Samuel WATT

Birth:
1784
North Carolina
Death:
1855/60
of Franklin, Alabama
Marriage:
1821
Clark, Alabama
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Sources:
1850 US Federal Census Dist 5, Franklin, Alabama
1840 US Federal Census Franklin County, Alabama
Ancestry Member Trees
1820 Alabama State Census Franklin County, Alabama
Indexed Early Land Ownership Maps Hunstville Meridian, Alabama
1850 US Federal Census Franklin County, Alabama (Slave Schedule)
1855 Alabama State Census Franklin County, Alabama, Samuel and 1 slave.
Notes:
                   RESEARCH NOTE:
This link has not been verified, but is supported by the following facts:
1.Thomas Watt and Margarette Williams were both from Alabama
2. Both this Watt family, and the Williams family, were living in District 5 of Franklin County, Alabama in 1850, when Thomas and Margarette would have been married.
3. The Watt name, without an S, is not common, and this is the only one in Alabama in 1840 with this spelling.
4. In 1840, the Samuel Watt family has a son between 15 and 20, the right age to be Thomas.


(Might be the same) Given land due to his service as a Private in the Tennessee Militia, Captain Wyatt's company, War of 1812.  80 acres were given in 1860, which were immediately assigned to George W. Arnett.  

If this is the one who served in 1812, the index cards list him as serving in Dyer's company, rather than Wyatt's.


Purchased 80 acres of land, identified as living in Franklin County in 1833:
   
Patentee Name :WATT, SAMUEL
Township:04-S
Range:12-W
Section: 25
Aliquot Parts:E½SE
County: Colbert
State: AL
Date Issued: 6/8/1833 
Land Office: Huntsville 
State of Land Offfice: AL
Document Number: 3966
Accession Number: AL1230__.307
Meridian:  Huntsville
                  
Rebecca MOORE
Birth:
Abt 1802
Tennessee
Death:
1850/55
of Franklin, Alabama
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
Abt 1826
Franklin, Alabama
Death:
2 Nov 1863
of Princeton, Dallas, Arkansas
Marr:
Abt 1849
of Franklin, Alabama 
Notes:
                   Served in the Confederate Army, Dallas Regiment, Company B, Infantry.  Widow applied for pension 1892.
**Request for pension sent Jan 4th 2013 (by Brad Jackman)

ANCESTRY WORLD TREE NOTES from Diana Hopper:
Bought 40 acres of land Mar 1 1855 in Dallas County, AR
   120 acres Jun 1 1859
   120 acres Apr 1 1861

1860 US census shows lived in Princeton, Dallas Co, AR

Fought in Civil War, Confederate, Arkansas Infantry, Company B, 18th Regiment. Widow applied for pension in 1892.

Company B??Princeton Rifles?. This company began recruiting on March 1, 1862, and completed its organization at Princeton, Dallas county, Arkansas, on March 12, with the election of Israel N. McClendon, captain; Robert G. Pattillo, first lieutenant; Robert M. Thrasher, second lieutenant; and Stephen Winstead, Jr., third lieutenant. Lieutenants Pattillo and Thrasher each subsequently served as captain of this company. At least twenty men of Company B died in the measles epidemic of the Spring of 1862. In June, 1862, five of its members were transferred to the newly organized 12th Arkansas Battalion (Sharpshooters). Company B suffered fifteen casualties at the Battle of Corinth, and surrendered with 31 men at Port Hudson, Louisiana. A total of 85 men are known to have served in Company B.[4]

The 18th Arkansas Infantry was organized at DeValls Bluff, Arkansas, on April 2, 1862, composed of ten volunteer companies from central Arkansas:

Field and Staff
Company A??Jefferson Minute-Men? of Jefferson county. 
Company B??Princeton Rifles? of Dallas county. 
Company C??Prairie County Avengers? of Prairie county. 
Company D??Pine Buff Rebels? of Jefferson county. 
Company E??Arkansas Rifles? of Arkansas county. 
Company F??Auburn Grays? of Arkansas county. 
Company G??Cotton Plant Guards? of St Francis (now Woodruff) county. 
Company H??North Fork Rangers? of Saline county. 
Company I??Ouachita Rifles? of Ouachita county. 
Company K??Jefferson Rifles? of Jefferson county.

David W. Carroll, captain of Company A, was appointed colonel; John N. Daly, a private in Company I, was appointed lieutenant-colonel; and Robert Hamilton Crockett, a private in Company E, was appointed major. The new regiment got off to an inauspicious, indeed, a tragic start. Measles broke out among the men almost immediately, and by the time the regiment arrived at its assigned station at Fort Pillow, near Fulton, Tennessee, it had become a full-fledged epidemic. It is possible to track the movements of the regiment in April 1862 by following the bodies. The unfortunate soldiers of the 18th Arkansas were dropping like flies, and every camp between DeValls Bluff and Fort Pillow contained the graves of those who had died during the night. At Fort Pillow, the regiment was literally decimated by the epidemic. By the time the epidemic had run its course, over a fourth of the men were dead, discharged or simply stricken from the rolls. The regiment was forced to undergo a major reorganization in June 1862, to replace the vacant commissioned and non-commissioned officer slots. Colonel Carroll was forced to resign due to illness, and was succeeded by Lieutenant-Colonel Daly.

With the epidemic behind it, the 18th Arkansas was ordered to Corinth, Mississippi, where it was assigned to Colonel Thomas Pleasant Dockery?s 2nd Brigade, Army of the West, along with the 19th, 20th and 21st Arkansas regiments, and the 8th Arkansas battalion. The 18th Arkansas fought in the battle at Iuka Springs, Mississippi, September 16, 1862, and then ensured its place in history at the battle of Corinth, Mississippi, October 4, 1862. From all contemporary accounts, the 18th Arkansas performed with magnificent courage at Corinth. Mustering a little over 300 men on the morning of the battle, only 43 answered the roll at the end of the day. Forming in a line of battle, the 18th Arkansas made a breath-taking charge under an enfilading fire from the entrenched Federal troops. Climbing through and over fallen timber, the 18th Arkansas relentlessly advanced right up to the enemy?s breastworks, where the withering fire literally melted the regiment away. Colonel Daly, leading the charge, sword in hand, was mortally wounded. Captain Parish, of Company H, immediately assumed command and rallied the regiment to continue the charge. Although he, too, was shot down, he survived the battle and received a meritorious promotion to lieutenant-colonel for his gallant conduct.

Following the battle of Corinth, the 18th Arkansas and its sister regiments of the 2nd Brigade were ordered to Port Hudson, Louisiana, where they formed a part of the garrison there, and endured the siege of that place. The garrison finally capitulated on July 9, 1863. The enlisted men were paroled on July 12, but the officers were sent to military prisons in the North for the rest of the war. Two audacious lieutenants of Company K, however, James W. Hellums and George P. Atkins, escaped from their captors by jumping from the Union transport into the muddy water of the Mississippi River between Napoleon and Helena, swam ashore, and eventually reached the Confederate lines.

There are few records of the 18th Arkansas after the fall of Port Hudson. The remnants of the regiment reorganized in southwest Arkansas, but were eventually consolidated with the remnants of the 23rd Arkansas and other Port Hudson units to form the 2nd Arkansas Consolidated Regiment. They spent the remainder of the war in the Trans-Mississippi Army, and were included in the general surrender of that army on May 26, 1865, at Marshall, Texas.
                  
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Samuel Watt - Rebecca Moore

Samuel Watt was born at North Carolina 1784.

He married Rebecca Moore 1821 at Clark, Alabama . Rebecca Moore was born at Tennessee Abt 1802 .

They were the parents of 1 child:
Thomas L Watt born Abt 1826.

Samuel Watt died 1855/60 at of Franklin, Alabama .

Rebecca Moore died 1850/55 at of Franklin, Alabama .