John Bullamore, born in England in 1839, came to Glen Ullin from Wisconsin. In 1863, while a resident of Wisconsin, he enlisted in the Army, and was in General Sherman's campaign in Georgia and the famous March to the Sea. He was the last survivor of the ten or twelve Civil War veterans who had settled in and around Glen Ullin years after the war was over.
He was discharged from the Army in November 1865 and the following year married Emiline Foat in Wisconsin. They came to Glen Ullin in 1892 and took up a homestead 6 miles northeast of town, where they farmed until retiring and moving into Glen Ullin. They had five children, Minnie [Gaylord], Alfred, Ella [Harper], Mabel [Harper] and Sidney. Emiline passed away in 1910 and John nineteen years later, at the age of ninety. Both are buried in Glen Ullin.
John Bullamore, born in England in 1839, came to Glen Ullin from Wisconsin. In 1863, while a resident of Wisconsin, he enlisted in the Army, and was in General Sherman's campaign in Georgia and the famous March to the Sea. He was the last survivor of the ten or twelve Civil War veterans who had settled in and around Glen Ullin years after the war was over.
He was discharged from the Army in November 1865 and the following year married Emiline Foat in Wisconsin. They came to Glen Ullin in 1892 and took up a homestead 6 miles northeast of town, where they farmed until retiring and moving into Glen Ullin. They had five children, Minnie [Gaylord], Alfred, Ella [Harper], Mabel [Harper] and Sidney. Emiline passed away in 1910 and John nineteen years later, at the age of ninety. Both are buried in Glen Ullin.
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