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The Civil War at Ocean Springs
Chronology (1861 - 1865)
January 9, 1861 - Mississippi became the second state to leave the
Union.
January 13, 1861 - Confederate forces occupy Ship Island.
March 4, 1861- Lincoln inaugurated at Washington D.C.
April 12, 1861 - Bombardment of Fort Sumter, Charleston, S.C. by
Confederate forces of P.G.T. Beauregard.
July 21, 1861 - Battle First Bull Run fought in Virginia.
September 18, 1861 - The Live Oak Rifles, Company A, 3rd Regiment
Mississippi Infantry, were sworn into State service. They had been
organized in the spring of 1861 by A.E. Lewis, State Senator James B.
McRae, and the Ramsay Family of west Jackson County. Originally 48
volunteers. Organized with the intent of protecting the coast between
Ocean Springs and West Pascagoula. They fought in Kentucky,
Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee, and the Carolinas.
September 16, 1861 - Confederate forces abandon Fort Twiggs and
burn the brick lighthouse at Ship Island.
December 4, 1861 - Vanguard of 18,000 Union troops lands at Ship
Island under the command of Major-General Benjamin F. Butler for the
assault of New Orleans.
March 1, 1862 - Ship launch from the USS Hartford anchored at Ship
Island visits Biloxi and Ocean Springs. First Union soldiers to land
at Ocean Springs. Did not see over ten people. Met John and Julia
Egan, Irish immigrants. Egan was US Postmaster at Ocean Springs
(1856-1861). Union soldiers took Egan's letter balance, fifty New
Orleans newspapers, and a number of dilapidated guns, rifles, and
muskets.
April 25, 1862 - Admiral David G. Farragut captured the City of New
Orleans.
May 31, 1864 - After grounding off the extensive flats off Ocean
Springs, the USS Cowslip and USS Narcissus, both gunboats, went about
twenty-five miles up the Tchoutacabouffa River and destroyed salt
works, boats and ferries. They also captured six pleasure yachts.
Sawmills and logs were not destroyed. The USS Vincennes went up Fort
Bayou to cut out a schooner. It had been scuttled, but two Confederate
officers, Major Toby and Captain Wilkinson, were captured while they
slept
August 5, 1864 - Battle of Mobile Bay fought between Union Navy
under Farragut and Confederate force under Franklin Buchanan.
The Civil War Comes
to Ocean Springs
by Ray L. Bellande
At the time of the Civil War (1861-1865), the population of Ocean
Springs consisted of about one hundred people. They made their
livelihoods by fishing and oystering, farming, logging, saw milling,
and making charcoal. The tourist industry was in its infancy as the
Ocean Springs Hotel had been built in 1853. Other hostelries operating
north of the steamboat wharf on Jackson Avenue were the Seashore
House, Morris House and Egan House. There may have been a structure
near Marble Springs, situated on Old Fort Bayou and present day
Iberville Drive.
As the Mississippi coast was not a commercial agricultural area,
the slave population was small. The 1860 Federal Slave Census of
Jackson County, Mississippi indicates that there were only about one
thousand slaves at Jackson County in 1860. Very few families at Ocean
Springs were affluent enough to possess slaves. On September 18, 1861
or about eight months after Mississippi seceded from the Union, the
Live Oak Rifles, Company A, 3rd Regiment Mississippi Infantry, were
sworn into state service. The company had been organized in the spring
of 1861, by A.E. Lewis, State Senator James B. McRae, and the Ramsay
family of West Jackson County. There were initially forty-eight
volunteers mobilized with the intent of protecting the Mississippi
coast between Ocean Springs and West Pascagoula. Instead the unit
fought in Kentucky, Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee, and the
Carolinas. Of the two hundred ten men of the Live Oak Rifles who
marched out of Ocean Springs in 1861, only seven returned in 1865.
During the late years of the Civil War, the defense of the
Mississippi Gulf Coast was in the hands of Colonel Abner Clayton
Steede (1828-1901) who commanded the 9th Mississippi Calvary known as
Steede's Mounted Partisan Rangers. Steede was born at Uniontown,
Alabama and moved to Jackson County in 1850. His forces were small and
relied on guerilla tactics. Steede is believed to have owned land at
Ocean Springs after the war. With the Union blockade in the
Mississippi Sound and many local farmer mustered into various military
units, food supplies, especially corn, were scarce. Mrs. Josephine
Bowen Kettler (1845-1933+), daughter of Reverend Philip P. Bowen,
lived at Ocean Springs until starvation drove her family to Eucatta,
Mississippi in 1862. In an interview with Schuyler Poitevent
(1875-1936) in 1933, she related the following:
"We had no bread. We had to eat sweet potatoes all the time; and
once we sent a nigger slave seventy-five miles for a bushel of corn
meal and he could get only a part of it, and after we sifted the meal
for bread we parched the husks and used them for coffee. We would roll
a fish in a paper and green leaves and cover it with hot ashes and
bake it that way, for we had neither lard nor tallow to fry with".
Mrs. Kettler also told of a telegraph operator named Steel. The
last time she saw him the Yankees were shooting at him as he fled down
the branch.
Later in the conflict local conditions ameliorated as indicated by
a letter dated June 27, 1864, from Fred Wing (1814-1895) of Ocean
Springs to Moses Greenwood at Mobile concerning conditions at Ocean
Springs stated:
"We are well and get along pretty smoothly. Breadstuffs are high,
corn $12 to $14 per bushel, but then contra, we have fish and oysters
for the trouble of catching and fruit in abundance. Chickens and eggs
we raise and if hard pressed go out and shoot a rabbit".
In a letter to Governor Pettus, W.A. Champlin, a War Tax Collector
from Handsboro, who constantly moved through Jackson County to avoid
capture by the Yankees wrote the following about Ocean Springs:
On last Monday a number (of Yankees) from Ship Island landed at
Ocean Springs and staid till Tuesday at the house of one John H.
Brown, who resides there, and claims to be a British subject, though
he has made a large fortune in New Orleans. Many women, some calling
themselves Ladies entertain these Yankee officers, and walk with them
on the streets, and load them with Bouquets, etc. when they depart.
They threaten to arrest me, and Stop my collection of the War Tax, and
I do not know when it may be done, as I am constantly moving about. I
am sorry to say among traitors on shore, who would sell any one for a
small consideration. Since New Orleans has fallen (April 25, 1862) a
large number of small vessels some say one hundred are trading with
the coast by license of Lincoln's commander, buying wood, charcoal,
lumber, etc. and much of this is doubtless for the Enemy's use. This
will if continued greatly demoralize the people on the Coast, who are
very poor and needy and in my opinion ought at once to be stopped.
In December 1861, the Union forces of General Benjamin F. Butler
began arriving at Ship Island. They were massing for the invasion of
New Orleans. A contingent of sailors and marines associated with this
force landed at Ocean Springs on March 1, 1862. They came from a
launch assigned to the USS Hartford, which was Admiral David G.
Farragut's flagship.
The New York Herald of March 25, 1862, reported the incident as
follows:
We now steered for Ocean Springs, and on landing we found we were
on Eagan's Wharf, which is well built and is several hundred yards in
length. On it is a railroad track used for transporting goods from the
boats, which land there. We seated ourselves on the car and the
marines were our steam, or rather motive power.
Here we met but one sore-faces Creole. Of course, we let him go,
but he followed us. On leaving "the cars", we passed through a
dilapidated building (This could have been the Seashore Hotel), by
another, and we were in Ocean Springs, and were the first landing
party of Union men who have been here since the war. Our footsteps
were directed to the Post Office, where we found Mrs. J. Eagan in
charge. Mrs. E. is a good looking lady from the Emerald Isle, of a
fiery temper, and with finger nails ling enough to do some tall
scratching with. Her better half, John, arrived soon after we entered
the domains of the Confederate States of America Post Office
Department. He wore an angry look and a seedy coat; was tall in
stature and in his speech; had a contemptuous air and an air of
onions; was not a Northerner or Southerner but was born in Ireland;
was a postmaster under Buck (President Buchanan) who illthrated him,
and now he was one of Mr. Davis' postmasters. He had returned all his
stamps, but kept his letter balance to balance his accounts. Colonel
Jones could not see his balance in that light, and after weighing the
thing in his mind came to the conclusion not to be found
wanting in the scales of duty, and carried off Eagan's balance because
it bore these significant characters---P.O.D.U.S. (Post Office
Department United States). Eagan was mad, but Mrs. Eagan was madder,
and she gave us a little bit of Irish advice. Ocean Springs is a
beautiful place and well adapted for a watering place. It is smaller
than Biloxi, which place was built up under the influence of the
Southern land excitements. Ocean Springs is almost entirely deserted
and we did not see over ten persons there. The object of our visit
being eminently successful, and having taken about fifty New Orleans
papers, we prepared to return. Bidding Eagan & Co. goodbye, we "took
the cars" for the end of the wharf were we found that the Hartford's
launch crew had made a seizure of quite as number of guns, rifles, and
muskets, all of them in dilapidated condition. They were probably
brought there for the purpose of complying with an order to the
citizens to send their old arms to New Orleans to be repaired. We put
them in the boat and started for the New London.
The city of New Orleans fell to Union forces on April 25, 1862. In
desperation, many coast people began a contraband trade with the enemy
at Ship Island and New Orleans. Tar, pitch, turpentine, lumber,
charcoal, wood, and livestock were exchanged for coffee, flour, shoes,
clothing, and medicine. Early in the war, coast residents had bartered
salt with inland farmers who provided corn, potatoes, vegetables, and
fresh or smoked meat.
In August 1949, Joseph Lewis "Dode" Schrieber (1873- 1951) related
the following tale of his step-father, German immigrant, Joseph
Letzler (1832-1908), to Ellis Handy (1891-1963), creator of "Know Your
Neighbor", in The Gulf Coast Times.
Joseph Letzler was trying to make his way overland from New Orleans
to Ocean Springs sometimes during the fall of 1863. He was without
food and traveled through the Honey Island swamp area and was either
just crossing or had crossed the Rigolets when he was arrested by
Negro Federal troops. He was three days without food and had no
particular reason for any sectional loyalty in a foreign country. He
asked for food but was told he must either enlist with the federal
forces or be confined. He served for some eighteen months with Company
E Louisiana Infantry and later received a federal pension. After the
close of the war Letzler came to Ocean Springs.
The Union Navy Western Gulf blockading squadron, which patrolled
the Mississippi Sound occasionally made forays up the local bayous and
rivers. One such incident reported by a correspondent for The New
Orleans Weekly Times on June 18, 1864, follows:
On Tuesday, May 31st, the gunboat, USS Narcissus, Wm. G.
Jones, commanding, and the USS Cowslip, Robert Canfield
commanding, went on an expedition up the Back Bay of Biloxi in command
of Lieutenant Commander W.F. Fitzhugh of the US steamer Sebago. At 10
o'clock A.M., we grounded on the extensive flats off Ocean Springs,
not having sufficient water to cross. After hard labor for twenty-four
hours, by heaving at anchors and lightening the vessels of their iron
platings, we succeeded in crossing the flats. There have been several
attempts since the war to penetrate into the rivers on the Back Bay of
Biloxi but they have always failed. But through the perseverance and
energy of Lt. Commander Fitzhugh and the commanders of the Cowslip
and Narcissus, we have succeeded in getting over the difficult
shoals. The Cowslip and Narcissus went twenty-five miles further up
the Chucatabuff (Tchoutacabuffa) River than any steamer previous to or
since the war. They destroyed all the salt works and boats and ferries
on the way, and also brought down six very fine pleasure
yachts. In addition, the Federal raiders captured two very important
officers, Major Toby and Lieutenant Wilkinson, of the Rebel army. The
launch of the USS Vincennes, with acting Master Billings in
charge was also on the expedition and rendered very efficient service.
Also, the 3rd cutter, in charge of Boatswain Smith of the Vincennes,
who volunteered to go to Fort Bayou at midnight to cut out a schooner,
which was in the bayou was apart of the flotilla. When Smith arrived
there he found the schooner scuttled by the rebels. He went up to a
house and surrounded it and demanded admittance, and captured the
Major and Lieutenant in their beds. This has been a bad blow to the
rebels as they never expected that our gunboats could cross the
shoals. We also captured a new boiler shaft and everything complete
suitable for a small propeller. The inhabitants on the river banks
received us with joy and at some places the ladies
serenaded us. The country through which we passed is one of the most
beautiful I ever saw. Fruits in abundance, and cattle by hundreds were
to be seen. We passed several very extensive saw-mills and the creeks
were full of pine and cypress logs. We did not destroy the saw-mills,
as they will be useful to Uncle Sam some future day. All the boats we
could not bring off, we destroyed. Everyone did his duty. The
commanders and officers of the Cowslip and Narcissus
were up night and day, wet to the skin for three days, as it rained
steadily the whole time. The rebels must bless the Yankees for
bringing them rain. We also brought off one deserter and several
refugees. Since my last report, the Narcissus has captured two
more boats from Mobile and the Cowslip one.
Many families from the Ocean Springs area fought in the Civil War.
Among them were: Bellande, Bellman, Bosarge, Bowen, Carco, Carroll,
Catchot, Cox, Cruthirds, Davis, Fayard, Fountain, Fournier, Gill,
King, Krohn, Lecand, Letzler, Mon, Noble, O'Keefe, Pons, Quave,
Ramsay, Ryan, Scarborough, Seymour, Van Cleave, Vaughn, Westbrook,
Woodcock, and Zirlott.
When those who survived the conflict returned home, one can only
surmise that they were heavily scarred from the ordeal. The shrimp,
oysters, and fish were still in the bay. The Ocean Springs Hotel
reopened. Life would go on. By 1870, the railroad reached town and the
economy would get better.
Camp of Confederate Veterans
In early April 1903, a temporary camp of Confederate Veterans
was organized at Ocean Springs. E.N. Ramsay was elected captain and
Dr. H. Shannon, secretary. Attendees were: Enoch N. Ramsay, W.D.
Bullock, W.G. Bullock, Julian Fayard, etc. (The Pascagoula
Democrat-Star, April 10, 1903, p. 3)
REFERENCES:
H. Grady Howell, Jr., To Live and Die in Dixie, (Chickasaw
Bayou Press: Jackson, Mississippi-1991), p. 135 and 311.
Schuyler Poitevent, Broken Pot, (unpublished manuscript
in the Department of Archives and History at Jackson, Mississippi),
Chaper 7 (Biloxi Bay), pp. 3-4.
Charles Sullivan, The Mississippi Gulf Coast: Portrait of a
People, (Windsor Publications: Northridge, California-1985),
pp. 89, and 97.
M. James Stevens Collection, Biloxi Public Library, Biloxi,
Mississippi-Book No. 25.
The Daily Herald, "Biloxi’s Hardships During Civil War’,
May 28, 1930.
The Daily Herald, "A Bit Of Civil War History", May 31,
1930.
The Historian of Hancock County, "Civil War Days", October
1994, p. 3.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Death of Col. A.C. Steede",
November 15,
1901, p. 3.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Ocean Springs Locals", April
10, 1903.
1860 Federal Slave Census of Jackson County, Mississippi
*******************************************************************************************************************************************************
The
Spanish-American War Comes
to Ocean Springs: 1898
by Ray L. Bellande

Probably members of Company B 5th US Volunteers
(courtesy of Norton Haviland)
Slightly over one hundred years ago, the United States and Spain
fought a short-term global war. Although the causes for this bellicose
action is complex possibly being a combination of Spain’s long
internal strife with the Cuban people, the aggressive nature of
American capitalism, and yellow journalism by the American press, this
conflict had its immediate cause at Havana, Cuba, where the USS
Maine, a 318-foot long, American battleship, commanded by
Captain Sigsbee, was mysteriously destroyed on February 15, 1898.
Several hundred American service men, aboard the Brooklyn Navy Yard
built vessel, were killed by a large internal explosion, possibly
caused by spontaneous combustion of her coal bunkers. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, February 18, 1898, p. 2, c. 2)
Republican President William McKinley (1843-1901) and the US
Congress declared war on Spain on April 21, 1898. .
This Spanish-American War had several impacts on Mississippi and
the South. The economy in the region improved, but the conflict was
also the catalyst, which returned Southern people to the mainstream of
American cultural life. The pangs of the Civil War defeat and
Reconstruction were still felt in the South. The Spanish-American War
united former enemies and a new sense of nationalism was reborn. As
one former Confederate soldiers said, "if we couldn’t whip Uncle
Sam in four years we shouldn’t allow someone else to come here
and do what we couldn’t do ourselves". (McLemore-1973, p. 492)
In late May 1898, by a special act of Congress, ten regiments
of Immunes from the South were authorized for the Spanish
American War. Five regiments were colored and five white.
They were selected for garrison duty in Cuba and other
tropical environments.(The Biloxi Daily Herald, May 28, 1898, p.
7)
Like many small American towns, Ocean Springs was affected by the
Spanish American War. As we shall see, many of our young men
volunteered for action in this short duration conflict. Two naval
heroes of this war, Admirals Dewey and Schley, were honored locally.
Dewey Avenue was named for Commodore George Dewey (1837-1917) who
defeated the Spanish fleet at Manila Bay in the Philippines in May
1898. Joseph Bellande (1819-1907) sold the city a thirty-five foot
strip of land south of Porter to the A.G. Tebo property for $100 in
May 1898, from which the thoroughfare was created. (Minute Book 1,
Town of Ocean Springs, Mississippi)
An award winning paper shell pecan was named for Rear Admiral
Winfield Scott Schley (1839-1911), who was credited with the
destruction of the Spanish fleet fleeing the Cuban port of Santiago de
Cuba. This decisive naval engagement in July 1898, virtually ended the
conflict. Albert Grant Delmas of Pascagoula developed the Schley
(pronounced Sly) Pecan. In 1900, it won a bronze medal at the
International Exposition in Paris. The silver medal was awarded the
nut in 1904, at the St. Louis Exposition. A.G. Delmas served the
people of Jackson County as Chancery Clerk from 1876-1884. (The History
of Jackson County, Mississippi-1989, p. 21)
Another bit of local trivia concerning the Spanish American War was
that probably the first shot fired in the conflict was directed at the
Spanish merchantman, Buenaventura. This vessel took on a
cargo of lumber at Pascagoula and was bound for Rotterdam when it was
fired upon a captured by the USS Nashville on April 22,
1898, near Key West, Florida. (O’Toole, 1984, pp. 200-201)
Mississippi’s initial quota for the Spanish-American War was two
regiments. The Federal Government funded the conflict. In late April
1898, Governor Anselm J. McLaurin (1848-1909) called for
volunteers. By early May, Camp Port Henry was set up near Jackson to
receive volunteer troopers. The Mississippi National Guard supplied
over half the men who enlisted to fight the Spanish in Cuba and the
Philippines. (Rowland-1978, p. 558)
About twenty-five young men volunteered from Ocean Springs for
military duty in the Spanish-American War. They were represented for
the most part in the 1st Mississippi Infantry
Regiment, 2nd Mississippi Infantry Regiment, and
the 5th US Volunteer Infantry (Immunes). The
Immunes were composed of men who were considered immune to yellow
fever.
In Cuba, the US Army lost about 2600 men in this conflict. Only 346
were killed or died from wounds. Disease accounted for over 2200
American lives. Although many were inflicted with malarial fever and
other tropical ailments, the Ocean Springs contingent of servicemen
returned safely. The Spanish-American War cost the country about
$900,000,000. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, October 7, 1898,
p. 1, c. 7 and August 26, 1898, p. 1, c. 4)
The hostilities of the Spanish-American War ended on August
12,1898. The Pascagoula Democrat-Star facetiously wrote
on August 26, 1889, "All mines having been removed
from Biloxi Bay, Mr. Narcisse Seymour (1849-1931)
treated the guests of the Shanahan House to a delightful boat ride on
his sloop, Leonie". At this time, Mr. Seymour was
associated in the oyster business with Phil McCabe of Biloxi. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, November 18, 1898)
The peace treaty ending the Spanish-American War was signed at
Paris on December 10, 1898. By virtue of this treaty and an earlier
agreement reached at the cessation of fighting in August 1898, Spain
gave Cuba her freedom, ceded the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam to
the United States. Spain received $20,000,000 from the US and agreed
to be responsible for its Cuban debt. (Encyclopedia Americana, 1995, p.
449).
Following is a chronological synopsis from local journals of the
months of 1898-1899, as relating to the effects of the
Spanish-American War at Ocean Springs:
In March 1898, rumors of war with Spain were ubiquitous about Ocean
Springs. Colonel Loren H. Whitney of Chicago, who had recently
built a cottage on Porter (now the domicile of Mike Smith at
619 Porter) expected to tender his services as Brigadier General in
case of war Whitney was writing the history of the three principal
world religions. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, March 18,
1898 and January 24, 1902)
Ocean Springs became directly involved in this war on April 13,
1898, when Colonel Edward Webb Morrill (1839-1910), a
Confederate veteran, of Biloxi, commander of the 1st
Regiment of the State National Guard, mustered Battery D, 1st
Regiment, Mississippi National Guard into service. Twenty-seven men
led by Captain Sam T. Haviland (1845-1911), 1st
Lt. Joseph B. Garrard (1871-1915), and 2nd Lt. Joe
March (1876-1939), met at Firemen’s Hall on Washington Avenue.
Their quota was forty men, which was expected to be met by the end of
the week. (The Biloxi Herald, April 16, 1898, p. 8)
Battery D boarded the naptha launch, Odette, and
sloop, Creole, owned by Captain Marsh, in late April
1898, and embarked for a drill called by Colonel E.W. Morrill at
Biloxi. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, April 29, 1898)
In early May, local physician, Dr. Edward Reneau Bragg
(1862-1916), was appointed surgeon for the 3rd Alabama
Regiment-US Army and expected to go to Cuba. He left Mobile for the
West Indies in early June 1898. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
June 10, 1898) Dr. Bragg was sent to New York to recover from the
effects of Cuba in August 1898. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
September 2, 1898). He reported to Washington D.C. in early October. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, October 7, 1898) Bragg returned
to Cuba and held a position at Santiago de Cuba in November 1898. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, November 18, 1898)
Lt. Garrard and orderly Sergeant Clark of the J.B. Rose Light
Artillery secured a number of recruits from the Fort Bayou community.
They were sworn into service. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, May
6, 1898).
In mid-May, Will Casey (1875-1960), Henry Gottsche
(1875-1905), Phil Bellman (1872-1927), John Cullinan,
and Frank Jackson joined the Scranton Battery. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, May13,1898).
On May 30, 1898, Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders passed rapidly
through Ocean Springs on a troop train. Perhaps the most unique and
colorful unit in the US Army, the Rough Riders were en route to Tampa,
Florida, their embarkation port, for Cuba. (The Biloxi Herald,
June 4, 1898)
Roosevelt’s troops, the First United States Volunteer Cavalry, were
mustered in New Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma, and Indian Territory. They
met in San Antonio, Texas to prepare for the conflict with
Spain. (Roosevelt-1971, p. 7 and p. 14)
In early June 1898, Lt. J.B. Garrard left Ocean Springs with
ten men for Jackson, Mississippi to enlist with Captain Wood’s Company
of the 2nd Infantry Regiment of the Mississippi Volunteers.
Among his cohorts were: Sergeant V.L. Beyer, W.V. Shannon,
Charles Bellman, P.H. Champlin, F.A. Schrieber,
John Catchot, and Jack Richards. About the same time,
Anton P. Kotzum (1871-1916) was appointed Band Master of the 2nd
Texas Volunteers stationed at Camp Coppinger. (The Pascagoula
Democrat-Star, June 10, 1898)
In late June 1898, Edwin A. Clark (1853-1936) gave a dinner
in honor of his son, Charles Clark (1879-1945), and his soldier
friends, Thornton Vaughan (1868-1898+) Joseph Marsh, and Silas Boyd
(1876-1950). These young men were leaving Ocean Springs for a military
camp at Columbus, Mississippi. They reported to Colonel Sargeant.
(The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, June 24, 1898)
With Martin Rooney, these men left for Columbus. Miss Jessie
Boyd sang the Star Spangled Banner when they departed. Martin Rooney
was rejected for military duty because of his low body weight. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, July 1, 1898 and July 8, 1898)
Three Ocean Springs soldiers are ill at Jacksonville, Florida.
Corporal Joe Garrard and Charlie Bellman of the 2nd
Mississippi Volunteers have been sick, but are much improved. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, August 12. 1898)
Garrard returned to Ocean Springs to recover from malarial fever. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, August 19, 1898)
Will Shannon also of the 2nd Volunteers returned to
Ocean Springs with his father, Dr. Harry Shannon (1831-pre
1909), who went for him. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
August 26, 1898).
With the combat phase of the conflict over, men began to return to
Ocean Springs. Private Henry Gottsche returned on furlough in
the first week of September. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
September 16, 1898)
Other personnel of the 1st and 2nd Regiments
of the Mississippi Volunteers were also home on furlough. The 1st
Mississippi was represented by: Sergeant Frank Jackson,
Corporal Will Casey, and Bugler Phil Bellman. Also,
Sergeant Vincent Beyer, Corporal J.B. Garrard, Will
Shannon, Dolph Schrieber, Porter Champlain, Len
Hopkins, and John Catchot were enjoying furlough from the 2nd
Regiment-Mississippi Volunteers. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
September 23, 1898).
Ab Jackson of the 2nd Alabama regiment arrived home
last week and was warmly greeted. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
September 30, 1898).
Ab Jackson left for Montgomery, Alabama to rejoin his
regiment, the 2nd Alabama and expects to be mustered out. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, October 28, 1898)
Ab Jackson returned to Ocean Springs as his unit was
mustered out. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, November
11, 1898)
Our boys of the 1st and 2nd Infantry
regiments left Sunday for Columbia, Tennessee where they will be
mustered out of service. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
December 2, 1898)
Sergeant Frank Jackson and Will Casey were mustered out
and went to work on the Shaffer Sugar Plantation at Terrebonne
Parish, Louisiana. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
December 12, 1898)
Master Horace Culver, son of Lieutenant George Culver
of the 5th Immunes US Volunteers Santiago de Cuba is home
again. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, January 13,
1899).
Bugler Manny Clark of the 5th US Volunteers,
Immunes, returned to Ocean Springs. He was expected to recover quickly
from the effects of the Cuban climate. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star,
March 17, 1899)
Dr. E.R. Bragg is home and will rent from Herman Nill
(1863-1904) an office building north of Nill’s Drugstore on Washington
Avenue. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, April 21, 1899)
Apparently, Dr. Bragg quickly changed his plans as he made a
decision to relocate to Biloxi. His Illinois born, sister-in-law, L.W.
Hyatt (1866-1900+), was living with them there in 1900. (The
Pascagoula-Democrat-Star, April 28, 1899)
Dr. Edward Reneau Bragg (1862-1916) studied medicine at Tulane. He
was licensed to practice medicine in Jackson County in April 1889. His
father, Dr. William D. Bragg (1833-1891) of Moss Point,
supervised his post-graduate medical training. Dr. Bragg was situated
in the Nill Building at Ocean Springs as early as April 1891. He ran
this advertisement in The Biloxi Daily Herald on October 9,
1900:
Dr. E.R. Bragg-Biloxi, Mississippi
Office 2nd Floor of Dukate’s
Theater-Telephone 11
Dr. Bragg expired at Biloxi on May 16, 1916. His remains and those
of his wife, Emma Hyatt (1868-1968), and son, Edward H. Bragg
(1900-1927), are interred in the Bragg-Hyatt family plot at the Biloxi
City Cemetery.
US VOLUNTEERS -5th Immune Regiment

Colonel H.H. Sargent, Commander USV 5th Infantry
This unit, composed of men from Alabama, Mississippi, and
Louisiana, was mustered at Columbus, Mississippi, in late July 1898.
Colonel H. H. Sargent was in command.
The 5th Immune Regiment was sent to Cuba to relieve the
troops of General Shafter at Santiago de Cuba, after the fighting
there had subsided. They performed garrison duty here from August 1898
until March 1899. Their chief enemy was malaria and yellow fever and
the other pestilence which pervaded this tropical
island. (Rowland-1978, p. 560).
The 5th Immune Regiment left Columbus, Mississippi on
August 6, 1898, for Savannah, Georgia, their embarkation point for
southeastern Cuba. The troop transports left Savannah on the 8th
of August, and arrived at Santiago de Cuba on the morning of August
12, 1898. Major James K. Vardaman (1861-1930), who resigned
from the editorship of The Greenwood Commonwealth to lead a
battalion of soldiers of the 5th Immunes, wrote a series of
letters to his wife, Anna Burleson Robinson Vardaman. They give
a detailed picture of a soldier’s life and living conditions in the
tropics. The Vardaman letters were published in The Journal of
Mississippi History, in April 1947. Before the Spanish-American War, Texas native, J.K. Vardaman, was a
lawyer-newspaper editor. He practiced law at Winona and was editor of
The Winona Advance (1882). Vardaman relocated to the Delta and
edited The Greenwood Enterprise-Greenwood
Commonwealth from 1890-1903. Returning from Cuba, he entered
politics and was elected as a populist Democratic Governor serving the
State from 1904-1908, in that capacity. Vardaman was Mississippi’s
U.S. Senator from 1913-1919. He became known as "the great white
father". (Biographical Directory of the American Congress-1961, p.
1751).
Major James K. Vardaman led about 82 enlisted men from Mississippi
to Cuba. These young men left home robust and healthy. At Cuba, seven
died, twenty-five were sent home, and for the most part the remainder
"looked more like half-animated cadavers than the stalwart
men they were when the regiment first landed on Cuban soil". (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, April 14, 1899)
In May 1899, the 5th US Volunteer Infantry was sent to
Camp Meade at Middleton, Pennsylvania. They were mustered out in June
1899. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, May 19, 1899)
On June 23, 1899, "Anchorage", the Shearwater neighborhood home of
Mrs. Jessie Boyd, was the site of a soiree for the
comrades of her son, Sgt. Silas Boyd, who had fought with the 5th
US Volunteers in Cuba. Invitees were: Lt. George Culver,
Sgt. Charles Clark, Sgt. Joe Marsh, Corp.
Thornton Vaughan, Corp. Will Ryan, and Bugler Manny Clark.
(The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, June 30, 1899)
5th Immune Men from Ocean Springs

Company B, 5th US Volunteer Infantry
Camp
Walthall, Mississippi-Spring 1898
(courtesy of Norton Haviland)
Sergeant Silas Weeks Boyd (1876-1950)-Silas W. Boyd was the son
of Texan William Boyd and Jessie M. Weeks (1855-1932). He was born at
Summitt, Mississippi. Silas Boyd made his livelihood as a salesman in
a grocery store at Ocean Springs, when he returned from the
Spanish-American War. In 1910, at New Orleans he commenced in the
lumber business as Enterprise Lumber and Commission Company. (The
Ocean Springs News, October 15, 1910)
Silas Boyd was married to
Daisy Davis. Their children were: Mrs. Ralph Hurst, Mrs.
Marlin Rains, Robert Weeks Boyd, and Beverly Boyd.
The Silas W. Boyd family settled at Jackson, Mississippi. (The Daily
Herald, February 23, 1950, p. 8, c. 1)
Sergeant Charles E. Clark (1879-1945)-Charles E. Clark was the
son of Massachusetts born, Edwin A. Clark (1853-1936), and
Katherine T. Glasscock (1853-1930). He was born at Concordia
Parish, Louisiana. The Clark family came to Ocean Springs in 1897.
Here, Charles married LuLu Haviland (1880-1972). They were
childless. Returning from Cuba, Clark became a college student and
studied medicine. He was educated at LSU and Cumberland University. At
Ocean Springs, he worked for the railway mail service and five years
as rural mail carrier at Ocean Springs. Clark was also an attorney. In
1936, he was officed on the 2nd floor of the Farmers &
Merchants State Bank Building. (The Daily Herald, April 6,
1945, p. 8, c. 3)
Bugler Alexander M. "Manny" Clark (1880-1950)-Manny Clark was
the son of James Lundy Clark (1850-1914) and Charlotte
Virginia Richards (1859-1939). He was born at Ocean Springs. Manny
Clark was married to Donna Hilton. Their children were:
Grace Clark, Mary Clark, Dr. Lamar S. Clark
(1911-1996), and A.M. Clark Jr. Dr. Lamar S. Clark received a
Doctor of Divinity degree from SMU. During WW II, he was a highly
decorated chaplain with the 24th Infantry Division in the
South Pacific theater. Dr. Clark ministered to the Methodist faithful
in east and southeast Texas, during his long ministerial career. Mr.
Manny Clark was a merchant at Gulfport and later moved to Houston,
Texas. In retirement, he returned to Ocean Springs and lived with
Joe L. "Dode" Schrieber’s family on East Porter Avenue.
Manny Clark expired in July 1950, at the Biloxi VA Center. His remains
were interred in the Clark Family plot in the Evergreen Cemetery at
Ocean Springs. (The Daily Herald, July 22, 1950, p. 2,
c. 3 and Lurline S. Hall, 1998).
Lieutenant George Culver (d. 1906) was married to Virginia
Norwood Jones of Chicago. They married on June 6, 1899 in Jackson
County, Mississippi. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W.
Norwood of Chicago and East Beach. The Norwoods acquired the Charnely
Cottage on East Beach at Ocean Springs in June 1896.
In January 1900, Lieutenant Culver, a staff member of General Wood,
was sent to Santiago de Cuba to supervise construction work for the
government. Mrs. Culver joined her husband in Cuba in March 1900. She
took passage aboard the steamer, Transit, out of the
port of Mobile. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, January 5, 1900, p. 3
and March 9, 1900, p. 3)
When George Culver returned from Cuba to Ocean Springs, he was the
manager for Southern Lands, a real estate company owned by W.R. Snyder
(1846-1919).
The Culvers were killed in the great storm of September 1906. He
had taken a post as custodian of the Emily C. Lyon estate oyster
planting grounds on the coast of Alabama, south of Grand Bay. In March
1908, Mrs. Culver’s corporal remains were exhumed by J.Y. Morgan, an
undertaker, and brought from Bayou Herron, to the Evergreen Cemetery
at Ocean Springs. (The Pascagoula Chronicle Star, March 14, 1908, p.
3)
Their son, Horace Culver, was living at Hattiesburg in April
1903, and in Mobile in July 1914, where he was circulation manager of
The Mobile Item. Young Culver had come to Ocean Springs in July
1914, to visit friends here in his racing sloop while attending the
Biloxi regatta. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, April 10, 1903, p. 3
and The Ocean Springs News, July 18, 1914, p. 5)
Sergeant Joseph B. Marsh (1876-1939). Sergeant Marsh was born
in Fitzpatrick, Alabama in December 1876. His parents were from
Georgia and Alabama respectively. He was the nephew of S.T.
Haviland (1845-1911). (Federal Census 1900-Jackson County,
Mississippi)
Before the war, Joseph B. Marsh was the skipper of the sloop,
Creole. He with Thornton Vaughan and Bob Jones ran an oyster
dredging operation in the Louisiana marshes. When they returned from
an oystering expedition in January 1898, Mr. Jones left the trio to
find employment elsewhere. (The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, January
21, 1898, p. 3)
J.B. Marsh was elected to be regimental color bearer of the 5th
Immune Regiment of Colonel H.H. Sargent. (The Pascagoula
Democrat-Star, July 29, 1898).
Joseph B. Marsh expired on December 23, 1939,
at the Biloxi Veterans Facility. He had been here for a month. Mrs.
Marsh resided in Jackson, Mississippi. J.B. Marsh’s corporal remains
were sent to Brookhaven, Mississippi for internment. (The Daily
Herald, December 26, 1939)
Major Hernando Deveaux. Money (1869-1936)-H.D. Money served in
Cuba as a battalion commander. He was charged with the Barracoa
District, under the overall command of General Leonard Wood.
H.D. Money resided north of Fort Bayou on a large farm (formerly the
Rose Farm) where he raised citrus and pecans. He was married to
Lucretia Eggleston (1876-1929) and was a cousin of Captain
James K. Vardaman. The Money children were: Deveaux Money
Ackley (1900-1986) and Lucretia Money Parlin (b. 1900).
After the conflict, the H.D. Money Camp of Spanish-American War
Veterans at Gulfport, were named in his honor. H.D. Money ran an
unsuccessful campaign for the 6th Congressional seat in
1928 election. He passed December 15, 1936 at the Wanalaw Plantation
in Holmes County, Mississippi. Money’s remains were interred in the
Evergreen Cemetery at North Carrollton, Mississippi. (The Daily
Herald, December 16, 1936, p. 1, c. 3 and The Ocean Springs
Record, January 6-20-1994, p. 14)
Corporal William Edward "Will" Ryan (1877-1925)-William E. Ryan
was the son of Antoine Ryan (1846-1908) and Marie Ryan
(1846-1886+). He worked on a steamboat in 1900, and moved to Biloxi
circa 1907, where he worked for the Biloxi police force. Ryan later
made his livelihood as keeper of the Biloxi Yacht Club. He married
Theodora Vuyovich (1886-1944) of Biloxi. Their children were:
Oliver Ryan (1907-1930+), Marshall J. Ryan (1910-1930),
Theodora Ryan (c. 1914), Rayoal Ryan (c. 1917), and
William Ryan. The family resided at 804 Reynoir Street. Will
Ryan’s corporal remains were interred in the Biloxi City Cemetery. (The
Daily Herald, December 2, 1925, p. 2, c. 5 and
Krohn,1995, p. 16).
A son, Marshall J. Ryan (1910-1930), died of pneumonia in March
1930. He worked for the Mississippi Ice and Utilities Company. (The
Daily Herald, March 15, 1930, p. 2, c. 2)
Corporal Thornton A. Vaughan (1868-1933)-Thornton A. Vaughan
was the son of Dr. Milton Clay Vaughan (1832-1903) and
Fanny Thornton (1840-1875). His father was a dentist at Ocean
Springs and served as mayor in 1895-1896. Vaughan’s siblings were:
Susie Willis Vaughan (1869-1962), Milton Clay Vaughan Jr.
(1873-1923), and Fannie Thornton Vaughan (1873-1965). Thornton
Vaughn made his livelihood here after the conflict as a carpenter. He
died in late December 1933. Vaughan’s remains like the remainder of
the M.C. Vaughan family are interred in the Evergreen Cemetery at
Ocean Springs. (The Daily Herald, January 1, 1934, p. 2, c.
2)
The following is a letter written from Cuba by Thornton A.
Vaughan (1868-1933) to his aunt, Susan W. Price:(The Pascagoula
Democrat-Star, September 1898)
Ocean Springs, Mississippi
Dear Aunt:
One week in camp and everything in fair shape. The
colonel, sergeant, and all officers in our regiment are the equals of
any officers in the United States service. Our boys are doing well and
would enjoy a skirmish, even with natives; anything to break the
monotony of garrison life. The climate resembles that of our coast,
but must be a few degrees warmer, as this island is so much nearer the
equator.
We are encamped on an eminence overlooking the Bay of Santiago, and
surrounded by high hills or low-lying mountains, whose sides are
ornamented with graceful palm trees. Bamboo grows in the
ravines or valleys to a height of probably forty feet and as large
around as a quart cup.
At present we drill one hour each day and have other work to occupy
two or three hours, morning and evening. We lounge around in tents and
smoke, talk, and spin yarns.
We do not know what our future will be. Some say we will be
discharged in a few weeks, while others think we will be retained for
garrison duty for months. I do not care about going into the city
often, but would like to feel free, and to be able to explore the
country about me.
Yours,
Santiago de Cuba
MISSISSIPPI VOLUNTEERS-1st Infantry Regiment
This military unit was commanded by Colonel George M. Govan.
They were mustered in at Jackson, Mississippi on May 26, 1898, but
soon left for the US Army camp at Chickamauga Park, Tennessee. The 1st
Mississippi Infantry regiment was mustered out at Columbia, Tennessee
on December 20, 1898. (Rowland-1978, pp. 558-559)
The men from Ocean Springs, who volunteered for the 1st
Regiment, US Volunteers, served in Company D led by Edgar R, DuMont
of Scranton (Pascagoula). They were as follows:
Miss. Volunteers,
1std Infantry
Regiment-Men from
Ocean Springs Company D
Bugler Phillip Bellman (1872-1927). Phillip Bellman was
enrolled as a private by Captain DuMont at Scranton on April 27, 1898.
He was appointed company musician on July 5, 1898. Bugler Bellman was
mustered out at Columbia, Tennessee on December 20, 1898, by Captain
W.B. Homer, 6th Artillery. (Spanish-American War Service
Record Extracts 1898-1899, No. 204).
Phillip Bellman was the son of Charles W. Bellman (1841-1885) and
Elmina Brown (1843-1880+). After the war, he returned to Ocean Springs
and worked as a butcher. Bellman married Alice Seymour (1880-1957),
the daughter of local seafood shipper, Narcisse Seymour (1849-1931),
and Caroline V. Krohn (1847-1895) in May 1899. They reared a large
family at Ocean Springs. By 1910, Phil Bellman made his livelihood as
an oysterman. He started in the seafood business for himself in March
1916. His packing house, The Ocean Springs Fish and Oyster Company,
was located on the beach between Washington and Jackson Avenue.
Bellman made a specialty of the Eagle Point Oyster. (The Ocean
Springs News, March 23, 1916, p. 6, c. 7).
He passed on at Biloxi on March 3, 1927, and his remains were
interred in the Bellande Cemetery at Ocean Springs.
_small.jpg)
Corporal Will H. Casey
(1875-1960)
image
made by A.W. Judd, Chattanooga, Tennessee
Courtesy of Joseph B. Garrard II from the Verta Lee Bradford Van
Cleave family collection.
Corporal Will H. Casey (1875-1960). Corporal Will Casey was
born at Clinton, Louisiana, the son of John F. Casey (1844-1907) and
Mary Emma Casey (1851-1928). His sister, Eudora Casey Van Cleave
(1876-1950), was the wife of William S. Van Cleave (1871-1938). The
Van Cleaves operated a store on the northwest corner of Washington and
Porter for several decades. Casey became a railroad engineer for the
Illinois Central Railroad in 1903. He lived at Gulfport and was active
in Spanish-American War Veterans causes on the national, state, and
local level. Casey served as commander of the H.D. Money Camp No. 12
at Gulfport, for many years. His remains like those of most of his
family are interred in the Evergreen Cemetery at Ocean Springs. (The
Daily Herald, August 13, 1960, p. 2)
Will Casey joined Company D of the 1st Mississippi
Volunteer Infantry Regiment on April 27, 1898, at Scranton. He was
mustered into service at Camp Port Henry on May 9, 1898, by Lt.
Lockwood. Casey was discharged on December 1,1898, at Columbia,
Tennessee. (Spanish-American War Service Record Extracts 1898-1899- No.
486).
Henry B. Gottsche-(1875-1905)-Henry B. Gottsche was the son of
German immigrants, Hans Heinrich Gottsche and Christiana
Switzer? The family came to Ocean Springs from New Orleans circa
1870. The Gottsche family owned a homestead on Washington Avenue in
Block 27-Lot 14 (Culseig Map of 1854). After the Spanish-American War,
Henry B. Gottshce was a laborer on the bridge gang of the L&N
Railroad. His brother, Albert C. Gottsche (1873-1949), who had
worked for the Davis Brothers general merchandising store, commenced
an enterprise of his own in October 1910, which developed into the
legendary Gottshe’s Thrifty-Nifty. It was located on the Gottsche
family lot at the southwest corner of Washington and Desoto. Henry B.
Gottsche expired on February 2, 1905. His remains were interred in the
Evergreen Cemetery. (The Biloxi Herald, February 3, 1905, p. 6,
c. 2)
Sergeant Frank T. Jackson-In November 1897, Frank Jackson was
associated with the US Marine Hospital Service. He mustered into the
military at Scranton on April 27, 1898. No further information. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, November 19, 1898)
Some Biloxians who served in Company D, under Captain duMont were:
Gus Henzelena (1869-1953), A.V. Foretich, Tom McCabe,
W. Smith, John Fayard, and Emile Tremmel. Private
Tremmel (1869-1898), a native of New Orleans, died of sickness at Camp
Chickamauga, Tennessee, in late August 1898 His remains were
accompanied to Biloxi by Gus Henzelena. (The Biloxi Daily Herald,
December 22, 1898, p. 8, c. 1 and August 27, 1898, p. 8, c. 3)
Also, Albert Irish Hann, son of Gelon Hann. (see DH,
12-4-1933, p. 1)
The 2nd Infantry Regiment led by Colonel William A.
Montgomery was mustered at Camp Port Henry near Jackson,
Mississippi in early June 1898. The unit was discharged on December
20, 1898, at Columbia, Tennessee. Company B of the 2nd
Infantry Regiment-Mississippi Volunteers was commanded by Edgar H.
Woods of Rosedale, Mississippi.(Rowlands, 1978 p. 559)
The men from Ocean Springs who served in Company B were as follows:
Miss. Volunteers, 2nd Infantry
Regiment-Men from
Ocean Springs Company B
Private Charles M. Bellman (1876-1956). Bellman was enrolled
for military service by Captain Woods at Ocean Springs on June 4,
1898. He was mustered in by Lt. Lockwood at Jackson, Mississippi on
June 7, 1898. Private Bellman was mustered out of the volunteer army
on December 20, 1898 at Columbia, Tennessee by Captain W.B. Homer.
(Spanish-American War Service Record Extracts 1898-1899-No. 204).
Charles M. Bellman was the son of Charles W. Bellman
(1841-1885) and Elmina Brown (1843-1880+). He made his
livelihood as a conductor for the GM&O RR and resided at Mobile. No
further information. (The Daily Herald, September 26, 1956, p. 2, c.
1)
Quartermaster Sergeant Vincent L. Beyer (1874-1920+). V.L.
Beyer was born in Texas. He mustered in at Jackson on June 4, 1898.
Beyer was promoted to Quartermaster Sergeant on August 1, 1898. He
mustered out at Columbia, Tennessee on December 20,
1898. (Spanish-American War Service Record Extracts 1898-1899-No. 225)
V.L. Beyer was married to Effie Beyer, a Mississippi native.
Her father was German and mother from the Magnolia State. His parents
were from New York and Louisiana. In 1920, V.L. Beyer was a nurseryman
at Ocean Springs and the father of eleven children. No further
information. (Federal Census 1920-Jackson County, Mississippi).
Cook John J. Catchot (1863-1910)-John J. Catchot was the son of
Spanish immigrant, Arnaud Catchot (1834-1910), and Adele Ryan
(1844-1880). He married Bessie Robbins circa 1900. Their
children were: Maggie Catchot (1901-1910+), Albertine
Catchot (1903-1903), Frazine Catchot (1904-1910+),
William Jerome Catchot (1906-1910+), and Frank Catchot
(1909-1910+). Catchot made his livelihood as a railroad
laborer. (Federal Census 1910-Jackson County, Mississippi) He was
mustered into the Army at Jackson on June 4, 1898, by Lt. Lockwood,
and mustered out at Columbia, Tennessee by Capt. W.B. Homer, 6th
Artillery. (Spanish-American War Service Record Extracts 1898-1899-No.
490).
John J. Catchot’s corporal remains were interred in the Bellande
Cemetery on Dewey Avenue.
Porter Hand Champlin (1870-1933)-Porter H. Champlin was the son
of Dr. Anthony P. Champlin (1839-1897) and Margaret
Smith. Dr. Champlin was a physician at Biloxi. He was born and
educated at New Orleans and was a quarantine physician for several
years at Ship Island. At the time of his demise, Dr. Champlin was in
charge of the Cat Island Quarantine Station. (The Biloxi Herald,
May 15, 1897, p. 8, c. 3) His niece, Lee B. Champlin
(1884-1964), the daughter of Judge Zachary T. Champlin
(1847-1924), married Daniel Judson Gay (1870-1949). Their son,
John Champlin Gay (1909-1975), was Mayor of Ocean Springs from
1953-1961 and from 1965-1969. (The Ocean Springs Record, June
29, 1995, p. 20)
Porter Hand Champlin was named for his uncle, Porter B. Hand.
Porter B. Hand (1834-1914) was born at New York, the son of Miles
B. Hand (1804-1880+), the founder of Handsboro. Porter Hand
married Margaret Champlin (1835-1880+), the sister of Dr. A.P.
Champlin, in May 1855. The Hands were childless. Porter Hand was a
merchant at Biloxi until early 1888, when he returned to Handsboro.
Here he built the schooner, Winnie Davis, in April 1888.
(The Biloxi Herald, May 12, 1888, p. 8, c. 2)
In 1905, Mr. Hand also operated a bucket factory at Ocean Springs
with George L. Friar (1870-1924).
After the demise of his wife, Porter Hand married Marie Anna
Adams (1846-1935). At the time of his demise, the Hands resided at
the foot of Oak Street in Biloxi. Hands’s remains were interred in the
Biloxi Cemetery. (The Daily Herald, August 13, 1914, p. 5, cc.
4-6)
Private Porter H. Champlin was born at Bay St. Louis, Mississippi
on July 3, 1870. He resigned his position under Captain Dana,
lighthouse inspector, in April 1898, and visited friends at Ocean
Springs. He mustered in at Jackson on June 4, 1898, and discharged
after the muster rolls were completed. (The Pascagoula
Democrat-Star, April 15, 1898 and Spanish-American War
Service Record Extracts 1898-1899, No. 506).
P.H. Champlin married Leonie Dufrechon (1880-1929), a native
of New Orleans, at Biloxi on January 8, 1900. She was the daughter of
Baptiste Dufrechon and Laura Bosarge. They were the
parents of three children: Louis Champlin, Laura
Rousseau, and Mrs. Julius Strong. (The Daily Herald,
January 18, 1929, p. 2).
After the Spanish-American War, Porter Hand Champlin resided at
1301 Bradford Street in the East Back Bay section of Biloxi where he
made his livelihood as a fisherman. Porter H. Champlin expired on
January 30,1933. His final respects were given by members of the
Admiral Thomas P. Magruder Camp, Spanish-American War Veterans of
Biloxi. Internment was at the Biloxi Cemetery. (The Daily Herald,
January 30, 1933, p. 6, c. 2 and January 31, 1933, p. 2, c.
2)

Joseph
B. Garrard
[Courtesy of Jack K. Garrard and Mary Lee Williams Garrard]
Corporal Joseph B. Garrard (1871-1915). Joseph B. Garrard was
born at New Orleans the son of James J. Garrard (1828-1902) and
Francesca V. Marks (1839-1907). Joseph B. Garrard was mustered
in at Jackson on June 4, 1898. Mustered out at Columbia, Tennessee on
December 20, 1898. Corporal Garrard was seriously wounded on the march
to Santiago de Cuba when he fell into a pit of poisoned spears. One of
the stakes penetrated his abdomen, but prompt action by the company
surgeon saved his life. (Spanish-American War Service Record Extracts
1898-1899. No. 997 and WPA, 1936-1938, p. 178)
In October 1899, Joseph B. Garrard was with the 29th
Regiment, U.S. Volunteers and sent to the Philippine Islands. His
mother was the recipient of one of his missives sent from Honolulu in
the Sandwich Islands, now the Hawaiian Islands. (The Pascagoula
Democrat-Star, November 3, 1899, p. 3)
Joseph B. Garrard married Carrie Ann Johnson (1886-1968) of
Algiers, Louisiana in January 1906. Their children were: James F.
Garrard (1906-1972) and Frank Benson Garrard (1908-1919).
Mr. Garrard made his livelihood in Ocean Springs as a brick
manufacturer and hardware merchant. Ward I Alderman, Joseph B.
Garrard II, and his brother, Jack Garrard, who resides in
the J.B.Garrard family home on Iberville Drive, are grandsons.
Private Leonard Hopkins (1871-1900+)-Leonard Hopkins was the
son of Mississippi native, the widow, Marancy Hopkins
(1853-1909+). Leonard Hopkins was born in Texas, the son of a Canadian
father. He had eight siblings in 1900. No further information. (Federal
Census 1900-Jackson County, Mississippi)
Private Jack D. Richards-Private Jack D. Richards was mustered
in at Jackson, Mississippi on June 4, 1898, by Lt. Lockwood. He was
mustered out at Columbia, Tennessee on December 20, 1898, by Captain
W.B. Homer, 6th Artillery. No further information. (Spanish-American
War Service Record Extracts 1898-1899, No. 2585)
Private Will V. Shannon (1878-1910)-Will V. Shannon was the son
of Dr. Harry Shannon (1831-1900+) and Lucy Irwin
(1838-1910+). He was mustered into military service at Jackson on June
4, 1898. Private Shannon was mustered out at Columbia, Tennessee on
December 20, 1898. Dr. Shannon owned a large citrus orchard called "Shannondale".
The Fort Bayou Estates occupies this site today. (Spanish-American Was
Service Record Extracts 1898-1899, No. 2764)
Will Shannon died suddenly from heat prostration at El Centro,
California in July 1910. He had recently located here. His remains
were interred at El Centro. (The Ocean Springs News, July 30, 1910)
Other men from Ocean Springs who served in the Spanish-American War
were as follows:
29th US Volunteers

F.A.
Schrieber
[courtesy of Lowell F. Ford-Torrance, California]
F.A. Schrieber (1871-1944)-Frederich Adolph Schrieber, called
Dolph, was the son of German immigrants, Adolph Josef Schrieber
(1835-1875) and Rosina Christian (1834-1920). Dolph Schrieber
married Lily Alice Rupp (1889-1972). Their children were:
Rachel S. Wright (1911-1968), Robert F. Schrieber
(1915-1973), Leah S. Thayer (1917-1992), Joseph W. Schrieber
(1921-1953), E.M. Ashley Schrieber (1919-2001), Mildred
S. Ford (1923-1978), and Allen Schrieber (1925-1985).
In August 1899, Dolph Schrieber re-enlisted with the 29th US
Volunteers and was assigned to CO G and sent to the Philippine
Islands to fight in the Philippine Insurrection. He was
discharged in May 1901 with the rank of corporal.(Lowell F. Ford,
January 3, 2007)
After
returning from military duty in the Philippine Islands, Mr. Schrieber
secured land at Marsh Point and planted rich oyster beds in the waters
of Davis Bayou. He later joined the US Lighthouse Service and spent
his career at light stations on the Louisiana and Mississippi
coastlines(The Jackson County Times, March 18, 1944, p. 1,
c. 2).
In 1929, Dolph and Lily Schrieber bought the Hamilton Conner
(1855-1929) cottage on Ward Avenue adjoining the home of her parents,
Robert Rupp (1857-1930) and Pauline Thieme (1857-1945).
They retired here in 1937, after his career in the US Lighthouse
Service was completed. Mr. Schrieber’s last duty station was at
Biloxi. (Schrieber, August 10, 1998)
US VOLUNTEERS-2nd Alabama Infantry
Albert Beyer-No further information.
George Beyer-No further information.
Albert Jackson (1920+)-Albert Jackson was the son of Dr.
Albert Jackson (1841-1925) and Laura Scott (1844-1922). Dr.
Jackson served in the Civil War with Company E of the 5th
Alabama Infantry. He was the lessee-manager of the Ocean Springs
Hotel from 1895 to about 1898. Dr. Jackson relocated to the Mobile
area where he ran the Spring Hotel. Albert Jackson later resided in
Biloxi at 124 West Beach where he cared for his parents in their old
age. (Bellande,1994, p.13 )
1st Louisiana Volunteer Infantry-Company
B
H. Peter Madsen (1879-1918)-was the son of Henry Peter
Madsen (1854-1892), a Danish immigrant shoemaker, and Margaret
Jennett Friar (1857-1932), the daughter of Hiram Heath Friar
(b. 1825) and Elizabeth A. Baxter (1823-1900+). H.P. Madsen and
Margaret Friar married in 1876. Their children were: George L.
Madsen (1877-1877), Amelia A. Madsen (1878-1878), H.
Peter Madsen (1879-1918), and Nathaniel C. Madsen
(1881-1948). Hall Peter Madsen married Elizabeth Toche
(1882-1978) on January 31, 1900. Their family consisted of: Hal P.
Madsen (1901-1971), Helen M. Belton (1907-1988),
Ruth M. Mullins (b. 1912), and Vera Madsen (b. 1916). He
expired on November 3, 1918, from the influenza during the pandemic
episode of 1918. Mr. Madsen worked at the Dierks-Blodgett shipyard in
Pascagoula at the time of his demise. (The Jackson County Times,
November 9, 1918, p. 5. c. 3)
Mrs. Elizabeth T. Madsen married Harry Struchen of Fairview,
Pennsylvania in February 1928. (The Jackson County
Times, February 18, 1928)
US VOLUNTEERS-2nd Texas Infantry
Charles Blount-No further information.
A.P. Kotzum (1871-1916). Anton P. Kotzum was the son of local
blacksmith-real estate mogul, Joseph Kotzum (1842-1915), and
housewife, Josephine Kotzum (1845-1920). During the 1898
conflict with Spain, he was appointed Band Master of the 2nd
Texas Volunteers at Camp Coppinger. Tony Kotzum left Ocean Springs for
Alameda, California after the Spanish-American War. He returned home
in September 1915 and soon founded the Eagle Point Oyster Company with
Spanish-American war veteran, Phil Bellman (1872-1927). In October
1895, Kotzum was married to Julia C. North. Their children were
Joseph Kotzum and Alice Kotzum. After his demise in
September 1916, the family returned to California. (The Ocean
Springs Record, March 7, 1996, p. 14)
John D. Collins Jr. (1889-1900+) John D. Collins Jr. was the
son of John D. Collins (1848-1900+) and McCall? Collins (1854-1900+).
He served aboard the USS Texas, a light battleship. (The
Pascagoula Democrat-Star, July 29,1898). The USS Texas was built at the Norfolk Navy Yard in
the late 1880s. The vessel was of English design and was lighter, but
faster than the other American battlewagons. USS Texas saw action at
the bombardment of Caimanera in June 1898, and the Battle of Santiago
de Cuba in July 1898. When Admiral Cervera (1833-1898+) aboard his
flagship, Infanta Maria Teresa, and the Spanish fleet
attempted to run the American naval blockade at Santiago de Cuba on
July 3, 1898, they were intercepted by the USS Texas and other US
naval forces and destroyed. No further information. (Photographic
History of the Spanish-American War, 1898, pp. 19-20 and p. 275)
On December 25, 1898, Chief Bugler Alexander Merrian "Manny" Clark
(1880-1950) composed a poem, "The Fifth Immunes", which was the
infantry unit in which he served at Santiago de Cuba from August 1898
until May 1899. Clark’s last verse of this ballad appropriately
follows:
Now my story is ended,
I will bring it to a close,
How I wish I was in Mississippi,
Where the watter mellons grow.
Once again we would all be happy,
And fill up on beer and prunes,
And we’d say the devil with Cuba,
And three cheers for the Fifth Immunes.
REFERENCES:
BOOKS
Ray L. Bellande, Ocean Springs Hotel and Tourist Homes,
(Bellande: Ocean Springs-1994).
Darlene J. Krohn, The Descendants of Jerome Ryan, (Krohn:
Latimer, Mississippi-1995), p. 16.
Richard A. McLemore, A History of Mississippi, Volume
II, (University and College Press of Mississippi: Hattiesburg,
Mississippi-1973).
Minute Book Volume One of the Town of Ocean Springs, Mississippi.
G.J.A. O’Toole, The Spanish War: An American Epic 1898,
(W.W. Norton & Company: New York-1984).
Theodore Roosevelt, The Rough Riders, (reprinted by
Corner House Publishers: Williamstown, Massachusettts-1971),
Dunbar Rowland, Military History of Mississippi,
(reprinted by The Reprint Company: Spartanburg, South Carolina-1978)
Biographical Directory of the American Congress 1774-1961,
(U.S. Government Printing Office-Washington, D.C.-1961).
Encyclopedia Americana, Volume 25, (Grolier Inc.: Danbury,
Connecticut-1995).
The History of Jackson County, Mississippi, "Pecans",
(Jackson County Genealogical Society: Pascagoula, Mississippi-1989).
--------------------------------------------------------, "James J.
Garrard", (Jackson County Genealogical Society: Pascagoula-1989).
Photographic History of the Spanish-American War, (The
Pearson Publishing Company: New York-1898).
MICROFILM
Spanish-American War Service Record Extracts 1898-1899.
(Microfilm at Mississippi Department of Archives and History-Jackson,
Mississippi).
JOURNALS
The Journal of Mississippi History, "The Spanish-American War
As Revealed Through The Letters of Major James K. Vardaman", Volume 9,
No. 2, April 1947.
VFW, "‘Mock’ Battle for Manila", August 1998.
NEWSPAPERS
The Biloxi Herald,
"Death of Dr. A.P. Champlin", May 15, 1897.
--------------------, "Battery D Mustered Into Service", April
16, 1898.
The Biloxi Herald, "War Echoes", April 30, 1898.
The Biloxi Herald, " ", ,
May 28, 1898.
---------------------, June 4, 1898.
---------------------, "Biloxi’s Dead Soldier", August 27, 1898.
The Biloxi Herald, "Local and Personal", September 10,
1898.
---------------------, "Local and Personal", December 22, 1898.
The Biloxi Herald, "Took The Suicide Route", February 3, 1905.
The Daily Herald, "Former Biloxian (E.W. Morrill) Dead in
Florida", February 24, 1910.
---------------------, "Admiral W.S. Schley Drops Dead in Street",
October 3, 1911.
---------------------, "Porter B. Hand Passes at Home", August 13,
1914.
---------------------, "Corporal William E. Ryan", December 2, 1925.
---------------------, "Mrs. Porter Champlin Dead", January 18, 1929.
---------------------, "Marshall Ryan Dies", March 15, 1930.
---------------------, "P.H. Champlin Dies", January 30, 1933.
---------------------, "T.A. Vaughan Buried", January 1, 1934.
---------------------, "H.D. Money Dies At Lexington", December 16,
1936.
---------------------, "Veteran Dies (Joseph B. Marsh)", December 26,
1939.
---------------------, "Charles Clark Dies", April 6, 1945.
---------------------, "Silas Weeks Boyd", February 23, 1950.
---------------------, "Alex M. Clark Dies", July 22, 1950.
---------------------, "Charles W. Bellman", September 26, 1956.
---------------------, "William Casey, Retired Railroad Engineer,
Dies", August 13, 1960.
The Jackson County Times, "Death of H.P. Madsen", November 9, 1918
--------------------------------, "Local and Personal", February 18,
1928.
--------------------------------, "F.A. Schrieber, Succumbs After Long
And Lingering Illness", March 18, 1944.
The Ocean Springs News, "Local News", July 30, 1910.
------------------------------, "Local News", October 15, 1910.
------------------------------, July 18, 1914.
------------------------------, "Local News", March 23, 1916.
The Ocean Springs Record, "Sous Les Chenes", January 6, 1994.
--------------------------------, "Sous Les Chenes", January 13, 1994.
--------------------------------, "Sous Les Chenes", January 20, 1994.
--------------------------------, "Sous Les Chenes", June 29, 1995.
--------------------------------, "Sous Les Chenes", March 7, 1996.
The Pascagoula Chronicle Star, "Local News", March 14,
1908, p. 3.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Ocean Springs Locals",
November 19, 1897.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Ocean Springs Locals",
January 21, 1898.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "An Awful Disaster", February
18, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", June
10, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", June
24, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", July 1,
1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", July 8,
1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", July
15, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", July
29, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "A Souvenir of Cervera’s
Fleet", July 29, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", August
26, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Cost of the War with Spain.
Men and
Money", August 26, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals",
September 16, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals",
September 30, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", October
7, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", October
28, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals",
November 11, 1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals",
November 18,
1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals",
November 25,
1898.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", January
13, 1899.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", March
17, 1899.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", April
14, 1899.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", April
21, 1899.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", April
28, 1899.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", May 19,
1899.
-------------------------------------, "Ocean Springs Locals", June
30, 1899.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Ocean Springs Locals",
January 5, 1900.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Ocean Springs Locals",
November 3, 1900.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Ocean Springs Locals", March
9, 1900.
The Pascagoula Democrat-Star, "Ocean Springs Locals", April
10, 1903.
PERSONAL COMMUNICATION
Charles Fayard at Ocean Springs, Mississippi on May 27, 1998.
Lurline Schrieber Hall at Letohatchie, Alabama on June 4, 1998, and
July 27, 1998.
Barbara and Norton Haviland at Ocean Springs, Mississippi on August 3,
1998.
Ashley Schrieber at Ocean Springs, Mississippi on August 10, 1998.
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