Difference between revisions of "Bradt, John W."
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==Marriage & Children== | ==Marriage & Children== | ||
− | John married and was widowed by | + | John married sometime after 1880 when he was listed as single in the census and was widowed by November of 1901 where his admission papers list him as widowed. He was more than 50 years old in 1880, and it isn't likely that he had children. |
==Military Service== | ==Military Service== |
Revision as of 15:00, 13 April 2013
Birth
John was born in Middleburg, Schoharie County on September 20, 1826, a son of Andrew Bradt and Betsey McCulloch.[1] He used the name Bill in non-legal documents.
Marriage & Children
John married sometime after 1880 when he was listed as single in the census and was widowed by November of 1901 where his admission papers list him as widowed. He was more than 50 years old in 1880, and it isn't likely that he had children.
Military Service
Residence: | Rensselaerville |
Enlistment Date: | 7 September 1861 |
Enlistment Place: | Kingston, NY |
Enlistment Rank: | Private |
State Served: | New York |
Regiment: | 80th Infantry |
Company: | Company K |
Wounded in Action on: | 30 Aug 1862 |
Wounded at: | Manassas, VA |
Re-enlisted as Veteran on: | 31 Dec 1863 |
Muster Out Date: | 29 January 1866 |
Muster Out Place: | Portsmouth, VA |
Additional Remarks: Enlisted at the age of 27 years. |
Sources Used: 1890 Veterans Census; American Civil War Soldiers, Ancestry.com; Annual Report of the Adjutant-General of the State of NY for the year 1905 |
Death
John died on December 28, 1901 at the U.S. National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers in Bath, Steuben Co., NY and was buried there. A headstone was provided by the government.
Obituary
Additional Research Notes
The records provided by the National Home for Disabled Veterans indicate that John lost his left eye during the war and that his sight was very diminished in his right eye. He was also senile by the time of his admission on November 25, 1901. His residence subsequent to his discharge from the army was Rensselaerville, but he continued on with his life elsewhere and returned to Rensselaerville before he became gravely ill.
Additional Media
Sources
- ↑ Descendants of Albert and Arent Adnressen Bradt, Cynthia Brott Biasca, 1990 Higginson Book Company