Constellation Similarity Assertions

Hanleiter, Cornelius R., 1815-1897.

Cornelius R. Hanleiter, journalist and Confederate soldier, was born June 14, 1815, in Savannah, Georgia, and died April 24, 1897, in Atlanta, Georgia. Hanleiter moved from Savannah, to Macon, Georgia, where he edited the SOUTHERN MISCELLANY; he then moved to Atlanta (1847), and established the NATIONAL AMERICAN, which became the GATE CITY GUARDIAN (at the start of the Civil War), then the SOUTHERN CONFEDERACY. In partnership with John H. Rice, he owned the Franklin Printing House. He entered the Confederate Army (September 1861) as a member of the Jo Thompson Artillery of Wright's Legion, 38th Georgia Regiment, and became a captain. His company stayed in the Savannah, coastal Georgia, and the Charleston, South Carolina areas.

From the description of Cornelius Hanleiter diary, 1861-1865 [microform]. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 123420068

...

View Constellation

Maybe-Same Assertions

There are 1 possible matching Constellations.

Hanleiter, Cornelius, 1815-1897.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6cv7g60 (person)

Cornelius Hanleiter (1815-1897) was born in Savannah, Georgia, the fourth and youngest child of John Jacob Hanleiter, Jr. and Elizabeth McFarland. His father died shortly after his birth and his mother orphaned him at the age of eight. He was soon an apprentice in Savannah where his career as a printer developed. Hanleiter published newspapers and journals throughout the state including the Constitutionalist, Georgia Messenger, and The Southern Ladies Book, among others. In 1847 he moved to Atla...

Compare