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James M. Small (first initial also incorrectly shown as S.), served aboard the CSS Indian Chief; sent from Charleston, South Carolina, to the Richmond station, and received aboard the CSS Hampton, James River squadron, on October 24, 1864; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Rockingham County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 744.]
Anthony Smalley, served as a private in company C, 19th Battalion Virginia Artillery; 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.]
D.J. Smart, indicated as being a "Southern Sailor;" died August 15, 1896; buried Gilead Cemetery, Simpson, Johnson County, Illinois. [Information from web site "List of Known Confederate Veterans buried in Illinois," compiled by Gale F. Red, at URL: http://www.illinoishistory.com/csa-veterans-illinoisburials.htm.]
John Smidt, originally served as private, company C, 2nd Battalion, Alabama Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
---- Smith, pilot, CSS Governor Moore, April, 1862. [ORN 1, 18, 307.]
---- Smith, pilot;served aboard the CSS Chickamauga, September-December, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 710.]
A. D. Smith, served at the Mobile station, in 1863, as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1061.]
A.L. Smith, served as seaman aboard the CSS Albemarle, and was involved in the engagements at Plymouth and in Albemarle Sound, North Carolina, 1864; resided at Charlotte, North Carolina, in 1907. [Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2.]
Adolph Smith, Seaman, CSS Selma, captured at Mobile Bay, Alabama, August 5, 1864, and sent aboard the USS Port Royal, as a prisoner of war. [ORN 1, 21, 844.]
Albert L. Smith, enlisted at Richmond, Virginia, on April 28, 1864, as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, James River squadron, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 461.]
Andrew Smith, enlisted as landsman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile Squadron, June 15, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 110.]
C. Smith , seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at an unnamed place, September 12, 1863; sent to Point Lookout, Maryland, then to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, where he was received September 23, 1864; exchanged October 1, 1864. [Fort Warren.]
Charles Smith, received aboard the CSS Huntress, Charleston station, on June 19, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 750.]
Charles Smith, born Louisiana, resided in New Orleans; pre-war occupation, mechanic; marital status, single; enlisted at New Orleans, April 28, 1861, as private, company K, 1st (Nelligan's) Louisiana Infantry; promoted corporal at an unspecified date; promoted sergeant, April 28, 1862; wounded in action, and captured at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July, 1863; exchanged at City Point, Virginia, October 28, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy on the recommendation of a Medical Examination Board, as being unfit for field service, October 31, 1864. [Booth3, 603.]
Charles Smith, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS Morgan, at the Mobile station, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1063 and 1181.]
Charles Smith, served as seaman aboard the CSS Palmetto State, Charleston station, South Carolina, in 1862; discharged, by order of flag officer Ingraham, from the Naval service, at Charleston, on December 31, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 245.]
Charles Smith, served as seaman aboard the CSS New Orleans, 1861; rated as quartermaster from November 14, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 369.]
Charles H. Smith, Private in Company A, 29th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, July 26, 1861; returns for the unit, dated May 1, 1863, show he was "detailed carpenter on gunboat at Savannah, Georgia, April 7, 1862. [Georgia Rosters, 3, 435.]
Clark Smith, officers' steward, CSS Macon, 1865. [CSS Macon Rolls.]
Cullen Smith, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
D. Smith, served as landsman, 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.]
Daniel Smith, served aboard the CSS Richmond, James River squadron, 1865; deserted about February, 1865, and went into Union lines, where he was sent to the provost marshal, Army of the James, and then sent aboard the USS Onondaga, on February 15, 1865, for interrogation. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 321.]
Daniel W. Smith, resident of Baltimore, Maryland; appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer, Confederate States Navy, about April or May, 1863; served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, 1863; died of consumption (phthisis pulmonalis), at Petersburg, Virginia, Monday, November 16, 1863 (a naval document indicates his date of death as being on November 17, 1863); remains interred at Petersburg. [Daily Richmond Examiner (Richmond, Virginia) dated Thursday, November 19, 1863; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 248.]
Edward Smith, served as landsman at the New Orleans station in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 91.]
Edward Smith, seaman, CSS Atlanta, 1862-1863. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Tuesday, January 20, 1863; ORN 2, 1, 275.]
Edward Smith, served as a private in company G, 1st Georgia Regulars; 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.]
Eugene M. Smith, Warrant Master's Mate, CSS Virginia, May, 1864; CSS Beaufort, February, 1865. [ORN 1, 10, 671; 1, 11 692 and 1, 12, 187.]
Eugene R. Smith, previous service as captain of company B, 25th Tennessee Infantry; later served as 2nd lieutenant of the Confederate States Marine Corps; commanded the marine guard aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, in 1864-1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 266; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 682.]
Frank Smith, Pilot, CSS Webb, February, 1863. [ORN 1, 24, 407.]
Frank Smith, listed on a Roll of Confederate Prisoners of War paroled at Alexandria, Louisiana, June 28, 1865, as being a private [?] in the Confderate States Navy; resident of New Orleans, Louisiana. [Booth 3, 608.]
George Smith, captain of top, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863; later served on the CSS Savannah. [ORN 2, 1, 304; CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll.]
George Smith, yeoman, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]
George Smith, originally served as private, company F, 23rd Virginia Cavalry (see also, 41st Battalion, Virginia Cavalry); transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
George Smith, enlisted for the war, as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, at Charleston, South Carolina, on September 15, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 186.]
George Smith, served aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1864-1865; rated as quarter gunner from January 1, 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 268 and 270-271.]
George Smith, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Jamestown, James River squadron, 1861-1862; rated as 1st class fireman from January 1, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 947.]
George Smith, 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.]
George A. Smith, served as private, company B (Virginia Riflemen), 3rd Virginia Regiment; transferred to the Confederate States Navy. [Norfolk County Record 56.]
George G. Smith, served as landsman on the CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; deserted about February, 1862, but was apprehended by (policeman?) James Morrison, and returned to the Naval authorities at New Orleans, on February 13, 1862, and for which Morrison collected a reward of $10. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 88; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 323.]
George H. Smith, served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps aboard the CSS Tennessee, 1864; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864; held as a prisoner of war aboard the USS Lackawanna, at Mobile Bay, August 7, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 463.]
George W. Smith, born Virginia; appointed master not in line of promotion, November 28, 1863; served aboard the CSS Torpedo, 1864; also served on the CSN Submarine Battery Defenses, James River, Virginia, April, 1864; involved in an unsuccessful torpedo attack on the USS Minnesota, off Newport News, Virginia, April 9, 1864; noted to have no knowledge of the duties of the master of a ship; ordered to relieve boatswain Gauley at Semmes Submarine Torpedo Battery, January, 1865 (see next entry, which may be the same person). [ORN 1, 9, 604 and 1, 11, 664; Register1864.]
George W. Smith, originally served as private, company A, 5th Virginia Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date (see previous entry, which may be the same person). [Civil War Service Records.]
George W. Smith, Seaman, Florida Volunteer Coast Guards, mustered in January 1, 1862. [Soldiers of Florida, 49.]
H. Smith, Boatswain's Mate, CSS Roanoke, July, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 727.]
H. Smith, served in company B, Confederate Naval service (?); filed for a post war Confederate pension from Fulton County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 875.]
H.A. Smith, served as landsman aboard the CSS Isondiga, 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; Confederate States Navy subject files - N Personnel - NI - Promotions.]
Heman S. Smith (middle initial also shown as L.), appointed from Louisiana, as gunner, Confederate States Navy, January 14, 1864; served aboard the CSS Tennessee, from February 16, 1864; 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; paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865. [ORN 1, 21, 406, 841 - 842 & 934; Porter's Naval History, 785; Register1864.]
Henry Smith, left London, England on January 21, 1864, for Brest, France, where he was shipped for service aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, as seaman, on January 24, 1864; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 256; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 353.]
Henry Smith, enlisted in Beaufort County, North Carolina, July 4, 1861, aged 38, as private, company G, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 1, 1862. [NCT 2, 155.]
Henry Smith, 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.]
Henry Smith, served as a sergeant in the Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station, 1864; on recruiting duty with lieutenant Venable, in March, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 454; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 293.]
Henry Smith, served as gunner's mate aboard the CSS Roanoke, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 542.]
Henry Smith, enlisted as seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile Squadron, May 29, 1862; rated as ship's cook on July 17, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 108.]
Henry A. Smith, served in the Confederate States Navy; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Columbus County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives.]
Henry J. Smith, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 83.]
Henry S. Smith, served at the New Orleans station, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 115.]
Ira E. Smith, Assistant Surgeon; appointed from Georgia. [Georgia in the War, 1861-1865, page 113.]
J.A. Smith, see John E. Smith.
J. W. Smith, born Nova Scotia, about 1833; enlisted at Shreveport, Louisiana on March 4, 1862, or at New Orleans, Louisiana, March 14, 1862, as a private in company A, 25th Louisiana Infantry; enlisted by Naval lieutenant W. W. Carnes, on April 9, 1864, at Dalton, Georgia, for service as landsman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; transferred to the CSS Isondiga, Savannah squadron on April 21, 1864. [Booth 3, 615; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 538-540, 542 and 803.]
J.W. Smith, CSS Tennessee; buried at Ship Island Cemetery, Mississippi (cemetery no longer extant, due to the action of storms). [John E. Ellis.]
J.W. Smith, CSS Atlanta, 1863. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Saturday, June 13, 1863.]
J. Maffitt Smith, Paymaster's Clerk, paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865. [Porter's Naval History, 785.]
Jacob Smith, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, and aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River squadron, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 275.]
Jacob Smith, served as landsman aboard the receiving vessel, CSS St. Philip, 1861; rated as hospital/surgeon's steward from July 1, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 555, 557 and 561.]
James Smith, Private, CSMC, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
James Smith, Captain of Forecastle, CSS Alabama; born Liverpool; deserted December 23, 1863, at Singapore. [William Marvel.]
James Smith, served in the Confederate States Navy; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Davidson County, North Carolina; his widow, Mary A. Smith, also later applied for a pension from the same county. [NC State Archives.]
James Smith, served as boatswain's mate aboard the CSS Lady Davis; involved in the capture of the prize vessel, A.B. Thompson, May 19, 1861; received the sum of $228.26, as his share in the capture of that vessel; deserted from the CSS Lady Davis about July, 1861, but was apprehended and lodged in the Savannah jail before being turned over to the custody of Naval authorities on July 23, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, page 1; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 405.]
James Smith, enlisted for three years or the war, as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, at Charleston, South Carolina, on July 8, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 164.]
James Smith, served as quartermaster aboard the CSS Indian Chief, Charleston station. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 81.]
James Smith, shipped aboard the CSS Huntress, Charleston station, for three years, on May 29, 1862, as boatswain's mate. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 749.]
James Smith, 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.]
James Smith, recruited as seaman at the Confederate States Naval rendezvous, in Richmond, Virginia, on October 31, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 448.]
James Smith, served as seaman aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, 1862; honorably discharged from the Naval service on May 19, 1862; re-enlisted for three years or the war on May 29, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 950.]
James B. Smith, appointed captain aboard the Confederate States gunboat John C. Breckinridge, of the Mississippi River Defense Fleet, 1862. [ORN 1, 18, 249; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 263.]
James E. Smith, served as landsman at the New Orleans station in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 88.]
James E. Smith, recruited as landsman at the Confederate States Naval rendezvous, in Richmond, Virginia, on October 31, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 448.]
James F. Smith, served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, and in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Richmond, James River, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 70; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 390.]
James M. Smith, Seaman, CSS St. Nicholas, June, 1861. [ORN 1, 4, 555.]
James M. Smith, served as boatswain's mate at the Richmond station, in 1861; later as acting boatswain, he was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863; appointed boatswain, Confederate States Navy, September 26, 1863; served on the Charleston squadron, 1863 - 1864; commanded a picket boat involved in the capture of several Union Navy personnel, February 26, 1864. [CSN Register; Register1864; ORN 1, 15, 345; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 484 - 487.]
James W. Smith, ordinary seaman, Confederate States Navy; captured at Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and exchanged. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 553.]
Jerry Smith, indicated to have served as captain in the Confederate Marine service; buried at the City Cemetery, Galveston, Texas. [Galveston Daily News (Texas) dated Tuesday, May 31, 1887, page 1.]
Job Smith, recruited aboard the CSS Resolute in 1863; later served as ordinary seaman; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863. [ORN 1, 14, 268; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 375.]
John Smith, Seaman, CSS Sumter, born England, shipped at Curacao, July, 1861; deserted at Trinidad, August, 1861. [ORN 1, 1, 633; CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
John Smith, CSS Albemarle, May, 1864; highly praised by commander James W. Cooke, CSS Albemarle, for his actions on May 5, 1864. [ORN 1, 9, 770; see also article on CSS Albemarle, page 2, Richmond, Virginia, Sentinel, Monday, May 23, 1864.]
John Smith, Seaman, CSS Arctic, August, 1862. [ORN 1, 23, 703.]
John Smith, served as captain of afterguard aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1233.]
John Smith, served as seaman aboard the CSS Fanny, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 330.]
John Smith, Quartermaster, CSS Atlanta, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 275.]
John Smith, of foreign birth, but had a wife in Savannah in 1863); aged 23 (in 1863); described as 5 feet 5 inches high, light hair, dark eyes and complexion; served aboard the CSS Atlanta; deserted in June, 1863, and a reward of $50 was offered for his apprehension and delivery, or confinement in jail. [Daily Morning News (Savannah, Georgia) dated Tuesday, June 16, 1863; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 486.]
John Smith, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Alabama, 1863-4; captured by USS Kearsarge, June 19, 1864, off Cherbourg, France. [William Marvel.]
John Smith, enlisted at Rappahannock, Virginia, March 2, 1862, as private, company H, 7th Louisiana Infantry; wounded at Fredericksburg, Virginia, May 4, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy sometime between September, 1863 and February, 1864. [Booth 3, 618.]
John Smith, enlisted in New Hanover County, North Carolina, December 31, 1861, as private, Captain William C. Howard's Cavalry Company; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, May 3, 1862. [NCT 2, 716.]
John Smith, resided in Virginia; enlisted at Petersburg, Virginia, July 17, 1862, aged 36, as private, company G, 43rd Regiment North Carolina Troops; enlisted as substitute for private John W. Pattillo of the same company; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, January 10, 1865. [NCT 10, 357.]
John Smith, previous service in Company M, 26th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, as Private, August 13, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April, 1864; served as Seaman on CSS Arctic in 1864. [Georgia Rosters, 3, 277.]
John Smith, born Ireland; aged 34; ordinary seaman, Launch No. 2; discharged from Naval service, February 8, 1862, after being admitted to the hospital vessel, CSS St. Philip, January 12, 1862, for neuralgia B. (?). [St. Philip.]
John Smith (used the surname of Hiddle, as an alias), acting chief engineer ; attempted to seize steamer, Salvador, running from Panama to the port of San Francisco; captured by the USS Lancaster, November, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 302 & 355.]
John Smith, 1st, served aboard the cruiser CSS Georgia, in 1863; a list of "boarders" aboard the cruiser shows Smith at the 2nd gun division. [Confederate Navy Subject file, N - Personnel, NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 604.]
John Smith, 2nd, served aboard the cruiser CSS Georgia, in 1863; a list of "boarders" aboard the cruiser shows Smith as powderman at the 3rd gun division. [Confederate Navy Subject file, N - Personnel, NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 604.]
John Smith, recruited as ordinary 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.]
John Smith, served as ward room steward, at Mobile, Alabama, in 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1085.]
John Smith, enlisted by captain Holmes, at New Orleans, Louisiana, on April 29, 1861, as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the Richmond station, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 468.]
John Smith, served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, 1863; listed as missing from the vessel as of March 15, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 596.]
John Smith, enlisted as seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile Squadron, June 11, 1862; rated as captain of forecastle on June 12, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 108.]
John Smith, appointed first officer aboard the Confederate States gunboat General Lovell, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, February 23, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 264.]
John E. Smith (name shown, in ORN 2, 1, 307, as J.A. Smith), born 1845; seaman, CSS North Carolina; ordinary seaman, CSS Tallahassee, 1864; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Granville County, North Carolina; also applied to the Home for the Disabled; died 1914; buried at Oakwood Cemetery, Raleigh, North Carolina. [John E. Ellis; ORN 2, 1, 294-296 and 307; NC State Archives.]
John E. Smith, originally served as private, Independent Grays, company H, 6th Virginia Infantry; promoted corporal; 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 aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865. [Civil War Service Records; Norfolk County Record 278; 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.]
John H. Smith, born and resided in Martin County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Martin County, April 16, 1862, aged 19, as private, company E, 55th Regiment North Carolina Troops; hospitalized several times at Richmond, mainly for dyspepsia; source indicates that he may have been transferred to the Confederate States Navy. [NCT 13, 482.]
John H. Smith, seaman, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863; also served on CSS Savannah. [ORN 2, 1, 304; CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll.]
John H. Smith, indicated to have served as an engineer (name not listed in any sources for Confederate States Navy officers) aboard the Oregon, which may or may not have been a vessel in Confederate Navy service; resided, in August, 1902, at Avondale, Alabama; applied for a Confederate pension from Jefferson County, Alabama; age shown as 78 (in 1902). [ADAH.]
John P. Smith, served as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy, 1863; deserted about February, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 325.]
John S. Smith, originally served as private, Captain Jones' Company, Texas Light Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
John W. Smith, 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.]
Joseph Smith, born Ireland, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, laborer; marital status, married; enlisted at Camp Moore, Louisiana, June 19, 1861, aged 30, as corporal (later promoted sergeant), company D, 8th Louisiana Infantry; deserted in the summer of 1862, and joined the Confederate States Navy. [Booth 3, 621.]
Joseph Smith, enlisted at Mobile, Alabama, for the war, as landsman in the Confederate States Navy, on April 5, 1864; sent aboard the receiving vessel CSS Danube; transferred to the CSS Morgan, at Mobile, on May 13, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1196 - 1199.]
Joseph C. Smith, born Rutherford County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Rutherford County, October 6, 1861, aged 23, as sergeant, company I, 34th Regiment North Carolina Troops; reduced to private sometime in March or April, 1862; promoted sergeant sometime between May, 1862 and February, 1863; reduced to private, again, sometime in September or October, 1863; absent without leave, October 5, 1863, but returned to duty at an unspecified date; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 3, 1864. [NCT 9, 340.]
Joseph W. Smith, landsman, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll.]
Joshua Smith, appointed, for one year, as 1st assistant engineer aboard the cruiser CSS Nashville, Charleston, South Carolina, on September 23, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1227.]
Joshua Smith, Chief Engineer, CSS Savannah, November, 1861. [See article "THE REBEL NAVY" in the Richmond, Virginia, Daily Examiner, Friday, November 29, 1861, page 1.]
Josiah Washington Smith (first name also shown as John), served as landsman aboard the CSS Isondiga, and the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, 1863; died July 13, 1863; buried Laurel Grove Cemetery, Savannah, Georgia, on July 14, 1863; Smith's married (and widowed) sister, Elizabeth S. Syms, declared herself to be Smith's lawful heir, received the balance of pay due to the deceased sailor, on August 31, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 289; Daily News and Herald (Savannah, Georgia) dated May 19, 1866; Honeycutt; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, pages 250-255; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 40.]
Julian Smith, served as paymaster's clerk in the Confederate States Navy; sent aboard the CSS Sampson, at Augusta, Georgia, as a paroled prisoner, April 12, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 182.]
Julius J. Smith, previously served as Private, Company B, 8th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, August 1, 1861; 2nd Battalion Georgia Cavalry, February 26, 1862, and 5th Regiment Georgia Cavalry, December, 1862; detailed as clerk in Office Chief Surgeon, Savannah, Georgia, January 1, 1863; transferred to Confederate States Navy, June 18, 1863, and was appointed paymaster's clerk, by assistant paymaster Charles W. Keim, aboard the CSS Savannah on June 20, 1863; captured at Savannah River, Georgia, while serving as paymaster's clerk on CSS Resolute, December 13, 1864; also shown as paymaster's clerk on CS Tender Sampson; paroled at Fort Delaware, and sent to City Point, Virginia, for exchange, February 27, 1865; paroled at Thomasville, Georgia, May 13, 1865; personal description at the time of his parole shown as blue eyes, light hair, fair complexion, and standing 5 feet 6 inches tall; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Chatham County, Georgia. [Georgia Rosters 1, 932; GA Pension Index 876; ORN 2, 1, 303; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 184; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (A - K), page 680.]
Leon Smith, commanded naval forces in Texas; was offered an appointment in the Confederate States Navy, but did not accept. [ORN 1, 3, 380.]
Montgomery Smith, 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.]
Nelson Smith, served as pilot aboard the CSS Jackson, New Orleans station, for a brief period in November, 1861; running from New Orleans to Memphis. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 888.]
P.W. Smith, Seaman, CSS Virginia II, wounded in action, James River, January 24, 1865. [ORN 1, 11, 689.]
Patrick Smith, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 38.]
Patrick Smith, seaman on the CSS Chicora, Charleston Squadron; 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; subsequently served aboard the CSS Virginia II, James River squadron. [Fort Warren; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated October 20, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 145.]
Peter Smith, born Denmark, about 1814; served as seaman aboard the CSS Jackson, New Orleans station, in 1861; rated quartermaster aboard the vessel on July 1, 1861. [St. Philip; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 870.]
Peter Smith, originally served as private, company K, 1st (McCreary's) South Carolina Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Peter Smith, originally served as private, company G, 8th Alabama Infantry; promoted corporal; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Peter W. Smith, resident of Virginia; served as acting master in the Confederate States Navy; shown as being in command of the Guard Boat in February, 1862; member of the Confederate Submarine Battery Service; captured at Jones' Point, James River, Virginia, May 6, 1864, and sent to Fort Lafayette, New York Harbor; transferred to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, September 18, 1864; exchanged October 1, 1864; assigned to temporary command of CSS Torpedo, in the absence of lieutenant Bell, sick, January, 1865; Smith allowed his servant, Richard Cook, to enlist in the Confederate States Navy, to permit him to accompany him on shipboard; paroled at Williamsburg, Virginia, May 3, 1865. [Fort Warren; ORN 1, 10, 10 and 1, 11, 664; Richmond Dispatch dated October 4, 1902, page 1; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water - Water for ships, page 647; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 669.]
Philip C. Smith, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, on May 29, 1861; served in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River squadron, in 1862; later promoted sergeant in the Confederate States Marine Corps, 1864, and served in the Marine Guard aboard the CSS Richmond, James River, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 70; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 285 and 390.]
R. H. Smith, served in the Confederate States Naval Battalion, at the fall of Richmond; deserted and surrendered himself aboard the USS Onondaga, on the James River, on April 4, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 554.]
R. J. Smith, enlisted as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy on October 6, 1863, and served at the Savannah squadron, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 640.]
Robert Smith, Second Assistant Engineer, CSS Georgia, resigned at Simon's Bay, August 26, 1863. [ORN 1, 2, 816.]
Robert Smith, appointed acting boatswain in the Confederate States Navy; served at the Gosport Navy Yard, 1861, and on the Red River defences, 1863; detached and ordered to Greenville, Alabama on April 24, 1863; served on the CSS Baltic, Mobile squadron, 1863; resigned September 4, 1863. [CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330.]
Robert J. Smith, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at Savannah, on April 20, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 586; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 417.]
Russell Smith, served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 630.]
Samuel Smith, enlisted for the war, in the Confederate States Navy, on May 4, 1864; served as seaman aboard the CSS Isondiga, Savannah Squadron; died of congestive chill, aboard the vessel, on October 26, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 257.]
Samuel B. Smith, served as a private in company C of the Confederate States Marine Corps, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 2.]
Samuel W. Smith, born, resided in, as a farmer, and enlisted at, Wake County, North Carolina, July 12, 1861, aged 23, as private, company K, 14th Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 15, 1862, for duty on the Merrimac (CSS Virginia); later transferred, April 21, 1864, as seaman on the CSS Isondiga, Savannah Squadron, and as landsman on the CSS North Carolina, 1864; in an incident aboard the CSS Isondiga, on May 26, 1864, when assistant paymaster D.C. Seymour had come on board to pay off the ship's crew, Smith complained that he was owed bounty, but had not received this; the complaint was made to the vessel's commander, J.S. Kennard, who then rebuked Seymour indirectly, through his clerk, Harvey Sheppard, and then used highly abusive language towards Seymour, and afterwards ordered him off the vessel. [NCT 5, 491; ORN 2, 1, 289 & 297; Confederate States Navy subject file N - NJ - Discipline; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions (January - June, 1864), page 720.]
Savage Smith, served as captain's clerk, Confederate States Navy, under lieutenant John H. Parker, at the Richmond station, Virginia; resident of Richmond, Virginia, in 1907. [Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2.]
Simon Smith, enlisted in Beaufort County, North Carolina, July 4, 1861, as private, company G, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, March, 1862. [NCT 2, 155.]
T. C. Smith, served as ordinary seaman 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.]
Theodore Smith, appointed, by lieutenant F. B. Renshaw, commanding the CSS Livingston, at New Orleans, as his clerk aboard the vessel, on January 15, 1862; Smith's appointment as captain's clerk was subsequently cancelled, on May 21, 1862, at which date he was appointed purser's clerk aboard the vessel, at Randolph, Tennessee; his appointment was cancelled on June 20, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 824, 826 and 926.]
Thomas Smith, ordinary seaman and quartermaster, CSS Atlanta, 1862; aged 24. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Wednesday, December 3, 1862; ORN 2, 1, 275.]
Thomas Smith, served as coal heaver aboard the CSS Jamestown, James River squadron; deserted from the vessel on June 11, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 312.]
Thomas C. Smith, served as private, company E, 17th Regiment North Carolina Troops (1st Organization); place and date of enlistment not reported; transferred to the Confederate States Navy prior to July 28, 1861, and served as seaman aboard the CSS Curlew, 1861. [NCT 6, 154; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 278.]
Thomas C. Smith, enlisted as seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile Squadron, June 15, 1862; deserted from the service in mid-July, 1862, after 27 days of service. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 109.]
Thomas L. Smith, served as seaman aboard the CSS New Orleans, 1861; rated as quartermaster from November 14, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 369.]
Tyree M. Smith, served in 2nd lieutenant Lloyd B. Stephenson's company of the Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond Navy Yard, 1864; died prior to January 1, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 43.]
Valentine Smith, shipped aboard the revenue cutter Morgan, Mobile, Alabama, on September 9, 1861; rated as coxswain on September 10, 1861; disrated on January 18, 1862; deserted from the vessel about February, 1862, but was apprehended by (policeman?) P. L. Jacobs, and returned to the Naval authorities at New Orleans on February 24, 1862, and for which Jacobs received a reward of $10. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1162 and 1168; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 327.]
W. C. Smith, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 301.]
W. J. Smith, enlisted at Winnsboro, Louisiana, August 8, 1861, as private, company C, 4th Battalion Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Naval Service, December 15, 1862. [Booth 3, 633.]
W. R. Smith, served as landsman 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 108.]
W.W. Smith, First Quartermaster, CSS Gaines, wounded in action, Mobile Bay, Alabama, August 5, 1864. [ORN 1, 21, 591.]
W. W. W. Smith, served as coal heaver 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.]
Walker Smith, born Georgia; landsman, CSS Atlanta, 1862; aged 20. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Friday, December 26, 1862.]
Walter W. Smith, appointed from Georgia; captured and tried as a pirate, in the United States Court in Philadelphia, October, 1861; case later suspended, and he was held as a prisoner of war; appointed pilot, Confederate States Navy, August 20, 1862; served aboard the ironclad, CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, 1862 - 1863; captured and paroled at Fort Warren, February 11, 1865; paroled at Shreveport, Louisiana, June 16, 1865; resided at New Orleans, Louisiana. [Booth 3, 634; CSN Register; some additional data from page 297, of the publication, Elements of International Law, by Henry Wheaton, published 1866, by Little, Brown, and Company, Boston.]
Warren Smith, served as private in the Confederate States Marine corps, aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile station, in 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1181.]
William Smith, born Ireland, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, laborer; marital status, single; enlisted at New Orleans, July 2, 1861, as private, company H, 14th Louisiana Infantry; deserted September 5, 1862; enlisted in the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Booth 3, 635.]
William Smith, born South Carolina; First Assistant Engineer, CSS Nashville, 1861. [ORN 1, 1, 752; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133.]
William Smith, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on February 5, 1862, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Pontchartrain for duty; later served as 2nd assistant engineer aboard the CSS Webb, Red River, April, 1865; abandoned the vessel below New Orleans, and was captured, and sent aboard the USS Bermuda, to Philadelphia, as a prisoner of war. [ORN 1, 22, 166 & 169; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 425.]
William Smith, Master's Mate (may be the same person listed in the next entry), CSS Virginia II, January, 1865; CSS Torpedo, February, 1865. [ORN 1, 12, 187.]
William Smith, master's mate, Confederate States Navy (may be the same person shown in the previous entry); captured in a boat from the CSS Oconee, at Ossabaw Sound, by the USS Madgie, August 20, 1863; transferred to the USS Wamsutta on August 21, 1863, and 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; also served aboard the CSS Drewry, James River squadron, 1865. [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 488; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 310.]
William Smith, appointed acting master in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on January 4, 1862, and ordered to report for duty aboard the steamer Lizzie Simmonds (CSS Pontchartrain). [ORN 1, 23, 201; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 423.]
William Smith, born England; CSS Shenandoah; joined the vessel at Melbourne, Australia; rated ship's cook, March 1, 1865. [Alabama Claims 1, 975; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log; ORN 1, 3, 783; Whittle 119.]
William Smith, previously served as Private, Company L, 1st Regiment Georgia Regulars, April, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 3, 1864; served as Seaman, Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, April 2, 1865. [Georgia Rosters 1, 366.]
William Smith, born England; aged 51; seaman, Launch No. 6, 1861; recommended for discharge from the Naval service, by Medical survey, February 22, 1862, after being admitted to the hospital vessel, CSS St. Philip, February 14, 1862, for an injury of the hip. [St. Philip.]
William Smith, seaman, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]
William Smith, originally served as private, company B, 5th Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
William Smith, served as seaman on the cruiser CSS Florida, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 357.]
William Smith, served as landsman aboard the receiving vessel, CSS Indian Chief, about 1864 [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 765-766.]
William Smith, shipped aboard the revenue cutter Morgan, Mobile, Alabama, on September 13, 1861; rated as quartermaster on September 14, 1861; disrated on January 21, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1162 and 1168.]
William Smith, served as ordinary seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 75.]
William Smith, appointed second officer aboard the Confederate States gunboat Warrior, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, March 7, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
William Smith, served as seaman in the Confederate States Navy, 1862; deserted about July, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 329.]
William Smith, jr., served as 1st class fireman on the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 93.]
William Breedlove Smith, born Louisiana, August 20, 1841 (the New Orleans Daily Picayune of January 12, 1897 actually indicates that William Breedlove Smith was born at Sumner County, Tennessee, while his parents were on a visit there, from New Orleans); his family had been residents of New Orleans since about 1827; schooled at the New Orleans Boys High School, where he graduated in 1856; then entered the University of Virginia, and pursued an academic course; did not graduate, but returned to New Orleans, to study law under Thomas J. Semmes, and thus became acquainted with his cousin, Raphael, whom he was later to serve under; resided with his widowed mother, Urilda Smith, and his siblings, Florence and Minor W. Smith, in 1860, at New Orleans, Louisiana; served as captain's clerk, CSS Sumter, 1861; captain's secretary (also held positions as librarian and postmaster on the CSS Alabama), CSS Alabama, 1862-1864; promoted assistant paymaster; in action off Cherbourg, France, June 19, 1864; an account of an incident, during the battle of June 19, 1864, states that Smith had raised his cutlass above the head of his commander, Raphael Semmes, and threatened to smash his head if the Confederate flag was hauled down, but the executive officer, who had also witnessed this action, drew his pistol, and aiming it at Smith, convinced him to calm down; escaped by being picked up by the English yacht Deerhound, after being eleven hours in the water; later served aboard the CSS Shenandoah, 1864 - 1865, and was appointed acting assistant paymaster aboard the cruiser, by lieutenant James I. Waddell, to date from October 1, 1864; resided for a couple of years after the surrender of the Shenandoah, in the United Kingdom, and was employed by cotton broking firm, W.C. Watts & Co.; returned to the United States in 1867, and began business in New Orleans, at the ship broking firm of Ashbridge, Smith & Co.; then spent a few years in Texas and in New York City; entered the grain business, at St. Louis, in 1878; returned to New Orleans in 1885, and formed a partnership with D.B. Francis; stated to have been "prominent in business and social circles" at New Orleans and St. Louis; elected the first president of the Interstate Fair Association, in 1878, and held that position until his resignation in 1896; elected to the presidency of the New Orleans Board of Trade in January, 1897; died at New Orleans, Louisiana, December 6, 1914. [1860 U.S. Census; Sinclair 116; Alabama Claims 1, 975; ORN 1, 1, 614 and 1, 3, 757; CSS Sumter Muster Roll; Whittle 28 & 187; additional information included in an affidavit, signed by fellow crew member, George Yeoman, at London, England, September 8, 1864; Semmes 467; Missouri State Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1881 at the Ancestry.com web site; Daily Picayune (New Orleans) dated January 12, 1897, page 3; New York Times dated December 7, 1914; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 426.]
William E. Smith, born Union County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Union County, June 5, 1861, aged 23, as private, company B, 26th Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 1, 1864. [NCT 7, 491.]
William E. Smith, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, and aboard the CSS St. Mary, Brashear, Louisiana, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 111, 545 and 551.]
William H. Smith, served as 1st class fireman at the New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 58-59.]
William J. Smith, CSS Atlanta, 1862. [Atlanta Medical Journal, entry dated Monday, December 22, 1862.]
William R. Smith, born near Decatur, DeKalb County, Georgia, April 19, 1829; enlisted at Camp Calhoun, Georgia, in July, 1861; served as seaman aboard the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), Savannah, Georgia, in 1863, and was stated to have been sent to hospital, reason not shown, about August, 1863; transferred, at an unspecified date, to the CSS Chicora, Charleston squadron; served until the close of the war; shown as a resident of Stroud, Chambers County, Alabama, in 1907. [ORN 2, 1, 286; ADAH; 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.]
William T. Smith, served as boatswain's mate at the Richmond station, in 1861; later appointed boatswain in the Confederate States Navy, November 20, 1863; served on the Charleston station, 1863 - 1864. [Register1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 484 - 487.]
William T. Smith, qualified, on May 2, 1864, to serve as a private in company B, Confederate States Marine Corps, on the Richmond station; paroled, at the close of the war, at Burksville, Virginia, April 25, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RV - Miscellaneous, page 44; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 460.]
William Taylor Smith, lieutenant; served in Virginia, 1861. [ORN 1, 4, 773.]
William W. Smith, served as seaman aboard the receiving vessel, CSS St. Philip, 1861; rated as 2nd class fireman from August 1, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 561 and 565.]
William W. Smith, previously served as Fourth Corporal, Company B, First Regiment Georgia Regulars, April, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 2, 1864; captured in Pickens County, Georgia, 1864; took oath of allegiance at Louisville, Kentucky, and sent north, June 16, 1864. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 316.]
William W. Smith, served as master aboard the CSS Bellewood, New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions (1861), page 524.]
William W. Smith, appointed master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on November 9, 1861, and ordered to report aboard the floating battery New Orleans, for duty; appointed acting master on November 20, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 419 and 421.]
Julius Smithge, enlisted at New Orleans, Louisiana, December 7 or 31, 1861, as private, new company B, 20th Louisiana Infantry; transferred to the Navy Department, by order of General Johnston, sometime in March or April, 1864. [Booth 3, 637.]
Miles Smithson, resided in, and enlisted at Pasquotank County, North Carolina, May 4, 1861, aged 19, as private, company A, 8th Regiment North Carolina State Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about April 22, 1863; served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Palmetto State, 1863-1864. [NCT 4, 531; ORN 2, 1, 298.]
William Smithson, ordinary seaman, CSS Sea Bird, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 306.]
James Robert Smithwick, born March 25, 1822, son of Jimmie and Frances Smithwick; recruited as a landsman in the Confederate States Navy, at the Naval rendezvous, Richmond, Virginia, August 1, 1863; served aboard the CSS Virginia II; CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864; died May 30, 1872, buried at Brown's Baptist Church Cemetery, Warrenton, Warren County, North Carolina. [Information provided by Mr. Grover Grissom, 236 Sweetwater Hills Drive, Hendersonville, North Carolina 28791; ORN 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 444.]
Edward Smyles, resident of Liverpool, England; joined the CSS Georgia in January, 1864; discharged May, 1864. [Alabama Claims 1, 709.]
Samuel Bell Smyth, enlisted at Montgomery, Alabama, April 15, 1861, as private, Confederate States Marine Corps, served aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, from November 1, 1861 to May 12, 1862; later 2nd sergeant, company C, Richmond Station, Virginia, January, 1863 to December, 1864, and as commissary sergeant at Camp Beall, November 1, 1863 to December 31, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 310 & 315; ADAH.]
Robert Snedwick, born Holstein, about 1839; served aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron; deserted the vessel and went aboard a vessel of the West Gulf Blockading Squadron, April 27, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 644.]
William M. Sneed (surname also shown as Snead), previously served as Private, Company H, First Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, September, 1861; transferred, as acting master's mate, to the Confederate States Navy, September 15, 1863, and served aboard the CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; appointed acting midshipman on February 11, 1864, and ordered to report to lieutenant William H. Parker, aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, for duty. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 198; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 428 and 431.]
Henry Snell, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, and aboard the CSS New Orleans in 1861; rated as 1st class fireman from November 12, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 79 and 369.]
Robert Snell, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, in 1861, and later as 1st class fireman aboard the CSS Morgan, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Tombigbee River, Alabama, on May 10, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1216 - 1218; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 79.]
John Snickenber, served as coal heaver at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 39.]
William L. Snider (surname also shown as Snyder), served as landsman, CSS Arctic and CSS Yadkin; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Davidson County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; ORN 2, 1, 277 & 313.]
J.A.L. Snowball, served as a private in company F, 8th Florida 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; later served on the Richmond station, and in the Confederate States Naval Battalion, at the fall of Richmond, in 1865; deserted and surrendered himself, together with his arms, aboard the Union vessel, USS Onondaga, on the James River, on April 4, 1865. [Confederate States Navy subject file; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 554.]
A. Snow, served as a crew member aboard the schooner Royal Yacht, at Galveston, Texas, October, 1861, subject to the Naval laws of the Confederate States of America. [ORN 1, 16, 844.]
George Snowden, first class boy (colored), CSS Macon, 1865. [CSS Macon Rolls.]
J.B. Snowden, shipped, by 2nd lieutenant F. M. Roby, as ordinary seaman, in the Confederate States Navy, on April 1, 1864, and sent for duty aboard the CSS Albemarle, at Plymouth Sound, North Carolina; also shown as coal heaver aboard the same vessel in 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 37-38.]
W.L. Snyder, see William L. Snider.
---- Solari, served as steward aboard the CSS Gaines, Mobile Bay, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OO - Operations of large groups of vessels; Charleston - Miscellaneous, page 24.]
G.W. Solomon, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Missouri, resident of Louisiana; surrendered at Shreveport, Louisiana, May 26, 1865; paroled, June 7, 1865. [ORN 1, 27, 234.]
Samuel L. Solomons (middle initial also shown as A.), resident of 124 N. Bond Street, Baltimore, Maryland (in 1865); served as master at arms aboard the CSS Tallahassee, and was rated as sailmaker's mate on October 1, 1864; previously served aboard CSS North Carolina; arrested April 27, 1865, as a paroled prisoner of war, no reason shown. [ORN 2, 1, 296 and 307; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 590; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 843.]
John Somers, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, in 1861, and later as seaman aboard the CSS Roanoke, in 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 76 and 542.]
W. H. Somers, 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.]
Peter Soper, born New Jersey, about 1834; previous service in the Army of Tennessee, and was enlisted by Naval lieutenant W. W. Carnes, on April 8, 1864, at Dalton, Georgia, for service as ordinary seaman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; transferred, in July, 1864 as seaman, to the CSS Macon, on which he served, 1864 - 1865. [CSS Macon Rolls; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 538-540 and 560.]
August R. Sorgea, served as coal heaver aboard the CSS Maurepas, New Orleans station, in 1862; listed his next of kin as Kate Howard. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1005.]
W.M. Sorrell, served aboard the CSS Charleston, and the CSS Indian Chief, Charleston station, in 1864, and was transferred, by order of flag officer J. R. Tucker, dated September 13, 1864, to the command of flag officer Lynch, at the Wilmington station, North Carolina; served as landsman aboard the CSS Albemarle, and Halifax station, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 156 and 761.]
Marshall L. Sothoron, born Maryland, 1845; son of John H. and Elizabeth M. Sothoron; served as assistant paymaster in the Confederate States Navy; involved in failed attempt to capture USS Adela, at St. George's Sound, Florida, May, 1864; later served on CSS Macon, 1864-1865; post war occupations as a laborer at St. Mary's County, Maryland, and as clerk in Washington, D.C. (1890); never married; resided, in 1920, with his sister, at her residence in St. Mary's County, Maryland. [ORN 1, 17, 698; CSS Macon Rolls; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1920 U.S. Census; see also the Washington, D.C. City Directory, 1890, available at the Ancestry.com web site.]
George Sour, served aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile, Alabama, 1864; discharged in the final quarter of 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1200.]
Benjamin F. Southall, previously served as Private, Company C, 4th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, April 25, 1861; transferred to CSS Virginia, February 10, 1862, as Landsman. [Georgia Rosters 1, 578.]
Charles Southard, served as master at arms aboard the CSS Governor Moore, at New Orleans, Louisiana, April, 1862; captured and taken aboard the USS Pinola, and later sent aboard the USS Hartford. [ORN 1, 18, 723.]
William Knox Soutter, son of James Taylor and Agnes Gordon (maiden name Knox) Soutter; a brother in law to Confederate States Navy officer, Charles M. Fauntleroy; stated to have served in the Confederate States Navy; married Louisa A. Meyer; may have resided in New York after the war. [New York Times dated Wednesday, February 23, 1899.]
Henry Spangler, 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.]
Andrew Jackson Spark (Sharpe?), CSS Virginia; previous service in company I, 2nd Louisiana Infantry. [Tom Brooks.]
Gale W. Sparks (first name also shown as Gayle), born Louisiana, July 17, 1843; pre-war service as acting Midshipman in the United States Navy, from which he resigned April 25, 1861; appointed from Louisiana, as acting Midshipman in the Confederate States Navy, July 8, 1861; promoted Master, June 2, 1864; served upon the defenses on the Mississippi, 1862-1863; Mobile Squadron, 1863-1864, and the Charleston Squadron, 1864; lieutenant; Torpedo Service; involved in failed attempt to capture USS Adela, at St. George's Sound, Florida, May, 1864; CSS Chattahoochee, June, 1864; buried at Magnolia Cemetery, East Baton Rouge, Louisiana; attached as 1st lieutenant, commanding company C, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; died August 30, 1888; buried at the Magnolia Cemetery, 19th Street, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70809. [Booth 3, 655; ORN 1, 17, 698; M1091; Young Sanders; U.S. Veterans Gravesites, circa 1775 - 2006 at the Ancestry.com web site.]
William H. Sparks, served as recruit aboard the CSS Resolute, Savannah squadron, in 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 375.]
Thomas Sparrow, served in the Confederate States Marine Corps 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 89.]
Charles Speakman, 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.]
Richmond E. Speaks, born North Carolina, 1841; son of M. and Aladelpha Speaks; resided, pre war, at Iredell County; served as landsman, CSS Arctic; married about 1870; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Nancy, and three children (eldest child born 1871) at New Hope, Iredell County, North Carolina; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Iredell County, North Carolina; died at Haywood County, North Carolina, March 8, 1916; his widow, Nancy Speaks, also later applied for a pension from Iredell county. [NC State Archives; ORN 2, 1, 278; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census; death information from the North Carolina Death Collection, 1908 - 1996, available at the Ancestry.com web site.]
Henry Spear, 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, pages 62 and 65.]
J. Spear, served in Confederate States Navy; buried at Charleston Port Society Cemetery, on Ashley River, Charleston. [Name and service status inscribed on granite monument unveiled December 10, 1922, by the Ladies Memorial Association of Charleston, South Carolina.]
John S. Spear, resident of Florida; landsman, CSS Chattahoochee, 1863; killed in the boiler explosion of May 27, 1863, Apalachicola River, Florida; buried at the First United Methodist Church Cemetery, Chattahoochee, Florida. [CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; ORN 1, 17, 869; John E. Ellis.]
G.A. Speer, enlisted October 1, 1862, as private, 1st company A, 60th Regiment Georgia Infantry (Bartow Artillery); transferred to company A, 22nd Battalion Georgia Heavy Artillery, November 26, 1862, and to company K, 28th Battalion Georgia Heavy Artillery, March 2, 1864; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 29, 1864; enlisted as landsman. [Georgia Rosters 6, 116.]
Joseph H.C. Speer (Sug), transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 2, 1864, from Company G, 19th Georgia Infantry, where he had enlisted as Private on July 2, 1861; wounded at Seven Pines, Virginia, May 30, 1862. Died in October, 1864 of yellow fever; buried Magnolia Cemetery, Charleston, South Carolina. [Confederate Burials, 59; Georgia Rosters 2, 743.]
F. H. Spence, served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Isondiga, Savannah squadron, in 1863; transferred to the Charleston station on September 25, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 779.]
Robert Spence, enlisted as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy, in 1861; served aboard the CSS Selma, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 420-422 and 1066.]
Henry Spencer, Englishman, aged 38; Seaman, CSS Sumter; joined the vessel at New Orleans in June 1861; placed aboard brig Cuba as prize crew, but overcome and taken prisoner by the captain of the vessel, July, 1861; sent aboard Costa Rica, to US authorities, as prisoner. [ORA Series 2, Volume 3; CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
J. E. Spencer, served as landsman aboard the CSS Spray, St. Mark's, Florida, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 820.]
Julian Murray Spencer, born February 17, 1842, near Centreville, Maryland, son of William Alexander Spencer and Catherine Murray Carmichael; originally appointed to the United States Naval Academy, September 22, 1856; resigned from the United States Navy, as acting Midshipman, April 21, 1861; entered the Confederate States Navy, and appointed midshipman on September 10, 1862; appointed lieutenant for the war, September 17, 1862; served with the James River Squadron and at Drewry's Bluff, Virginia, 1862-1863, and on the CSS Baltic and the CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, 1863-1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; surrendered and paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; post war employment as assistant Librarian at the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland; married Elizabeth Hollyday Carmichael (daughter of judge Richard Bennett Carmichael), at estate Belle Vue, on the Wye River, June 14, 1874; died November 26, 1919; buried, with his wife, at the Naval Academy Cemetery, Annapolis. [Porter's Naval History, 785; ORN 2, 1, 322; Register1863; JCC 4, 122; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Richmond Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated April 15, 1900, page 15; additional information provided by Howard Crise, of Baltimore, Maryland, in an e-mail (hcrise@bcpl.net) dated September 12, 2003; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 433 and 434.]
John Spidell, born Alabama (one account mentions that he was a native of middle Tennessee, where he had lost all his property, during the war); appointed, for one year, as 3rd assistant engineer aboard the cruiser, CSS Nashville, Charleston, South Carolina, on September 23, 1861; later served as 1st assistant engineer (acting Chief) aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, 1862 - 1863; sent off the CSS Florida, July 22, 1863, at Bermuda, for expressing disloyal sentiments. [ORN 1, 1, 749, 752 & 769 and 1, 2, 673; Quinn Journal; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133; New York Herald dated January 31, 1863; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1227.]
R. N. Spillers, indicated to have been a private (?) in the Navy Department of the Confederate States; paroled at Albany, Georgia, May 7, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 669.]
John Spillman, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 850.
Henry Sporgler, born Maryland; aged 25; seaman, CSS Pickens; discharged from Naval service, January 1, 1862, after being admitted to the hospital ship, CSS St. Philip, on November 14, 1861, for syphilis. [St. Philip.]
Charles Fenton Mercer Spotswood, born Virginia, 1813; originally served in the United States Navy, November 1, 1828; resided with his wife Juana and five children at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, Virginia, in 1860; name stricken from the rolls of the United States Navy, April 18, 1861; served first in the Virginia State Navy, and hoisted the flag at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, on the evacuation by the United States Navy, in 1861; took possession of the Navy Yard in the name of the Commonwealth of Virginia; entered the Confederate States Navy, June 10, 1861, as 1st lieutenant; served aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, 1862; also served aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, about 1863; attached, as lieutenant colonel, to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [Register1863; M1091; 1860 U.S. Census; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated May 31, 1861; Norfolk County Record 17; some correspondence addressed to John Kirkwood Mitchell, held in the Mitchell collection at the Virginia Historical Society; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 652.]
George W. Spotswood, born Florida, 1843; attended Spring Hill College, at Mobile, Alabama, as a student, in 1860; served as clerk to the Secretary of the Confederate Navy, at Richmond, Virginia, 1863. [Register1863; 1860 U.S. Census.]
William A.W. Spotswood (surname also shown as Spottswood), born Virginia, 1806; appointed from Florida; original service in the United States Navy, from December 2, 1828; resigned January, 1861, when Virginia seceded; appointed surgeon, Confederate States Navy, March 26, 1861; served at the Pensacola Navy Yard, Warrington, Florida, 1861; later appointed chief of bureau, Office of Medicine & Surgery, Confederate Navy Department, Richmond, Virginia, and served there from 1861 to 1864; resided as a doctor, in 1880, with his wife, Mary E. Spotswood, and six children (eldest child born Florida, 1844) at Mobile, Alabama; died September 7, 1891, aged 84 years; buried Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile, Alabama. [John E. Ellis; Register1863; 36th Congress Report 24; ORN 2, 1, 320, 321 & 323; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Richard N. Spraggins, born Virginia, August, 1838; son of Sylvanus and Elizabeth Spraggins, of Henrico County, Virginia; originally served as private, company A, 15th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, and appointed acting master's mate, at Richmond, on December 24, 1863; served aboard the CSS Richmond, and on the Richmond station, 1863 - 1865; also served aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, in 1864; resided as a box maker, in 1910, with his second wife, Emma N. Spraggins (married 1888), at Richmond, Virginia. [ORN 1, 10, 632; 1, 11, 102 and 2, 1, 322; Register1864; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census; Civil War Service Records; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 438.]
George Spriggs, originally served as private, company B, 2nd Battalion, Alabama Light Artillery; promoted sergeant; transferred to the Confederate States Navy and served as landsman aboard the CSS Selma, Mobile squadron, 1864; 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; Civil War Service Records.]
George Spriggs, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Morgan, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Tombigbee River, Alabama, on May 10, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1216 - 1218.]
John Spring, born England; seaman, CSS Shenandoah; joined the vessel at Melbourne, Australia, 1865; rated coal heaver, March 15, 1865 (possibly rated as captain of the hold, at a later date). [Alabama Claims 1, 975; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log; ORN 1, 3, 783.]
Noah Spruill, born North Carolina, 1841; son of Charles and Mary Spruill; served aboard the CSS Chicora; resided as a farmer, in 1870, with his wife [Mary] Ann Spruill, and four children, at Cool Spring township, Washington County, North Carolina; later resided, in 1880, as a farmer, at Scuppernong township, Tyrrell County, North Carolina; his widow, Mary A. Spruill, later applied for a post war Confederate pension from Tyrrell County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; 1850 U.S. Census; 1870 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census.]
George W. Spurlin, born 1845; indicated to have served in the Confederate States Navy; died 1864; buried at the Hollywood Cemetery, 412 South Cherry Street, Richmond, Virginia 23218. [U.S. Veterans Gravesites, circa 1775 - 2006 at the Ancestry.com web site.]
Panos Stabraos, served as seaman on the cruiser CSS Florida, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 357.]
Edward Stack (first name also shown as Edmond), born about 1834; private, Confederate States Marine Corps; served on the Georgia and South Carolina stations, 1861; resided, in 1909, at 705 Red River Street, Travis County, Texas. [ORN 2, 1, 317; Texas Confederate Pension file no. 17076 for W.G. Huddleston.]
Patrick Stack, shown as being a Confederate Marine (Daily Dispatch shows him to be a sailor in the Confederate States Navy); tried, together with fellow Marine, James Rawlings, at the court of judge Lyons, Richmond, Virginia, in June, 1864, for garroting David Gray and robbing him of $500; acquitted of such charge. [Article in Richmond, Virginia, Sentinel, dated Wednesday, June 22, 1864; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 22, 1864.]
Z. T. Stack, 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.]
Charles B. Stacy, indicated to have been an acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy; held as a prisoner of war at Fort Delaware, November, 1864. [ORA 2, 7, 1113.]
John Stacy (surname also shown as Stacey), served as landsman, CSS Arctic; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Montgomery County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; ORN 2, 1, 278.]
Joseph Stacy, wardroom steward, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]
Oliver Staff, born Louisiana, 1845; attended Spring Hill College, at Mobile, Alabama, in 1860; served aboard the CSS Tennessee; buried at Ship Island Cemetery, Mississippi (cemetery no longer extant, due to the action of storms). [John E. Ellis; 1860 U.S. Census.]
James M. Stafford, born North Carolina, about 1843; attended the United States Naval college at Annapolis, in 1860; resigned from U.S. Naval service on April 25, 1861; appointed acting midshipman in the Confederate States Navy, July 16, 1861; served on the CSS Ellis, 1861, and on the CSS Caswell, 1861 - 1862; resigned from the Confederate States Navy, May 27, 1862. [1860 U.S. Census; ORN 1, 6, 781; CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330.]
John Stafford, Second Class Fireman, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864; captured about November, 1864, and sent north as a prisoner of war. [ORN 2, 1, 274; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 461.]
John Stafford, served as seaman in the Confederate States Navy; captured at an unspecified date and place, and was confined at Point Lookout, Maryland; wrote from Point Lookout, on April 7, 1865, asking to take the oath of allegiance; died of scorbutus, at Point Lookout, on June 5, 1865; buried at the Point Lookout cemetery. [Point Lookout; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 259; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 669.]
John Stafford, born Ireland, pre-war occupation, laborer; enlisted at Camp Pulaski, August 6, 1861, as private, company G, 15th Louisiana Infantry; source indicates that he was sent to hospital, sick, in June, 1862, and deserted; also shown to have transferred to the Navy, 1862. [Booth 3, 675.]
Henry Stahl, see Henry Sahl.
Lucas Staidel (surname also shown as Stairel), left London, England on January 21, 1864, for Brest, France, where he was shipped for service aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, as 1st class fireman, on January 24, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 353 and 368.]
H. C. Staley, served as a landsman in the Confederate States Navy; paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, May 19, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 669.]
Sterling Stallings, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
B. A. Stamm, 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 582.]
Meridith D. Stamper, resided in, and enlisted at Ashe County, North Carolina, May 17, 1861, aged 19, as private, company A, 26th Regiment North Carolina Troops; killed another private of his company, H.D. Wagoner, in camp near Kinston, on April 20, 1862 (further details of this killing not known); transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about April 1, 1864, as landsman; attached as private to company F, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [NCT 7, 479 & 480; M1091.]
Oliver Stan, 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 Stanaland, Landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
Moses Stancil (surname also shown as Stancel and Staneil), born Johnson County, North Carolina, August, 1841; son of William and Salley Stancil; pre-war occupation, farmer; enlisted at Johnston County, March 18 or 21, 1864, aged 22, in the Confederate States Navy; served as landsman, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864; married 1885; resided as a farmer, in 1900, with his wife, Sarah R., and six children, at Wake County, North Carolina. [CSN Shipping Articles; ORN 2, 1, 274; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 407.]
William H. Standin, appointed paymaster's clerk in the Confederate States Navy, at Wilmington, North Carolina, on May 15, 1863; reported for duty to assistant paymaster A. Tredwell, at Wilmington, on the same day; tendered his resignation from the Naval service on December 31, 1863, which was accepted the same day. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 439 and 1065.]
J.B. Stanfield (surname also shown as Stansfield), served as landsman in the Provisional Navy of the Confederate States; served aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864, and later aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865; attached, as private, company K, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 849.]
George Stanford, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS McRae, and captured aboard the CSS Louisiana; paroled and sent to the Mobile station, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1054.]
Lorenzo Stanland, served in the Confederate States Navy; his widow, Jennie Stanland, later applied for a post war Confederate pension from Brunswick County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives.]
Cecil Stanley, 1st class boy, Provisional Navy of the Confederate States; attached as private to company F, 2nd Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091.]
Charles Stanley, Quarter Gunner, based at Savannah, Georgia, 1864; involved in the taking out of the USS Water Witch, at Ossabaw Sound, Georgia, June 3, 1864. [ORN 1, 15, 500.]
D. R. Stanley, served as landsman aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1231.]
J.T. Stanley, served as quartermaster, Confederate States Navy; attached as private to company C, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [M1091.]
James J. Stanley, originally served as private, company B, Jeff Davis Legion, Mississippi Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
John Stanley, born Manchester, England, of Irish parents; resided, with his wife, Catherine, at no. 26 Court, Ovid Street, Vauxhall Road, Liverpool, England; shipped aboard the cruiser CSS Georgia, April, 1863, as cook; a list of "boarders" on the cruiser shows Stanley in the position of tackleman at the 1st gun division. [Alabama Claims 1, 696; Alabama Claims Correspondence 4, 554 and 563; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 604.]
N. Stanley, shown on a Roll of Prisoners of War paroled at Meridian, Mississippi, May 10, 1865, as being a private [?] in the Navy Department; resident of New Orleans, Louisiana. [Booth 3, 679.]
C.H. Stant, died 1865; buried at Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. [Tom Brooks.]
Charles E. Stanton, served as landsman at the New Orleans station in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 85.]
Clarence L. Stanton, born Kentucky, June 1841; son of lawyer Richard H. Stanton, and his wife, Asmatte; resided, in 1850, with his parents and siblings, at Maysville, Mason County, Kentucky; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as master not in line of promotion, April 28, 1863; served on the Charleston station, and aboard the CSS Chicora, 1963 - 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 8, 1864; served aboard the CSS Chickamauga, September-December, 1864; also served at Fort Fisher, Wilmington, North Carolina; captured at Sailor's Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865; personal description in 1865, shown as dark hair, gray eyes, light complexion, and standing 5 feet 6 inches tall; married in 1867; resided, in 1900, as a travelling salesman, with his wife, Ida, and five children, at Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio; still residing at Cincinnati in 1907. [ORN 1, 3, 710; JCC 4, 122; 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; 1850 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census; Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated June 30, 1907, page 2; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RE - Release and Exchange, A-W, page 145; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water - Water for ships, page 116.]
John Stanton, enlisted as a seaman in the Confederate States Navy in 1861; lodged in the parish prison at New Orleans for 70 days until January 21, 1862, for an unspecified reason, then turned over to the Naval authorities. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 420-422; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 421.]
W.B. Stanton, served as seaman aboard the CSS Fanny, in 1861, and as quartermaster aboard the CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 334.]
John M. Staples, recruited as seaman at the Confederate States Naval rendezvous, in Richmond, Virginia, on October 31, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 448.]
George Stapleton, First Class Fireman, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
James M. Stapleton (a Naval document shows his first name as Thomas), served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, 1863-1864; indicated to have been sick, in town (Savannah) about August, 1863; another document indicates that he had deserted, but had returned to duty on October 18, 1863; killed in action, June 3, 1864, during the expedition which captured the USS Water Witch, near Ossabaw Sound, Georgia. [ORN 1, 15, 495; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 339; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, pages 471 and 475.]
Thomas Stapleton, enlisted in the Confederate States Navy on August 1, 1863; served as ordinary seaman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, about 1863; indicated to have "run" (deserted) on October 1, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 652 and 670; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, pages 331 and 527.]
Charles Stark, transferred, on July 25, 1862, as seaman to the CSS Gaines, Mobile squadron. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 468.]
C.A. Starkey, served as landsman in the Confederate States Navy; resident of Memphis, Tennessee; personal description shown as grey eyes, dark hair, light complexion, 5 feet, 8 inches in height; captured at an unspecified date; released October 17, 1864 at New Orleans, Louisiana, by order of General Canby of the Union Army. [Scriber.]
William Starkey, Seaman, CSS Sumter, 1861. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll.]
James H. Starley (surname also shown as Starlan and Starling; middle initial also shown as A.), recruited aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, in 1864, and was transferred as landsman, on October 6, 1864, from that vessel to the floating battery CSS Georgia, also in the same squadron; transferred to the Richmond station by order of flag officer W.W. Hunter, dated October 19, 1864; captured at an unspecified date and place, and confined at Point Lookout, Maryland; died of pneumonia on May 23, 1865; buried at the Point Lookout cemetery. [ORN 2, 1, 287; Point Lookout; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 261; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 579 and 583; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 648.]
James Staunton, born England; aged 52; seaman, CSS Louisiana, 1862. [St. Philip.]
William Staunton, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, August, 1862. [ORN 1, 23, 703.]
William B. Staunton, enlisted in Cumberland County, North Carolina, March 1, 1862, as private, 3rd company B, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, May 5, 1862. [NCT 1, 206.]
G.C. Steadman, served in the Confederate States Navy, 1863 - 1864; captured, 1863, and imprisoned; released and sent to Fortress Monroe, and then to City Point, Virginia, from where he was sent to Richmond, Virginia, arriving Friday night, January 29, 1864. [Richmond Daily Examiner dated Monday, February 1, 1864.]
Henry Steding, coal heaver, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]
William M. Stedman, Landsman, CSS Fredericksburg, wounded in action (severely in the left eye), James River, Virginia, October 22, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 589.]
F. R. Steel, 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.]
Francis H. Steel, originally served as private, company B, 15th Mississippi Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Civil War Service Records.]
Joseph Steel, served as seaman aboard Launch No. 6, New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 49.]
Thomas Steel, authorized, by secretary of the Navy Mallory, to serve as clerk for the Navy agent, William B. Howell, first at New Orleans, March 20, 1862 to May 1, 1862, at the rate of $75 per month, and later in the same capacity at Montgomery, Alabama, 1862 - 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PL - Labor and civil personnel; Albany - Richmond, pages 350 and 375.]
H.A. Steele, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
Matthew H. Steele, previously served as Private, Company L, 1st Regiment Georgia Regulars, April 2, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 3, 1864; served as landsman aboard CSS Chattachoochee, in 1864, and at Savannah, Georgia, station, October, 1864; transferred, at an unspecified date, to the Charleston squadron. [Georgia Rosters 1, 366; ORN 1, 17, 701; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 716.]
John W. Steely, Boatswain's Mate, CSS Albemarle, May, 1864; Halifax Station, 1864; highly praised by commander James W. Cooke, CSS Albemarle, for his actions on May 5, 1864. [ORN 1, 9, 770 and 2, 1, 274; see also article on CSS Albemarle, page 2, Richmond, Virginia, Sentinel, Monday, May 23, 1864.]
Charles Steeson, Seaman, CSS Alabama, 1862-4; born Sweden; rated Captain of Hold, July 3, 1863; disrated to Seaman, August 15, 1863; rated Captain of Foretop, December 24, 1863. [William Marvel.]
Fritz Steinborn, see Fritz Stienborn.
J.P. Steiner was Clerk/Purser aboard the CSS Col. Lovell. He died on May 18, 1862, and is buried at Soldier's Rest, Elmwood Cemetery, Memphis, Tennessee. [From details shown at Internet site CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS AND VETERANS BURIED IN SOLDIER'S REST, ELMWOOD CEMETERY, MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE at URL: http://www.people.memphis.edu/~jcothern/soldrest.htm]
George Steinman (surname also shown as Stenam), Second Captain of Forecastle, 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.]
Joseph Steinriede (surname also shown as Steinride and Stemride), born Louisiana; served as surgeon's steward at the New Orleans station in 1862; appointed acting assistant surgeon for the war, at Jackson, Mississippi, August 22, 1862; served on the Mississippi River defenses, 1861 - 1863, and aboard the CSS Livingston, 1861 - 1862; served on the Mobile station, 1863; resigned February 17, 1863. [CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 108; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 445.]
F.W. Stephens, served as surgeon in the Texas Marine Department, at Galveston, Texas, 1864; deserted, December 28, 1864, and taken aboard the USS Lackawanna, off Galveston; sent to New Orleans. [ORN 1, 21, 777.]
James H. Stephens (surname also shown as Stevens), enlisted at Richmond, Virginia, September 1, 1861, in company I, 1st South Carolina (Gregg's) Volunteer Infantry; served as corporal; transferred as landsman, to the Confederate States Navy, January 17, 1862; appeared as a defendant in a Naval Court Martial, held at Richmond, Virginia, in July, 1862, specification of charges not shown. [SC1st; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 179.]
Joseph Stephens, served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS Richmond, James River, in 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 386.]
Peter Stephens (surname also shown as Stevens), served as ordinary seaman and seaman aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington, 1864; commander of the vessel ordered the paymaster to pay Stephens $10 in gold, on November 9, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XP - Pay and Allowances, Paymaster's Accounts - Miscellaneous, page 536; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 849.]
William White Stephens, served as seaman aboard the CSS Maurepas, New Orleans station, in 1862; listed his next of kin as Eliza Stephens. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1005.]
Lloyd B. Stephenson, served as lieutenant in the Confederate States Marine Corps; paroled at Conrad's Ferry, Maryland. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 187.]
George Stephenson, served as corporal in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the cruiser, CSS Sumter, 1861; also indicated to have been transferred about December, 1864, no places shown. [CSS Sumter Muster Roll; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 323.]
Eugene Steptram, Seaman, CSS Florida; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 256.]
Isaac Sears Sterett, born and appointed from Maryland; previous service in the United States Navy, as from March 24, 1819; appointed captain in the Confederate States Navy, June 10, 1861; commanded the batteries at Camp Pickens, Manassa Junction, 1861; served on the Richmond station, 1861 - 1862; appointed president of a Naval General Court Martial, instituted to be convened at Savannah, Georgia, on August 29, 1862; Sterett subsequently travelled from Alleghany Springs, Alleghany County, Virginia, to Savannah for the Court Martial; awaiting orders, 1863 - 1864; died April, 1864. [Register1863; CSNRegister; death date supplied by Lorraine McConaghy, in an e-mail (l.mcconaghy@comcast.net) dated December 4, 2005; obituary in the Baltimore Sun of April 17, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 196; Confederate Navy subject file O - Operations of Naval ships and fleet units; OH - Shore Operations; Miscellaneous, pages 8 and 36.]
H.A. Sterling, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Oconee (originally the CSS Savannah prior to April, 1863), Savannah River, Georgia; served May - June, 1862; also served aboard the side wheeled steamer CSS Sampson, Savannah, Georgia, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 297 & 303.]
Neil Howison Sterling, born North Carolina; son of Fort Sterling, of Greensboro, North Carolina; nephew of R.R. Howison of Richmond, Virginia; original entry into Confederate States Navy, as acting midshipman, 4th class, August 24, 1861, and was ordered to report to lieutenant J. N. Barney, aboard the CSS Jamestown, for duty; served on the Richmond station, and at Drewry's Bluff, 1861 - 1863; reported for duty at Houston, Texas, February, 1863; died at Richmond, Virginia; funeral service held on Tuesday, April 19, 1864, at the home of his uncle, R.R. Howison, in Richmond. [ORN 1, 19, 835 and 2, 1, 321; Register1863; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated April 19, 1864; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 447.]
Henry Sternhoff, Carpenter's Mate, enlisted July 5, 1862 for 1 year at the rate of $25 per month; transferred, April 13, 1863 to CSS Harriet Lane; later that same year, sent to Shreveport, Louisiana, for service aboard the CSS Missouri, under lieutenant J.H. Carter. [ORN 1, 20, 815.]
Antonio Stevanovitch, Seaman, CSS Florida; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 256.]
G.K. Stevens, served in the Confederate States Navy; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives.]
Henry Kennedy Stevens, born Connecticut, October 17, 1824; resident of South Carolina (also shown as being a resident, and appointed from, Florida); previous service in the United States Navy, from March 2, 1839; arrested for disloyalty and sent to Fort Lafayette, New York, October 2, 1861; appointed from Florida, as Lieutenant, November 26, 1861; served on the Richmond station, in 1861; served as ordnance officer during an expedition to Edisto Island, South Carolina in January, 1862; later on the Mississippi and Red River defences, 1862-1863, and aboard the CSS Capitol, in 1862; also commanded the CSS Arkansas, 1862; highly commended by his commanding officer, Isaac N. Brown, for his behavior during the actions on the Mississippi River, in July, 1862, and recommended for promotion; killed in action aboard CSS Cotton, at Bayou Teche, Louisiana on January 13, 1863 (another source shows date of death as January 14 and another as January 18, 1863, below Franklin, Texas); buried at St. Paul's Churchyard, Pendleton, South Carolina 29670. [ORN 1, 19, 71; 1, 23, 698 and 2, 1, 321; Florida Confederate Card File; U.S. Veterans Gravesites, circa 1775 - 2006 at the Ancestry.com web site; New York Times dated Wednesday, October 7, 1861; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water, Coal and Wood for ships, page 159; ORA 1, 6; Register1863; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 844.]
Joseph Stevens (surname also shown as Steveson and Stevenson), African American; shipped as seaman aboard the CSS Shenandoah, April 2, 1865. [Alabama Claims 1, 975; ORN 1, 3, 783; Whittle 235.]
Marion Stevens, indicated to have previously been a lieutenant who had been reduced to a private in the ranks on the charge of cowardice; served as seaman on board the ironclad CSS Richmond, James River Squadron, 1865; committed suicide aboard the CSS Richmond on Thursday, March 2, 1865, by shooting himself in the head with a pistol; had attempted suicide on one previous occasion, but was prevented from doing so by his messmates. [Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated March 7, 1865.]
Richard Stevens, 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.]
Samuel Stevens, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 83 and 115.]
W. White Stevens, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 110.]
William I. Stevens, served aboard the CSS V.H. Ivy, New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 844.]
C.H. Stevenson, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
James L. Stevenson, served as a musician in the Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 454 and 472.]
John A. Stevenson, commanded CSS Warrior, April, 1862. [ORN 1, 18, 249.]
Joseph F. Stevenson, claimed to have been a sailing master or lieutenant in the Confederate States Navy, 1865; no evidence of such service in any other source; captured as commander of the armed Confederate schooner Anna Dale, off Galveston, Texas, February 18, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 43 - 45.]
Joseph Steveson, see Joseph Stevens.
Alex. Stewart, served as landsman at the New Orleans station in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 87.]
Alexander Stewart, seaman, CSS Florida; also served on the captured vessels, Clarence, Archer and Tacony; captured, June, 1863, and sent to Fort Warren for confinement; took the oath of allegiance, January 25, 1865, and released. [Fort Warren.]
C. E. L. Stewart, served as clerk in the Navy Department, Richmond, Virginia, between January 5, and January 31, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, V - Governmental relationships, VA - Administration, etc., Miscellaneous, page 20.]
Charles Stewart, landsman, CSS Macon, 1865. [CSS Macon Rolls.]
David Stewart, served as captain of the hold 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.]
David Stewart, acting gunner, CSS Virginia II, 1864; ordered to report to commander John Taylor Wood, at the Navy Department, Richmond, Virginia, July 3, 1864, for temporary special duty; served aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865; attached as lieutenant to Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 1, 10, 714; M1091; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271.]
George Stewart, Second Class Fireman, shipped aboard CSS Chattahoochee, May 4, 1864. [ORN 1, 17, 701.]
George Stewart, born Georgia, about 1842; enlisted in the Confederate States Navy for three years or the war; personal description shown as hazel eyes, dark hair, fair complexion, and standing 6 feet 1 inch tall; served on the Savannah squadron, in 1864, and was transferred to the CSS Palmetto State, Charleston station, in 1864. [Confederate Navy Subject file, N - Personnel, NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 609; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, pages 537 - 538.]
Henry Stewart, served as seaman aboard the receiving vessel, CSS St. Philip, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 555 and 561.]
Hugh Stewart, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, and aboard the CSS General Polk, in 1861; rated as carpenter's mate from October 1, 1861; in a dispatch from the commander, lieutenant Carter, addressed from aboard the CSS General Polk, at Columbus, Kentucky, December 3, 1861, to paymaster Nixon, it was advised that Hugh Stewart, carpenter's mate, had been banished from the vessel, and that his name was to be struck off the rolls, by order of flag officer Hollins, and that Stewart was to receive no pay for his services; it was additionally indicated that Martin Anderson had been rated carpenter's mate in place of Stewart, and this rating was to take effect from the date of the burning of the Tuscarora (which was burnt on November 22, 1861), the reasons for such a drastic move was not shown; appointed carpenter aboard the Confederate States gunboat Stonewall Jackson, of the Mississippi River Defense Fleet, on March 17, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 471 and 473; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 58-59; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 265.]
J. A. B. Stewart, served as paymaster's clerk aboard the CSS Isondiga, Savannah squadron, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XP - Pay and Allowances, Paymaster's Accounts - Miscellaneous, page 547.]
J.S. Stewart, Landsman, CSS Webb, April, 1865. [ORN 1, 22, 170.]
Joseph B. Stewart (surname also shown as Steward), born Henrico County, Virginia; served throughout the Civil War, first in the Confederate States Navy, and later in the engineering department; post war member of the Republican party; also a deputy in the internal revenue office; also held a position in the post office for four years; appointed collector of customs for the port of Richmond, Virginia, by President McKinley, April 1, 1901. [Times (Richmond, Virginia) dated April 2, 1901, page 2.]
William Stewart, previously served as First Corporal, Company F, First Regiment Georgia Regulars, February, 1861; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 3, 1864; served aboard CSS Palmetto State, June 30, 1864; captured at Burkeville, Virginia, April 6, 1865; released at Point Lookout, Maryland, June 20, 1865. [Georgia Rosters, 1, 340.]
William Stewart, born Scotland; aged 42; seaman, CSS Jackson, 1861-1862. [St. Philip.]
William E. Stewart, enlisted October 6, 1864, in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served as private in the marine guard aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station; deserted on January 5, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 266.]
John C. Stickney served in the Confederate Navy as Assistant Surgeon at Pensacola, Florida. He died on February 25, 1906 and is buried at the Greenwood Cemetery, New Orleans, Louisiana. [Young Sanders]
William Stickney, appointed master's mate in the Confederate States Navy on September 9, 1861, and served aboard the CSS Ivy, New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 842.]
Fritz Stienborn (surname also shown as Steinborn; name is also shown as Steinborn Fritz), served as seaman aboard the CSS Mobile, in 1861; rated as quartermaster on October 31, 1861 (date also shown elsewhere as January 1, 1862); later served aboard the CSS Palmetto State, Charleston harbor, 1864; deserted from the vessel on December 21, 1864, and went into Union lines, arriving on Wednesday, January 11, 1865, after leaving the city of Charleston on the morning of January 9,1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 1029 and 1035; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, pages 115-117.]
Charles B. Stiles, landsman (colored), CSS Macon, 1865. [CSS Macon Rolls.]
Edward Stiles (surname also shown as Styles), served aboard the CSS Isondiga, Savannah squadron, 1863 - 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 797 and 831.]
Edward Copeland Stiles (Register1864 incorrectly shows his middle initial as E.), born Pennsylvania, about 1827, and a resident of Philadelphia; son of Edward James Stiles; previous service in the United States Navy, as midshipman, from December 13, 1839; resigned from the United States Navy, as passed midshipman, in August, 1847; in his diplomatic passport application, dated September 1, 1856, he is described as having dark brown hair, blue eyes, a small nose and a round chin, and stated that he was married with two children (his wife may have passed on, as he later re-married, while living in England); served as United States consul to Vienna, from 1856; appointed from Missouri; original entry into the Confederate States Navy, May 26, 1863; sent to Bermuda, and then received instructions to go to England, arriving there in October, 1863; appointed lieutenant for the war, January 7, 1864, to rank from May 25, 1863; on special service, 1863 - 1864; involved in the purchase of a number of vessels for the Confederate States, including the Cornubia, the Hawk, the Eugenia and the Justitia; sailed aboard the Justitia with a cargo of stores, part of which were landed at Bermuda, and the rest at Nassau; afterwards served in command of the Wren, and was captured at Key West harbor, on June 12, 1865; examined in the Court of Admiralty, at London, England, in June, 1869, in relation to the dealings of the Confederate government in the United Kingdom, during the war; married Betsy Wilson Peter, at Islington, Middlesex County, England, September 25, 1869; occupation at the time of his marriage shown as master mariner; occupation later shown as a general agent; obtained an invalid pension from the United States government, for his service in the Mexican War; indicated, in the English census records, as being a British subject; died of stricture of the urethra, cystitis, uremia and cardiac failure, at the Middlesex Hospital, Marylebone, London, England, May 2, 1895. [Register1864; Callahan; Morning Republican (Little Rock, Arkansas) dated June 25, 1869; see also, his passport application, dated September 1, 1856, at the Ancestry.com web site; some additional data also obtained from his marriage and death certificates, copies of which are in the possession of the compiler; 1871 U.K. Census.]
Randolph R. Stiles, previous service as Private in Richmond Howitzers; wounded at Cold Harbor, June, 1864; served as 2nd lieutenant aboard the ironclad CSS Richmond, James River squadron, 1865; volunteered for temporary special duty, under lieutenant A. D. Wharton, on January 13, 1865. [Georgia in the War, 1861-1865, page 113; ORN 1, 11, 795; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 944.]
G.W. Still, enlisted at Talladega County, Alabama, February, 1861, in the 5th Alabama Regiment; served as gunner; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February, 1863; served aboard the floating battery at Mobile Bay, under commander Brown; transferred to the 9th Alabama Regiment, December, 1863; wounded in action at Chickamauga, and at Spanish Fort, Alabama; paroled at Meridian, Mississippi, May, 1865; resided at Palestine, Texas, after the war. [ADAH.]
Antonio Stipanovich, served as seaman on the cruiser CSS Florida, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 357.]
William S. Stoakley, born North Carolina; appointed assistant surgeon for the war on May 1, 1863; assistant surgeon, provisional Navy of the Confederate States, June 2, 1864; served on the Savannah station, 1863-1864; employed at the Naval Hospital at Savannah, 1864. [CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MA - Administration of hospitals and medical departments; Brest - Miscellaneous, page 283.]
Joseph Stockdell (surname also shown as Stockaell), served as 2nd class fireman aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River, in 1861; deserted from the vessel, off Grove Wharf, about November 16, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions (1861), page 430; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 334.]
Edward Cantey Stockton, born Florida (one source indicates that he was South Carolinian by birth); previously served in the United States Navy, having been appointed a Midshipman in that service in October, 1849; dismissed from the USN in June, 1858; served aboard the privateer, Lady Davis, and was involved in the capture of the first prize of the newly created Confederacy, the A.B. Thompson, on March 19, 1861; awarded the sum of $304.37 as his share in the capture of the Thompson; appointed 2nd lieutenant in the Confederate States Marine Corps, but his appointment was rejected by the Confederate States Senate on September 30, 1861; enlisted January 13, 1862 in the 21st South Carolina Infantry; resigned April 15, 1862 at Georgetown, South Carolina; appointed a Master in the Confederate States Navy on March 6, 1862, and served aboard the CSS Gaines and the CSS Chicora; served at Mobile, Alabama; married Nellie Eliza Mitchell on April 26, 1865 (or 1866?) at Houston, Texas; engaged in business in Texas and spent a fortune in land speculation; committed suicide at the Eutaw Hotel, St. Louis, Missouri, on Sunday, February 29, 1880; left a suicide note stating that he died because he had no home to go to; survived by his widow and three children. [Florida Confederate Pension File No. A 04178; Florida Confederate Card File; Brooklyn Daily Eagle dated March 2, 1880; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, page 1; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 329.]
Richard Stockton, Assistant Engineer, CSS Webb, February, 1863. [ORN 1, 24, 407.]
Robert E. Stockton, appointed paymaster's clerk in the Confederate States Navy, at Columbus, Georgia, January 21, 1863, at the rate of $60 per month; served as clerk to paymaster Felix Senac; appointment date also shown, in another document, as May 6, 1863, and, at this date, reported for duty to paymaster John W. Nixon. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 454 and 456.]
T.K. Stoddard, involved in a plot to seize the Panama to San Francisco steamer, in October, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 302 & 357.]
J. C. Stokes, served aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile, Alabama, 1864; discharged in the final quarter of 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1200.]
John Stokes, enlisted in Beaufort County, North Carolina, July 3, 1861, aged 29, as private, company G, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Cavalry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 1, 1862; served as captain's cook on the CSS Raleigh, 1862, and as ordinary seaman on the CSS Savannah, 1862-1863; also served as cabin cook aboard the CSS Roanoke, in 1864. [NCT 2, 156; ORN 2, 1, 301 & 305; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 542.]
J. F. Stotle, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 58-59.]
Benjamin F. Stone, resided Nash County, North Carolina; enlisted at Campn Mangum, near Raleigh, North Carolina, May 2, 1862, aged 32, as private, company D, 47th Regiment North Carolina Troops; stunned by a shell at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and captured sometime between July 1 and 5, 1863; hospitalized at Davids Island, New York Harbor on or about July 17, 1863; received at City Point, Virginia, August 28, 1863, for exchange; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 15, 1864. [NCT 11, 291.]
D. M. Stone, shipped by lieutenant Venable, at Richmond, Virginia, in early 1864, and served as a musician in the Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 454; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NV - Miscellaneous; Marine Corps - Miscellaneous, page 299.]
David D. Stone, [An image of this person, indicated as being a member of the Confederate States Navy, is held at the United States Military History Institute, Carlisle, Pennsylvania.]
Henry Stone, appointed, from Louisiana, as assistant Surgeon in the Confederate States Navy, at Natchez, Mississippi, on February 26, 1863; Stone accepted the appointment on March 18, 1863; resigned October 10, 1863. [Booth 3, 714; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 460.]
J. W. Stone, 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.]
Joseph Stone, born Staffordshire, England; pre-war occupation, laborer; enlisted at Currituck County, North Carolina, May 13, 1861, aged 40, as private, company L, 17th Regiment North Carolina Troops (1st Organization); transferred to the Confederate States Navy on or about July 28, 1861, and first served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Curlew, 1861; served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Virginia II. [NCT 6, 199; ORN 2, 1, 312; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 278.]
Sardine Graham Stone, jr., born Alabama, about 1842; original service in the United States Navy, as acting midshipman, from September 29, 1857; resigned, January 14, 1861; entered the Confederate States Navy, April 13, 1861, as midshipman; served aboard the steam sloop CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861; promoted 2nd lieutenant, February 8, 1862; later served aboard the CSS Polk, and on the Jackson station, 1862, and aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, 1862 - 1863; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; captured at Bahia, Brazil, October 7, 1864; sent to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, where he was received November 26, 1864; released January 26, 1865, upon the express condition that he was to leave the United States within ten days; post war occupation as county treasurer at Mobile, Alabama; died Mobile, January 18, 1900; buried at the Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile. [1860 U.S. Census; ORN 1, 2, 673; 1, 3, 256 and 2, 1, 290 & 318; Register1863; JCC 4, 121; Fort Warren; Sheppard - Atlanta Constitution dated January 19, 1900; 36th Congress Report 25; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 490.]
Thomas D. Stone, born at Bladon, Choctaw County, Alabama, July 19, 1845; originally enlisted at Fort Morgan, Alabama, April 9, 1861, as a private in company F, 21st Alabama Infantry, and continued until April 25th of that same year, the reason for his leaving being that he was under 18 years of age; appointed midshipman in the Confederate States Navy on March 31, 1863, at Mobile, and served aboard the CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron; later served on the side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1864; captured at Richmond, Virginia, April 3, 1865, and turned over to the provost marshall, April 15, 1865; paroled at Richmond, April 15, 1865; shown to have been a resident of Crichton, Mobile County, Alabama, in 1907. [ORN 2, 1, 292 & 300; Census or Enumeration of Confederate Soldiers Residing in Alabama, in 1907 at Ancestry.com; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RL - Paroles, A-W, page 191.]
F. Stonemell, served as officer's cook in the Confederate States Navy. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 996.]
Edward Stonington, Officer's Steward, CSS Alert, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 275.]
George Stott, born about 1814; served as seaman and quarter gunner aboard the ironclad ram CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile Bay, Alabama, 1863; resided, in1891, at Mobile County, Alabama; applied for a Confederate pension from Mobile County, December 10, 1891 (see also, entry for George Stout, below, who may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 308; ADAH.]
George Stout, Seaman, CSS Alert, 1861 (see also, entry for George Stott, above, who may be the same person). [ORN 2, 1, 275.]
Thomas Edward Stout, born Nashville, Tennessee, January 24, 1849; father, Dr. Samuel H. Stout, who was a well to do planter before the war, and who served as surgeon in the 3rd Tennessee (Clack's) Infantry; his father also later became Medical Director, Army of Tennessee, mother, Martha Moore Abernathy; Thomas may have previously served as a private, company I, 25th Tennessee Infantry (a person of this name is listed in the roster); appointed midshipman, Confederate States Navy; and assigned to the school ship, CSS Patrick Henry, lieutenant William H. Parker commanding, February 2, 1865; states, in his pension application, that he never participated in battle, during the war; paroled at Atlanta, Georgia, May 6, 1865; resided in Hamilton County, Tennessee, after the war, as a Confederate pensioner; married, 1880, to Clara C. Allen; wife died some years prior to his application, in 1918; also had three married daughters at that time; was a member of the United Confederate Veterans, and also of Georgia Lodge of Masons, No. 96 died Atlanta, Georgia, August 30, 1920; buried Westview Cemetery, Atlanta. [Tennessee Rosters, 2, 386; Tennessee Confederate Pension file #S15373; Confederate Veteran 28 (1920), 429.]
William Stout, 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 85.]
James Strachan (Temple 977 also shows his surname as Strauth; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log shows his name as Joseph Stracken; his surname is also shown in other sources, as Strachen and Stracks), native of Scotland; captured aboard the prize schooner, Lizzie M. Stacey, November 13, 1864 and shipped as coal heaver aboard the cruiser CSS Shenandoah; allowed liberty at Melbourne, Australia; charged with fighting in the street, and fined five shillings, at the Melbourne City Court, on Monday, February 13, 1865; returned aboard the cruiser on the same day; one of the signatories who expressed confidence in the command of lieutenant James I. Waddell, in a petition dated in September, 1865. [Temple 977 (this source incorrectly shows him as having joined the vessel at Melbourne); ORN 1, 3, 783; Argus (Melbourne newspaper) dated February 14, 1865; Whittle 71; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log.]
E. M. Stratton, appointed acting master in the Confederate States Navy, but his appointment was revoked on December 7, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330.]
W. D. Straub, served at the Mobile station, in 1863, as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1061.]
J. L. Straughan, shipped for the war, as seaman aboard the CSS Oconee, Savannah squadron, on May 1, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 602.]
James Straughan, served as quartermaster aboard the CSS Lady Davis, and was involved in the capture of the prize A.B. Thompson, on May 19, 1861; received the sum of $108.70 as his share in the capture of that vessel. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, page 1.]
William Strauss, private, Confederate States Marine Corps; captured at Fort Gaines, Alabama, August 8, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 224.]
J.R. Street, served aboard the CSS Indian Chief; later transferred to the CSS Pee Dee; applied for a post war Confederate pension from Cleveland County, North Carolina, and from Rutherford County, North Carolina (see also the entry for D.D. Green, who also served aboard the same vessels). [NC State Archives.]
Charles B. Streeter, served as seaman aboard the CSS V.H. Ivy, New Orleans station, 1861-1862; rated as quartermaster from January 1, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 844 and 850.]
Dick Strength, probably a sailor in the Confederate States Navy; mentioned as being the assailant who had inflicted a stab wound on CSN sailor, William Angelo Heidt, in 1864, at Augusta, Georgia. [Information from the pension papers of William Angelo Heidt, Florida Confederate Pension File No. A 04728.]
John M. Stribling, born Virginia (some sources show state of birth as South Carolina), about 1835; appointed from South Carolina; previous service in the United States Navy, from which he resigned, December 31, 1860; shown to be a resident, with his wife, Elizabeth A. Stribling, of Norfolk, Virginia, in 1860; later served as lieutenant, Confederate States Navy; served aboard the CSS Sumter, 1861, and CSS Florida, 1862; died September 12, 1862, of yellow fever, off Mobile, Alabama; buried Melrose, Alabama. [ORN 1, 1, 614 & 767; CSS Sumter Muster Rolls; Semmes 124; 36th Congress Report 24; 1860 U.S. Census.]
H. Strickland, Landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
James Strickland, Ordinary Seaman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
Nathaniel Strickland, enlisted in the Confederate States Navy; served as landsman on the CSS Arctic and the CSS North Carolina; transferred, February 29, 1864, as private, to company E, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; captured at Fort Fisher, January 15, 1865, and confined at Elmira, New York, where he died, March 12, 1865, of pneumonia; buried at Woodlawn National Cemetery, Elmira. [NCT 1, 254; ORN 2, 1, 276 & 294.]
Simeon Strickland, sr., born Walton County, Florida, December 24, 1844; enlisted at Milton, Florida, in 1861, in a company known as the Morton Confederates (under captain C.C. Henderson); also in Walker's 40th Provisional Army Regiment, consisting of four Alabama, four Arkansas, one Kentucky and one Florida companies; captured at Tiptonville, Tennessee; held as a prisoner of war at Springfield, Illinois, for 5 months, 16 days before being exchanged; after the battle of Missionary Ridge was transferred from the army to the Navy, in the latter part of 1863; served aboard the CSS Tennessee, at Mobile Bay, 1864; wounded in the right foot, at the battle of Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864, and captured; held as a prisoner of war at Ship Island for about four months before being exchanged again; then sent aboard the gunboat CSS Huntsville; after this vessel was sunk, he was sent aboard the CSS Nashville; surrendered aboard the gunboat CSS Nashville, under lieutenant John Bennett, at Demopolis/Nanna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; paroled at Mobile; post war occupation as a farmer, and also ran a store; resided at Port Washington, Washington County, Florida; suffered from facial paralysis, piles and rheumatism later in life; married Beatrice Wise, at Walton County, Florida, February 28, 1891; applied for a Confederate pension from the state of Florida, in 1907; died at Washington County, Florida, January 9, 1910. [Florida Confederate Pension File No. A03637.]
Charles Stringer, served as 3rd class boy in the Confederate States Navy, 1862; deserted about August, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 336.]
F. Stringer, served as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
Charles Stroble, born Charleston, South Carolina, about 1830; previous service in the Army of Tennessee, and was enlisted by Naval lieutenant W. W. Carnes, on April 8, 1864, at Dalton, Georgia, for service as landsman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; transferred, on May 4, 1864, to the CSS Sampson, Savannah squadron. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 538-540; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 585.]
John Strode, born 1834; enlisted June, 1861, at Tampa, in Company K, Fourth Florida Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 11, 1864. [Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 457.]
John L. Strode, born Hillsboro, Florida, about 1829; previous service in the Army of Tennessee, and was enlisted by Naval lieutenant W. W. Carnes, on April 9, 1864, at Dalton, Georgia, for service as landsman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; transferred, in July, 1864, to the CSS Macon. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 538-540 and 560.]
John Stroker, private, Confederate States Marine Corps; captured at Fort Gaines, Alabama on August 8, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., A - A.W. Baker - U.S.S. Minnesota, page 224.]
John J. Strokes, served as landsman aboard the receiving ship, CSS Arctic, 1864; died on April 24, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 265.]
William E. Strom, captured from aboard the American bark, Delphine, December 29, 1864, and shipped aboard the CSS Shenandoah. [Whittle 98 and note 2.]
Henry Strong, Jr., born Ireland, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, sailor; marital status, married; enlisted at New Orleans, July 18, 1861, aged 34, as private (later promoted sergeant), company D, 15th Louisiana Infantry; deserted July 27, 1862; same source also indicates that he transferred to the Confederate States Navy in 1863. [Booth 3, 727.]
James Strong, shipped aboard the CSS Shenandoah, November 14, 1864. [CSS Shenandoah Deck Log.]
Thomas Strong, Captain of Mizzentop; CSS Shenandoah, 1865; joined the vessel at Melbourne, Australia, February, 1865; rated coxswain, April 8, 1865; completed the cruise at Liverpool, November, 1865; returned to Melbourne, and attempted, unsuccessfully, to rejoin his old employment, as stevedore, at Sandridge, Port of Melbourne; supposed to have shipped, immediately after, on a foreign voyage, from which he never returned to Australia. [Alabama Claims 1, 975; CSS Shenandoah Deck Log; additional information included in a dispatch, dated at Melbourne, March 22, 1872, sent by the United States Consul at Melbourne; ORN 1, 3, 783.]
Alford A. Stroup (first name also shown as Alfred), born Gaston County, North Carolina (1860 U.S. Census shows birthplace as Buncombe County, North Carolina); resided in Cleveland County, North Carolina, as a farmer; enlisted at Surry County, North Carolina, April 26, 1861, aged 22, as private, company D, 14th Regiment North Carolina Troops; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 19, 1862, for duty on the Merrimac (CSS Virginia); served as landsman aboard this vessel. [NCT 5, 433; ORN 2, 1, 310; 1860 U.S. Census.]
A. Stuart, First Class Fireman, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 274.]
C.E.L. Stuart, born Italy; served as clerk on the staff of Secretary Mallory, at the Confederate States Navy Department, Richmond, Virginia, 1864. [Register1864.]
John J. Sturgis, born New Jersey, 1838; originally served in company F, 9th Virginia Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February 12, 1862, and served, as ordinary seaman, aboard the CSS Virginia; confined at Richmond, Virginia, in August, 1864, under sentence of a General Naval Court Martial; sent to Charleston, South Carolina, in the custody of master's mate William H. Fitzgerald, on August 5, 1864. [Nansemond; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 247.]
Edward Styles, see Edward Stiles.
Richard Styles, served as ordinary seaman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in 1863; paid off and discharged from the service on September 22, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 524.]
William Suddenston, see William Green Huddleston.
William Suddleston, see William Green Huddleston.
J.J. Sugenbuhl, see John Julius Lugenbuhl.
Edmond F. Suit, 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 408.]
M. H. Suit, 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 408.]
Charles Sulivan, served as ordinary seaman aboard Launch No. 6, New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 49.]
A. Sullivan , served as quartermaster 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.]
Anthony Sullivan, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 300.]
Anthony Sullivan, resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; unmarried; served in the Confederate States Navy and on the Confederate States Naval battery at Drewry's Bluff, in 1864; killed in the taking out of the USS Underwriter, North Carolina, 1864; a cousin of Anthony Sullivan's mother named Stephen Sullivan, applied, on behalf of his brother, Michael Sullivan, for any pay that was due to the deceased sailor, on March 1, 1864. [Norfolk County Record 203; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, pages 267-269.]
B.J. Sullivan, see B. J. Scullion.
Charles Sullivan, 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.]
Charles Sullivan, seaman, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]
Daniel Sullivan, served as private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, and aboard the CSS Charleston, Charleston station in 1863-1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 133, 136-139 and 153.]
George Sullivan, see Robert Scott.
Henry Sullivan, involved in a plot to seize the Panama to San Francisco steamer, in October, 1864. [ORN 1, 3, 302 & 357.]
James Sullivan, Seaman, Florida Volunteer Coast Guards, mustered in January 25, 1862. [Soldiers of Florida, 49.]
James M. Sullivan, seaman (rating also shown as fireman), Confederate States Navy; served as seaman aboard the CSS Indian Chief, and also aboard the torpedo boat CSS David, and was captured October 5, 1863, off Charleston, South Carolina, while attempting to blow up the USS Ironsides; sent to Fort Lafayette, New York Harbor, then transferred to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, September 18, 1863; exchanged October 1, 1864; released and sent to Richmond from City Point, Virginia, October 18, 1864, after being exchanged. [Fort Warren; ORN 1, 15, 19 - 21; 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 765-766.]
James T. Sullivan, served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Seabird; captured and paroled at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February, 1862. [Scharf, 392; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 779.]
Jerry Sullivan, aged 25 years (in 1863); described as about six feet high, with florid complexion, short black hair, greyish eyes, slightly hump backed and limped a little; served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, Georgia, 1863; deserted from the Naval hospital at Savannah, Tuesday, July 7, 1863; a reward of $30 was posted for his apprehension; a Naval document indicates that he deserted about September, 1863, which may have been a second desertion. [Daily Morning News (Savannah, Georgia) dated Wednesday, July 15, 1863; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 338.]
John Sullivan, born Ireland, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, laborer; marital status, single; enlisted at Camp Moore, Louisiana, July 22, 1861, aged 24, as private, company H, 10th Louisiana Infantry; deserted his Regiment and joined the Confederate States Navy at an unspecified date. [Booth 3, 739.]
John Sullivan, enlisted, for one year, as coal passer aboard the cruiser CSS Nashville, Charleston, South Carolina, on September 23, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1228; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133.]
John Sullivan, served as ordinary seaman, CSS Savannah, 1862-1863; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Newton County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 919; ORN 2, 1, 304.]
John Sullivan, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 55.]
John Sullivan, served as a private in company C, Confederate States Marine Corps, at the Richmond station, in 1863; transferred about July, 1863, to the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron; transferred, on January 28, 1864, to the CSS North Carolina. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 212 and 437.]
John Sullivan, served as landsman on the CSS Resolute, Savannah squadron, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 586.]
John C. Sullivan, born England; transferred from the Confederate States Army, and appointed, from Virginia, as acting boatswain, Confederate States Navy, September 3, 1862; later appointed boatswain; served on the CSS Beaufort, James River squadron, 1862 - 1863; died March 17, 1863. [CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330.]
Louis Sullivan (first name also shown as Lewis), enlisted March 1, 1862, in Company E, First Florida Infantry; wounded at Murfreesboro; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 10, 1864; sent aboard the CSS Spray, St. Mark's, Florida, as ordinary seaman, on June 2, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 815; Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 104.]
Michael Sullivan, served on the submarine defences of the James River, 1864; rated as 1st class fireman from April 4, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 942.]
Michael Sullivan, served as fireman aboard the CSS Tuscaloosa, Mobile station, 1864; deserted from the vessel and went aboard the USS Lackawanna, off Mobile, in February, 1864; subsequently sent to New Orleans, aboard the USS Admiral, for further interrogation, on February 20, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 495.]
Patrick Sullivan, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the ironclad CSS Atlanta, Savannah River, and was captured aboard that vessel at Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; later served, also as 2nd class fireman, aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in 1863; transferred to the Charleston station about August, 1863. [ORN 1, 14, 268; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 519-523.]
Patrick Sullivan, seaman, CSS Florida; also served on the captured vessels, Clarence, Archer and Tacony; captured, June, 1863, and sent to Fort Warren for confinement. [Fort Warren.]
Patrick J. Sullivan, enlisted at Camp Moore, Louisiana, August 16, 1861, as private, companies C and I, 13th Louisiana Infantry; also indicated to have served in the 11th Louisiana Infantry; captured at Perryville, Kentucky, while on duty with the quartermaster wagons, no date shown; wounded at Jackson sometime between July and October, 1863; promoted sergeant, December 1, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 11, 1864, by order of the Secretary of War. [Booth 3, 742.]
Peter B. Sullivan, served as 2nd class fireman in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
R. Sullivan, served as coxswain in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
Robert Sullivan, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia. [ORN 2, 1, 300.]
Robert Sullivan, resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; served as petty officer in the Confederate States Navy. [Norfolk County Record 202.]
Samuel Sullivan, Third Assistant Engineer, captured at Arkansas Post, January 12, 1863. [ORN 1, 24, 117.]
Thomas Sullivan, enlisted, for one year, as waiter aboard the cruiser CSS Nashville, Charleston, South Carolina, on September 21, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1229; Alabama Claims 2, (appendix 2), 133.]
Andrew M. Summers (first name also shown as Adam), born Ohio, about 1829; appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on February 5, 1862, and ordered to report aboard the CSS Pontchartrain, for duty. [St. Philip; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 464.]
Charles Summers, served as seaman aboard the CSS St. Nicholas, 1861, and aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River squadron, in 1862; made an allotment of his pay out to Nancy Summers in 1862. [ORN 1, 4, 555; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 287.]
Charles Summers, served as quarter gunner in the Confederate States Navy, and at the Richmond station, in 1861; involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863 (see also, entry for Charles Sumners, who may be the same person). [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 484 - 487.]
G.W. Summers, served in Confederate States Navy; buried at Charleston Port Society Cemetery, on Ashley River, Charleston. [Name and service status inscribed on granite monument unveiled December 10, 1922, by the Ladies Memorial Association of Charleston, South Carolina.]
James Summers, served as ordinary seaman in the Confederate States Navy, and was involved in the expedition to capture the USS Satellite and the USS Reliance, off Windmill Point, Rappahannock River, Virginia, on August 23, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, pages 30-32.]
John Summers, Seaman, CSS Alert, 1861. [ORN 2, 1, 275.]
Lawrence Summers, served as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Patrick Henry, James River, Virginia, 1863; next of kin listed as Ellen Summers. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 941.]
Sidney Clingman Summers, born February 4, 1844 (one source shows year of birth as 1845); served as seaman aboard the CSS Indian Chief; died June 22, 1912 (one source shows date of death as June 19, 1912); buried at Highland Cemetery, 1000 N Hillside, Wichita, Kansas 67214. [Information compiled by Jon Jenkins, of Wichita, Kansas, and included at his web site, Confederate Burials in Kansas, at http://www.1439.ksscv.org/Confedgrvs.html; U.S. Veterans Gravesites, circa 1775 - 2006 at the Ancestry.com web site.]
John Sumner, 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.]
Joseph J. Sumner, born Hertford County, North Carolina; resided there as a farmer or mechanic, prior to enlisting there, May 22, 1861, aged 21, as private, company D, 17th Regiment North Carolina Troops (1st Organization); captured at Fort Hatteras, August 29, 1861; confined at Fort Columbus, New York Harbor, and at Fort Warren, Boston Harbor; exchanged February 20, 1862; mustered out on disbandment of the company on or about March 20, 1862; enlisted again, March 24, 1862, as private, company C, 17th Regiment North Carolina Troops (2nd Organization); detailed as fireman on board the CSS Bombshell; captured on board that vessel at Plymouth, 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; received a Confederate pension from North Carolina, after the war. [NCT 6, 148 & 230; ORN 1, 9, 746; deck log entries for the USS Sassacus dated May 5, 1864 and May 10, 1864.]
Charles Sumners, Quarter Gunner, CSS Richmond, January, 1865 (see also, entry for Charles Summers, quarter gunner, who may be the same person). [ORN 1, 11, 794.]
J. L. Surgant, served as landsman aboard the CSS Neuse, North Carolina, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1232.]
A. G. Surratt, enlisted October 6, 1864, in the Confederate States Marine Corps; served as private in the marine guard aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station; deserted on January 5, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 266.]
Henry Sutherland, Fireman; born Scotland; CSS Shenandoah, 1865; joined the vessel at Melbourne, Australia. [Alabama Claims 1, 977; ORN 1, 3, 783.]
Jacob V. Sutton, appointed acting master's mate in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, October 7, 1861, and ordered to report for duty aboard the CSS Calhoun; later appointed acting master, October 15, 1861, and served aboard the CSS General Polk, 1861-1862; advised that his services were no longer required, and he was discharged from the service on June 19, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 476 and 479-480; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, pages 466 and 952.]
James Sutton, served as pilot aboard the CSS Selma, 1863 - 1864; captured at Mobile Bay, Alabama, August 5, 1864, and sent aboard the USS Port Royal, as a prisoner of war. [ORN 1, 19, 627 and 1, 21, 844.]
John C. Sutton, previous service in the Confederate States Navy, before being transferred, August 5, 1863, as private, to 3rd company G, 2nd Regiment North Carolina Artillery; captured at Fort Fisher, January 15, 1865, and confined at Elmira, New York, where he died, April 16, 1865 of pneumonia; buried at Woodlawn National Cemetery, Elmira. [NCT 1, 288.]
Benjamin F. Swain, resided in Brunswick County, North Carolina; enlisted at Camp Howard, North Carolina, July 18, 1861, aged 18, as sergeant, company C, 30th Regiment North Carolina Troops; reduced to private sometime between May and December, 1862; wounded in the left arm at Gaines' Mill, Virginia, on or about June 27, 1862; promoted to corporal sometime between January and June, 1863; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 5, 1864; served as landsman on the CSS Yadkin, 1864. [NCT 8, 350; ORN 2, 1, 313.]
Edward Augustus Swain, born in New Orleans, Louisiana, January 22, 1843; appointed as acting midshipman, Confederate States Navy, October 31, 1861; ordered to proceed to New Orleans and report for duty to flag officer George N. Hollins, on the same day; Swain indicated that he left his domicile at Richmond, Virginia on November 6, and reported to Hollins, at New Orleans, on November 12, 1861; ordered to report aboard the CSS Pamlico, November 12, 1861; ordered to Mobile, May 4, 1862; ordered to the CSS Baltic, May 20, 1862, and is shown, in mid-1863, as acting master aboard this vessel; ordered to relieve acting Master's Mate F.M. Tucker in command of C.B.S. [?] Gunnison, November 9, 1863; detached from the Mobile Squadron and ordered to the CSS Patrick Henry, December 1, 1863; leave of absence granted for three months, December 27, 1863; resigned from the Confederate States Navy on February 20, 1864, but was re-appointed by acting master T.E. Hogg, on May 7, 1864, as acting master's mate; attempted to seize steamer, Salvador, running from Panama to the port of San Francisco; captured by the USS Lancaster, November, 1864; sentenced to confinement at San Quentin state penitentiary, California, for ten years, in 1865; sentence remitted, and released, April, 1866; member of the New York Board of Fire Underwriters, since 1868; personal description shown as 5 feet, 10 inches tall, grey eyes, brown hair and florid complexion; died, aged 66, of a complication of diseases, after an illness of two years, at the Hotel Chelsea, New York, March 10, 1909; survived by his widow; see the next entry. [Booth 3, 750; ORN 1, 3, 302 & 355; 1, 20, 848 and 1, 22, 796; ORA 2, 8; New York Times dated March 11, 1909; U.S. Passport Applications at the Ancestry.com web site; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XF - Fuel and Water, Coal and Wood for ships, page 304; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 470; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 471.]
Edward A. Swain, born and resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, clerk; marital status, single; enlisted at Camp Moore, Louisiana, June 7, 1861, as private, company H, 7th Louisiana Infantry; discharged November 5, 1861; also shown as being transferred to the Confederate States Navy, December, 1861; probably the same person shown in the previous entry. [Booth 3, 750.]
Thomas Swanton, Seaman; born England; CSS Shenandoah, 1865; joined the vessel at Melbourne, Australia. [Alabama Claims 1, 976.]
Otto Swartz, captured from aboard the American bark, Delphine, December 29, 1864, and shipped aboard the CSS Shenandoah. [Whittle 98 and note 2.]
B. Swatt, see Berrien Sweat.
John Swazer, ordinary seaman, CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 304.]
Berrien Sweat (surname also shown as Swatt), served as ordinary seaman aboard the ironclad battery CSS Georgia, at Savannah, Georgia; signed on for the war on July 1, 1863, and, as landsman, was granted a fourteen day furlough from July 6, 1863; later served aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1864-1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865; attached as private to company C, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Ware County, Georgia. [GA Pension Index 923; ORN 2, 1, 287; M1091; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271, 514 and 608.]
James G. Sweat, Seaman, Captain A.B. Noyes company of Coast Guards, enrolled, October 18, 1861, at St. Marks, Florida. [Soldiers of Florida, 52.]
John Sweeney, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 69.]
Michael Sweeney, enlisted as ordinary seaman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile Squadron, June 15, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 110.]
George Swenson, served as seaman at the New Orleans station, and aboard the flag ship, CSS St. Philip, 1861; rated as quartermaster from November 1, 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 57 and 567.]
John Swift, appointed first assistant engineer aboard the Confederate States gunboat General Earl Van Dorn, of the Mississippi River Defense fleet, February 23, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 263.]
John W. Swift, appointed 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at Shreveport, Louisiana, on February 19, 1864; paroled at Shreveport, June 7, 1865. [ORN 1, 27, 235; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 473.]
Joseph Swift, appointed chief engineer aboard the Confederate States gunboat General Beauregard, 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.]
A.M. Swimm, born New Orleans, Louisiana, about 1836; originally served as private, company H, 9th Kentucky Mounted Infantry; promoted sergeant; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, April 21, 1864 (an official Navy document shows transfer date as April 8, 1864), for service as landsman aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; transferred, as landsman aboard the CSS Isondiga, Savannah Squadron, on April 21, 1864; rated as quartermaster, aboard that vessel, on October 1, 1864, by order of lieutenant commanding, H.H. Dalton; deserted from the CSS Isondiga on the night of the evacuation of Savannah, Georgia. [Civil War Service Records; Confederate States Navy subject files - N Personnel - NI - Promotions; Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XO - Clothing and Food, Clothing and Provisions (January - June, 1864), page 720; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 538-540, 542 and 803; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 543.]
John J. Swing, Landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 276.]
Martin Swoards, served as coal heaver 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 110.]
John E. Sydney, see John E. Sidney.
Frederick Manuel Edwards Syfrette (surname also shown as Syfrett and Syphret), born November 12, 1827, in South Carolina; shown to be a farmer, residing in Jackson County, Florida, in 1860; enrolled September, 1862 (pension records show date of enlistment as October 16, 1862); served, as landsman, on CSS Chattahoochee; also served, as ordinary seaman, on CSS Savannah; mustered out May, 1865 (pension records show discharge date as June 29, 1865, at Maryland); included in the Roll Confederate Navy of Florida; married Mary Jane Summerlin, at Geneva County, Alabama, on July 22, 1874; post war occupation as farmer; later resided in Florida, and died at Jackson County, Florida, on March 5, 1904. [Soldiers of Florida, 317; Florida Confederate Pension File No. A00052; ORN 2, 1, 304; CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1900 U.S. Census.]
Constantine Sygalas (surname also shown as Sygulas), born at Theatre Santourenen, Greece, May 5, 1829; originally enlisted October 13, 1861, in the Confederate Army as a private, Company G, 21st Alabama Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, in October, 1862, and served aboard the CSS Morgan; paroled at McIntosh Bluff, Alabama, in April, 1865 (also shown as paroled at Mobile, Alabama on April 29, 1865); married Harriet, 1867; employed, post war, as bartender and saloon keeper, at the Manassas Club and Frank's Saloon, respectively, in Mobile; died Mobile, Alabama, October 14, 1914; buried at Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile. [John E. Ellis; 1910 U.S. Census; see also the Mobile, Alabama City Directories, 1890 - 1892 and Census or Enumeration of Confederate Soldiers Residing in Alabama, in 1907 at Ancestry.com; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 669.]
Thomas M.Y. Sykes, Private, Company G, 19th Regiment Georgia Volunteer Infantry, July 2, 1861; captured at Fredericksburg, Virginia, December 13, 1862; paroled near Falmouth, Virginia for exchange December 14, 1862; transferred to Confederate States Navy, May 2, 1864; in service at Charleston, South Carolina, as oarsman, November, 1864; no later record. [Georgia Rosters 2, 743.]
James Sylvanus (first initial also incorrectly shown as L. and D.), seaman aboard General Ripley's despatch boat (may in fact have been an enlisted man in the Confederate States Army); captured at 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.]
Emmanuel Sylvia, see Emanuel Silver.
F.M.E. Sypret, see F.M.E. Syfrette.
Peter Syrest, shipped as seaman aboard the revenue cutter Morgan, Mobile, Alabama, in 1861. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 1162.]