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PVT William Amaziah Lafayette “Amsey” Stine

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PVT William Amaziah Lafayette “Amsey” Stine

Birth
Lincoln County, North Carolina, USA
Death
29 Nov 1909 (aged 83)
Alexander County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
Bethlehem, Alexander County, North Carolina, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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William Amaziah Lafayette "Amsey" STINE was born on 6 November 1826 in Lincoln County, North Carolina, the son of John Stine and Catherine Deal. He died on 29 November 1909 at the age of 83 in Alexander County, North Carolina.
William Amaziah "Amzi" STINE and Elizabeth Lucinda "Betsy" HERMAN were married about 1849 in Lincoln County, North Carolina. Elizabeth Lucinda "Betsy" HERMAN, daughter of John Daniel HERMAN and Mary "Polly" KILLIAN, was born on 28 July 1829 in Lincoln (Catawba County), North Carolina. She died on 11 October 1909 at the age of 80 in Catawba County, North Carolina.
Amacey, Amsey, Amsi, Amzi, Amaziah were some of the many nicknames he had.
Name: William A Stine
Residence: Alexander County, North Carolina, North Carolina
Age at enlistment: 37
Enlistment Date: 7 Dec 1862
Rank at enlistment: Private
Enlistment Place: Alexander County, North Carolina
State Served: North Carolina
Service Record: Enlisted in Company K, North Carolina 7th Infantry Regiment on 07 Dec 1862.
Birth Date: abt 1825
Sources: North Carolina Troops 1861-65, A Roster
"United States Civil War Soldiers Index, 1861-1865", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F9VM-3ZX : 25 August 2021), William A. Stine, 1861-1865.
7th Infantry Regiment State Troops was organized at Camp Mason, near Graham, North Carolina, in August, 1861. Its members were recruited in the counties of Iredell, Alexander, Cabarrus, Rowan, New Hanover, Mecklenburg, Nash, and Wake. The unit took an active part in the fight at New Bern , then moved to Virginia. It was assigned to General Branch's, Law's, and Lane's Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia. After fighting at Hanover Court House , it participated in the various campaigns of the army from the Seven Day' Battles to Cold Harbor , then was involved in the Petersburg siege south and north of the James River. The regiment sustained 51 casualties at New Bern, 253 out of the 450 engaged during the Seven Days' Battles, 69 at Second Manassas and Ox Hill , 52 at Sharpsburg , and 86 at Fredericksburg . There were 37 killed and 127 wounded at Chancellorsville , and of the 291 in action at Gettysburg , thirty-one percent were disabled. It lost 5 killed, 62 wounded, and 37 missing at The Wilderness and 11 killed and 28 wounded at Spotsylvania . On February 26, 1865, the unit was sent to North Carolina where it surrendered with the Army of Tennessee with 13 officers and 139 men. A detachment surrendered at Appomattox with 1 officer and 18 men. The field officers were Reuben P. Campbell, William L. Davidson, and Edward G. Haywood; Lieutenant Colonel Junius L. Hill; and Majors Edward D. Hall, James G. Harris, Robert B. McRae, John M. Turner, and Robert S . Young.
William Amaziah Lafayette "Amsey" STINE was born on 6 November 1826 in Lincoln County, North Carolina, the son of John Stine and Catherine Deal. He died on 29 November 1909 at the age of 83 in Alexander County, North Carolina.
William Amaziah "Amzi" STINE and Elizabeth Lucinda "Betsy" HERMAN were married about 1849 in Lincoln County, North Carolina. Elizabeth Lucinda "Betsy" HERMAN, daughter of John Daniel HERMAN and Mary "Polly" KILLIAN, was born on 28 July 1829 in Lincoln (Catawba County), North Carolina. She died on 11 October 1909 at the age of 80 in Catawba County, North Carolina.
Amacey, Amsey, Amsi, Amzi, Amaziah were some of the many nicknames he had.
Name: William A Stine
Residence: Alexander County, North Carolina, North Carolina
Age at enlistment: 37
Enlistment Date: 7 Dec 1862
Rank at enlistment: Private
Enlistment Place: Alexander County, North Carolina
State Served: North Carolina
Service Record: Enlisted in Company K, North Carolina 7th Infantry Regiment on 07 Dec 1862.
Birth Date: abt 1825
Sources: North Carolina Troops 1861-65, A Roster
"United States Civil War Soldiers Index, 1861-1865", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F9VM-3ZX : 25 August 2021), William A. Stine, 1861-1865.
7th Infantry Regiment State Troops was organized at Camp Mason, near Graham, North Carolina, in August, 1861. Its members were recruited in the counties of Iredell, Alexander, Cabarrus, Rowan, New Hanover, Mecklenburg, Nash, and Wake. The unit took an active part in the fight at New Bern , then moved to Virginia. It was assigned to General Branch's, Law's, and Lane's Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia. After fighting at Hanover Court House , it participated in the various campaigns of the army from the Seven Day' Battles to Cold Harbor , then was involved in the Petersburg siege south and north of the James River. The regiment sustained 51 casualties at New Bern, 253 out of the 450 engaged during the Seven Days' Battles, 69 at Second Manassas and Ox Hill , 52 at Sharpsburg , and 86 at Fredericksburg . There were 37 killed and 127 wounded at Chancellorsville , and of the 291 in action at Gettysburg , thirty-one percent were disabled. It lost 5 killed, 62 wounded, and 37 missing at The Wilderness and 11 killed and 28 wounded at Spotsylvania . On February 26, 1865, the unit was sent to North Carolina where it surrendered with the Army of Tennessee with 13 officers and 139 men. A detachment surrendered at Appomattox with 1 officer and 18 men. The field officers were Reuben P. Campbell, William L. Davidson, and Edward G. Haywood; Lieutenant Colonel Junius L. Hill; and Majors Edward D. Hall, James G. Harris, Robert B. McRae, John M. Turner, and Robert S . Young.


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