Notes for John * MILLS Jr.
Moved to Indiana when 13 (1845) where his brother Alfred had some farmland. He stayed until 1855, when he moved to Michigan. (There are many Millses, St Johns, and Lockwoods in the area.) It was here he met Olive Granger. After their first son was born, they moved to Chicago.
7917 Sept 1864 he enlisted at Chicago to fight in the Civil War on the Union side. He fought at Chattanooga. He was an engineer at Fort James, where gunpowder blew into his eyes while blasting rock and he was discharged. He only served in the Army for a year; Edna Ruth suspects he may have enlisted to claim the $300 bonus given to new recruits.
79Private in Co. E, 1st Regiment of US Veteran Volunteers Engineers in 1864 (Civil War) at Springfield IL. Enlisted at Chicago on 17 Sept for 2 years. “Mustered out” at Nashville TN 26 Sept 1865.
78After his discharge, the family moved to Crown Point, where he ran a contracting business which built the courthouse. Edna Ruth has letters that “the grandfather” (George?) wrote.
79Archie Mills recalled to his kids that he remembered when his grandfather John Mills died, he was laid out in a coffin with his Civil War uniform on and sword by his side. Archie remembered pushing a chair up by the side of the coffin so he could get a better look at the sword. As John was an engineer, not an officer, Edna Ruth and Kenny were perplexed as to where he got the sword. Turns out he was a prominent member of the Grand Army of the Republic, the VFW of the Civil War, which gave swords to its members. Unfortunately, the unit of the GAR of which John was a member had an argument with its commander and tossed him out. In a fit of spite, the commander then destroyed all the records!
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