History of Kershaw's Brigade eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 884 pages of information about History of Kershaw's Brigade.

History of Kershaw's Brigade eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 884 pages of information about History of Kershaw's Brigade.

General John D. Kennedy was born in Camden, South Carolina, January 5th, 1840, the son of Anthony M. and Sarah Doby Kennedy.  His mother was the grand-daughter of Abraham Belton, a pioneer settler of Camden and a patriot soldier in the Revolution.  His father was born in Scotland, having emigrated to the United States about the year 1830, at which time he settled in Kershaw County, S.C., where he married.  (He has been engaged in planting and merchandising for many years.  Two sons and two daughters were the issue of this marriage.) General Kennedy obtained his early scholastic training in the Camden schools, and in 1855, at the age of fifteen, entered the South Carolina College at Columbia.  He entered the law office of Major W.Z.  Leitner soon after, and was admitted to practice in January, 1861, and in April of that year joined the Confederate Army as Captain of Company E, Second South Carolina Regiment, under the command of Colonel J.B.  Kershaw.  In 1862 he was made Colonel of the Second South Carolina Regiment, and in 1864 was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General, and held that position to the close of the war, having surrendered with General Johnston at Greensboro, North Carolina, in 1865.  General Kennedy was six times wounded, and fifteen times was hit by spent balls.  At the close of the war he resumed his practice of law at Camden, but abandoned it soon after and turned his attention to farming.  In 1877 he once more returned to the bar, and has since been actively and prominently engaged in his practice.  In 1876 he was a member of the State Democratic Executive Committee, and was its chairman in 1878.  In December, 1865, he was elected to Congress, defeating Colonel C.W.  Dudley, but did not take his seat, as he refused to take the ironclad oath.  In 1878-9 he represented his county in the Legislature, and was Chairman of the Committee on Privileges and Elections.  He was elected Lieutenant Governor of the State in 1880, and in 1882 was a prominent candidate for Governor, but Colonel Hugh Thompson received the nomination over General Bratton and himself.  He was elected Grand Master of the Grand Lodge A.F.M. of South Carolina in 1881, and served two years.  As a member of the National Democratic Convention in 1876, he cast his vote for Tilden and Hendricks, and in 1884 was Presidential Elector at large on the Democratic ticket.  President Cleveland sent him as Consul General to Shanghai, China, in 1886.  In 1890 he was Chairman of the State Advisory Committee, of the straightout Democratic party.  In early life he was married to Miss Elizabeth Cunningham, who died in 1876.  In 1882 Miss Harriet Boykin became his wife.

The above is taken from Cyclopaedia of Eminent and Representative Men of the Carolinas of the Nineteenth Century.

Notes on General Kennedy’s life, furnished by one of his soldiers: 

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History of Kershaw's Brigade from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.