
Caswell BARNETT, who had a good record as a soldier during the late war,
is numbered among the industrious farmers who are carrying on the
agricultural interests of Johnson County,
of which he is a native. He
was born January 6, 1836, and his home is on a part of the old farm in
Elvira Township that was his birthplace, and which is now in his
possession.
The father of our subject was William A. BARNETT, who was born in
Tennessee September 10, 1808, a son of Robert Fields BARNETT, who was
an early settler of Tennessee,
and served in the War of 1812. He came
from Tennessee to Illinois in 1830, traveling on the Tennessee and Ohio
Rivers, and landing at Cairo, he settled in what is now Alexander
County
at first, but a year later he came to Johnson County, and made
his home with his son William in Elvira Township until his demise.
William BARNETT passed his early life in his native State, and was in
the vigor of early manhood when he came to Illinois in 1830. He was
married in Arkansas early in 1835, and
returning
to this county with
his bride, he located on a tract of Government land in Elvira Township.
He at once commenced the hard task of clearing and developing a farm,
and in the
comfortable home he built up he closed his earthly career
December 6, 1869, and thus passed away a useful and greatly respected
pioneer of this county. The maiden name of his wife was Charlotte T.
MANGUM. She was born April 24, 1817, two and one-half miles west of Vienna, a
daughter of Henry L. and Disa Ann (FAIN) MANGUM, and she departed this
life
July 23, 1892. She reared eight children: Caswell, Sarah V.,
Gilbert, Martha A., William J., Margaret E., Rhoda J. and Mary.
The subject of this biographical sketch was reared and educated in his
native township. He attended the primitive pioneer schools of the time,
that were rudely furnished with seats made
by splitting logs and hewing
one side smooth and inserting wooden pins for support, and the building
was heated by means of an open fireplace. For many years after the
family settled here
deer and other kinds of game were very plentiful
and roamed at will through the country, which was sparsely settled. Our
subject resided with his parents until he was twenty-one, and then
commenced for himself in a steam sawmill. He afterward ran a steam
engine until his enlistment, which occurred August 22, 1861, when he
became a member of Company D, Thirty-first
Illinois Infantry. He went
to the front with his regiment, and in the terrible years of strife
that followed, his patriotism and valor stood well the test of many of
the hard-fought battles in which
he bore his part. He was on the field
at Belmont when the Union and Confederate troops met in deadly
encounter, and at Ft. Henry and at the siege of Corinth. At Burnt
Bridge, Tenn., he
was wounded, and still carries a rebel bullet in his
body as a memento of the occasion, he did his duty as a soldier at
Champion Hills and Jackson, Miss. While en route for Vicksburg he
was
captured and taken to Libby Prison. A few weeks later he was so
fortunate as to be exchanged, and he joined his regiment at Vicksburg
in season to bear his part in the siege and
downfall of the city. The
next important battle in which he participated was at Kenesaw Mountain,
and he was an actor in the siege and capture of Atlanta, and in the
battles at Jonesboro
and Flint River, and with his comrades pursued
Hood's army to Rome, Ga. In October, 1864, he was honorably discharged
at the expiration of his term of service at Chattanooga.
After
his return from the seat of war Mr. BARNETT resumed his former
occupation of operating an engine, and was thus employed until
his marriage. He then turned his
attention to
farming, which he carried on on rented land. In 1882 he
bought the part of the old homestead that he now owns and occupies, and
has here a productive and well-tilled farm of sixty acres.
The marriage of our subject with Miss Zary V. A. EVANS was celebrated
in November, 1866. Mrs. BARNETT was born in Tennessee February 14,
1845, a daughter of William H.
and Eliza EVANS, and was but an infant
when her parents brought her to Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. BARNETT are
blessed with six children: Eliza C., William A., Mary E., Sarah J.,
John G.
and Albert C. Mr. BARNETT is a stalwart Republican in politics.
He is a worthy member of Vienna Post No. 221, G. A. R., and of
Goreville Lodge No. 528, I. O. O. F.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
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