Persistence Pays Off? Maybe. Maybe Not.

I wrote previously about finding information that Adam P. Hocker, son of George and Margaret (Prevost) Hocker of Buckingham County, Virginia, had served in the Company E of the 20th Virginia Infantry (Lee’s Guards) during the Civil War and died at the Battle of Rich Mountain. However, information I’ve recently located calls that into doubt.

The 1860 census indicates that Adam P. Hocker was a miller.1 This is fitting as I found an account, dated 8 May 1863, for the purchase of 180½ bushels of wheat by the Confederate Army in which “Mr. A.P. Hocker” was dissatisfied with the price of $487.35.2 A further note from 24 July 1863, signed by A.P. Hocker indicates that he received $812.25 for his wheat. On 19 January 1864, Adam appointed William Hocker as his attorney to receive any money due him from the Commissionary department of the Confederate States. So, during the war Adam was working as a miller and supplying wheat to the Confederate army.

Additionally, in looking up the members of Company E, 20th Virginia Infantry, the only name that looks close to “Hocker” was that of “E.T. Hocher.” E.T. signed up for 12 months service in Buckingham County on 20 May 1861 and appears on the muster roll for 30 June to 10 September 1861.3 The Battle of Rich Mountain occurred 11 July through 13 July 1861 in Randolph County, [West] Virginia.4 So, he likely would have been a participant at the battle.

I believe that “E.T. Hocher” may have been Edmund T. Hocker, son of George and Margaret (Prevost) Hocker and youngest brother of Adam P. Hocker. Ed reenlisted in the war on 9 February 1862 with Company H, 22nd Battalion of Virginia volunteers to serve the whole war.5  Subsequent records show him as Edmund T., Edward T. and E.T. Hocker. The muster rolls show him as serving through 1865 though he was injured 1 July 1863. Ed also survived the war, appearing in the 1880 census with the Nathan Payne family in the Slate River district in Buckingham County, Virginia.6 He died 23 December 1891.7

Adam’s brother, Amos H. Hocker, also served in Civil War. He enlisted on 7 February 1862 for one year as a private in Company K, 2nd Regiment Virginia Artillery.8 This regiment disbanded in May 1862. Amos then enlisted on 28 July 1862 for 6 months in Company C, 25th Battalion VA Infantry.9 He actually served through 1865. He was hospitalized for rheumatism from July to September in 1863. He also requested a 25-day furlough on 30 August 1864, but was present with his unit in November and December. He was apparently captured by the Union on 6 April 1865 in Nottoway County, Virginia—possibly at Sailor’s Creek when General Sheridan cut off nearly a quarter of the retreating Confederate Army—and sent to Point Lookout, Maryland. He was released on 13 June 1865.

So, it doesn’t look like Adam served in Company E of the 20th Virginia Infantry and didn’t die in the Battle of Rich Mountain. So, what happened to him?

The answer may lie in his brother Amos’ letter requesting a furlough in August 1864. Here’s what he wrote:

Camp 25 Va Batt

Chaffin’s Farm/30 Aug 1864

Col.

I respectfully ask a Furlough for Twenty-five Days under the following circumstances, to go to Buckingham County [?] my Father died during last year & willed me an amount in money, one third of which [I know not] between $5000 & $6000 I have already lost by reason of the act of Congress reducing the currency & my not being able to obtain a Furlough at the time to make an investment, one of my brothers has since died & left important business requiring my attention; the remnant of money left me was invested in Court Bonds, which the Shff informed me will now be paid & has avised [sic] to come & received the same I desire to make a permant [sic] investment of these funds which is the object of this application. I saw Genl. Ewell on yesterday & stated these facts to him who voluntary consented to approve Furlough for the time asked.

Very Respectfully

Yr Obs. Svt.

A.H. Hocker

Co. C 25 VA Batt

Did you see that? He wrote: “one of my brothers has since died…” Both of his younger brothers George W. and Edmund T. survived the war. Thus, Adam P. Hocker—his only other brother—died sometime shortly before 30 August 1864.

Persistence does pay off; but often it’s in unexpected ways.

Footnotes

  1. Adam Hocker household, 1860 United States Federal Census, Buckingham County, Virginia, population schedule, District 1, post office: Buckingham Courthouse, page 16, dwelling 120, family 120, lines 27; image, Internet Archive, “Population schedules of the eighth census of the United States, 1860, Virginia” (http://archive.org/stream/populationschedu1337unix#page/n386/mode/1up : accessed 7 Sep 2012); citing NARA micropublication M653, roll 1337.
  2. A.P Hocker, 1863-1864, Confederate Papers Relating to Citizens or Business Firms (NARA microfilm publication M346); Citizens File; General Records of the Department of State in the National Archives, Record Group 109; digital image, Fold3.com, “Confederate Citizens File” (http://www.fold3.com : accessed 6 Sep 2013).
  3. Compiled service record, E.T. Hocher, Pvt, Co. E, 20th VA Infantry; Carded Records Showing Military Service of Soldiers Who Fought in Confederate Organizations, compiled 1903 – 1927, documenting the period 1861 – 1865; General Records of the Department of State in the National Archives, Record Group 109; index and image, Fold3.com, “Confederate Compiled Military Service Records” (http://www.fold3.com : accessed 6 Sep 2013); citing NARA microfilm publication M324, roll 0632.
  4. “Battle of Rich Mountain,” Wikipedia (http://www.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Rich_Mountain : accessed 10 Sep 2013).
  5. Compiled service record, Ed T. Hocker, Sgt, Co. A, 22 Battalion VA Infantry; Carded Records Showing Military Service of Soldiers Who Fought in Confederate Organizations, compiled 1903 – 1927, documenting the period 1861 – 1865; General Records of the Department of State in the National Archives, Record Group 109; index and image, Fold3.com, “Confederate Compiled Military Service Records” (http://www.fold3.com : accessed 6 Sep 2013); citing NARA microfilm publication M324, roll 0657; The card indicates that he accepted the reenlistment bounty and was examined by a surgeon.
  6. Edmund T. Hocker, 1880 United States Federal Census, Buckingham County, Virginia, population schedule, Slate River district, Enumeration district 38, page 545B, dwelling 376, family 398; digital images, Internet Archive, “Population schedules of the tenth census of the United States, 1880, Virginia” (http://archive.org/stream/10thcensus1357unit#page/n813/mode/1up : accessed 7 Sep 2012), citing NARA micropublication T9, roll 1357
  7. “Virginia, Deaths and Burials, 1853-1912,” index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X51F-NQX : accessed 10 Sep 2013), Edmond T. Hocker, 1891.
  8. Compiled service record, Amos H. Hocker, Pvt, Co. K, 2nd VA Artillery; Carded Records Showing Military Service of Soldiers Who Fought in Confederate Organizations, compiled 1903 – 1927, documenting the period 1861 – 1865; General Records of the Department of State in the National Archives, Record Group 109; index and image, Fold3.com, “Confederate Compiled Military Service Records” (http://www.fold3.com : accessed 6 Sep 2013); citing NARA microfilm publication M324, roll 225.
  9. Compiled service record, Amos H. Hocker, Sgt, Co. C, 25th VA Infantry; Carded Records Showing Military Service of Soldiers Who Fought in Confederate Organizations, compiled 1903 – 1927, documenting the period 1861 – 1865; General Records of the Department of State in the National Archives, Record Group 109; index and image, Fold3.com, “Confederate Compiled Military Service Records” (http://www.fold3.com : accessed 6 Sep 2013); citing NARA microfilm publication M324, roll 702.

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, "Persistence Pays Off? Maybe. Maybe Not.," A Pennsylvania Dutch Genealogy, the genealogy & family research site of Kris Hocker, modified 20 Mar 2017 (https://www.krishocker.com/persistence-pays-off-maybe-maybe-not/ : accessed 20 Apr 2024).

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