Virginia, 1862, the CSS Richmond, 1862 - 1863, and on the Richmond station, 1861 - 1863; made out a monthly allotment of $90, on March 31, 1862, to Mrs. N. F. Phillips, at Richmond, Virginia; participated in the engagement at Hampton Roads, Virginia, aboard the CSS Virginia, March, 1862; served on the steamer, CSS Tennessee, Mobile station, 1863 - 1864; resided as a physician and farmer, in 1880, with his wife Nannie T. Phillips, and three children (eldest child born 1864) at Stonewall, Rappahannock County, Virginia. [ORN 1, 7, 47 and 2, 1, 308, 321 & 625; Register1863; Register1864; 1880 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 880.]
Eugene Phillips, born Louisiana, about 1848 (one source shows born Mobile, Alabama, about 1846, and another source states that he was a native of Washington, D.C.); son of Philip and Eugenia L. Phillips; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, March 19, 1863; served on the Mobile Squadron, and aboard the CSS Gaines, 1863-1864; subsequently sent to Battery Buchanan, at Wilmington, and Richmond, Virginia; at the evacuation of Richmond, Phillips served as one of the guard of the Confederate Treasury; resided as a dry goods clerk, in 1880, at New Orleans; shown, in 1892, as a member of the Army of Tennessee Association of Confederate Veterans, of New Orleans, Louisiana; died at the residence of his brother, John W. Phillips, New Orleans, Thursday, December 10, 1891; interred in the tomb of the Association of the Army of Tennessee, Louisiana Division, Camp No. 2, United Confederate Veterans. [Booth 3, 133; Register1864; 1880 U.S. Census; Daily Picayune (New Orleans) dated Friday, December 11, 1891, page 4, and Wednesday, January 13, 1892, page 3; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OO - Operations of large groups of vessels; Charleston - Miscellaneous, page 26.]
Frank Phillips, enlisted in the Confederate States Navy on April 8, 1864; served as seaman and ship's steward aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, 1864; transferred from the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in September, 1864, to the Naval station at Wilmington, North Carolina. [ORN 1, 17, 700 and 2, 1, 283; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 575.]
George M. Phillips, commanded an army transport in the Mexican War; commanded the Confederate States gunboat Stonewall Jackson, Mississippi River Defense Fleet, Louisiana, February 3, 1862 to July 1, 1862; died in New Orleans, May 26, 1881. [ORN 1, 18, 249; New York Times dated May 27, 1881; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XD - Claims, Miscellaneous, page 11; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
James M. Phillips, born Louisiana (birthplace also shown elsewhere in his pension record as England, September, 1837); resided in Florida since 1848; previous service in company H, 2nd Florida Infantry; enlisted, November, 1861, at St. Marks, Florida, aboard the CSS Spray; captured at St. Marks in 1865 (an official Confederate Navy document actually shows his year of capture as 1863) and imprisoned at Key West; was residing in Tampa, Florida, in 1902. [Florida Confederate Pension File No. A10967; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 814.]
Jerome B. Phillips, private, Confederate States Marine Corps, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 311.]
John Phillips, pilot, steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1861 - 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 301; DANFS.]
John Phillips, served as seaman 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.]
John C. Phillips, born North Carolina; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, June 20, 1863; ordered to report for duty aboard the CSS Georgia, Savannah station, in July, 1863; attached, as lieutenant, to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 1, 14, 726; Register1864; M1091.]
John L. Phillips, born Alabama; appointed acting master in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on November 2, 1861; served aboard the Confederate States floating battery New Orleans, off Columbus, Kentucky, aboard which he had reported for duty on November 4, 1861; later served at the Jackson station, and aboard the CSS Arkansas, 1862; involved in the action of July 15, 1862, when the Arkansas took passage from the Yazoo River, through the combined Union fleet above Vicksburg; commissioned lieutenant for the war, Confederate States Navy, January 7, 1864, to rank from May 25, 1863; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; served aboard the steamer, CSS Gaines, Mobile squadron, 1863 - 1864; commanded the steamer CSS Webb, Red River, Louisiana, 1864 - 1865; relieved of command of the CSS Webb, by lieutenant Charles W. Read, on March 31, 1865. [ORN 1, 19, 132; 1, 22, 168 and 2, 1, 319; ORA 1, 48/1; Register1864; JCC 4, 122; Charleston Courier dated Thursday, July 31, 1862; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 7; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 243.]
John W. Phillips, served as quartermaster aboard the CSS Sea Bird; captured at (Cobb's Point Battery) Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February, 1862; paroled and returned to Norfolk, Virginia, February 19, 1862. [Scharf, 392; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated February 19, 1862.]
John W. Phillips, private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314.]
John William Phillips, born about 1836 (age in 1913 shown as 77); served in the Confederate States Navy, under commander Lynch; applied to enter the Robert E. Lee Confederate Veterans' Home, Richmond, Virginia, in September, 1913, because of old age; place of residence at the time of admission shown as Accomack County, Virginia; died September 30, 1913; remains taken to Wachapreague, Virginia, for burial. [LVa.]
Joseph F. Phillips, born 1843, enlisted July 10, 1861, at Tampa, Florida, in Company K, 4th Florida Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 10, 1864. [Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 455.]
W.H. Phillips, enlisted from Talladega County, Alabama, February, 1861, in the 5th Alabama Infantry; transferred to the 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.]
William Phillips, 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 111.]
William F. Phillips, served as clerk to major A. S. Taylor, Confederate States Marine Corps quartermaster at Charleston, South Carolina, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OV - Miscellaneous; Charleston - Richmond (accounts), page 64 - 66.]
William H. Phillips, appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on August 8, 1861; served on the New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862, and aboard the CSS Pamlico in 1861; also on the Jackson station, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 318 & 320; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 259; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 245.]
William H. Phillips, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served aboard the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters, 1864 (see William H. Phipps, seaman, listed below, who may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 278 & 302.]
Thomas N. Philpot [middle initial also shown as S.], chief pilot on the Savannah River; pilot for the CSS Talomico, 1862, and the steamer Fingal, 1862; served aboard the CSS Macon, 1864 - 1865; resided, post war, at Augusta, Georgia. [CSS Macon Rolls; ORN 1, 16, 465 & 478; CSN Register; Weekly Georgia Telegraph (Macon, Georgia) dated October 1, 1869; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OM - Routine Operations; CSS Atlanta - Miscellaneous, page 669.]
William H. Phipps, born Liverpool, England; seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; also served as quartermaster aboard the steam gunboat CSS Raleigh, North Carolina and Virginia waters; later a 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 (see W.H. Phillips, landsman, listed above, who may be the same person). [ORN 1, 9, 746 and 2, 1, 277 & 301; deck log entries of the USS Sassacus dated May 5, 1864 and May 10, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 38.]
Jos. Pichford, sent from Charleston, South Carolina, to the Richmond station, and received aboard the CSS Hampton, James River squadron, on October 24, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 744.]
A.A. Pickens, resident of Georgia; served as 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.]
William Pickering, enlisted in the Confederate States Navy, as landsman aboard the CSS Tuscarora, New Orleans station, 1861; rated as officer's steward from November 1, 1861; also served aboard the CSS General Polk, 1861-1862; shown as a cabin steward aboard the vessel in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 476, 479-480 and 495; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 75, 874 and 876.]
George Picket, served as coal heaver on the submarine defences of the James River, 1864; rated as frigate's armorer from April 1, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 942.]
J.W. Pickett, originally served in company A, 23rd Alabama Volunteers; transferred from lieutenant general Polk's Army at Brandon, Mississippi, to the Confederate States Navy, by special order no. 309, Adjutant and Inspector General's office, dated at Richmond, Virginia, December 30, 1863, and ordered to report to flag officer William F. Lynch, at Wilmington, North Carolina; sent on to report to admiral Franklin Buchanan's command at Mobile, Alabama, by another order dated at Richmond, on January 7, 1864. [Confederate States Navy subject file N - NF - Distribution and Transfers.]
Thomas J. Pickett, resided in, and enlisted at, Orange County, North Carolina, September 10, 1861, aged 22, as private, company K, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, May 21, 1864. [NCT 2, 174.]
William Pickett, originally served as private, company G, 20th Texas Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Joseph Picketts, quarter gunner, side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 292.]
John Pickles (surname also shown as Pickels), private, company A, Confederate States Marine Corps, December, 1864; also served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Charleston, Charleston station in 1863-1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 133, 136-139 and 153.]
M. Piconella (first initial also shown as P.), served at the Mobile station, in 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.]
George Pielut, coal heaver, screw steamer CSS Torpedo, James River, Virginia, 1862 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 307.]
E.E. Pierce, served in the Confederate States Navy; his widow, Sarah Pierce, later applied for a post war Confederate pension from Pender County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives.]
F. S. Pierce, shipped at the Naval Rendezvous, Raleigh, North Carolina, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, on March 21, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 407.]
James C. Pierce, see James C. Peirce.
John Pierce, born Wake County, North Carolina; resided in Moore County, North Carolina, as a farmer; enlisted at Moore County, March 11, 1862, aged 44, as private, company H, 46th Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 1, 1864. [NCT 11, 215.]
John Pierce, seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]
Joseph Pierce (surname also shown as Peirce and Pearce), resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; master ship carpenter of the Gosport Navy Yard, prior to his service in the Confederate Navy; previous service in the Virginia Navy, 1861; appointed acting Naval constructor, Confederate States Navy, September 17, 1861; served at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Virginia, 1861 - 1862; then served on the New Orleans station, September 27, 1861, where he superintended the construction of the CSS Mississippi and the CSS Louisiana, and attended the destruction of the Mississippi; stated to have had "the reputation of being an active and efficient constructor" and was promised the position of full Naval constructor, by Secretary Mallory, but never received this position; also served on the Jackson station, 1862; later at Selma, Alabama, 1863 - 1864, and on the Mobile station, 1864; died at the Naval station at Charleston, South Carolina, October 20, 1864; buried at the St. John's Cemetery, Charleston. [ORN 1, 7, 786 and 2, 1, 318, 319, 540, 548 & 555; Register1862; Register1864; Booth 3, 143; Norfolk County Record 221 & 354; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, pages 204-218; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 247.]
Silvester Pierce (surname also shown as Pearce), born North Carolina, 1818; landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, at Boon Hill, Johnston County, North Carolina. [ORN 2, 1, 277; 1880 U.S. Census.]
William D. Pierce, enlisted at Mobile, Alabama, on October 26, 1863, as a private in company A, Confederate States Marine Corps; served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, James River squadron, in 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 464.]
William Washington Pierce, born Mobile County, Alabama, November 4, 1833; enlisted at Mobile, October, 1863, as private/seaman (?); re-enlisted, April, 1864, aboard the ram CSS Tennessee; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; imprisoned at Ship Island for 15 days, then sent to New Orleans; paroled April, 1865; resided in 1907 - 1908, at Theodore, Alabama. [ADAH - personal statement, census tax assessor, Mobile County, Alabama, 1907 - 1908.]
Denin Piercer, served as 2nd class fireman 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.]
John Piety, see John Peits.
J.E. Pigford, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]
J.W. Pilant, originally served as private, company D, Timmon's Regiment, Texas Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
George Pilert, served as armorer, Confederate States Navy; attached as private to company B, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091.]
J. J. Piles, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 552.]
W.B. Pilgrim, resident of Georgia; originally served aboard the ironclad battery, CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, Georgia; transferred to the CSS Atlanta, 1863; captured aboard that vessel at Wassaw Sound, Georgia, June 17, 1863. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Wednesday, May 27, 1863; see also the deck log for the USS Vermont, entry dated June 24, 1863; Daily Morning News (Savannah, Georgia) dated June 27, 1863.]
Edward Pinckney, landsman, ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), July, 1863 - September, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS.]
R.F. Pinckney, see Robert F. Pinkney.
Richard Hopson Pinckney (first name also shown as Robert, and middle initial also shown, incorrectly, as E.), born Grimes County, Texas, about 1847; enlisted, July 19, 1861, at Grimes County, as private, company G, 4th Texas Infantry; appointed Midshipman and transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 29, 1863; served on the CSS Patrick Henry, James River Squadron, Virginia, 1863 - 1864; resigned July, 1864, and joined the Confederate States Army, once again; served in Shannon's Scouts, Cavalry Detachment (identified as being a unit of the 8th Texas Cavalry Regiment), Johnston's Army; married Emma (maiden name not shown), January 21, 1875, at Waller County, Texas; died January 19, 1921, at Houston, Harris County, Texas. [Texas in the War, 1861-1865, 58; Register1864; pension files of Richard H. Pinckney, of Waller County, Texas, and Emma Pinckney, of Harris County, Texas.]
Roger Pinckney, born South Carolina; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 4th class, October 11, 1861, at Charleston, South Carolina; served on the Savannah station, 1861 - 1862; then on the Richmond station, and at Drewry's Bluff, 1862 - 1863; served aboard the school ship, CSS Patrick Henry, 1864; later on the ironclad ram CSS Chicora (which operated in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina), 1863 - 1864; also served aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864, and aboard the CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864; resided as a planter, in South Carolina, in the 1890's; shown, in 1907, as a resident of McPhersonville, South Carolina. [ORN 1, 10, 644 and 2, 1, 283, 321 & 322; Register1863; Register1864; New York Times dated July 9, 1893; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 848; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 249.]
Thomas C. Pinckney, born South Carolina, 1838; previous service in the 5th Regiment, South Carolina Infantry; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as midshipman, 4th class, December 20, 1861; served on the Jackson station, 1862; later on the Charleston station, 1862; afterward on the Richmond station, 1862 - 1863, served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, and the CSS Nansemond, 1864; served on the receiving ship CSS United States, and was at the capture of the USS Underwriter, on the James River; captured at Sailor's Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865; resided as a way bill clerk, in 1891, at San Francisco, California; still a resident of San Francisco, in 1907. [ORN 1, 10, 642 and 2, 1, 317, 319 & 321; Register1863; Register1864; see also article titled List of Confederate Officers captured at Sailor's Creek, VA., April 6, 1865, published in the New York Herald, dated April 9, 1865; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated August 11, 1864; 1870 U.S. Census; San Francisco, California Directories, 1889 - 1891 at the Ancestry.com web site; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2.]
E. F. Pinelloux, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 552.]
John Pingelly, see John H. Pengally.
Thomas Pinhorn, landsman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 300; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 484 - 487.]
H. Pinkney, passed midshipman, Provisional Navy of the Confederate States; attached, as captain, commanding company H, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091.]
Robert F. Pinkney (surname also shown as Pinckney), born Maryland, about 1816; previous service in the United States Navy, as midshipman, from December 1, 1827; shown residing, as a United States Naval captain, in 1860, with his wife, Henrietta, mother Rebecca, and other relatives, at Baltimore, Maryland; resigned as commander in the United States Navy, April 23, 1861; appointed commander, Confederate States Navy, June 24, 1861; commanded Fort Norfolk, Virginia, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel (an act of the Confederate Congress allowed army rank to Naval officers who were on duty with the army); attached to the Jackson station, 1862; commanded the CSS Livingston, Mississippi River, 1862; commanded side wheeled steamer CSS Resolute, Savannah river area, Georgia, 1862 - 1863; promoted captain, Provisional Navy, to rank from May 13, 1863; ordered to the command of the ironclad ram CSS Savannah, Savannah River, Georgia, July, 1863; detached from the command of the CSS Savannah, and ordered to proceed to Halifax, North Carolina, April 12, 1864; in command of the Naval defenses of North Carolina, 1864 - 1865, and also served aboard the CSS Neuse, in 1864; present at the bombardment of Fort Fisher, December, 1864; enrolled as colonel in Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; took the oath at Baltimore on June 20, 1865; filed for a Presidential pardon on September 22, 1865. [ORN 1, 11, 365; 1, 14, 726; 1, 15, 725; 1, 22, 750 and 2, 1, 303, 304 & 318; JCC 4, 121; M1091; Register1863; Callahan; 1860 U.S. Census; Norfolk County Record 239; Presidential pardons at Ancestry.com; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1234.]
William E. Pinkney (surname also shown as Pinckney), born Louisiana, 1842; (36th Congress Report 25 shows he was a citizen of Florida) previous service in the United States Navy, as midshipman, from September 23, 1858; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 1st class, May 8, 1861; resigned from the service on March 18, 1863. [1860 U.S. Census; Register1862; Register 1863; Callahan; 36th Congress Report 25; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330.]
Charles L. Pioger, served as clerk at the Naval Storekeeper's office at Charlotte, North Carolina, in 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations; PB - Administration of stations; Albany - Charlotte, page 540.]
Charles Piper, enlisted as landsman, 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 Moss Pipkin, born Missouri, September, 1843; son of attorney at law Philip, and Sophia B. Pipkin; resided, in 1850, with his parents and siblings, at Jefferson County, Missouri; pre-war, attended the United States Naval Academy, class of 1859, but resigned later; previous Confederate service as private, company E, 2nd Missouri Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, date unknown; married in 1868; post-war, practiced law in Missouri, till about 1880, after which he deserted his wife and two children to become a miner in Idaho, where he is believed to have died circa 1919. [Callahan; additional information from "My Fifty Years in the Navy," by Charles E. Clark, reprinted 1984, by the Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, page 8n; Civil War Service Records; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census.]
John H. Pippen, Clerk, paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865. [Porter's Naval History, 785.]
J. L. Pires, 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.]
Samuel W. Pitchford, born North Carolina, 1847; served in the Confederate States Navy; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife Emma, and three children (eldest child born 1870) at Fork, Warren County, North Carolina; his widow, Emma Pitchford, later applied for a post war Confederate pension from Warren County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Lorenzo D. Pitt, born Nansemond County, Virginia, about 1840; resided, with his siblings, at the home of Joseph and Lydia Outland, in 1850; resided as an apprentice painter, in 1860, at Portsmouth, Virginia; originally served as private, company D (Virginia Artillery), 9th Virginia Infantry, 1861; transferred to the Confederate States Navy; served as ordinary seaman aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862; later promoted to acting master's mate, and served aboard the CSS Albemarle, 1864; married October, 1869; resided as a painter, in 1870, with his wife, Henrietta, at Portsmouth, Virginia. [ORN 1, 10, 718 and 2, 1, 274 & 309; 1850 U.S. Census; 1860 U.S. Census; 1870 U.S. Census; Norfolk County Record 77.]
F. O. Pittman, recruited as seaman at the Naval rendezvous, Kinston, North Carolina, on May 2, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 955.]
Frank W. Pittman, originally served as private, company H, 15th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date, and served as captain of forecastle aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, in 1864. [Civil War Service Records; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1233.]
James M. Pittman, private, company B, Confederate States Marine Corps; served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864, and also 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 850.]
Stephen Pittman, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 278.]
John Pitts, seaman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 279.]
John H. Pitts, native of England; captured from the brig Susan, November 10, 1864, by the CSS Shenandoah, and shipped. [Whittle 66.]
John Pitz, ordinary seaman, originally served aboard the CSS Chicora, Charleston Squadron; captured September 7, 1863, and sent north as a prisoner of war; exchanged and arrived in Richmond, Virginia, October 26, 1864, then sent for service aboard the ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 312; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 145.]
Francis L. Place, midshipman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1864; also served aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, 1865; captured at Sailor's Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865. [ORN 1, 12, 187 and 2, 1, 300; 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.]
Jonas Plahers (surname also shown as Plahn), served as seaman at the New Orleans station, 1861, and aboard the CSS Pamlico from October 15, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 54 and 268.]
F. Planguist, see Francis Palinquist.
Abraham Plank, enlisted at Mobile, Alabama, on March 21, 1864, as a private in company A, Confederate States Marine Corps; served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, James River squadron in 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 461.]
Samuel P. Platt, born North Carolina, 1839; son of William and Margaret Platt; resident of Smithville district, Brunswick County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation as mariner; served as pilot aboard the CSS Arctic, 1863; resided as a steamboat captain, in 1870, with his wife Josephine, and two children, at Wilmington, North Carolina. [ORN 2, 1, 276; 1850 U.S. Census; 1860 U.S. Census; 1870 U.S. Census.]
Samuel Platte, 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.]
John Pledge, served as ordinary seaman at the New Orleans station in 1861, and later aboard the CSS Arkansas; wounded in action, Yazoo River, July 15, 1862; later served as captain of the main top aboard the ironclad ram CSS Chicora, at Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 1, 19, 69 and 2, 1, 284; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 85.]
John Plunkett, served as landsman aboard the CSS Mobile, in 1861; rated as coal heaver on November 5, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1027.]
Tobias A. Plyler (surname also shown as Plyer), born about 1823; resided as a farmer, in 1860, with his wife, Mary, and five children, at Stanly County, North Carolina; served as seaman (one source also shows rating as ordinary seaman) aboard the CSS Arctic and the CSS Neuse, 1864; transferred, about September or October, 1864, as private, to company C, 13th Battalion North Carolina Light Artillery; paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, May 1, 1865. [1860 U.S. Census; ORN 2, 1, 276; NCT 1, 574; see also Record Group 45, entry 419 - "Muster Rolls and Pay Rolls of Vessels of the Confederate States Navy," in the collections of the National Archives, Washington, D.C; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1232.]