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Pitser Miller “PM” Cheshier

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Pitser Miller “PM” Cheshier

Birth
Tennessee, USA
Death
23 Jul 1919 (aged 82)
Sulphur, Murray County, Oklahoma, USA
Burial
Craighead County, Arkansas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Pitser Miller 'PM' Cheshier, was born in Tennessee and served in the Civil War.

He married Easter (E. S.) Woodburn who was born June 28, 1840, in Tennessee, and died November 2, 1902, in Arkansas. They married in 1856.

The children are Isabel Sarah Amanda Utoka Jane Cheshier, Thomas Pitser Cheshier, John J Cheshier, Bettie A Cheshier, Carie E Cheshier, William Washington Cheshier, and Minnie Minerva Cheshier.

He remarried after his wife died to Bettie Hawkins in 1906.

He died in Oklahoma but was buried in Arkansas next to his first wife and children.

There is a depositon where he is trying to get money back from the United States for taking his horses during the war. In this depositon it shows the dates when he served in the war for the South and the North. It tells how he was made to sign up for the South and he ran away and joined the North.

*Information borrowed from Ann Place, who added a duplicate memorial.

From Ancestry.com:
He said he was threatened and forced to join by his father in law who was on the Confederate side.
Pitser Miller 'PM' Cheshier, was born in Tennessee and served in the Civil War.

He married Easter (E. S.) Woodburn who was born June 28, 1840, in Tennessee, and died November 2, 1902, in Arkansas. They married in 1856.

The children are Isabel Sarah Amanda Utoka Jane Cheshier, Thomas Pitser Cheshier, John J Cheshier, Bettie A Cheshier, Carie E Cheshier, William Washington Cheshier, and Minnie Minerva Cheshier.

He remarried after his wife died to Bettie Hawkins in 1906.

He died in Oklahoma but was buried in Arkansas next to his first wife and children.

There is a depositon where he is trying to get money back from the United States for taking his horses during the war. In this depositon it shows the dates when he served in the war for the South and the North. It tells how he was made to sign up for the South and he ran away and joined the North.

*Information borrowed from Ann Place, who added a duplicate memorial.

From Ancestry.com:
He said he was threatened and forced to join by his father in law who was on the Confederate side.


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