William Dunbar Holder Explained

William Dunbar Holder
Birth Date:6 March 1824
Birth Place:Franklin County, Tennessee
Death Place:Jackson, Mississippi
Occupation:lawyer

William Dunbar Holder (March 6, 1824  - April 26, 1900) was a prominent Confederate politician and soldier.

Biography

Holder was born in Franklin County, Tennessee, but later moved to Mississippi. He served in the state legislature in 1853 and was a colonel in the Confederate States Army in the American Civil War. In 1862, he led the 17th Mississippi Infantry Regiment in the Missouri Brigade of General Charles Clark and was wounded in the Battle of Malvern Hill.[1] He resigned his commission after another wound sustained during the Battle of Gettysburg where he commanded the 17th Mississippi Infantry, as part of Barksdale's Mississippi Brigade.[2] In a letter to The Clarion-Ledger in October 1886, Holden wrote the following,

Holder represented the state in the Second Confederate Congress from 1864 to 1865. He served as a state auditor in 1890–1896.

He died in Jackson, Mississippi on April 26, 1900.[3]

Family

He married Catharine Theresa Bowles (1837–1887) and they had six sons and one daughter.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Albert Lucian Lewis. The Confederate Congress, a Study in Personnel, Volume 2, University of Southern California, 1955, p. 221
  2. Kent Masterson Brown. Retreat from Gettysburg (2011), p. 54.
  3. Biographical Guide to the Mississippi Hall of Fame. Published during the 33rd Anniversary Year of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, 1935, p. 28.
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=xLUCAAAAMAAJ Tennessee: The Volunteer State, 1769-1923