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Tennessee's - Governor / CSA General - William B. Bate - Framed Personal Display

$ 175.29

Availability: 89 in stock
  • Condition: Used

    Description

    Here is a framed item that I made.  This wonderful framed display includes a black/white reprinted photo of Mr. Bate as Governor of Tennessee and a
    GENUINE Personal Check
    that he wrote in Washington D.C. about 1901(?).
    William Bate was born in Castalian Springs, ( Sumner County )Tennessee on October 7, 1826 and died in Washington, D.C. on March 9, 1905.
    *****  Read more information on William B. Bate below  *****
    Mr. Bate was also a MAJOR GENERAL in the Confederate Army during the Civil War.
    The size of this frame is 16 1/2 by 22 7/8 inches.  The frame is a very old wood frame that I found and bought to create this display.  The check included here is guaranteed to be 100% genuine ( with his signature ) or your money back.
    ******   Protected Shipping is $ 25.00 to all U.S States.   ******
    William B. Bate
    William Brimage Bate
    (October 7, 1826 – March 9, 1905) was an American soldier and politician. He served as
    Governor of Tennessee
    from 1883 to 1887, and subsequently served as a
    United States Senator
    from 1887 until his death. During the
    Civil War
    , he fought for the
    Confederacy
    , eventually rising to the rank of
    major general
    and commanding a
    division
    in the
    Army of Tennessee
    .
    Bate was born in Bledsoe's Lick (now
    Castalian Springs
    ) in
    Sumner County, Tennessee
    , the son of James H. Bate and Amanda Weatherred Bate. He attended a log schoolhouse known as the "Rural Academy." When he was 15, his father died, and he left home to find work. He was eventually hired as a clerk on the steamboat,
    Saladin
    , which traveled up and down the
    Cumberland
    ,
    Ohio
    , and
    Mississippi
    rivers between
    Nashville
    and
    New Orleans
    .
    Following the
    Battle of Fort Sumter
    in April 1861, Bate enlisted in a private company in Gallatin, and was elected as its captain. In early May, after Tennessee aligned itself with the Confederacy, Bate was elected
    colonel
    of the 2nd Tennessee Infantry. This unit was quickly dispatched to Virginia, where it was among the forces tasked with guarding the
    Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad
    . Bate was present at the
    Battle of Aquia Creek
    on May 30, 1861.
    At the
    First Battle of Bull Run
    (First Battle of Manassas) in July 1861, Bate was in the reserve brigade of
    Theophilus Holmes
    in the
    Confederate Army of the Potomac
    After Senator
    Howell Jackson
    resigned in 1886, Bate appointed
    Washington C. Whitthorne
    to fill out his term, which was set to expire in March 1887. The
    Tennessee General Assembly
    then elected Bate to fill the Senate seat.
    Governor Bate's paternal grandfather, Colonel Humphrey Bate (1779–1856), was an early settler in Sumner County.
    Governor Bate's middle name comes from his paternal grandmother (Colonel Humphrey Bate's first wife), Elizabeth Brimage.
    After the death of Elizabeth Brimage, Colonel Humphrey Bate married Anna Weatherred, sister of Governor Bate's mother, Amanda.
    Several of Governor Bate's relatives, including his brother, Captain Humphrey Bate (1828–1862), were killed or wounded at the Battle of Shiloh.
    Dr.
    Humphrey Bate
    (1875–1936), a cousin of Governor Bate, was a noted harmonica player and
    string band
    leader, and was one of the first musicians to perform on the
    Grand Ole Opry
    in the 1920s