Joseph R. Kinser

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Joseph R. Kinser

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Lee County, Virginia, United States
Death: November 1864 (26-27)
Camp Douglas (Chicago) Union Prison Camp (Typhoid Fever)
Immediate Family:

Son of William Preston Kinser, Sr. and Elizabeth Kinser
Husband of Sarah Kinser
Father of Martha Kinser; Eudosia Vance and William Andrew Kinser
Brother of John M. Kinser; William P. Kinser; Jacob Kinser and Maretta Jane Kinser
Half brother of Elizabeth Kinser; Samuel H. Kinser; Letitia Catherine Johnson; Conley Trigg Kinser and Putnam D. Kinser

Managed by: Joseph M. Urso, Jr
Last Updated:

About Joseph R. Kinser

Company F, 64th Virginia Mounted Infantry of the Confederate Army. Name spelled Kincer on the roster. Joseph, along with his brother Jacob, was captured and spent part of the war in Camp Douglas, a Union POW camp at Chicago. My notes say Joseph died Nov 1864 in the camp of Typhoid Fever. (See attached POW records).

From "The 64th Virginia Mounted Infantry" by Jeff Weaver "From a military point of view, the history of the entire regiment hinged on the first nine days of September 1863. The capture of two-thirds of the regiment's effective force at Cumberland Gap was never overcome. The 64th's first regimental commander, Campbell Slemp, was cashiered from service for disobeying orders. Auburn Pridemore and the other field and staff officers, however, were apparently no better at military discipline than Slemp was. In-fighting among the 64th Virginia Mounted Infantry's regimental and brigade officers destroyed a potentially valuable group of soldiers for the Confederacy. The regiment's men finally accepted more far-flung assignments, but it was too late to be of benefit or to redeem their reputation.

The casualties taken in battle were among the lowest of any regiment in the Confederate Army. Despite the lack of shed blood, the regiment suffered a horrendous death rate, mostly at the infamous Union prison at Camp Douglas. The record of the regiment is mixed and so is the commentary. A group of men with no vested economic interest in Southern Independence served, but only served where they could care for the needs of their families."

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Joseph R. Kinser's Timeline

1837
1837
Lee County, Virginia, United States
1853
1853
Lee County, Virginia, United States
1858
1858
Lee County, Virginia, United States
1861
March 16, 1861
Lee County, Virginia, United States
1864
November 1864
Age 27
Camp Douglas (Chicago) Union Prison Camp