Peticolas, A.B. (Alfred Brown), 1838-1915
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Peticolas, A.B. (Alfred Brown), 1838-1915
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Peticolas, A.B. (Alfred Brown), 1838-1915
Peticolas, A.B. 1838-1915
Name Components
Name :
Peticolas, A.B. 1838-1915
Peticolas, Alfred Brown 1838-1915
Name Components
Name :
Peticolas, Alfred Brown 1838-1915
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Biographical History
Sergeant of the Fourth Texas Mounted Volunteers, Company C; served in the Sibley Brigade during the Civil War. Later became a lawyer and judge in Victoria, Texas.
Sargeant in the Confederate Army during the Civil War.
Born to Julius Adolphus Peticolas and Mildred Warner Brown in Richmond, Virginia, Alfred Brown (A. B.) Peticolas (1838-1915) studied in Petersburg before moving to Amherst, where he established a school and began studying law. After receiving his law license in 1859, Peticolas moved to Victoria, Texas, and enlisted in Company C of the 4th regiment of the Texas Mounted Volunteers during the Civil War. Following the war, he returned to his law practice and married Mary Dunbar in 1866. A year later, his wife and infant daughter died of yellow fever, though in 1869 he married Marion Goodwin, with whom he had three sons. In addition to his law practice, Peticolas edited the Victoria Advocate and sketched many drawings of Texas scenery and architecture in Victoria.
Source:
Curlee, Kendall. Peticolas, Alfred Brown. Handbook of Texas Online . Accessed August 1, 2011. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fpe78 .
Born to Julius Adolphus Peticolas and Mildred Warner Brown in Richmond, Virginia, Alfred Brown (A. B.) Peticolas (1838-1915) studied in Petersburg before moving to Amherst, where he established a school and began studying law.
After receiving his law license in 1859, Peticolas moved to Victoria, Texas, and enlisted in Company C of the 4th regiment of the Texas Mounted Volunteers during the Civil War. Following the war, he returned to his law practice and married Mary Dunbar in 1866. A year later, his wife and infant daughter died of yellow fever, though in 1869 he married Marion Goodwin, with whom he had three sons. In addition to his law practice, Peticolas edited the Victoria Advocate and sketched many drawings of Texas scenery and architecture in Victoria.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/33387925
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n84009690
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n84009690
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Glorieta Pass, Battle of, N.M., 1862
Railroad bridges
Soldiers
Valverde, Battle of, Val Verde, N. M., 1862
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United States
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Galisteo (N.M.)
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Victoria (Tex.)
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New Mexico
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Albuquerque (N.M.)
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Fort Hudson (Tex.)
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United States
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Texas
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Victoria (Tex.)
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Lynchburg (Va.)
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Stapleton (Va.)
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El Paso (Tex.)
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Fort Davis (Tex.)
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Victoria (Tex.)
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Memphis (Tenn.)
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Amherst (Va.)
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Petersburg (Va.)
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Virginia
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>