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Home Texas Wise County Decatur Randolph Vesey
     

Randolph Vesey

  Texas Historical Markers
State Street, at Courthouse, Decatur, TX, USA

Latitude & Longitude: 33° 13' 55.07438999988", -97° 35' 10.0111399998"
 
    Texas State
Historical Marker
    (1832-1908)

Respected Negro citizen and homeowner. Champion pioneer fiddler, popular at Forts Belknap, Griffin and Richardson and over county. Once when he was an Indian captive, held in Kansas, Texans sent ponies to ransom him. He is buried in Oak Lawn, Decatur.

Born in Georgia. He served during the Civil War as body servant and voluntary battle aide to General W. L. Cabel of the Confederate army. Vesey's courage and loyalty were typical. Hundreds of slaves went to war with masters. Many operated farms and ranches of soldiers away at war, producing cotton and food for the Confederacy. Others did work for hire, with wages supporting the master's family. On patrol duty they protected homes from Indians, bandits, outlaws.

During War years, 1861-1865, some 30,000 to 50,000 Negros - free and slaves - aided Confederate armies. They served with the Nitre and Mining Bureau and departments of medicine, engineers, quartermaster general, ordnance and commissary general. They built fortifications on coasts from Brownsville, Texas, to Norfolk, Virginia, and at inland points. Many were army teamsters, wheelwrights, blacksmiths, butchers, shoemakers, cooks, and nurses. Texas and other states later provided land grants and pensions for army. (1965)

This page last updated: 9/6/2009 18:22:21

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Randolph Vesey Historical Marker Location Map, Decatur, Texas

 
   
Related Themes: Texas C.S.A., Texas Confederate States of America, Confederacy
 
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