Absolom Brown "Little Brown" Clontz

Male 1833 - 1918  (84 years)


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  • Name Absolom Brown "Little Brown" Clontz 
    Birth 18 Jul 1833  (Mecklenburg County, North Carolina) Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Reference Number Franz Clontz 
    Death 15 Mar 1918  Paulding County, Georgia Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Burial Bethel United Methodist Church Cemetery, Hiram, Paulding County, Georgia Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    Person ID I9632  The Hennessee Family
    Last Modified 6 Apr 2001 

    Father John Jacob Clontz,   b. 27 Sep 1790, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 12 Jan 1894, Paulding County, Georgia Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 103 years) 
    Mother Elizabeth "Betsey" Shelby,   b. 12 Jan 1794, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 10 Sep 1892, Paulding County, Georgia Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 98 years) 
    Marriage 16 Feb 1815  Mecklenburg County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  [4
    • blessing by James McLarty, Bondsman
    Family ID F3263  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 18 Jul 1833 - (Mecklenburg County, North Carolina) Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 15 Mar 1918 - Paulding County, Georgia Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBurial - - Bethel United Methodist Church Cemetery, Hiram, Paulding County, Georgia Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • ------

      Private, Co. "F", Regt. Ga. Volunteer Infantry,
      Army of Tennessee, CSA
      Paulding Washington Guards, Paulding Co.,GA
      Enlisted March 4, 1862
      Captured at Vicksburg,MS, July 4, 1863
      Paroled July 6, 1863
      Absent & Sick December 31, 1863.

      -----

      Never married.

      -----

      This letter, written by "Little Brown", was found by Thelma Clonts in the
      Georgia State Archives;



      "Resaca, Georgia
      May 14, 1864


      Dear Father and Mother:

      I received your kind letter of the 8th of this instant and was glad to
      hear from you. These lines leave me tolerable well as to health, but my legs
      and feet is pestering now as bad as ever. I hope these lines may soon reach
      you and find you enjoying good health. I have not got time to write much to
      you at this time. It is busy times with us today. We have to draw rations
      and cook and carry them to the company every night. These has been a continual
      roar of cannon and small arms at this place for two days. I have not been to
      the regiment since last night. I don't know whether any of the boys are hurt
      or not. I will have to go to the regiment between now (and) morning. The
      Yanks are shelling Calhoun today, and it may be a close race between us and
      the Yanks to Atlanta. I think surely this fight will be the last hard fight
      we will have. I believe that our folks will have to give some proposals of
      peace before long, if we don't whip this fight. I do hope and pray with all
      my heart that the time is close for these troublesome times to close, when the
      wearied soldiers shall all be blessed with the privilege of returning home to
      spend the balance of their days with their kindred and friends, never to be
      called on to serve in as cruel a war as this, while life lasts.

      May the Lord keep us all from harm and danger is my constant desire. I
      remain as ever

      your affectionate Son."


      Thelma continues to say that

      "The 1870 census for Paulding Co.,GA, Brownsville Post Office, dated,
      September 8, 1870, shows that Absolom Brown was living with his father, Jacob,
      80, and his mother, Elizabeth, 76. He eventually farmed on land next to his
      father's, on Sweetwater Creek, that was considered a model farm at the time.
      His youngest sister, Mary Ellen Clonts Tidwell, lived with him after she was
      widowed, in 1865, until Tidwell lived with him after she was widowed in 1865
      until she remarried and possible after she was widowed the second time in
      1869. "Little Brown", so called to differentiate him from another relative
      called, "Big Brown", (possibly John Dennis Brown Clonts or Lemuel Brown Meek,
      son of Rachel Elizabeth Clonts and Lemuel Carter Meek) reared her son,
      W.J.Tidwell,Jr., and possibly her daughter, Sally Taylor.

      The widow of his nephew, Jacob Henry Clonts, the son of John Green Clonts,
      also lived with "Little Brown" for at least a while and he helped to rear her
      three daughters - Mano, Bessie & Kate. C.R. Clonts remembered this great uncle
      with affection & that he limped due to war wounds."

  • Sources 
    1. [S11965] "The Clontz Family",by Franz J. Clontz,173-17 89th Avenue,Jamaica,NY 11432,, 112 & 114 (Reliability: 3).

    2. [S6676] Penley,Thelma; personal knowledge, research & abstractions;.

    3. [S9308] Clonts,Barbara:Abstract of Paulding Co.,GA cemeteries,received 9 Apr 2001.

    4. [S11965] "The Clontz Family",by Franz J. Clontz,173-17 89th Avenue,Jamaica,NY 11432,, p. 53 (Reliability: 3).