In 1865 the 117th Illinois Infantry Regiment fought in the final battle for Mobile. During the campaign, young William Tate Osborne (said to be born February 12, 1855, in slavery near Monroeville, Alabama, the setting for To Kill a Mockingbird) attached himself to the soldiers, who turned him over to Colonel Jonathan Merriam. Later, William took charge of Merriam's horse, Frank. Part of the larger Mobile Campaign, this encounter was the one of the last official battles of the Civil War. As the battlecommenced, a Union force with 16,000-strong marched against a much smaller Confederate army composed of just 4,000 soldiers. The battle lasted only a few hours, and the Union army won by sheer size alone. When all was said and done, only 200 Confederate soldiers escaped; nearly 3,400 were taken as prisoners of war to Ship Island and another250 lost. |
|
1854 |
Born in Alabama as a slave |
1865 |
Encounters Lt. Colonel Jonathan Merriam and attaches himself with the 117th IL Infantry |
1865 |
Continues with Merriam after the end of the Civil War to his farm near Atlanta, IL |
1865-1869 |
Lives with Merriam and learns to read, though he is discriminated against in the local school |
1869 |
Travels to Wheaton to begin his studies in the preparatory program |
1869 |
Joins College Church |
July, 1876 |
Moves to Quincy, IL, formerly an ardent abolitionist town on the Mississippi River |
1878 |
Moves to Monroe City, MO and marries Parthena Buckner. He also joins the African-Methodist Episcopal Church |
1879 |
Receives A.M (masters degree) from Wheaton College |
1884 |
Ordained a Deacon in the A.M.E. Church |
1885 |
Living in Shelbina, Missouri and a son is born |
1887 |
Parthena and William have a daughter |
1888 |
Ordained an Elder in the A.M.E. Church |
1888-1906 |
Pastors churches in Louisiana and Monroe City, MO |
1906-1909 |
Pastor in Helena, MT |
1910-1912 |
Pastor in Seattle, WA |
1912-1917 |
Pastor of St. John's A.M.E. Church in Omaha, Nebraska |
1918-1923 |
Pastor of Ebenezer A.M.E. Church in Kansas City, MO |
1928-1930 |
Pastor of Trinity A.M.E. Church in Kansas City, MO |
January 15, 1932 |
Dies in Kansas City, MO |
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