LC control no. | no2017013330 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Anderson, William T., 1840-1864 |
Variant(s) | Anderson, Bill (William T.), 1840-1864 Anderson, Bloody Bill, 1840-1864 Anderson, W. T. (William T.), 1840-1864 |
Associated country | United States |
Birth date | 1840 |
Death date | 1864-10-26 |
Place of birth | Hopkins County (Ky.) |
Place of death | Orrick (Mo.) |
Profession or occupation | Soldiers Guerrillas |
Found in | Goodman, T.M. A thrilling record, founded on facts and observations obtained during ten days' experience with Col. W. T. Anderson (the notorious guerrilla chieftain), 1868: title page (Colonel William T. Anderson) Hale, D.R. They called him Bloody Bill, c1975: page II (Bill Anderson) page 77 ("Bloody" Bill Anderson) page 115 (tombstone: William T. Anderson, 1840-1864; Capt. Mo. Guerrilla; Confederate States Army) |
Invalid LCCN | n 80088893 n 2002039607 |
LC control no. | no2017013346 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Anderson, William T., 1859-1934 |
Associated country | United States |
Located | Toledo (Ohio) Urbana (Ill.) Lima (Ohio) Cuba |
Birth date | 1859-08-20 |
Death date | 1934-08-21 |
Place of birth | Seguin (Tex.) |
Place of death | Cleveland (Ohio) |
Affiliation | Howard University African Methodist Episcopal Church United States. Army. Cavalry Regiment, 10th (1866-1950) Homeopathic Medical College of Cleveland |
Profession or occupation | Physicians Military chaplains Clergy |
Found in | African American National Biography, accessed June 18, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (Anderson, William T.; slave, physician, military chaplain, clergy; born 20 August 1859 in Seguin, Texas, United States; received a theology certificate, Howard University (1886); graduated from the Homeopathic Medical College of Cleveland (1888); was a pastor for AME churches in Toledo (Ohio), Urbana (Illinois), Lima (Ohio), and Cleveland (Ohio); President William McKinley appointed him to be a chaplain (1897); was a captain into the Tenth Cavalry, a unit of Buffalo Soldiers; was stationed at the Assinniboine headquarters in Montana (until 1898); rejoined his men near Santiago, Cuba (1898); published with fellow troopers "Under Fire with the Tenth Cavalry", the history of the unit's action (1899); served as part of the army of occupation in Manzanillo, Cuba (1899-1902); helped the enlisted men organize a regimental Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) in Cuba and in Nebraska; commanded the United States Morgue in Fort William McKinley, near Manila in the Philippines (1907); was stationed at Fort Ethan Allen, Vermont, US; retired in 1910; became an accountant and secretary to the bishop in the Third Episcopal District in Wilberforce; minister of Warren Chapel, Toledo (1916-1918); died 21 August 1934 in Cleveland, Ohio, United States) |
Invalid LCCN | n 80088893 n 2002039607 |