By
far the most noted Brantley Confederate Officer during the civil war was
Brigadier General William Felix Brantley. We discussed the General in
the 2nd and 4th reports.
General
Brantley began his military career in 1861 as Captain of The Wigfall
Rifles (Company D 15th Mississippi Infantry, later the 29th Infantry).
He was rapidly advanced to the rank of Colonel, and commanded his
regiment at the great battles of Murfreesboro and Chickamauga. For his
part in the fight on Lookout Mountain, he was particularly commended by
Colonel Walthall, the Brigade Commander. At Resaca, Georgia he led a
charge on the enemy that was of notable gallantry and his line three
time repulsed the Union assaults. At the battle of Ezra Church, near
Atlanta, General Samuel Benton was killed and Colonel Brantley took
command of the brigade, which he retained with his promotion to
Brigadier- General, to the close of the war. The General was
assassinated at Winona, Mississippi on November 2, 1970. He is buried
at the local Greensboro Cemetery.
General
Brantley was born on March 12, 1830 in Green County, Alabama to William
and Marinda (Jolly) Brantley. His father was the son of Malachi
Brantley and Polly Thomas once of Hancock County, Georgia and previously
of Edgecombe County, N.C. Wm Felix and at least three of his brothers
were highly educated for their day. He had began law practice in 1852
at Greensboro, Mississippi. The three brothers were: Dr John Ransom
Brantley, Arnold J Brantley (Mayor of Winona, Miss), Albert Horton
Brantley (District Attorney). Another brother was Edmund, who died in a
gun dual in Tennessee. He had two sisters, Mary and Missouri.
Missouri Brantley married Josiah Dunn. This area in Mississippi where
this family lived had one of the worst reputations for violence in that
area in that day and time. Except for Albert, all these brothers died
violent deaths. As mentioned, his brother Edmund died in a gun dual.
His brother, Dr John Ransom Brantley was killed in Gonzales, Texas in
1859 by the hand of David Balzell. On August 16, 1870, his brother
Arnold J Brantley, mayor of Winona, was shot in cold blood, according to
reports. The "Weekly Clarion" stated in November 1970 that it was the
General's attempt to bring to justice the party responsible for the
murder of his brother, that led to his own. None of the latter
assassins were ever apprehended. Even his nephew William Dunn, son of
his sister Missouri, was shot and killed in Greensboro, by a man named
Story in 1872. On November 2, 1870, the General
was ambushed about one half mile east of Winona. He had been warned of
the dangers of traveling from Winona to Greensboro. He stated that he
intended to go wherever his business called him.
The Clarion article
described General Brantley as being possessed of remarkably sound
judgment, a man who allowed no danger to turn him from the right or left
once his mind was made up.
His
grave with his image chiseled in the tombstone is in the Greensboro,
Mississippi Cemetery. He had married first Cornelia Medley and later
Julia Cunningham. Of all his children, only one daughter lived to
adulthood. She was Mary T. (Brantley) Knight. She died in 1943 in St
Louis, Missouri.
Ken Brantley
The
life and genealogy of General Brantley was discussed in our 4th
Report and supplemented in our
5th Report.