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    1. [OHBELMON] Walker and James GOINS
    2. Robert Goins
    3. I wrote this out of the need to try to understand the Civil War, American history and the role of African Americans in the Civil War and American history. After six years of genealogy, I accidently came across the Civil War pensions of two of my great great grandfather's brothers. Finding these records forever changed how I look at the Civil War and American history. During the waning sunlit, muggy hours, seconds and moments of August eighteen and sixty-four, two colored men from Belmont County, Ohio joined the Union Army. They joined because colored men were finally allowed to join after Abraham Lincoln and his generals found out that these colored gentlemen could help swing victory in the direction of the Union. Walker and his brother James Edward Goins, "officially" volunteered with the Union Army of the United States of America because they knew the stakes were exceedinly high; and yet the feeling of going off to fight in a Civil War-- any war in the United States-- must have been the most frightening prospect for a colored man in this country during a period when colored men had few if any civil rights and or protections enumerated the United States Constitution. According to the eighteen and sixty Belmont County, Ohio census, Walker was twenty-one. He humbly began his military career in the fifth regiment of Ohio and finished his duty in the 101st U.S. Federal troops. James who lived with his parents Michael and Verlinda Goins was, according to another sheet in the Belmont County, Ohio census, fourteen years old. He served in the seventeenth regiment of and from the Buckeye State. These brothers, born in Ohio, Walker circa eighteen and thirty-eight and the younger James Edward, circa eighteen and forty-six took on this duty and fought on the front lines of Tennessee. Although the War of the Rebellon officallly began in Virginia at the "First Manassass or First Bull Run in the seventh month and twenty-first day of eighteen and sixty, Tennessee was an important battle front. The Confederate Army won that first battle at Manassass. They also lost many battles. The Union Army took many causalities as well. It looked like draw in the early stages of the conflict. It was a bloody battle right down to the last shot. Each side had to figure a way to out maneuver the opponent in the tug of Civial War. One method the Union planned to use to out maneuver its Southern counterpart involved enlisting the services of colored people who might become troops. It is as though Abraham Lincoln and his generals used the same move Lord Dunmore, who was the British governor of Virginia during her colonlial period, used when the upstart Americans decided to declare themselves independent of the crown in the late seventeen hundreds. Walker and James were two of a multituded of colored volunteers who made the sacrifice of life, limb and family during America's hour internal restlessness. The eldest of these two brothers took Mary Jackson Curry as his wife before leaving and their home in Barnesville. James, the younger of the two brothers, was about to turn eighteen. This is the ripe old age of young men when military units try to increase, almost swell its ranks with soldiers. According to his pension, Walker married Mary Jackson-Curry " in the year of Our Lord eighteen and fifty-nine." The nuptials, again according to Walker's pension, took place in the fair county of Belmont. The same county where Walker and James' parents Michael and Verlinda, married in during the late spring of eighteen and thity-five. Michael and Verlinda, former Virginians resided, in this county which sits next to the vulernable Ohio River. Perhaps Michael and Verlinda grew restless knowing that they and their younger chidren were near--too close for comfort anyway-- the Civil War's front. They were so restless they moved to Kalamazoo, Michigan sometime after 1861 with their daughter Emily, their grandchildren and her husband Gabriel Green. The certain internal and Civil restlessness in America pulled and tugged at the hearts of families on both sides of the War. It pulled, tugged and tore families asunder as if it seemed the Civil War was a storm cloud covering every square inch of the United States without plans to move, Walker left his bride, Mary of seven years or so in Barnesville where most of his and James' brothers and sisters lived as well. The Goins family , according to the eighteen and sixty Belmont County, Ohio census, identifies the household of Michael and Verlinda Goins, Walker and James' parents. This household included Michael (the younger), Emily ( perhaps the twin of James Edward ?) James Edward, John, Robert, Stewart and Roswell. One brother, Riley, the eldest known brother of these Colored Civil War Veterans, according to the 1860 Muskingum County, Ohio census, lived with his wife Clarissa and their children in that county. The Goins family lived far, wide and beyond the State of Ohio. Again the elder Goins', Michael and Verlinda, as old as they were--in their sixties--, migrated to Michigan with their two youngest sons Stewart and Roswell sometime before or during the conflict Although some of the Goins' left the potential war front of Ohio for the relative safety of Michigan, Mary and her children remained at least and until hopefully Walker and James returned from their tedious and tremendous task of fighting the Confederate Army. The Union Army won the Civil War and Walker discharged from his most honorable and courageous civic duty in April, eighteen and sxity-five. He returned home to his bride Mary and the his remaining siblings. He came back home alone. James, the younger of the two brothers unfortunately met his death in the course of battle according to his ever so brief pension file. He died in a Nashville, Tennessee hospital. The records from the National Archives says, this "Private of Captain Geo. H.Haywood of Company C ( I believe it is C--I can't read the hand writing), of the seventeenth the United States Infantry Volunteers, who enrolled the sixth day of December, in the State of Ohio as a recruit and mustered into the service the sixth day of December 1864 at Barnesville...died in Gibson Hospital on the twenty-second day of June, eighteen and sixty-five." I am far from knowing how Walker must have felt. Perhaps it was a most joyous occasion to see his wife and the rest of his family. Nevertheless, some part of him remained in Tennessee on one of those bloody battlefields. That specific part came in the shape and form of his younger brother. James; he must have been important to Walker because he named one his children James and still another Edward, James' middlename. James was perhaps so important to Walker, that the name remained in the Goins family for a few generations. Introduce yourself to history because history knows you! ____________________________________________________________________________________ TV dinner still cooling? Check out "Tonight's Picks" on Yahoo! TV. http://tv.yahoo.com/

    04/11/2007 01:35:26
    1. [OHBELMON] GOINS & the War between the States
    2. Sandra Ferguson
    3. I found what I imagine may be one of your Goins, in THE CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF BELMONT CO (although the names don't appear on any of the included county military rosters, nor can I find a Capt Haywood) The African Methodist Episcopal Church of St Clairsville was organized around 1840, after some trouble that occurred at "a communion service".....between the whites and blacks who both used the facility, at different times......the black members "withdrew and established a meeting house of their own." ......they built their own church on Market St. In 1901 "Father Goins" was the senior member of the congregation. I believe you'll find that the the shelling of Fort Sumter, in Charleston, SC, in April of 1861, is pretty much accepted as the beginning of the War between the States, while Manassas was the first major battle......in July of that same year.... '61....not 1860. Here's a site on the American Civil War, and gives battle timelines, and many other great links... http://americancivilwar.com/ the following is included on the page, a section on 'colored troops' http://americancivilwar.com/colored/colored_troops.html if you type Ohio troops into the search slot, you'll get some additional good 'reads'. Sandra "I wrote this out of the need to try to understand the Civil War, American hstory and the role of African Americans in the Civil War and American history. After six years of genealogy, I accidently came across the Civil War pensions of two of my great great grandfather's brothers. Finding these records forever changed how I look at the Civil War and American history. "

    04/11/2007 07:17:06
    1. Re: [OHBELMON] Walker and James GOINS
    2. Jae BROWN
    3. On Apr 11, 2007, at 10:35 AM, Robert Goins wrote: > Finding these records forever > changed how I look at the Civil War and American > history. Fascinating story. How did your views on the Civil War and American history change? jae

    04/11/2007 09:38:00