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Capt William Ivy “W.I.” Coggins

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Capt William Ivy “W.I.” Coggins

Birth
Davidson County, North Carolina, USA
Death
1912 (aged 76–77)
Telico, Ellis County, Texas, USA
Burial
Telico, Ellis County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Plot
C-4
Memorial ID
View Source
Wilson was a brickmason by trade and left North Carolina after 1860. He was at first a 3rd Sgt, but in short order was a Captain in the Confederate States Army and was Commander of Co. H of the 18th Texas Calvary, which became Co. D, Morgans Cavalry Battalion. (National Archive Records) Resided in Ellis County, Texas after the war and according to his Confederate Pension Application he was still a brickmason in 1905 but had failing eyesight. Daughters of Confederacy placed a bronze marker on his grave behind a Masonic marker in November of 2005, but his name is listed as William on the marker based apparently on the name listed on the Confederate Pension Application.
Brother:David Raper Coggins
Brother:Henry Allen Coggins
Sister:Malinda Coggins Watkins Morrison
Brother:Roland H. Coggins, Jr.
Sister:Mary Lunda Coggins Rickman
Wilson was a brickmason by trade and left North Carolina after 1860. He was at first a 3rd Sgt, but in short order was a Captain in the Confederate States Army and was Commander of Co. H of the 18th Texas Calvary, which became Co. D, Morgans Cavalry Battalion. (National Archive Records) Resided in Ellis County, Texas after the war and according to his Confederate Pension Application he was still a brickmason in 1905 but had failing eyesight. Daughters of Confederacy placed a bronze marker on his grave behind a Masonic marker in November of 2005, but his name is listed as William on the marker based apparently on the name listed on the Confederate Pension Application.
Brother:David Raper Coggins
Brother:Henry Allen Coggins
Sister:Malinda Coggins Watkins Morrison
Brother:Roland H. Coggins, Jr.
Sister:Mary Lunda Coggins Rickman


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