John C. Carter (U.S. naval officer) explained

John C. Carter
Birth Date:c. 1805
Birth Place:Virginia, U.S.
Death Place:Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.
Branch: United States Navy
Serviceyears:1825-1867
Rank: Commodore
Battles:Mexican-American War
American Civil War
Relations:Charles Carter (grandfather)

John C. Carter (c. 1805 – November 24, 1870) was a Virginia-born career U.S. Navy officer whose service during the Mexican-American War and later during the American Civil War ended with his retirement in 1870 at the rank of Commodore.[1] [2]

Early and family life

Born in Virginia to the former Sarah Champe Stanard (1741–1814) and her husband (and distant cousin) Walker Carter (1772-d. after 1820 and before 1830), he could trace his ancestry to the First Families of Virginia. However, his grandfather Charles Carter (1732–1796), a patriot during the American Revolutionary War (and member of the House of Burgesses and the Virginia House of Delegates), dissipated the wealth inherited from his paternal grandfather Robert Carter I.

His father Walker Carter owned 9 slaves in Spotsylvania County in 1810[3] After serving in the War of 1812, he moved his family to Louisville in Jefferson County, Kentucky, where he prospered and owned two properties by 1820. At one of those, he owned no slaves, but his other location in the 1820 census shows him as owning 12 slaves (3 males and 9 females), and his family also included 8 white males between 16 and 26 and 14 white men between 26 and 45 (hence a likely manufacturing or steamboat operation).[4] Although several brothers and sisters died as infants or without issue, his sister Virginia married David Smith Benedict of Louisville. Both his younger brothers who had children married women from Fredericksburg, and survived the Civil War and are buried in St. Louis, Missouri. Frank Carter (1813–1896) was a steamboat captain who transported mail, freight and passengers on the Ohio River and was buried in Louisville's historic Cave Hill Cemetery like his father. The children of Capt. Walker Randolph Carter Jr.

Notes and References

  1. [Lyon Gardiner Tyler]
  2. [Appleton's Cyclopedia]
  3. U.S.Federal Census City for Spotsylvania County, Virginia, image 21 of 41 on ancestry.com
  4. 1820 U.S. Federal Census for Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky p. 2 of 10, available on ancestry.com