In 1850 census he is in household with his mother and other siblings as his father was deceased. In 1860 census he is living in household of his older brother Charles S Wolf.
He served the CSA along with three of his brothers, George Washington Wolf, Charles S. Wolf, and John B. Wolf.
He was a Mason, confederate soldier in the AR 14th, and 4th Master of the nearby Masonic Lodge.
Confederate Burials in Arkansas list his name as Jaco H. Wolf but that is the only place the middle initial is found. On the 1870 census and the headstone his name is simply Jacob Wolf. Neither his wife or child can be traced after the 1870 census.
(The top picture is a close-up of one of the memorial tablets in the Wolf Cemetery showing Jacob Wolf as one of the individuals buried in the cemetery. Photo courtesy of Glenn Luther.
The bottom picture shows the gravestone at the Jacob Wolf grave. Photo courtesy of Vera Reeves.)
In 1850 census he is in household with his mother and other siblings as his father was deceased. In 1860 census he is living in household of his older brother Charles S Wolf.
He served the CSA along with three of his brothers, George Washington Wolf, Charles S. Wolf, and John B. Wolf.
He was a Mason, confederate soldier in the AR 14th, and 4th Master of the nearby Masonic Lodge.
Confederate Burials in Arkansas list his name as Jaco H. Wolf but that is the only place the middle initial is found. On the 1870 census and the headstone his name is simply Jacob Wolf. Neither his wife or child can be traced after the 1870 census.
(The top picture is a close-up of one of the memorial tablets in the Wolf Cemetery showing Jacob Wolf as one of the individuals buried in the cemetery. Photo courtesy of Glenn Luther.
The bottom picture shows the gravestone at the Jacob Wolf grave. Photo courtesy of Vera Reeves.)
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