Gideon Sly, 1827

Battle of Chickamauga Map
Name
Gideon /Sly/
Surname
Sly
Given names
Gideon
Birth February 4, 1827 55 43
Marriage of a half-siblingSamuel BarnettLodemia SlyView this family
August 28, 1828 (aged 1 year)

Marriage of a half-siblingJames Calvin SlyMary BassettView this family
March 25, 1829 (aged 2 years)
Marriage of a half-siblingJames Calvin SlyMargriet Jane FullerView this family
September 1, 1831 (aged 4 years)
Marriage of a siblingHezekiah FiskLodicia SlyView this family
May 14, 1837 (aged 10 years)

Marriage of a half-siblingSolomon SlyHuldah WilsonView this family
October 3, 1842 (aged 15 years)

Death of a brotherJoshua Sly Jr.
August 8, 1848 (aged 21 years)
Death of a brotherCaleb B. Sly
November 1848 (aged 21 years)
Marriage of a half-siblingJames Calvin SlySusannah GustinView this family
March 25, 1849 (aged 22 years)
Death of a fatherJoshua F. Sly
about 1849 (aged 21 years)
MarriageJan KeigerView this family
July 14, 1854 (aged 27 years)

Marriage of a half-siblingJames Calvin SlyNancy Bruster GustinView this family
January 19, 1856 (aged 28 years)
Death of a half-brotherJames Calvin Sly
August 31, 1864 (aged 37 years)
Note: Journal Says James C. Sly died Aug 31st1864
Burial of a half-brotherJames Calvin Sly
1864 (aged 36 years)
Marriage of a half-siblingBenjamin SlyPolly NicholsView this family
August 1866 (aged 39 years)
Death of a half-sisterMartha Lavina Sly
August 5, 1877 (aged 50 years)
Marriage of a half-siblingBenjamin SlyMatilda AbbeyView this family
December 31, 1879 (aged 52 years)
Death of a half-brotherBenjamin Sly
April 21, 1885 (aged 58 years)
Death of a half-sisterLodemia Sly
September 29, 1894 (aged 67 years)
LDS baptism January 11, 1974 (aged 146 years)

LDS endowment February 6, 1974 (aged 147 years)

LDS child sealing February 27, 1974 (aged 147 years)

Family with parents
father
17721849
Birth: 1772 23 17
Death: about 1849Ohio
mother
elder sister
1817
Birth: September 11, 1817 45 33Bristol, Ontario, New York
3 years
elder sister
1820
Birth: February 15, 1820 48 36Phelps, Ontario, New York
3 years
elder brother
18231848
Birth: March 8, 1823 51 39Phelps, Ontario, New York
Death: August 8, 1848Portsmouth, Sciota, Ohio
2 years
elder brother
18251848
Birth: April 16, 1825 53 41Phelps, Ontario, New York
Death: November 1848Mexico City, Mexico
22 months
himself
Battle of Chickamauga Map
1827
Birth: February 4, 1827 55 43Perinton, Monroe, New York
Father’s family with Eliza Hill
father
17721849
Birth: 1772 23 17
Death: about 1849Ohio
step-mother
17741810
Birth: 1774
Death: about 1810
Marriage
Marriage: about 1805
3 years
half-brother
James Calvin Sly Face
18071864
Birth: August 8, 1807 35 33Sodus, Wayne, New York, USA
Death: August 31, 1864Chicken Creek, Juab, Utah, USA
3 years
half-sister
images/Sly/Lodemia Sly face.JPG
18101894
Birth: April 21, 1810 38 36Scarborough, Ont, Canada, Canada
Death: September 29, 1894Ventura, Los Angeles, California
Father’s family with Lucretia Calkins
father
17721849
Birth: 1772 23 17
Death: about 1849Ohio
step-mother
Divorce
Divorce:
half-brother
1794
Birth: about 1794 22 4Jefferson, New York
2 years
half-brother
17961885
Birth: January 12, 1796 24 6Brothertown, Oneida, New York
Death: April 21, 1885La Crosse, La Crosse, Wisconsin
3 years
half-sister
17981877
Birth: 1798 26 8Canada
Death: August 5, 1877Green Township, Hocking, Ohio
Family with Jan Keiger
himself
Battle of Chickamauga Map
1827
Birth: February 4, 1827 55 43Perinton, Monroe, New York
wife
Marriage
Marriage: July 14, 1854
Note

This is the battle Gideon Sly, JC Sly's brother fought in:

The Battle of Chapultepec

September 1847 was a volatile and critical month in the Mexican American War. Although an armistice between the U.S. and Mexico was signed on August 24, 1847, it was short-lived and hostilities resumed with battles at Molino del Ray (September 8) and Chapultepec (September 12-13) just outside Mexico City. General Winfield Scott ultimately claimed Mexico City on September 14, forcing General Santa Anna's Mexican troops to abandon the city in defeat. The Battle of Chapultepec was bloody, long, and difficult. Marines and soldiers scaled the fortress walls and engaged in close hand-to-hand combat toward the end. It is a well-remembered battle of an oft-forgotten war. The Chapultepec fortress was also known as the Halls of Montezuma and is historically significant for the U.S. Marine Corps. Most of the Marines who fought at Chapultepec were killed in the battle. The Corps' official Marines' Hymn memorializes their bravery and losses, as it begins with a phrase referring to the storming of Chapultepec: "From the Halls of Montezuma." At the Battle of Churubusco, a few weeks earlier, U.S. troops had captured 85 members of the St. Patrick's Battalion, a Mexican artillery unit comprised mostly of Irish Catholic defectors from the U.S. They were court-martialed and fifty were sentenced to be hanged. However, the hanging of thirty of them was delayed to deliver a message. The thirty condemned men stood with nooses around their necks, waiting to be hanged for several hours until the American flag was raised over the fortress of Chapultepec. They were then provided with a final vision of their treachery. Stonewall Jackson, Robert E. Lee, and Ulysses S. Grant were three of many who became future leaders in the U.S. Civil War, yet began their military careers in battles near Mexico City. Explore Mexican War Service Records on Fold3 to learn more about those who fought in these and other battles between the U.S. and Mexico. Be sure to locate the Unit Information which precedes individual service records within each military unit for accounts of the battles in which the units were engaged.

150th Anniversary (1863 2013) This Month in the Civil War: Battle of Chickamauga The Battle of Chickamauga, a disastrous defeat for Union troops, was fought in Georgia along the West Chickamauga Creek, south of Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 18-20, 1863. The Union Army of the Cumberland, commanded by General Rosecrans met General Bragg's Confederate Army of Tennessee. The North was on the offensive after victories in the Tullahoma Campaign and the taking of Chattanooga on September 9, yet the three-day campaign was one of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War with over 15,000 casualties on each side and a Union loss. Despite the Union defeat, General George Thomas was nicknamed "the Rock of Chickamauga" through his successful withdrawal of troops, avoiding even more massive casualties.

A colorful map ( http://survey.fold3.com/Default.aspx?link=js4oUAnpJMDNT1CXsGuAZg%3d%3d&linkid=1406 ) showing the position of General Thomas' troops on September 20 at 3 p.m. and many other maps and records related to the Battle of Chickamauga are available on Fold3. Find your Civil War ancestors on one of the largest Civil War collections online. Explore now at: http://survey.fold3.com/Default.aspx?link=js4oUAnpJMDNT1CXsGuAZg%3d%3d&linkid=916