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! Possible discrepancy
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There may have been two distinct "Samuel M. Echols"'s in Alabama during this time period. This would explain the discrepancy between birth dates and Confederate States Army records. See more in [[#Possible Conflicts]].
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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Samuel Moore Echols
| name = Samuel Moore Echols

Revision as of 01:52, 11 January 2026

Possible discrepancy

There may have been two distinct "Samuel M. Echols"'s in Alabama during this time period. This would explain the discrepancy between birth dates and Confederate States Army records. See more in #Possible Conflicts.

Samuel Moore Echols
...
Born Circa 1781 (Halifax County, Virginia)
Died June 29, 1864 (Madison County, Illinois)
Parents John Echols (born 1736) and Lucy Annah (Moore) Echols
Spouse Jane M. (Holloway) Echols
Children John Washington Echols, ...



Summary

Samuel Moore Echols, the son of John Echols, moved from Virginia to Northern Alabama (John Echols (born 1736)#Virginia to Alabama) along with father, mother, and siblings.

He may also be listed in the 1830 Federal Census, Alabama under the same "Sam M. Echols" in Morgan County, Alabama.

Possible Conflicts

Note that the 1850 federal census has an implied birth of 1781; however, findagrave lists a birth at 1816. If he had been born in 1816, then his father would have been 80 so I find this unlikely. In addition, the census lists his wife's birth year as 1783.

Additionally, he would have been captured at the age of 83 which is unusually old for his position in the Confederate States Army. His location as a solider is in the same general region of the Southern United States as his other records (meaning there is a significant likelihood that this is the same Samuel Echols) and Samuel must have been born in Virginia (meaning that even if his birth was recorded incorrectly, he must have been at least in his 60s).

Given the combination of these conflicts, there is a significant possibility of a second Samuel Echols in the northern Alabama and surrounding states region during this time period.

Timeline

Date Event
Circa 1781 Born in Virginia (1850 Federal Census, Alabama)
May 16, 1864 Captured in Resaca, Georgia as a PVT, Co. B, 29th Alabama (per tombstone)
June 29, 1864 Died as a result of Typhoid Malaria (per tombstone)

Tombstone

Samuel's tombstone, in the Confederate Cemetary of Alton, Madison County, Illinois, is inscribed with the following:


Echols, Samuel

PVT, Co. B, 29th Alabama

Captured; 05/16/64, Resaca, Georgia

d. 06/29/64 Typho Malaria

Buried; State Ground


Source: findagrave