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Col.
John B. Palmer
© 2007, Michael C. Hardy
John B. Palmer was born in Plattsburg, Clinton County, New York,
on October 13, 1826. His father, John Palmer, was a lawyer and two-term
legislator from Clinton County in the United States Congress. His
mother was Charlotte Theresa Sailly, whose parents came from France.
Both John B. Palmer’s grandfather and great-grandfather were
members of the 14th New York Militia during the American Revolution.
His father died in 1840, and John B. went to Detroit, Michigan,
where one of his brothers and one of his sisters lived.
In Detroit, Palmer quickly established himself, going into the mercantile
business with his brother-in-law, James A. Hicks. Palmer also had
an interest in the shipping business, and in 1849, was one of the
trustees of the new Detroit Savings Bank. On October 12, 1852, Palmer
married Miss Frances Marvin Kirby, the daughter of Colonel Edmund
Kirby and Eliza Brown, of New York. Miss Kirby was the first cousin
of Edmond Kirby Smith, became a lieutenant general in the Confederate
army. Her brother, a Federal artillery captain named Edmond Kirby,
was killed at Chancellorsville. Palmer continued to rise through
the ranks of society. In 1856 he was one of the directors of the
new Detroit Board of Trade, and a year later was elected president
of the Detroit Young Men’s Literary Society. About this time,
and possibly for health reasons, or because of a relationship with
the famous Childs family, he began looking at western North Carolina
as a new home.
Palmer settled on a tract of land in what was then Watauga County,
and made arrangements to have a house constructed. A historian once
wrote that Palmer "had built the finest house in all the area
that became Avery County." Palmer called his estate "Grasslands."
According to the 1860 census, John B. Palmer’s personal and
real estate value was $105,000, making him one of the wealthiest
men in western North Carolina, but he simply listed his occupation
as "farmer." Palmer quickly became an important member
of the region’s society. In June 1861, he wrote to North Carolina
Governor Ellis requesting the General Assembly to call a special
election to fill the seat of George N. Folk, who had resigned to
raise a company for the new Confederacy. A few months later, Palmer
was appointed as one of the commissioners to select a county seat
for one of the newest counties in the state: Mitchell County.
December 1861 found Palmer raising a company for North Carolina’s
contribution to the Southern war effort. Why Palmer joined the South
in her quest for independence is a mystery. At the age of 35 in
1861, he was beyond the age for conscription. Both he and his wife
also had many relatives who fought for the Union. Whatever his reasons
for supporting the Confederate cause, on December 11, 1861, Palmer
was elected captain of the "Mitchell Rangers." In early
1862, Palmer was authorized to raise "Palmer’s Legion."
A legion during the Civil War was an organization composed of infantry,
cavalry, and artillery. Legions were falling out of favor with the
Confederate government, but on May 13, 1862, Palmer was promoted
to lieutenant colonel of the 5th Battalion, North Carolina Partisan
Rangers. Palmer created a training camp, called Camp Martin, on
his property, and begin to recruit men. In July 1862, Palmer was
promoted to Colonel and assigned to the newly created 58th North
Carolina Troops, then forming at Johnson’s Depot (now Johnson
City), Tennessee.
Colonel Palmer led the 58th NCT out of camp in August 1862 and headed
for Cumberland Gap, Tennessee. At the Gap, Palmer was placed in
charge of paroling recently captured prisoners. He was ordered into
Kentucky in late 1862, but the 58th did not arrive in time to participate
in the battle of Richmond. From Kentucky, Palmer led the 58th to
various areas of east Tennessee, guarding railroads and supplies.
In September 1863, Palmer and the 58th were ordered to Chickamauga,
Georgia, and assigned to the Army of Tennessee. Colonel Palmer was
wounded in the desperate fighting the 58th performed while routing
the Yankees from their stubborn defenses. Colonel Palmer and the
58th gained great praise from their commanders. Major General Stevenson
wrote that Colonel Palmer "performed his duties with such admirable
zeal and efficiency that I have thought it due to so worthy an officer
to add my humble merits." There was serious talk of promoting
Palmer to the rank of brigadier general. Palmer returned to the
58th on November 1, 1863, and on November 19, 1863, was reassigned
to command the department of Western North Carolina.
With his headquarters in Asheville, Palmer was given an area to
defend and not nearly enough troops to do the job. There were constant
raids from east Tennessee into western North Carolina, raids from
both Federal soldiers and bushwhackers. It was during one of these
raids in June 1864 that Unionists from Tennessee set out to raid
the conscription camp near Morganton. On their return, the group
burnt Palmer’s house at Grasslands. Palmer continued to do
what he could with his limited forces, rounding up deserters in
western North Carolina and helping with Confederate campaigns in
Union-controlled east Tennessee. In the last days of the war, Palmer
was given a field command, and the department was turned over to
Brigadier General Joseph G. Martin. Palmer was paroled in Athens,
Georgia, on May 8, 1865.
Colonel Palmer moved to South Carolina not long after the war, but
continued to hold on to his property in present-day Avery County.
He and his wife made several trips to Europe after the war. Colonel
Palmer became president of the Charlotte, Columbia, and Augusta
Railroad and president of the Southern Security Commission. He also
served as president of two different banks in Columbia, South Carolina.
In 1879, Palmer purchased 80 acres of orange groves in a new winter
resort area in Central Florida: Winter Park. His property was located
on Lake Maitland. Both a street in the new town and a canal were
named after Colonel Palmer. In 1882 Palmer gave $50 towards the
construction of a new depot in Winter Park for the South Florida
Railroad. Palmer and his family continued to travel between Florida,
South Carolina, and New York. On April 30, 1889, Palmer sold his
Avery County property to George R. Watkins, who built the Watkins
House. Colonel John B. Palmer died on December 10, 1893, possibly
in Florida at his Winter Park estate, and was interred in the Elmwood
Cemetery in Columbia, South, Carolina. His wife, known as Fannie,
moved to New York City after his death and was known for her philanthropic
work. She died in 1921 and is also buried in Columbia, South Carolina. |
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©2008 Michael C.
Hardy
©2008 Barry Houck
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All
Rights Reserved |
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