Name |
William Madison Lanham |
Birth |
25 Dec 1835 |
Spartanburg District, South Carolina, USA |
Gender |
Male |
Also Known As |
Sarah |
Death |
24 Jun 1903 |
Calera, Shelby County, Alabama, USA |
Burial |
Salem Cemetery, Calera, Shelby County, Alabama, USA |
|
 |
William Madison Lanham
|
Siblings |
8 brothers |
| 1. John Henry Lanham, b. 22 Sep 1834, Spartanburg County, South Carolina, USA d. 11 Mar 1915, Kingston, Bartow County, Georgia, USA (Age 80 years) ▻ Mary Jane Martin, m. 3 Dec 1860 | | 2. William Madison Lanham, b. 25 Dec 1835, Spartanburg District, South Carolina, USA d. 24 Jun 1903, Calera, Shelby County, Alabama, USA (Age 67 years) ▻ Caroline Miller, m. cir 1860 ; Sallie Mae Campbell, m. 13 Nov 1892 | | 3. Samuel D. Lanham, b. 1838, Spartanburg County, South Carolina, USA  | | 4. Berryman Pinkney Lanham, b. 19 Nov 1839, Spartanburg County, South Carolina, USA d. 13 Mar 1922, Bartow County, Georgia, USA (Age 82 years) ▻ Harriett Goddard, m. 6 Feb 1860 ; Mary E. Elder, m. 19 Oct 1893 | | 5. Rinny (?) Lanham, b. cir 1840 | | 6. Benjamin Lanham, b. 1843 d. 1887 (Age 44 years) | | 7. Joseph Lanham, b. cir 1846 | | 8. James Lanham, b. cir 1848 | | 9. Alfred M. Lanham, b. 21 May 1851 d. 12 Feb 1876 (Age 24 years) | |
Notes |
- William Lanham left South Carolina for Floyd County, Georgia, in 1856. According to family tradition, he enlisted in the Confederate Army, but was sent home because he couldn't keep up. A slave reportedly had thrown a pitchfork and hit him in the knee cap. He did serve in Company I, Floyd Legion, Georgia State Guards, as a private, and may be the William Lanham who served in the 17th Battalion, Georgia Infantry, as a private. He is recorded in the 1900 census as living on E. Central Ave., Calera, Alabama, with his wife, Sarah, step-daughters Artie M. and Nellie Jones, daughter Lucy, son Robert, and mother-in-law Mary A. Campbell. After William's death, Sallie lived in Shades Mountain, Alabama, until 1908, then Birmingham for a year, then to Weaver, Alabama, until 1912, then to Armiston, Alabama, until 1916, and finally to Chattanooga, Tennessee. His Civil War service is noted on his tombstone, as "C.S.A."
|
Person ID |
I1928 |
Bryan-Martin |
Last Modified |
10 Mar 2005 |