The Inman Compendium

All data that I have is included in the database.

Entries: 102090    Updated: 2009-11-16 01:41:26 UTC (Mon)    Contact: Jim Williams    Home Page: Go_To_The_Inman_Compendium

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ALL of my data AND source material is included in the database.


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  • ID: I31835
  • Name: Daniel Logan INMAN
  • Sex: M
  • Census: I550 NC, IL
  • Birth: abt 1827 in NC 1
  • Death: 25 DEC 1864 in Camp Douglas, IL
  • Burial: Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago, Cook, IL
  • Note: Confederate Mound.
  • Military: C.S.A., Private, NC 62nd Infantry Reg., CO. I, Civil War
  • Note: Daniel Logan Inman enlisted in the Confederate Army May 31, 1861. Logan Inman was a Pvt. in Co. I of the 62nd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, along with brothers Anderson and Joseph. They trained at Haynesville, TN, (now Johnson City), and wer e then sent to Cumberland Gap to guard the railroad line coming into TN from VA. Their position was taken by Northern troops on September 09, 1863. They and about twelve hundred of their comrades were taken as prisoners of war to Camp Dougla s at Chicago, IL, where Logan and Joseph died in 1864, probably of smallpox. They were buried there in Confederate Mound. (from "History of the Inman Family", by Charles O. Frazier).
  • Note:
    1850 CENSUS - Unknown, Haywood, NC roll 633 p 170 fam 536, next to father.
    1860 CENSUS - Fork Pigeon, Division 37, Haywood, NC roll 901 p 281 fam 13; next to his father and brother.
  • Note: Daniel Logan Inman was the second son of Joshua and Mary "Polly" Inman of Haywood Co., NC. He enlisted in the Confederate Army along with his brothers Anderson, Joshua Ervin, W. P., Lewis Hezekiah, and Joseph. Only Anderson and Hezekiah live d to return home. Daniel Logan and his brother, Joseph A., died at Camp Douglas, IL, (Confederate POW camp), most likely of smallpox. Some six thousand men died there. At first they were buried in unmarked paupers' graves in Chicago's City Cemeter y, but in 1867 the remains were reburied at Oak Woods Cemetery, located about five miles south of the camp. Confederate Mound in Oak Woods Cemetery is a monument to the Confederate soldiers who died at Camp Douglas. William Pinkney Inman, the seve nth child of Joshua and Polly Inman, is known to many now as the "Inman" of the "Cold Mountain" book by Charles Frazier.
  • Note: PICTURES - View pictures of Daniel Inman.



    Father: Joshua INMAN b: 10 JAN 1805 in Newberry Co., SC
    Mother: Mary Ann SMITH b: abt 1804 in SC

    Marriage 1 Elizabeth SWANGER b: FEB 1828 in NC
    • Married: 24 JAN 1847 in Haywood Co., NC
    Children
    1. Has No Children John INMAN b: abt 1848 in NC
    2. Has No Children Rebecca Louisa INMAN b: abt 1849 in NC
    3. Has No Children Elizabeth INMAN b: abt 1850 in NC
    4. Has Children William D. B. INMAN b: JUL 1850 in NC
    5. Has Children Marcus L. INMAN b: 10 NOV 1859 in Waynesville, Haywood, NC
    6. Has No Children Joseph Pinkney INMAN b: NOV 1860 in NC

    Sources:
    1. Title: Census records.

  • Index | Descendancy | Register | Pedigree | Ahnentafel | Add Post-em

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