Pvt John Lane

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Pvt John Lane

Birth
Death
1865
High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
High Point, Guilford County, North Carolina, USA GPS-Latitude: 35.9649664, Longitude: -80.0058689
Plot
Oakwood Municipal
Memorial ID
View Source
John Lane
Rank: Private
State Served: Tennessee
Unit: 9th Infantry Regiment
Company: B
Enlisted December 1, 1861 Centerville Tennessee
He is one of 50 buried in the Confederate section of the cemetery at High Point, North Carolina, Oakwood Cemetery.
He was sent to the wayside hospital in High Point, known as the Barbee Hotel. It not known if he died of wounds or disease. The Barbee Hospital Register lists John Lane, Co. d, 9 Tenn and no date of death.
CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS' GRAVES

Located in Oakwood Cemetary in High Point, NC From 1863 thru 1865, over 5,000 wounded Confederate Soldiers were brought to High Point, NC by train and treated at a temporary hospital, formerly the Bellvue Hotel, which was across the street from the depot.

Fifty of these soldiers were known to have died while at the hospital and were buried at various gravesites around the town. It is unknown if they died of their actual wounds or of smallpox, which was in epidemic in the area at that time.
About 10 years later, the bodies were all moved to the Oakwood Cemetary and marked accordingly.
John Lane
Rank: Private
State Served: Tennessee
Unit: 9th Infantry Regiment
Company: B
Enlisted December 1, 1861 Centerville Tennessee
He is one of 50 buried in the Confederate section of the cemetery at High Point, North Carolina, Oakwood Cemetery.
He was sent to the wayside hospital in High Point, known as the Barbee Hotel. It not known if he died of wounds or disease. The Barbee Hospital Register lists John Lane, Co. d, 9 Tenn and no date of death.
CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS' GRAVES

Located in Oakwood Cemetary in High Point, NC From 1863 thru 1865, over 5,000 wounded Confederate Soldiers were brought to High Point, NC by train and treated at a temporary hospital, formerly the Bellvue Hotel, which was across the street from the depot.

Fifty of these soldiers were known to have died while at the hospital and were buried at various gravesites around the town. It is unknown if they died of their actual wounds or of smallpox, which was in epidemic in the area at that time.
About 10 years later, the bodies were all moved to the Oakwood Cemetary and marked accordingly.

Inscription

JOHN LANE
CO. D NINTH REGIMENT OF TENN

Gravesite Details

Confederate Soldier