Pitts rode for awhile with the 43rd Battalion, Virginia Cavalry, better known as Mosby's Rangers. Pitts then enlisted in Company D, 1st Regiment, Maryland Cavalry C.S.A. He was captured twice, and was confined at the large prison compound at Point Lookout, Maryland, for one and one-half years.
After the Civil War he returned to his home state of Maryland and spent most of the rest of his life living in Adamstown, Maryland with his sister, Laura Jane Brashear Johnson, and her husband, Dr. William Hilleary Johnson. He died of cancer.
Thomas Pitts Brashear was interred at old St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 10 miles from Adamstown, Frederick County, Md. His niece Minnie Brashear, from Girard, Louisiana, visited his grave in 1899, but some years later his remains were moved to Mt. Olivet Cemetery, where his grandparents Belt Brashear and Ann Cook Brashear had also been re-interred, and where many other relatives are buried.
Details of Family Photo
The Thomas Cook Brashear family lived in New Market, Maryland. Thomas and wife Ann Maria Pitts had 5 daughters and 2 sons. This photo was made around 1850, after Ann Maria had already died. The boy on the left (dark hair) is Thomas Pitts Brashear. The boy on the right is Charles Hall Brashear. Ann Elizabeth Brashear, an older daughter, is probably on the right in front of Charles. There are only 4 girls in this photo and no one can put names to the girls faces with certainty nor tell which girl is missing from this picture.
Photo courtesy of Moses M. Coleman, Jr, great great grandson of Thomas Cook Brashear and great grandson of Charles Hall Brashear.
Pitts rode for awhile with the 43rd Battalion, Virginia Cavalry, better known as Mosby's Rangers. Pitts then enlisted in Company D, 1st Regiment, Maryland Cavalry C.S.A. He was captured twice, and was confined at the large prison compound at Point Lookout, Maryland, for one and one-half years.
After the Civil War he returned to his home state of Maryland and spent most of the rest of his life living in Adamstown, Maryland with his sister, Laura Jane Brashear Johnson, and her husband, Dr. William Hilleary Johnson. He died of cancer.
Thomas Pitts Brashear was interred at old St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 10 miles from Adamstown, Frederick County, Md. His niece Minnie Brashear, from Girard, Louisiana, visited his grave in 1899, but some years later his remains were moved to Mt. Olivet Cemetery, where his grandparents Belt Brashear and Ann Cook Brashear had also been re-interred, and where many other relatives are buried.
Details of Family Photo
The Thomas Cook Brashear family lived in New Market, Maryland. Thomas and wife Ann Maria Pitts had 5 daughters and 2 sons. This photo was made around 1850, after Ann Maria had already died. The boy on the left (dark hair) is Thomas Pitts Brashear. The boy on the right is Charles Hall Brashear. Ann Elizabeth Brashear, an older daughter, is probably on the right in front of Charles. There are only 4 girls in this photo and no one can put names to the girls faces with certainty nor tell which girl is missing from this picture.
Photo courtesy of Moses M. Coleman, Jr, great great grandson of Thomas Cook Brashear and great grandson of Charles Hall Brashear.
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