Adam Beattie

Adam Beattie (born c. 1833 in or near Seneca, New York) was the captain of the New York 26th Independent Battery, Light Artillery Barnes’ Rifle Battery during the American Civil War. His parents were John and Nancy Beattie.

On November 28, 1862, Beattie was mustered at the age of 29 into the New York 26th Independent Battery (Light Artillery) as a 2nd Lieutenant. He was promoted to Vice First Lieutenant, then Captain of the Battery, by George W. Fox on March 29, 1863. He was honorably discharged on September 12, 1865 and mustered out at New Orleans. He returned to his family in Seneca, New York. He and his first wife, Mary E. Johnson, had a son, Willard Grant Beattie, in 1865.

Along with many residents of Seneca Falls County, New York, Beattie made his way to Ovid, Michigan where he was a grocer, ran for school board, and became Ovid's postmaster. His Civil War friend George Fox followed him to Ovid. On February 13, 1871, Fox was the master carpenter on a 22-man team building Ovid's First Congregational Church. The church was moved by oxen in 1899 and turned to face Main Street where it stands today as a residence.

Adam Beattie was married three times: first to Mary E. Johnson, then to Kate A. Hann (July 1843 - 10 September 1879) on November 1, 1869 ; and finally to Mary E. Hagin (1840 - April 1918) on April 3, 1883. Adam Beattie died at age 59 on June 26, 1893. Adam Beattie, George Fox, Mary E. Hagin, and Kate A. Hann are all buried in Ovid, Michigan's Maple Grove Cemetery; as some of the first settlers to the area to die, their tombstones are near the front entrance. Adam shares a large granite monument with his second wife Kate. His third wife Mary E. Hagin is buried nearby in an unmarked grave.

Read more about Adam Beattie:  References and Sources

Famous quotes containing the word adam:

    Cannons and fire-arms are cruel and damnable machines; I believe them to have been the direct suggestion of the Devil. If Adam had seen in a vision the horrible instruments his children were to invent, he would have died of grief.
    Martin Luther (1483–1546)