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Presentation of Confederate Battleflag to Family of Colonel George T. Ward, 1862(From: Governor, State Governors' Incoming Correspondence, 1857-1888, Series S 577)George Taliaferro Ward was a prominent planter and politician in antebellum Florida. Born in Kentucky in 1810 or perhaps earlier, he moved with his family to Tallahassee in 1825. Ward married into the wealthy Chaires family in 1844, and he eventually became a successful planter in his own right. He also served in the Legislative Council from Leon County, attended the 1838-1839 Constitutional Convention, and ran an unsuccessful campaign for governor on the Whig ticket in 1852. Ward was elected to the 1861 Florida Secession Convention. He opposed immediate secession, urging instead that Florida wait for cooperative action with other southern states. He ultimately signed the Ordnance of Secession, but stated reluctantly: "When I die, I want it inscribed upon my tombstone that I was the last man to give up the ship." Despite his lukewarm support for secession, Ward ran for and was elected to the Confederate Provisional Congress in April 1861. Later that year he was elected colonel of the Second Florida Infantry Regiment and early the following year he resigned his congressional seat. Sent with his unit to Virginia, Ward was shot dead on may 5, 1862 at the battle of Williamsburg. One of his men described Ward's death: "[O]ur gallant and brave colonel ordered a charge and we followed him, but not long was he allowed to lead us (and we would have followed him through thick and thin) for at an evil hour (and when we needed him most) a ball struck him under the left shoulder and come out on the right breast--killing him instantly, he never spoke." A month after Ward's death, Florida Governor John Milton presented the colonel's children with a battleflag carried by the Second Florida. The letter reproduced here accompanied the flag. A text version
is included below the graphic image.
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| NEW AND NOTEWORTHY ON FLORIDA MEMORY | ||||
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| Conjunto Aventura Norteño, sometimes also called Norteña or Conjunto, literally translates to the word “northern,” referring to the region of northern Mexico and present day southern Texas where the musical style originated. |
Resources for the 2010 Florida History Fair This is a list of resources available online from the State Library and Archives of Florida relating to the suggested Florida History Fair topics. |
See the "Common Ground" slideshow! This presentation is part of “Common Ground,” a global event consisting of museums, galleries, and archives worldwide showing the same slideshow of photographs in public spaces on the same weekend (October 2-3, 2009). |
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