Lt. Col. Leonard Anderson Abercrombie

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Lt. Col. Leonard Anderson Abercrombie

Also Known As: "(CSA)"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Macon County, Alabama, United States
Death: December 23, 1891 (59)
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Milo Bolling Abercrombie, Sr. and Sarah Lee Abercrombie
Husband of Lavinia Afton Abercrombie
Father of Mary Lee Finch; Lavinia Chilton Lovett; Ella Haden Abercrombie; Francis Amelia Abercrombie; William Chilton Abercrombie and 2 others
Brother of Mary S. Abercrombie; Alabama Abercrombie; John Comer Abercrombie; Col. Robert Haden Abercrombie (CSA); George A. Abercrombie and 8 others

Occupation: Confederate officer
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Lt. Col. Leonard Anderson Abercrombie

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard_A._Abercrombie

ABERCROMBIE, LEONARD ANDERSON (1832–1891). Leonard Anderson Abercrombie, lawyer, Confederate Army officer, and legislator, was born in Macon County, Alabama, on December 1, 1832, the son of Milo B. and Sarah (Anderson) Abercrombie. He was educated in Alexandria, Virginia, and read law in Tuskegee, Alabama. He was admitted to the bar in 1854 but later that same year moved to Madison County, Texas, then to Huntsville. In 1860 he was elected prosecuting attorney for Galveston, Grimes, Harris, Montgomery, and Walker counties. On January 1, 1860, he married Lavinia Chilton in Tuskegee, Alabama; the couple eventually had seven children. From January 28 until February 4, 1861, Abercrombie represented Walker County as a delegate to the state Secession Convention. During the Civil War he served as lieutenant colonel of Col. Henry M. Elmore's Twentieth Texas Infantry. This regiment, organized in the spring of 1862, was composed primarily of middle-aged men, many of whom were prominent citizens. It was assigned to guard duty on the Texas Gulf coast from Galveston to the Sabine River and did not see duty outside of the state. It did, however, play an important role in the Confederate recapture of Galveston in January 1863 (see GALVESTON, BATTLE OF). After the war Abercrombie returned to his legal practice at Huntsville and was elected to represent the Ninth District as a state senator in the Twentieth Legislature. He was reelected to a seat in the Twenty-first Legislature. He died at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on December 23, 1891, and his body was returned to Huntsville for burial.

https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fab02

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=AB&GSpartial=...

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Lt. Col. Leonard Anderson Abercrombie's Timeline

1832
December 2, 1832
Macon County, Alabama, United States
1861
February 15, 1861
Huntsville, Walker, Texas, United States
1863
February 16, 1863
1865
March 2, 1865
1867
March 22, 1867
1872
January 2, 1872
1875
April 15, 1875
1877
October 21, 1877
1891
December 23, 1891
Age 59
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States