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  • Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

    Pulled this off the net just now:

    Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies
    By PHILLIP RAWLS
    Associated Press Writer

    MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Alberta Martin, the last widow of a Civil War veteran, died on Memorial Day, ending an unlikely ascent from sharecropper's daughter to the belle of 21st century Confederate history buffs who paraded her across the South. She was 97.
    Martin died at a nursing home in Enterprise of complications from a heart attack she suffered May 7, said her caretaker, Dr. Kenneth Chancey. She died nearly 140 years after the Civil War ended.

    Her May-December marriage in the 1920s to Civil War veteran William Jasper Martin and her longevity made her a celebrated final link to the old Confederacy.

    After living in obscurity and poverty for most of her life, in her final years the Sons of Confederate Veterans took her to conventions and rallies, often with a small Confederate battle flag waving in her hand and her clothes the colors of the rebel banner.

    "I don't see nothing wrong with the flag flying," she said frequently.

    Chancey said she loved the attention. "It's like being matriarch of a large family," he said.

    "She was a link to the past," Chancey said Monday. "People would get emotional, holding her hand, crying and thinking about their family that suffered greatly in the past."

    Wayne Flynt, a Southern history expert at Auburn University, said the historical distinctiveness of the South, which is so tied to the Civil War, has been disappearing, but Martin provided people with one last chance to see that history in real life.

    "She became a symbol like the Confederate battle flag," he said.

    The last widow of a Union veteran from the Civil War, Gertrude Janeway, died in January 2003 at her home in Tennessee. She was 93 and had married veteran John Janeway when she was 18.

    In 1997, Martin and Daisy Anderson, whose husband was a slave who ran away and joined the Union Army, were recognized at a ceremony at Gettysburg, Pa. Anderson, who lived in Denver, died in 1998 at age 97. Janeway wasn't invited to the Gettysburg event because, at the time, no one outside her family knew her whereabouts.

    Alberta Stewart Martin was not from the "Gone With the Wind" South of white-columned mansions and hoop skirts. She was born Alberta Stewart to sharecroppers on Dec. 4, 1906, in Danley's Crossroads, a tiny settlement built around a sawmill 70 miles south of Montgomery.

    Her mother died when she was 11. At 18, she met a cab driver named Howard Farrow, and they had a son before Farrow died in a car accident in 1926.

    Stewart, her father and her son moved to Opp. Just up the road lived William Jasper Martin, a widower born in Georgia in 1845 who had a $50-a-month Confederate veteran's pension.

    The 81-year-old man struck up a few conversations with the 21-year-old neighbor and a marriage of convenience was born.

    "I had this little boy and I needed some help to raise him," Alberta Martin recalled in a 1998 interview.

    They were married on Dec. 10, 1927, and 10 months later had a son, William.

    She said her husband never talked much about the war, except the harsh times at Petersburg, Va.

    "He'd say it was rough, how the trenches were full of water. They were so hungry in Virginia that during the time they were fighting, they had to grab food as they went along. They came across a potato patch and made up some mashed potatoes," she said.

    Asked if she loved her husband, Martin said: "That's a hard question to answer. I cared enough about him to live with him. You know the difference between a young man and an old man."

    William Jasper Martin died on July 8, 1931. Two months later, Alberta Martin married her late husband's grandson, Charlie Martin. He died in 1983.

    She became the focus of a dustup over the depiction of her and her late Confederate husband in the 1998 book "Confederates in the Attic." Among other things, the book by Tony Horwitz described William Jasper Martin as a deserter.

    A group that defends Southern heritage disagreed, contending there were at least two William Martins who served in Company K of the 4th Alabama Infantry Regiment and that Horwitz got the wrong one. Horwitz said his research was carefully checked and the book was accurate.

    The state government considered Martin's record clean enough to award him a Confederate pension in 1921 and to give Alberta Martin Confederate widow's benefits in 1996.

    Martin's older son, Harold Farrow of North Little Rock, Ark., died last June. Her younger son, Willie Martin, lives in Elba.

    Alberta Martin is to be interred at New Ebenezer Baptist Church six miles west of Elba, in an 1860s-style ceremony following her funeral June 12.
    [B]Dave Fullarton[/B]

  • #2
    Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

    Great post, Dave; definitely something of interest. I have some skeptical thoughts however. I understand the technicality of this dear woman's link to the Confederacy, but have trouble validating that link to myself. As the general premise of her story follows, she was married to a Confederate veteran for a very short period of time when she was a very young girl. So, with that in mind, it's hard for me to accept her as the last Confederate "widow". She was born decades after the war was fought and married the veteran out of what sounded like a friendly foundness. I'm sure she enjoyed his stories and company, but this girl didn't really grasp what it was like to be in the war-time south except perhaps through those enjoyable stories. I am truly disappointed to hear of her passing on and she certainly does have her place in history. Interesting story and I'm sure she will be missed by friends and family.
    Jim Conley

    Member, Civil War Trust

    "The 'right' events still leave much to be desired." - Patrick Lewis

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

      Originally posted by JimConley
      Great post, Dave; definitely something of interest. I have some skeptical thoughts however. I understand the technicality of this dear woman's link to the Confederacy, but have trouble validating that link to myself. As the general premise of her story follows, she was married to a Confederate veteran for a very short period of time when she was a very young girl. So, with that in mind, it's hard for me to accept her as the last Confederate "widow". She was born decades after the war was fought and married the veteran out of what sounded like a friendly foundness. I'm sure she enjoyed his stories and company, but this girl didn't really grasp what it was like to be in the war-time south except perhaps through those enjoyable stories. I am truly disappointed to hear of her passing on and she certainly does have her place in history. Interesting story and I'm sure she will be missed by friends and family.
      That notwithstanding, having had the occasion and privilege to converse personally with a man who did grasp what it was like to be in the war and in the war-timeSouth coupled with her own humble sharecropper upbringing, likely gave Mrs. Martin a deeper appreciation of the deprivations of war and hard times than you or I likely possess.
      Godspeed Mrs. Martin
      Andy Redd
      Andy Redd

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

        I had the privellage to briefly meet Mrs. Martin several years ago during the annual Sons of Confederate Veterans Reunion at Richmond, VA. I will never forget her introduction to the crowd present and the responding 15 minute standing ovation accompanied by the sounds of a brass band.

        May she rest in peace,

        Mark White
        16th Missouri Mounted Rifles
        [FONT=Century Gothic]Mark C. White[/FONT]

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

          Being a member of the SCV, I have meet Miss Alberta on numerous occasions while attending Southern Heritage events. There is no doubt that she had a firm grasp of her heritage per our conversations. Anyone who has had the honour of speaking with this splendid lady would agree. She will be sorely missed!
          Jeff Rice
          1st Stuart Horse Artillery

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

            First, it is high time we stopped treating "Confederates in the Attic" as either a work of history or sociology. It is neither. It is an entertaining work of fiction and nothing more.

            William Martin served in Co. K of the 4th Alabama the Larkinsville Guards. He was conscripted late in the war and the last muster roll carrying his name lists him as "deserted/not present." Of course, it is unclear what this shorthand means.
            John Stillwagon

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            • #7
              Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

              Originally posted by reddcorp
              That notwithstanding, having had the occasion and privilege to converse personally with a man who did grasp what it was like to be in the war and in the war-timeSouth coupled with her own humble sharecropper upbringing, likely gave Mrs. Martin a deeper appreciation of the deprivations of war and hard times than you or I likely possess.
              Godspeed Mrs. Martin
              Andy Redd
              I understand your point friend, that is why I hold her a valued place in history and the understanding of the Civil War. I merely expressed skepticism on the terms of their relationship, and short it was. But nonetheless, friend, you are correct.
              Jim Conley

              Member, Civil War Trust

              "The 'right' events still leave much to be desired." - Patrick Lewis

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

                Originally posted by Yellowhammer
                William Martin served in Co. K of the 4th Alabama the Larkinsville Guards. He was conscripted late in the war and the last muster roll carrying his name lists him as "deserted/not present." Of course, it is unclear what this shorthand means.

                Does it really matter if he was a deserter or not? I can sure understand if a confederate soldier would want to desert from the army late in the war. There sure was no real reason to keep fighting and get back home to your love ones alive would sure be the number one priority.
                [FONT=Courier New]Mark Maranto[/FONT]

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Last Widow of a Civil War Veteran Dies

                  Originally posted by Yellowhammer
                  First, it is high time we stopped treating "Confederates in the Attic" as either a work of history or sociology. It is neither. It is an entertaining work of fiction and nothing more.

                  William Martin served in Co. K of the 4th Alabama the Larkinsville Guards. He was conscripted late in the war and the last muster roll carrying his name lists him as "deserted/not present." Of course, it is unclear what this shorthand means.

                  this is in response to the above post by Mr. Stillwagon on the character of service of W.J. Martin in the 4th Alabama. He is correct in stating the William Martin was listed as a "deserter/not present" on the last roll but this issue has been raised numerous times in the past. There are two William Martin's in the 4th AL one listed as W.J. Martin Company B and another as William Martin in Company C who served under honorable conditions.

                  I am sure that Mr. Stillwagon is aware that for a Confederate veteran and or widow to receive a pension from the state. that the service member must have served under honorable coniditions. A veteran or widow applied to the State Veteran's Board and the Board in return, requested and received a copy of the veteran's service records from the War Department. When these records, if available where received and the veteran served honorably, the pension was approved, if the character of service was not bonorable, the veteran or widow was denied a pension.

                  It is a fact that PVT Martin did receive a veteran's pension and later, Mrs. Martin a widow's pension based on his service, we must assume that his service was under honorable conditions. If a veterans had no CSR on file at the War Department, then the veteran or widow had to supply at least two sworn statement from individuals who knew of the veteran's honorable service.

                  In conclusion, as stated above, both Pvt. Martin and his widow did receive a pension from the state of Alabama and in fact, in later years, Mrs. Martin's expenses where paid out of the Alabama Confederate Veteran's Fund, one must agree that his service was honorable or in this day of "politically correct" history, someone would have challenged this and the millions of dollars in that fund could have been put into the State's General Fund for use. While she was alive, the funds had to remain in the Veteran's fund.

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