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Carroll Family Cemetery - Ebony
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Located approx. 0.5 mi. east of Ebony Rd. (Route 903). The entrance is a driveway approx. 100 yd. south of a home with the address of 1400 Ebony Rd. On this wooded path in 2009 were 2 gates to go through. The cemetery sits on the immediate left just after entering an open pasture. Many other graves are possibly in this cemetery that has been trodden down by livestock. |
Latitude: | 36º 34' 2.1" N (36.567250) |
Longitude: | 77º 59' 17.9" W (-77.988306) |
Transcribed: | 2009 |
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William J. Carroll Sr. | 21 Oct 1813 — | 17 Feb 1905 | Co G 21 VA INF C.S.A. |
The upright stone is a government-issued military marker, installed by the Old Brunswick Camp # 512 - Sons of Confederate Veterans in 2004. He also has an old broken stone lying on the ground that reads: BGNF/O death where is thy sting/O grave where is thy victory.
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Rebecca A. Carroll | 20 Jul 1818 — | 20 Feb 1902 | Gone But Not Forgotten She died as she lived |
Rebecca Edwards, wife of William Carroll Sr., CWS f BCV, p. 95. |
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Robie King | 5 Apr 1905 — | 23 Feb 1909 | Daughter of Fayet & J.V. King O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory |
In 1900 “Feb” and Jennie King were residing in Meherrrin District with two infant sons in their household, Family 117. This is possibly a child of Frederick C. King and Virginia C. “Jennie” Carroll, a daughter of Nathaniel and Laura Carroll, CWS f BCV, p. 631. |
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According to Civil War Soldiers from Brunswick County, Virginia, Laura W. Wray and her husband, Nathaniel M. Carroll, a grandson of William Carroll Sr., are buried here, CWS f BCV, p. 631. |
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© Copyright John W. Pritchett
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