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Carnton Cemetery Photos
225 Unknown Soldiers buried here ---------------- The C S A Symbol

Sign at the entrance of the Cemetery
 
L.R. Townsend from Carroll Co TN -- Johnson K. Duncan from East TN
NOTE: SOME ARE BURIED AT THE MCGAVOCK CEMETERY
1) On page 38 of the booklet MCGAVOCK CONFEDERATE CEMETERY,
FRANKLIN, TENNESSEE by Franklin Chapter #14, United Daughters
of the Confederacy, copyrighted in 1989, the total numbr of
soldiers buried at the cemetery was said to be 1481. A note
follows saying: "in the handwriting of Mrs. McGavock is the
following: 'Gen. Duncan of La. removed here from E. Tenn.
and his grave marked by his family who reside in New Orleans,
La.' (General Johnson Kelly Duncan)"
A sign at the cemetery says: "Following the Battle of Franklin,
Nov. 30, 1864, John McGavock, owner of "Carnton," collected and
buried here the bodies of 1496 Confederates. The five general
officers killed there were interred elsewhere after being brought
to the house. Other Confederates were later buried here, including
Brig. Gen.Johnson K. Duncan."
2) N. H. B., #66, is actually Col. William H. Bishop, according to
Tim Burgess, who for the last twenty years has been researching and
collecting information about the soldiers who are buried at the
McGavock Confederate Cemetery, preparing to write a book about
them. One of his goals is to correct the many mistakes in past
records, including the very ones I used from the afore-mentioned
booklet.
3) The remains of Col. G. A. Smith of Georgia, #895, were removed
to the Rosehilt Cemetery in Macon, Georgia.
4) Captain J. L. Riggs of Tennessee, #804, was erroneously buried
in Missouri Section 9.
5) J. C. Wells of Georgia, #1029, was erroneously buried in Tennessee
Section 79.
6) In the list I used from the afore-mentioned booklet, a soldier's
name was followed not by the state he served, as in my list, but by
his company letter. It is not clear to which the question mark refers
or if it refers to both.
7) Tim Burgess, Ibid, wrote that 565 [soldiers], a "full one third
of the total killed" are Unknowns.
8) On page 16 of the aforementioned booklet is a picture of a tombstone
for the only non-Confederate buried here: The marker reads:
Marcellus Cuppett
Born Jan. 16, 1841
Died April 26, 1866
Whilst assisting in reintering of the confederate dead."
The following was typed and sorted by Betty Jane Carl. The information
came from
McGavock Confederate Cemetery Book and is reprinted with written
permission from Frances Hall, President of the Franklin #14 -
United Daughters of the Confederacy.
Those veterans with asterisks (*) following their names did not die on
the
battlefield but died at Carnton Plantation Home [which temporarily
served as a
hospital].
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