Thomas Marion MOZINGO, son of Henry MOZINGO and Elizabeth Robinson PEMBERTON , was born 03 July 1838 in Greensburg, Decatur Co, IN. He married Annie Eliza WHEAT 07 September 1871 in Harrison Co, KY. He died 09 May 1911 in Greensburg, Decatur Co, IN. Annie Eliza WHEAT was born abt. 1846 in KY. She died 09 February 1924.
1. Ada MOZINGO, b. abt. 1876 | See John C TRIMNELL & Ada MOZINGO |
2. Mary C MOZINGO, b. 03 July 1872 |
Notes for Thomas Marion MOZINGO:
1880 Harrison, Kentucky, Berrys Station, p 110A
MAZINGO, Thomas, 41, IN, IN, IN
Annie, Wife, 34, KY, KY, KY
Addie, Dau, 4 KY, KY, KY
SHAD, Albert, Other,20 VA, VA, VA
1890 Veterans Schedule, Grant, KY, Corinth, p 098, MOZINGO THOMAS M.
1900 ?
1910 DECATUR, IN, 2-WD GREENSBURG, ED 14, Sheet 11B, Series: T624 Roll: 345 Page: 202
MORINGO, THOMAS, 71, Married 39 yrs, IN, KY, KY
Anna, wife, 63, married 36 yrs, 2 children, 1 living, KY, KY, KY
1920 Decatur, IN, Greensburg Ward 2, ED: 68, Page: 2B
Trimnell John C. 46yrs. old M. Ky. Ky. Va. bookkeeper
Ada wife 44yrs. old M. In. In. Ky.
...
Mozingo Anna E. mother-in-law 73 Wd. Ky. Ky. Ky.
http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/prisoners.htm
Andersonville (Union Soldiers)
Mozingo, Thomas M.
Side: Union
Unit Name: 7 Indiana Infantry
Regiment: 7
State: Indiana
Function: Infantry
Company: E
Rank: Private
Type: Held at Andersonville and survived
Capture Date: 05/06/1864
Capture Site: Wilderness, Virginia
Alternate Name: None
Remarks: None
From the files of Belinda Carrol:
Thomas enlisted among the first call for troops to Indiana, in the Civil War's first land battle. They captured 50th Virginia. He spent ten months in Andersonville as a prisoner of war. He ranked to captain.
From the files of Tom Williamson:
After the Civil War he settled in Corinth, KY and was the United States Claim and Penison Agent for that region.
From: Patricia Dunn
> Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 7th ed., Harrison Co.
>
> DR. W. H. DAUGHERTY was born in Harrison County, Ky., March 20, 1835, and
> is the eldest of a family of six children born to James and Mary F.
> (Thompson) Daugherty. James Daugherty was born in Harrison County, Ky.
> He was a farmer and mechanic all his life, and died in 1867 from exposure
> in the Federal Army in 1863. He was a son of Henry Daugherty, who was a
> native of Ireland, and was in the war of 1812. Mrs. Mary F. Daugherty
> was a native of Kentucky, and a daughter of T. T. Thompson, who was a
> large land owner in Grant and Harrison Counties. Dr. W. H. Daugherty was
> reared in Harrison County, and educated at the common schools in the
> country. He commenced to read medicine in 1858 under Dr. Risk. He attended
> lectures at the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, at Cincinnati,
> and graduated in 1861. He has always been a successful physician. In
> 1882 he changed his way of administering medicine from the allpathic to
> the homoeopathic, and he seems well satisfied with the change, still
> retaining a good practice. In addition to practicing medicine, farming
> and other interests, he established a drug store, in Corinth in 1885,
> with T. M. MOZINGO as manager, the firm name being T. M. MOZINGO & Co.
> Dr. Daugherty owns about 600 acres of land in Grant County, and 400 acres
> in Kansas, and some property in Texas and Tennessee. He is Royal Arch
> Mason, and a Democrat, though frequently voting the Prohibition ticket.
> December 28, 1860, he married Miss A. B. Mozee, of Grant County, daughter
> of George Mozee. Mr. and Mrs. Daugherty are both consistent members of
> the Christian Church, the Doctor having been an elder and Sunday school
> superintendent in said church for about twenty years. He has been
> charitable and liberal with his means, spending much of his time and
> means in the cause of education, orphan children seeming to have been his
> special charge, several of whom have been liberally educated by him, and
> hold positions of influence and usefulness in the church and society.
From Chris Buchanan
Capt. Mozingo is Gone
One by one the patiotic soldiers of the sixties are passing away.
Tuesday at 4:30 P.M. Capt. Thomas M. Mozingo answered the last roll
call at his home on East Hendricks Street, after months of suffering
of rheumatism and heart trouble.
Mr, Mozingo was one of the best known and most highly esteemed
citozens of the county. We was born July 3, 1838 , on a farm four
miles southeast of town, a son of Henry Mozingo, who was born in
Harrison County , Kentucky., and of French descent.
He enlisted at the first call for troops in Co. F. Seventh Indiana ,
under Capt. J. V. Bemusdaffer and was in the first land battle of
the Civil War at Philippi , Virginia, June 3, 1861. After his three
month's service had expired he re-enlisted in the three year's
Seventh regiment in Co. E, under Ira G. Grover, and was mustered out
April 13, 1865.
On May 5, 1864, when the Seventh captured the Fifieth Virginia, It
was Mr. Mozingo, Perry S. Tremain and Robert L. Alyea who had the
honor of capturing the Rebel Flag, after a hard fight with the color
bearer. Later ont he same day Comrade Mozingo and thirht-six other
members of the seventh, including Col. Grover, were captured and
taken to Andersonville prison, where he was kept for ten months.
On September 7, 1871, The deceased was married to Miss Annie Eliza
Wheat, daughter of C.P. Wheat of Harrison County Kentucky., and in
1879 he moved to that state, where he resided until 1900 , when he
returned to spend his last days among old friends and comrades of his
early years.
Mr. Mozingo was several times honored by his fellow citizens. In 1874
he was nominated for sheriff by the Republican Party, but was
defeated owing to disaffection in the party. From 1876 to 1878 he was
deputy sheriff and jailer under sheriff John A. Meek. Previous to
that time he served as county assessor for two years. after going to
Kentucky he declined the nomination for the county judge of Grant
County, and from 1885 to 1990 was engaged in the drug business. Later
he was connected with the Corinth Deposit Bank in an official
capacity.
A widow and one daughter Mrs. J. C. Trimnell of North Broadway,
survive . Also a brother, James H. ("Polk") Mozingo of six miles
south of town, and five sisters , Mrs. Smith Riley and Mrs. James R.
Clemons, city; Mrs. A. G. Tremain , Columbia,Mo., Mrs Allen Beagles,
Sardinia, and Mrs. W. W. Marlow, Lawrenceburg.
The deceased was a member of Greensburg Chapter No. 8 Royal Arch
Masons, "Pap" Thomas Post No. 5 G.A.R. , and an elder in the
Christian Church of which he had been a member since 1877.
The funeral was held at the home at 2 P .M. Yesterday, Rev. W.J.
Cocke Officiating. Burial in charge of the Masons and the G.A.R at
Sandcreek Cemetery.
per ancestry.com
American Civil War Soldiers
Name: Thomas M Mozingo ,
Residence: Decatur County, Indiana
Enlistment Date: 13 September 1861
Distinguished Service: DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served: Union
State Served: Indiana
Unit Numbers: 635 635
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 13 September 1861
Enlisted in Company E, 7th Infantry Regiment Indiana on 13 September 1861.
POW on 05 May 1864 at Wilderness, VA
Mustered out Company E, 7th Infantry Regiment Indiana on 08 April 18
Sources for Thomas Marion MOZINGO:
Notes for Annie Eliza WHEAT:
Sources for Annie Eliza WHEAT:
Notes for Mary C MOZINGO:
Sources for Mary C MOZINGO:
Copyright © 2009 Samie Melton
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