Moultrie, in Charleston Harbor; Elizabeth Bradford White, widowed, and residing in New Orleans in winter and Kentucky in summer, and Mrs. Lucy Bradford Mitchell, widow of Dr. C. R. Mitchell, of Vicksburg, Miss.
Lucinda Davis, the next sister, married Mr. William Stamps, of Woodville, Miss.
Her children are all dead and her grandchildren are Mrs. Edward Farrar and Mrs. Mary Bateson, of New York, and Mrs. William Anderson; Hugh, Richard and Isaac Alexander, and one great grandchild, Miss Josie Alexander.
Matilda, the fourth sister, died in childhood, and the youngest and next in age to the later President, was his boyhood's companion and delight, Little Polly.
She was Mary Ellen Davis, who married—without changing her name—Robert Davis, of South Carolina, and left one daughter, who is still living, Mrs. Mary Ellen Davis Anderson, of Ocean Springs, Miss.
It is another coincidence in the parallels of the lives of the two great leaders in the Civil War, that the Christian County
B.
Hofman, C. H.
Jelks, William A.
Jameson, W. A.
Johnson, R. H.
Jones, R. E.
Jordan, Orris F.
Kenney, Robert
Kevan, William C.
Kinsey, Levi A.
Kull, Mark E.
Lacy, William P.
Lee, E. B.
Lilly, William E.
Lipscomb, Hersey
Lufsy, H. Lewis
Lyon, Daniel
Robertson, J. T. R.
Roberts, John P.
Ruffin, Theo.
B.
Sandford, Paul W.
Simmons, N. B.
Smith, Joseph A.
Smith, W. C.
Smith, Robert L.
Snead, John W.
Summerville, J. B.
Spottswood, Jos. E.
Steel, Alexander
Stone, Jordan
Stywalt, Hiram
Styles, Waverly R.
Tally, George A.
Talley, Peyton
Taliaferro, J. B.
Taylor, George A.
Tatum, L.
Tomlin, C. B.
Topham, J. H.
Totty, William G.
Vaughan, Lycurgus
Waller, Thomas J.
Webb, Robert T.
White, George R.
Wells, Robert M.
Wills, O. L.
Williams, Wm. J.
Weeks, E.
The names in italic type indicate those who were present and surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse.