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Smith Family Tree

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Rae Creed

Rae Creed

Female 1934 - 2004  (69 years)


 

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Chattanooga National Cemetery

Chattanooga, Hamilton, Tennessee
Find a Grave: #109392

Plot:

National Cemetery

Date1863
File nameCemetery-CHATTANOOGA NATIONAL (Chattanooga TN).jpg
File Size129.71k
Dimensions1024 x 768
Linked toFind a Grave (Military Cemetery-Chatanooga National); Claude Corlew Coke (Burial); Rae Creed (Burial)

Chattanooga National Cemetery, Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee, USA

Notes: On Dec. 25, 1863, Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas, "The Rock of Chickamauga," issued General Orders No. 296 creating a national cemetery in commemoration of the Battles of Chattanooga, Nov. 23-27, 1863. Gen. Thomas selected the cemetery site during the assault of his troops that carried Missionary Ridge and brought the campaign to an end. The land was originally appropriated, but later purchased, from local residents Joseph Ruohs, Robert M. Hooke and J. R. Slayton.

By 1870, more than 12,800 interments were complete: 8,685 known and 4,189 unknown. The dead included men who fell at the battles of Chickamauga, Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain. There were also a number of reinterments from the surrounding area, including Athens, Charleston and locations along the line of Gen. Sherman's march to Atlanta. A large number of men—1,798 remains—who died at the Battle of Chickamauga were relegated to unknowns during the reinterment process.

In addition to Civil War veterans, there are 78 German prisoners of war buried here. Pursuant to provisions included in the peace treaty between the United States and Germany at the end of World War I, the German government sought the location and status of the gravesites of Germans who died while detained in the United States. An investigation conducted by the War Department found that the largest number of German POWs was interred at Chattanooga National Cemetery. For a short time, thought was given to removing all other German interments to Chattanooga. In the end, however, the German government decided that only 23 remains from Hot Springs National Cemetery should be reinterred here. The German government assumed the cost of disinterment and transportation to Chattanooga, and erected a monument to commemorate the POWs.






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