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Calvin E. Johnson, Jr.
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A native of Georgia, Calvin Johnson lives near the historic town of
Kennesaw and he's a member of the Chattahoochee Guards Camp, Sons of Confederate Veterans. He is Chairman of the Confederate History and Heritage
Month for the Georgia Division Sons of Confederate Veterans.
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Confederate History Month Series
A Confederate History Minute (23) – by Calvin E. Johnson, Jr.
Remembering Mrs. Alberta Martin--Confederate Widow
Mrs. Alberta Martin was believed to be the last Confederate widow of a Confederate soldier. Since I wrote this, reports have arisen of yet another
Confederate widow.
The nation lost an historic lady in 2004. Mrs. Alberta Martin, the last known widow of a Confederate soldier, passed away on Memorial Day 2004. She
was 97 and a living link to history of which most people know little or nothing.
Mrs. Martin was born on December 4, 1906, at Dannely’s Crossroads, Coffee County , Alabama . The small country intersection has changed little since
her birth.
“Miss Alberta ” was born into a sharecropper’s family. They went wherever there was work for planters and pickers. She learned the hard work of
picking cotton at a young age.
Miss Alberta Martin married W.J. Martin in 1927. Martin was 82 and Alberta was 21. He had been a Confederate soldier over sixty years before
they married.
In July of 1997 Mrs. Martin made a pleasant trip to Gettysburg , Pennsylvania to a gathering of descendants of Confederate and Union soldiers. There,
Mrs. Martin met Mrs. Daisy Anderson who was the last widow of a Black Union soldier. The two ladies had a good conversation at the historic Dobbs
House. Mrs. Anderson passed away in 1998.
She was the widow of Private Robert Ball Anderson who served in the 125th United States Colored Troops.
The last Union widow, Mrs. Gertrude Janeway, died on January 2003.
Mrs. Martin spent much time with the Sons of Confederate Veterans and she believed in flying the Confederate Battle Flag “Cross of Saint Andrew.” In
2000 she participated in a rally in Columbia , South Carolina to support the flag which flew on the state capitol. Though in a wheel chair, Miss
Martin held her Southern flag and proudly waved it.
In 1996, Miss Alberta was escorted to the National Convention of the Sons of Confederate Veterans in Richmond , Virginia for their 100th birthday.
As she entered the meeting hall, everyone came to their feet and began singing “ Dixie ” to her honor.
People tried to hold back the tears of memory as they laid this Southern lady to rest in Alabama . She is now with Jesus, her family and General
Robert E. Lee. She had entered the gates of Heaven, she is home.
A native of Georgia, Calvin Johnson lives near the historic town of Kennesaw, home
of the locomotive "The General" from the War Between the States. He is Chairman of the Confederate History and Heritage
Month for the Georgia Division Sons of Confederate Veterans and he's the author of the book When America Stood for God, Family and
Country. His email is: cjohnson1861@bellsouth.net.
Confederate History Month Series
Confederate Heritage Month
Kidnapping of Roswell Mill Women
Confederate Memorial Day in Georgia
Why We Celebrate
Confederate History Month Series
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