Soldier Information
Name: James Venable
Alias: Vanible
Place of Birth: Shelby KY Year of Birth: 1840
Occupation: Laborer
Eyes: Black Hair: Black Complexion: Black
Height in Feet: 5 Inches: 6
View Ledger
Enlistment Information
Enlistment Date: September 8, 1864
Enlistment Place: Louisville
Enlistment State: KY
Compiled Military Service Record
Document: View
Congressional District: 4th
Company: K Regiment(s): 107th Regt USCI
Mustered Where: Louisville, KY
Mustered Out Date:
Rank at Muster Out: Private
Notes:
Shortly after being mustered into Co. C 107th USCI at Louisville, Kentucky, James Venable was in the hospital. He spent time in and out of hospitals during his service and died of an unspecified “disease” in the Point of Rocks field hospital in Chester County, Virginia on January 12, 1865.
Soldier Death Information
Died in war? Yes
Military Death Date: January 12, 1865
Military Death Location: Point of Rocks, Virginia, Chester County
Military Cause of Death: Disease
Death Date: January 12, 1865
Cause of Death: Disease
Soldier Pension Information
No pension card found
Widow Pension Information
Widow Pension Card: Pension Card
Widow Application Date: January 21, 1869
Application No.: 170728 Certificate No.: 129844
No other family pension card found
Pension File Information
Pension File: Pension File
Pensioners: Jane Venable
James Venable
Walter Venable
Pensioner County: Jefferson Pensioner State: KY
Number of Pages:2
Pension Notes:
The pension file from January 15, 1865 shows that James Venable’s widow, Jane Venable, was entitled to receive $8 per month for her pension. In addition to her widow’s pension, Jane Venable was to receive an extra $2 per month for each of her two minor children, James Venable and Walter Venable, until each son turned 16 years old. At the time of the pension award, James Venable was about three-years-old and Walter Venable was about two-years-old. The pension was to commence on January 15, 1866. On January 21, 1869, a widow’s pension card was issued for Jane Venable. No mention of any minor children was made and the pension card was last document issued for Jane Venable and/or her children.
Freedman’s Bank/Freedmen’s Bureau Information
No Freedman’s Bank information found
No Freedmen’s Bureau Documents found
Family Information
Mother First Name: Mother Maiden Name:
Father First Name: Father Last Name:
Siblings:
Wife #1 First Name: Jane Maiden Name:
Wife #2 First Name: Maiden Name:
Wife #3 First Name: Maiden Name:
Children: James Venable 1862
Walter Venable 1864
Family Notes:
After Jane Venable’s pension card was issued in 1869, there were no further records of either Jane Venable and/or her two sons, James Venable and Walter Venable. It is possible that either Jane Venable died or remarried. It is also possible that both sons either died or, if Jane remarried, that they assumed the surname of their stepfather. Further research is needed to determine if any of the three Venable family members survived past 1869.
Family Tree:
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1870 Census
1870 Census information not found
1880 Census
1880 Census information not found
1890 Census
1890 Census information not found
1900 Census
1900 Census information not found
1910 Census
1910 Census information not found
1920 Census
1920 Census information not found
Enslaver Information
Name: Dr William Joseph Morton Location: Shelby County, Shelbyville, Kentucky
Previous Enslaver:
Enslaver Notes:
Dr. William J. Morton (1817-1896) was the son of William Quinn Morton (1794-1850) and Elizabeth McRobert Venable (1795-1863). His parents were enslavers and it is likely that James Venable came to be enslaved by Dr. Morton through his wife’s family. Dr. Morton was educated at Centre College and the Louisville College of Medicine. He married his second wife, Ellen S. Gatewood (1822-1880) in 1867 and relocated to the Racine, Wisconsin area. Dr. Morton increased his wealth after the Civil War by investing in real estate in Louisville, Cincinnati, and Chicago.
1850 Enslaver Census
1850 Census Link: View
1850 Slave Schedule Link: View
1850 Number of Enslaved: 10
1860 Enslaver Census
1860 Census Link: View
1860 Real Estate Value: 1860 Personal Estate Value: $6,260
1860 Slave Schedule Link: View
1860 Number of Enslaved: 11
1870 Enslaver Census
1870 Census Link: View
1870 Real Estate Value: $100,000 1870 Personal Estate Value: $14,000
1880 Enslaver Census
Compensation Information
Compensation Application not found