Barrycdog
Major
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2013
- Location
- Buford, Georgia
A lot is written about Nathan Bedford Forrest but I have not heard a lot about his brother.
Southern Recorder, Nov. 24, 1863 -- page 1
Col. Jeff. Forrest, the brother of General Forrest, whose death has been so universally deplored, still lives. He was shot through his hips. He is now at the house of Captain Steele, a mile and a half from Tuscumbia, and is doing well. On the first day of his series of fights, he had with him five men, and Forrest pursued by large number, took refuge in an accessible mountain cove. He and his comrades killed twenty eight of the enemy, among them a Colonel, a Major and two Captains. - Knoxville Register.
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Birth: Jun. 10, 1838
Death: Feb. 22, 1864
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Civil War Confederate Officer. Tippah County, Mississippi native Jeffery Edward Forrest was a younger and purportedly favorite brother of Nathan Bedford Forrest. At the onset of the war in 1861, Jeffery and Nathan each enlisted as a Private into Captain Josiah White's Tennessee Mounted Rifles, a command that would later be designated the 7th Tennessee Cavalry. He subsequently had the additional assignment as a captain in Forrest's Tennessee Cavalry. In February of 1862, he was among the cavalcade, led by his older brother, which eluded capture at Fort Donelson. He tendered his resignation in June 0f 1862; however he rejoined as a major of the 13th Tennessee Cavalry (8th Cavalry) sometime prior to 1863. This service was followed with a commission as colonel of Forrest's Alabama Cavalry. During action at a place called Bear's Creek, Alabama, he was captured after he fell with severe wounds in October 1863. As a brigade commander under the command of his brother, he received a fatal wound to his throat during action near Okolona, Mississippi on February 22, 1864. Witnessing his fall, Nathan Bedford Forrest rushed to his dying brother's side and ‘dropped to his knees and held [his] head in his arms' before he died. He was buried in Aberdeen's Odd Fellows Cemetery after his death with a 1868 re-interment in Elmwood Cemetery, Memphis, Tennessee.
Consequently, the marker erected in the Odd Fellows Cemetery is a cenotaph.
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=38389911
Southern Recorder, Nov. 24, 1863 -- page 1
Col. Jeff. Forrest, the brother of General Forrest, whose death has been so universally deplored, still lives. He was shot through his hips. He is now at the house of Captain Steele, a mile and a half from Tuscumbia, and is doing well. On the first day of his series of fights, he had with him five men, and Forrest pursued by large number, took refuge in an accessible mountain cove. He and his comrades killed twenty eight of the enemy, among them a Colonel, a Major and two Captains. - Knoxville Register.
Expired Image Removed
Birth: Jun. 10, 1838
Death: Feb. 22, 1864
Expired Image Removed
Civil War Confederate Officer. Tippah County, Mississippi native Jeffery Edward Forrest was a younger and purportedly favorite brother of Nathan Bedford Forrest. At the onset of the war in 1861, Jeffery and Nathan each enlisted as a Private into Captain Josiah White's Tennessee Mounted Rifles, a command that would later be designated the 7th Tennessee Cavalry. He subsequently had the additional assignment as a captain in Forrest's Tennessee Cavalry. In February of 1862, he was among the cavalcade, led by his older brother, which eluded capture at Fort Donelson. He tendered his resignation in June 0f 1862; however he rejoined as a major of the 13th Tennessee Cavalry (8th Cavalry) sometime prior to 1863. This service was followed with a commission as colonel of Forrest's Alabama Cavalry. During action at a place called Bear's Creek, Alabama, he was captured after he fell with severe wounds in October 1863. As a brigade commander under the command of his brother, he received a fatal wound to his throat during action near Okolona, Mississippi on February 22, 1864. Witnessing his fall, Nathan Bedford Forrest rushed to his dying brother's side and ‘dropped to his knees and held [his] head in his arms' before he died. He was buried in Aberdeen's Odd Fellows Cemetery after his death with a 1868 re-interment in Elmwood Cemetery, Memphis, Tennessee.
Consequently, the marker erected in the Odd Fellows Cemetery is a cenotaph.
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=38389911