Friday, September 4, 2009

Thursday, September 3, 2009

New Albany Daily Times, 6/12/1855, p. 2, col. 3

Married,
In this city on Sunday evening the 10th pnst., by the Rev. T.Y. McKee, Mr. George Jennings, to Miss Charlotte M., eldest daughter of Dr. T.R. Austin. The receipt of the gold dollar and a slice of the cake is duly acknowledged. May the happy couple enjoy a long-life of continued peace and prosperity.

New Albany Daily Ledger 1/12/1865, page 2, col. 4

Died,
In New Albany, Indiana, January 11th, 1865, Mary Ann, wife of Lieut. John M. Austin, 53rd Indiana regiment and second daughter of Isaac S. Ellis of Harrison County, Ind. in the 27th year of her age.
May the Lord comfort the hero in his sudden affliction while in a distant part of the country. Her funeral will take place to-morrow (Friday) evening at 10 o'clock from the residence of Geo. Jennings on Lower 6th Street between Market and Spring. The friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. Corydon paper, please copy.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Officers of the 53rd Indiana Infantry Regiment

The center bottom row may be Lt. John Malix Austin. Photograph is a collage of individual photos from the book:

To the Mountain of Fire and Beyond, The Fifty-Third Indiana Regiment From Corinth To Glory, By Garland A. Haas, 1997, Guild Press of Indiana, 276 Pages.


What do you think? The left is the Lt. in 1865, the center is John Malix Austin about 1898, and the right is John Malix Austin about 1910.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Edits to the developing story of previous post

John had been wounded in the battle for Atlanta. His regiment had suffered substantial casualties at Peachtree Creek, when the Confederates had outflanked Sherman to escape from the tightening noose around Atlanta. John’s company was decimated of officers and sergeants, overrun and nearly annihilated in that quick action. The beloved Colonel of the 53rd, died in that action, shortly before he was to return home having already been mustered out, but waiting orders to return home. (The 53rd had entered the battle with 15 officers and 357 enlisted men and suffered 5 officers killed, 3 wounded and 115 enlisted men killed, wounded or missing. ) John had tried to protect him, but to no avail. He had been treated by the 23rd Indiana Regiment surgeon, Dr. Magnus Blucher, on the field. In an irony, not lost on John, Blucher had replaced his father, Dr. T.R. Austin, as regimental surgeon. Had Thomas Ralph been there, John would have spoken to his father for the first time since he was 13 years old. That separation had been in 1854, when Thomas Ralph moved his family from Elizabeth, Indiana, to the largest city at that time in Indiana, New Albany, about 19 miles away. John had balked at leaving his friends, including Mary Ann Ellis who would become his wife, and was apprenticed to a farmer and wagon maker, Samuel Davidson. There John found the affection from Uncle Sammy and Aunt Sally that he hadn’t felt since his mother, Martha Haigh, died when he was 6 years old and his father remarried a much younger woman.

John Malix Austin

John Malix Austin
Culver (Kansas) Union Cemetery N39.00 W097.82

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Born in Iwakuni, Japan. 1st birthday on a Liberty troopship coming to the US. Grew up in rural Kansas and have lived in Topeka since 1977. 3 sons, 2 Eagle Scouts