Macoupin County IL - John Slaughter - Civil War
Veteran
Pictures donated for use by David Richard
John Slaughter
June 22, 1838 - Jul 20, 1937
Macoupin County Enquirer Thurs Jul 22 1937, page 1, column 6 and
page
4, column 4
Last Gillespie Civil War Vet Dead at 99
Funeral Services for John Slaughter To Be Held at Gillespie M E.
Church Tomorrow Afternoon
John Slaughter, 99, last Civil War veteran and oldes resident of
Gillespie
and communitiy, died at 2:30 p.m Tuesday at St. Francis hospital,
Litchfield,
where he has been for several months following a fall at his home.
Mr. Slaughter, familiarly known as Uncle John, was born at Hanover,
Germany,
June 22, 1838. At the age of 14 he came to the United States and
settled
on a farm near Edwardsville. He enlisted at the beginning of the Civil
War and served until the close of the conflict. With a comrade he was
the
first to use a pick and shovel at the siege of Vicksburg, having
volunteered
to do the hazardous work.
In the beginning of the war he was a member of Company C, 124th
Illinois
Infantry and was later transferred to a regiment of artillery.
At the close of the conflict he became a salesman in a large department
store in St. Louis, later going to Cinicinnatti, Ohio, where he was
head
of the woolen goods department of Hubell & ?Flaber/Plaber Dry Goods
Co. It was there that he fell in love with Julia Worthwyne, first
cousin
of the late William Howard Taft, but because he believed the difference
in their station in life would bring unhappiness, he left Cincinnatti,
returning to St. Louis, later going to Bunker Hill. There he was
employed
as bookkeeper and clerk at the Friedrichsen general store.
After an unhappy marriage, he returned to Cincinnatti to find the
sweetheart
of his youth had died.
For a number of years he had made his home with his son, George
Slaughter
in Gillespie and until the past few years enjoyed unusually good health
and was exceptionally active fo his age.
Surviving relatives are one son, George Slaughter; a daughter-in-law,
five
grandsons and eight great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held tomorrow (Friday) afternoon at 2 o'clock
at the Methodist Episcopal church, Gillespie, Rev. C. C. Dawdy, pastor
of the church, and Rev. F. L. Crouch of Carlinville, former pastor of
the
Gillespie Baptist church, officiating. Interment will be in the Bunker
Hill Cemetery at Bunker Hill.
Carlinville Democrat - Thurs July 22, 1937 page 4, column 2
Gillespie's
Last Civil War Vet is Dead
Gillespie's Last Civil War Vet is Dead
John Slaughter, aged 99, Gillespie's last civil war veteran, and
oldest Mason in point of membership, in Illinois, is dead. He died at
2:30
p.m., Tuesday July 20th, at St. Francis hospital in Litchfield, where
he
was a patient for several months following a fall at his home.
Mr. Slaughter was born at Hanover, Germany, June 22, 1838 and came to
the
United States at the age of 14. He settled on a farm near Edwardsville,
where he was employed at the outbreak of the Civil war. He enlisted at
the beginning of the war and served until the close.
He became a member of the Masonic lodge of Bunker Hill, No 157, in
1866.
At the close of the war he became a salesman in Cincinnati, Ohio, later
returning to St. Louis, and then returned to Bunker Hill where he was
employed
as bookkeeper and clerk in the Friedrichsen general store.
For a number of years he made his home with a son, George Slaughter, in
Gillespie, and throughout his long life had enjoyed remarkably good
health.
Funeral services will be held Friday at 2:00 p.m. from the Methodist
church,
Rev. Dawdy officiating, assisted by Rev F L Crouch. Interment will be
in
the Bunker Hill cemetery.
Besides the son and wife, Mr. Slaughter is survived by five grandsons
and
eight great grand-children.
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