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Lieut Aubin Lee Boulware Sr.

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Lieut Aubin Lee Boulware Sr. Veteran

Birth
King and Queen County, Virginia, USA
Death
13 Jun 1897 (aged 53)
Richmond City, Virginia, USA
Burial
Richmond, Richmond City, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 19, Lot 158
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Andrew Moore Boulware and Martha Ellen Todd Boulware. Brother of Vivian Gray Boulware, also of Company H, 9th Virginia Cavalry. (Both are buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Va.)
Married Janie Grace Preston; father of Aubin Lee Boulware, Jr., Mrs. Janie Preston Boulware Lamb, Ballard Preston Boulware; grandfather of Aubin Boulware Lamb, Janie Preston Lamb Munford, Sarah Fauntleroy Lamb Larus, Brockenbrough Lamb Jr., Margaret Gordon Lamb Vaughan; great grandfather of Norvell Preston Lamb Adamson.

Studied at different private schools until outbreak of the War.

Company H "Lee's Rangers" of King and Queen County, 9th Virginia Cavalry, W.H.F. Lee's Brigade, Fitz. Lee's Division, Cavalry, Army of Northern Virginia, C.S.A.

Residence King and Queen County, Va.
Enlisted on 6/20/1862, he mustered into Company H, 9th Virginia Cavalry, as a Private.
Absent (seriously Wounded In Action in Battle of Brandy Station), 7/63 thru 12/63.
Absent sick on 10/6/64 final Roll.
Hospitalized in 3/65.
Paroled 5/5/65 at Bowling Green, Caroline County, Va.

Postwar resumed Edge Hill Academy education, then went to the University of Virginia, graduating 3 years later in Fall of 1869, with Master of Arts; a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity there. He taught school at Kenmore High School in Fredericksburg, Va., then opened the University High School there as Proprietor. One to two years later, he commenced reading Law in the offices of Judge William Stone Barton and St. George Rose Fitzhugh (Marye & Fitzhugh), in Fredericksburg. Admitted to the bar, becoming a member of the firm of Johnston and Williams in Richmond, Va., afterwards Johnston, Williams, and Boulware. When the Southern Railway Co. was established, Boulware became a director, serving until his death. Acted as receiver in the U.S. Courts in the White Sulphur Springs case, the Arlington Life Insurance Company case, and the Southern Telegraph Company case.
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Mr. A. L. Boulware, president of the First National Bank, died at his residence in Richmond on Saturday evening. Mr. Boulware was 54 years of age, was a lawyer by profession and served gallantly in the Confederate army as lieutenant of cavalry. He was born in Caroline county.

Alexandria Gazette (Alexandria, D.C.), June 14, 1897.
[Obit furnished by & typescript courtesy of Loretta Castaldi (47472615).]
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The 9th Cavalry Regiment was formed in January, 1862, using the 1st Battalion Virginia Cavalry as its nucleus. Its companies were from the counties of Stafford, Caroline, Westmoreland, Lancaster, Essex, Spotsylvania, Lunenburg, King William, King George, and Richmond.
Son of Andrew Moore Boulware and Martha Ellen Todd Boulware. Brother of Vivian Gray Boulware, also of Company H, 9th Virginia Cavalry. (Both are buried in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Va.)
Married Janie Grace Preston; father of Aubin Lee Boulware, Jr., Mrs. Janie Preston Boulware Lamb, Ballard Preston Boulware; grandfather of Aubin Boulware Lamb, Janie Preston Lamb Munford, Sarah Fauntleroy Lamb Larus, Brockenbrough Lamb Jr., Margaret Gordon Lamb Vaughan; great grandfather of Norvell Preston Lamb Adamson.

Studied at different private schools until outbreak of the War.

Company H "Lee's Rangers" of King and Queen County, 9th Virginia Cavalry, W.H.F. Lee's Brigade, Fitz. Lee's Division, Cavalry, Army of Northern Virginia, C.S.A.

Residence King and Queen County, Va.
Enlisted on 6/20/1862, he mustered into Company H, 9th Virginia Cavalry, as a Private.
Absent (seriously Wounded In Action in Battle of Brandy Station), 7/63 thru 12/63.
Absent sick on 10/6/64 final Roll.
Hospitalized in 3/65.
Paroled 5/5/65 at Bowling Green, Caroline County, Va.

Postwar resumed Edge Hill Academy education, then went to the University of Virginia, graduating 3 years later in Fall of 1869, with Master of Arts; a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity there. He taught school at Kenmore High School in Fredericksburg, Va., then opened the University High School there as Proprietor. One to two years later, he commenced reading Law in the offices of Judge William Stone Barton and St. George Rose Fitzhugh (Marye & Fitzhugh), in Fredericksburg. Admitted to the bar, becoming a member of the firm of Johnston and Williams in Richmond, Va., afterwards Johnston, Williams, and Boulware. When the Southern Railway Co. was established, Boulware became a director, serving until his death. Acted as receiver in the U.S. Courts in the White Sulphur Springs case, the Arlington Life Insurance Company case, and the Southern Telegraph Company case.
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Mr. A. L. Boulware, president of the First National Bank, died at his residence in Richmond on Saturday evening. Mr. Boulware was 54 years of age, was a lawyer by profession and served gallantly in the Confederate army as lieutenant of cavalry. He was born in Caroline county.

Alexandria Gazette (Alexandria, D.C.), June 14, 1897.
[Obit furnished by & typescript courtesy of Loretta Castaldi (47472615).]
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The 9th Cavalry Regiment was formed in January, 1862, using the 1st Battalion Virginia Cavalry as its nucleus. Its companies were from the counties of Stafford, Caroline, Westmoreland, Lancaster, Essex, Spotsylvania, Lunenburg, King William, King George, and Richmond.

Bio by: BigFrench



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