Father and son shouldered their rifles in battle, together, and were at the Siege of Vicksburg. William was captured at Snyder’s Bluff on 19 May 1863, and his father on the following day. David and William were both sent to Memphis, Tennessee, on May 25, 1863. They arrived at Fort Delaware, Delaware, on June 15, 1863 and were transferred to City Point, Virginia, for exchange in July of 1863. William would probably have been sent on to Point Lookout, with his father, but he did not make it that far. He died at Fort Delaware on August 16, 1863. David was sent to Point Lookout, Maryland, on September 20, 1863. He was on the Hospital Register, having been admitted to Hammond U. S. A. General Hospital at Point Lookout on October 19, 1863. He died there of disease on March 7, 1864.
Interestingly, my paternal 2nd great grandfather, John Worden, was a guard at Point Lookout during the time my maternal 3rd great grandfather, David Milton Tannehill, was imprisoned there. In John Worden’s pension file is a sworn affidavit, detailing his service record. Worden served with the 2nd U.S. Cavalry, and was detached to Point Lookout from the fall of 1863 until the fall of 1864. Whether my two ancestors ever had any personal contact, I can only guess. Worden survived the war. Tannehill did not. [Read more about Worden & Tannehill here]
The great tragedies that befell the Tannehills during the war were numerous; David’s father, Ninian, lost everything. His home. His business. His son and his grandson. He and his wife, Polly, had to start over in their golden years, when they should have been able to rest comfortably on the laurels of their years of toil. The couple prevailed, and attained success once more, though Ninian and Polly would never see their son, David, or their grandson, William, again. Their bodies were interred in mass graves; William’s at Fort Delaware and David’s at Point Lookout, where their souls may still roam.
Nancy Murphy Tannehill survived her husband, and remained in Louisiana until her death in 1876. She never remarried.
SEE ALSO: [North & South] [David Milton Tannehill tree]
[David Milton Tannehill on Footnote.com]
Story written and researched by Shae Leighland.
This page is part of www.Heritage-Files.com
This article is forthcoming in PARAPET (Descendants of Point Lookout).
