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Notes
a. Note:   At the end of the war he was a prisoner. After the war he returned to Yellow Creek and engaged in farming until 1873 when he began merchandizing in Houston County. Eventually he engaged in the furniture and undertaking business in Erin, Houston County, Tennessee. He was a Justice of the Peace and Clerk of Chancery Court for Houston County.
  According to William J. Nesbitt's biography on John Nesbitt family, James A.M. Nesbitt never married. However, there is a grave in the same Section A. of Oak Hill Cemetery in Houston County of a Maria P. Nesbitt (1851-1925).
Note:   In the Civil War he was a member of Company D, 49th Tennessee Volunteers.


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