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N. Yader, 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 M. Yarborough (surname also shown as Yarbrough), served as a private in the Confederate States Marine Corps, aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, 1863; transferred, on March 22, 1863, to the CSS Atlanta; captured aboard the CSS Atlanta, Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; returned to duty at a later stage, and was a defendant in a Naval Court Martial, at Savannah, in August, 1864, specification of charges and sentence details not shown. [ORN 1, 14, 268; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 598; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 249.]

William Yarnboden, enlisted as landsman aboard the CSS Baltic, Mobile Squadron, June 9, 1862; deserted in early July, 1862, after only 23 days service. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 109.]

James Yarvan, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 278.]

Henry Yates, seaman, CSS Alabama; later served on the CSS Shenandoah, under the name of Henry Fox; expiration of service, April 8, 1865. [ORN 1, 3, 72 & 783; Whittle 139.]

J.A. Yates, recruited aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah squadron, in 1864, and was transferred as landsman, on October 6, 1864, from that vessel to the ironclad floating battery CSS Georgia (also known as the State of Georgia and Ladies' Ram), also in the same squadron; died aboard the vessel on November 25, 1864; buried Laurel Grove Cemetery, Savannah, Georgia. [ORN 2, 1, 287; Honeycutt; Confederate Navy subject file M - Medical; MN - Discharges from medical custody and deaths; Deaths - discharges, page 325; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 648.]

J.N. Yates, served as 2nd assistant engineer 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 $228.26 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.]

Jeremiah S. Yates, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, aboard the CSS Lady Davis, on May 27, 1861; also served aboard the CSS Savannah, and on the CSS Macon, 1865; services dispensed with as of January 28, 1865, due to his not being regularly in the Navy. [CSS Macon Rolls; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 712; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 667.]

W. Yates, recruited at Savannah, Georgia, on April 14, 1863, as a private in company E, Confederate States Marine Corps. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 683.]
William Yates, 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.]

Nicholas Yeager
, 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 1182.]

---- Yeargen, see David Yergin.

A. F. Yeargin, served as 2nd class fireman aboard the floating battery, CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron, in 1863; signed on for the war, on July 1, 1863, and was granted a fourteen day furlough from July 4, 1863; transferred to the Charleston station about August, 1863. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 510, 514 and 522.]

H.J. Yearty, born St. Marks, Florida, about 1844; enlisted from the Army of Tennessee, by Naval lieutenant W.W. Carnes, on April 8, 1864, as ordinary seaman for service aboard the floating battery CSS Georgia, Savannah squadron; transferred to the steamer CSS Isondiga, Savannah squadron, on April 21, 1864; transferred, in July, 1864, to the CSS Macon, and served as quartermaster aboard the vessel, 1864 - 1865; shown, in January, 1865, as being in prison for theft; attached to the Shell Bluff battery, on the Savannah River, in February, 1865; sent to Augusta, Georgia, February 26, 1865, in charge of two Union prisoners. [CSS Macon Rolls; ORN 1, 16, 509; 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 and 560.]

Charles E. Yeatman, born Virginia, 1828; commissioned lieutenant, Confederate States Navy, May 5, 1863; served aboard the steamer, CSS Baltic, 1863 - 1864; appointed 1st lieutenant, Provisional Navy, to rank from January 6, 1864; paroled at Nanna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; resided as a railroad agent, in 1880, with his wife, H.R. Yeatman, and two children (eldest child born 1864) at Norfolk, Virginia. [Porter's Naval History, 785; JCC 4, 122; Register1864; 1880 U.S. Census.]
C. Yeatts, died January 1, 1865; buried at Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia. [Tom Brooks.]

T.C. Yennette, Assistant Engineer, James River Squadron, October, 1864. [ORN 1, 10, 766.]

George Yeoman, native of Canterbury, Kent, England; engaged, September, 1862, aboard the Agrippina, of London, as Ordinary Seaman; joined the CSS Alabama, October, 1862, at Martinique; taken aboard the Deerhound, after the battle off Cherbourg, France, June 19, 1864, and then to Southampton, England, where he was supplied with a suit, and paid off. [William Marvel; sworn affidavit, by George Yeoman, dated September, 1864, at London, copy of which is in the possession of this author.]

Richard H. Yeomans, appointed acting 3rd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on March 28, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 669.]

David Yergin (surname also shown as Yeargen), landsman, ironclad steam sloop CSS Virginia II, James River, Virginia, 1864 - 1865; attached as private to company D, 1st Regiment, Semmes' Naval Brigade, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 2, 1, 312; M1091.]

John Yergin, 1st class fireman, CSS Georgia, July, 1863. [ORN 1, 14, 715.]

H.J. Yerty, see H.J. Yearty.

E.F. Yonce, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]

Bragg Yonge (name also shown as P.H. Bragg Yonge; surname also shown as Young), born Muscogee County, Georgia, 1837; son of Willaim P. and Ann Yonge; younger brother of Clarence Randolph Yonge (see entry below), who was a Confederate Navy officer aboard the CSS Alabama; resided as an engineer, in 1860, at Savannah, Georgia; enlisted January 3, 1861, as private, Captain A.C. Davenport's Independent Company, Georgia Volunteer Cavalry, later enlisted as private, company G, 1st Regiment Georgia Infantry (Olmstead's), May 16, 1862; sent on detailed duty to the Engineering Department, December 31, 1862; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, April 27, 1863; served aboard the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863-4; resigned from Naval service in 1864; resided in Columbua, Georgia; served as an engineer on the North and South Railroad, of Columbus, Georgia; killed in a train accident on that railroad on Wednesday, March 18, 1874; survived by his wife and two children. [GARosters 1, 192; Georgia in the War, 1861-1865, 114; Register1864; ORN 2, 1, 304; 1850 U.S. Census; 1860 U.S. Census; Georgia Weekly Telegraph and Georgia Journal & Messenger (Macon, Georgia) dated Friday, March 20, 1874; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 581; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 670.]

Chandler J. Yonge, born November 15, 1843, Walton County, Florida; enlisted March 25, 1861, at Bluff Springs, Florida, in Company I, First Florida Infantry; transferred to the Confederate States Navy, February, 1864; assigned to the Savannah Squadron, as Master's Mate aboard the CSS Isondiga; transferred to the Charleston Squadron, and served on the CSS Indian Chief, then transferred to Drewry's Bluff, James River, Virginia; paroled at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, April 9, 1865; was residing in Hillsboro County, Florida, December, 1909. [Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 128; Florida Confederate Pension File No. A07925.]

Clarence Randolph Yonge, born Thomaston, Upson County, Georgia, 1833, son of William Philip and Ann Easton; married Mary Ann Tiernay, September 16, 1857, at Savannah, Georgia; employed in the Naval Paymaster's office, at Savannah, Georgia, in 1861; released from his duties and accompanied James D. Bulloch to England, where he subsequently joined the crew who were sent aboard the CSS Alabama, in 1862; dismissed from the service of the Confederate Navy, at Jamaica, January, 1863; employed, in 1880, at Baltimore, Maryland, as clerk in the Railroad office. [1880 U.S. Census; Alabama Claims 2, 371-372.]

Thomas M. Yopp (middle initial also shown as N.), born Georgia, June 5, 1828; resided, as a farmer, in 1860, at Laurens County, Georgia; appointed 1st lieutenant, Company H, 14th Regiment, Georgia Volunteer Infantry, July 9, 1861; elected Captain, July 18, 1861; wounded at Seven Pines, Virginia, May 31, 1862; cashiered August 31, 1863; records show he received pay at Richmond, Virginia, while serving as private in this company from October 17, 1863 to April 2, 1864; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 4, 1864; served as landsman aboard the CSS Olustee, Wilmington station, 1864, and later aboard the CSS Columbia, Charleston station, 1865; transferred to the Richmond station on January 22, 1865; shown to be living in Runnels County, Texas, in 1880, as a farmer; resided, in 1910 and 1920, as an inmate of the Confederate Soldiers' Home, at Edgewood district, Fulton County, Georgia; died Fulton County, Georgia, January 23, 1920. [Georgia Rosters 2, 388; 1860 U.S. Census; 1880 U.S. Census; 1910 U.S. Census; 1920 U.S. Census; Georgia Deaths, 1919 - 1998 at the Ancestry.com web site; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 270 - 271; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 849.]

Franklin York, born Randolph County, North Carolina, 1840; son of Adam York; resided with his father and siblings, in 1850, at Randolph County, North Carolina; pre-war occupation, seaman; enlisted at the Naval Rendezvous, Raleigh, North Carolina, in the Confederate States Navy, March 18 or 21, 1864; served as landsman, CSS Albemarle, and Halifax Station, 1864. [CSN Shipping Articles; ORN 2, 1, 274; 1850 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NR - Recruiting and Enlistments, shipping articles; Miscellaneous, page 407.]

W. J. York, served as landsman in the Confederate States Navy; paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, May 16, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 672.]
John Yost, born North Carolina, 1824; served as landsman, CSS Arctic, 1863; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Betsey (Elizabeth) and two children (eldest child born 1863) at Atwell, Rowan County, North Carolina; his widow, Elizabeth Yost, later applied for a post war Confederate pension from Rowan County, North Carolina. [ORN 2, 1, 276; NC State Archives; 1880 U.S. Census.]
Andrew Young, served as 1st class fireman at the New Orleans station, in 1861, and later aboard the ironclad ram CSS Chicora, Charleston station, 1863 - 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 284; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 58-59.]

Andrew Jackson Young, served as landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863; signed an affidavit for William L. Snider, Confederate States Navy veteran of Davidson County, North Carolina. [NC State Archives; ORN 2, 1, 277.]

Daniel T. Young, served as 1st class boy aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, pages 359-360 and 378.]

Ephraim Young, landsman, ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, March, 1862; also served on CSS Fredericksburg, January, 1865; member of the Healy-Claybrooke Camp, United Confederate Veterans, Saluda, Virginia; died, about 1917 or 1918, at Saluda. [ORN 1, 11, 794 & 2, 1, 309; Confederate Veteran magazine, volume 25, page 87 and volume 26, page 122.]

Francis Young, officers' cook, side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown (operated in James River and Hampton Roads, Virginia area); served sometime between January, 1861 and June, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS.]

George Young, born Virginia, about 1828; resided at Hampton, Virginia, in 1850; appointed acting boatswain, December 1, 1861; served at Bushs Bluff, Elizabeth River, 1861, and on the CSS Jamestown, Richmond station, 1861 - 1862; also served on the CSS Patrick Henry and the CSS Roanoke, James River squadron, 1862 - 1864; resigned March 1, 1863; later as pilot aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, James River squadron, 1864; a newspaper report of March, 1865, indicates that George Young, of Hampton, Virginia, aged 38, died of consumption on Wednesday, March 30, 1865. [1850 U.S. Census; ORN 1, 9, 805-806 & 1, 10, 766; CSN Register; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 330; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated Thursday, March 31, 1865.]

H.A.F. Young, born England, 1789; appointed from Virginia; originally served as sailing master, United States Navy, from which he resigned, May 15, 1861; resided with his three daughters, in 1860, at Norfolk, Virginia; served in the Virginia State Navy, 1861. [CSNRegister; 1860 U.S. Census.]

Hicks L. Young (surname also recorded as Youngs), born New York, 1831; appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on October 14, 1861; served aboard the CSS Seger, New Orleans station, and later at the Jackson station, 1862, and aboard the CSS St. Mary, Brashear, Louisiana, 1862; resided as a farmer, in 1880, with his wife, Lizzie, and five children (eldest child born 1867) at St. Charles parish, Louisiana. [ORN 2, 1, 318; 1880 U.S. Census; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 545 and 789; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 677.]

J.W. Young, boatswain's mate, CSS Rappahannock, May 16, 1864. [CSS Rappahannock Muster Roll.]

John Young, seaman, side wheeled steam tug CSS Ellis (which operated in North Carolina waters), 1861 - 1862; captured at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February, 1862; paroled and returned to Norfolk, Virginia, February 19, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 285; Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) dated February 19, 1862.]

John S. Young, served as seaman aboard the side-wheeled steamer CSS Jamestown, James River squadron, 1861 - 1862; rated as quartermaster from January 1, 1862; disrated to seaman from April 1, 1862; deserted from the vessel on June 11, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 289; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 947; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NZ - Desertions and straggling, Miscellaneous, page 442.]

John W. Young, Seaman, CSS Ellis; captured and paroled at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, February 12, 1862. [Scharf, 392; Confederate Navy subject file, R - Prisoners and Prisons, RB - Prisoner of War rolls.., Mississippi Squadron-Miscellaneous, page 449.]

Joseph C. Young, appointed acting master's mate, Provisional Navy of the Confederate States, June 2, 1864; served on the James River squadron (as pilot, July - September, 1863). [CSN Register; Register1864.]

Joseph H. Young, born 1831; enlisted June 6, 1861, at Tampa, in Company K, Fourth Florida Infantry; transferred to Confederate States Navy, April 10, 1864; sent aboard the CSS Spray, St. Mark's, Florida, as seaman, on June 2, 1864; paroled at St. Marks, May 12, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 815; Hartman's Florida Rosters, 1, 458; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 672.]

Lewis T. Young, landsman, CSS Arctic, Cape Fear River, North Carolina, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 277.]

Moses P. Young, born Virginia; resident of Portsmouth, Virginia; originally served as private, Old Dominion Guard, company K, 9th Virginia Infantry; entry into Confederate States Navy, as 3rd assistant engineer, May 19, 1863; served aboard the CSS Charleston, Charleston station, 1863 - 1864; later promoted 2nd assistant engineer; served aboard the CSS Richmond, 1865; attached as to Semmes' Naval Brigade, for special service, April, 1865; surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, April 26, 1865. [ORN 1, 11, 691; Register1864; M1091; Norfolk County Record 100 & 221.]

R.E. Young, seaman, CSS Florida; captured October 7, 1864 (at Bahia, Brazil); received at Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, November 11, 1864; released February 1, 1865. [Fort Warren.]
Thomas Young, served as ordinary seaman and seaman aboard the steam sloop CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; suffered contusion, April, 1862, and sent to the Marine Hospital at New Orleans. [Daily Picayune, Tuesday, April 29, 1862; ORN 2, 1, 291; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, page 87.]

Thomas M. Young, resident of Jefferson County, Georgia; served on the Ladies' gunboat, ironclad battery CSS Georgia at Savannah, Georgia; transferred to the CSS Atlanta; captured aboard that vessel, at Wassaw Sound, June 17, 1863; filed for a post war Confederate pension from Jefferson County, Georgia. [ORN 1, 14, 268; GA Pension Index 1060; Daily Morning News (Savannah, Georgia) dated June 27, 1863.]

W. S. Young, 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.]

William Young, served as boatswain's mate aboard the ironclad ram CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 1862 sent from Drewry's Bluff, James River, to Saffold, Georgia, in November, 1862, for service aboard the CSS Chattahoochee, 1862-1863. [ORN 1, 17, 864 & 2, 1, 309; CSS Chattahoochee Muster Roll; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 244.]

William Young, native of Great Britain; served as 2nd class fireman, and later as 1st class fireman aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, 1864; was one of the party who were ashore, when the vessel was captured at Bahai, Brazil, in 1864, by the USS Wachusetts; returned to London; granted leave of absence, December 1, 1864 to January 1, 1865, by his commander, Charles Manigault Morris; later received payment through paymaster Richard W. Curtis, in London, January, 1865; ordered to report aboard the CSS Rappahannock, but did not do so. [Florida Medical Journal, see the list of personnel in the Engineer's Department, CSS Florida, dated at St. George's, Bermuda, June 27, 1864; Alabama Claims 2, 637 and 655; Alabama Claims Correspondence 3, 366; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 357.]
William H. Young, resided in Granville County, North Carolina, as a lawyer, and enlisted there, April 22, 1861, aged 24, as private, 2nd company D, 12th Regiment North Carolina Troops; promoted corporal prior to June 7, 1861, when he was transferred to the Confederate States Navy. [NCT 5, 173.]

William J. Youngblood, landsman; later served as ordinary seaman on the CSS Savannah, Savannah Squadron, Georgia, 1863. [ORN 2, 1, 305.]

Wilson Youngblood, born South Carolina, 1830; appointed acting 2nd assistant engineer in the Confederate States Navy, at New Orleans, on March 21, 1862; served as senior engineer on the CSS Louisiana, New Orleans, 1862; captured Mississippi River, at the fall of New Orleans, April, 1862; praised for his actions at New Orleans; confined Fort Warren, Boston Harbor; later served on the Jackson station, 1862; promoted 1st assistant engineer, August 15, 1863; served aboard the side wheeled gunboat CSS Morgan, Mobile Squadron, Alabama; ordered, on December 28, 1863, to proceed to Richmond, Virginia, and attend a Court of Inquiry to give testimony (relating to the fall of New Orleans), and, on completion of his testimony, he was ordered to return to his duties at Mobile; later chief engineer; paroled at Nunna Hubba Bluff, Alabama, May 10, 1865; resided as a mechanical engineer, in 1880, with his wife, Deborah and two sons (eldest son born 1857) at New Orleans, Louisiana; in September, 1897, a fire partly damaged his residence at Bienville Street, New Orleans, but costs were recovered through insurance; died in New Orleans, July 4, 1914. [ORN 1, 18, 298, 317 & 331 and 2, 1, 292 & 319; ORA 2, 3 (which incorrectly shows his first name as William); Porter's Naval History, 785; Register1864; Wayne Cosby; 1880 U.S. Census; Daily Picayune (New Orleans) dated September 8, 1897, page 8; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NN- Acceptances......Revoked commissions; Acceptances - Appointments of officers (L - Z) - Revoked commissions, page 675; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NO- Court Martial; Court of Inquiry - Military Commissions, page 12.]

Hicks L. Youngs, see Hicks L. Young.

A. T. Yuiestra, served as chief clerk at the Confederate States Naval store at Montgomery, Alabama, 1863 - 1864, at the rate of $75 per month; also shown as acting Naval storekeeper in September, 1864. [Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations; PB - Administration of stations; Columbia - Pensacola, page 462; Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PI - Industrial activity; Selma, page 716; Confederate Navy subject file P - Bases, Naval (including Navy Yards and Stations); PL - Labor and civil personnel; Albany - Richmond, page 340.]


L.H. Zachary, ordinary seaman, side wheeled steamer CSS Oconee (originally the CSS Savannah prior to April, 1863), Savannah River, Georgia; served May - June, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 297.]

Frederick Zaneman, left London, England on January 16, 1864, for Brest, France, where he shipped aboard the cruiser CSS Florida, on January 19, 1864, as 2nd class fireman. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 351.]

Michael Zart or Zarp, see Michael Tad.

H. M. Zealy, served as a marine aboard the CSS Lady Davis, and was involved in the capture of the prize A.B. Thompson, on May 19, 1861; received the sum of $85.63 as his share in the capture of that vessel. [Confederate Navy subject file, X - Supplies, XZ - Prizes, prize money, etc., Distribution of prize money - Miscellaneous, page 3.]

Henry Zimmerli, served as landsman at the New Orleans station, and aboard the CSS St. Mary, Brashear, Louisiana, 1862; rated as ship's cook from February 17, 1862. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS New Orleans - Yorktown, pages 111 and 547.]

Frank Zimmerman, served as ordinary seaman aboard the steam sloop CSS McRae, New Orleans station, 1861 - 1862; rated as ship's steward on April 1, 1862. [ORN 2, 1, 290; DANFS; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 990.]

George W. Zinn, enlisted at Mobile, Alabama, on April 14, 1863, as a private in company A, Confederate States Marine Corps; served in the marine guard aboard the CSS Fredericksburg, James River squadron in 1864. [ORN 2, 1, 314; Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; CSS Alabama - CSS Neuse, page 461.]

Berry Zuringer (or Zaringer), indicated to have served in the Confederate States Navy; paroled at Charlotte, North Carolina, May 31, 1865. [Confederate Navy subject file N - Personnel; NA - Complements, rolls, lists of persons, etc.; Lists and Registers, page 672.]

Bartholomew Zwifel, born Germany, resided in New Orleans, Louisiana; pre-war occupation, laborer; marital status, single; enlisted at New Orleans, June 6, 1861, aged 22, as private, company C, 14th Louisiana Infantry; deserted March, 1863, and joined the Confederate States Navy, at an unspecified date; name included on a list of paroled prisoners of war, dated at Richmond, Virginia, May 18, 1865. [Booth 3, 1194.]







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