The Act of Congress of March 3, 1871 was intended to reimburse Union supporters who had suffered losses inflicted from the Union Army during the Civil War. People asking for reimbursement had to prove their case against the Union, prove their loyalty to the Union, and provide witnesses supporting their claim. Twenty-two thousand claims were made, but less than a third were paid. Only those who could prove unquestionable loyalty and proof of loss were even considered.
One such claimant was Cyrus Albert Norman, who lived in one of the southern seceding states?Tennessee in Bradley County.
The following text is copied from
National Archive records. Included are depositions by J.C.Tipton,
Andrew
J. White, Robert E. Johnson, William H. [Dow?] and William Cate.
Remarks by the Special Commissioners
"The claimant in this case [Cyrus Norman] was a man of
poor health but a good farmer. None of the Union men about Cleveland
[Tennessee] doubt his loyalty to the cause of the United States.
Although unfit for
military service-being ruptured-yet he would not stay about when the
rebels
were and thus had to lie out in the thickets much of his time. His
witnesses
are men of intelligence and character (I know them all) and the facts
testified to by farmers who saw them. I am favorably impressed with the
claim.
signed John W. Ramsey, Special Commissioner.
Cyrus Norman's answers to questions asked
on his claim application. (Typed as closely as could be deciphered from
the
handwriting of the Special Commissioner.)
#2 "I resided the first part of the time [civil war] on my farm two
& a half miles north of Cleveland [Tenn.] and my family resided
there all the time. It was my own farm, about 80 acres were in
cultivation and about 80
were woodland. My occupation at the time I was at home was farming.
After I went through the lines [union lines], I was employed about June
1863 at Nashville by the United States Government in loading and
unloading boats
at the wharf under Capt. J.B. Cobb."
#3 "I went from my home near Cleveland in January 1862 with a load of
beef cattle to Savannah Ga., sold them and got back by the 10th of that
same month. I was within the Confederate lines at home and all the time
of the war up to the time I left and went to Nashville."
#13 "I left & went to Nashville to keep from being conscripted."
[forced into confederate service.]
#22 "On the 10th of December 1862. I tried to go through to the Federal
lines and with nine others travelled by night making our own skiff to
cross Tennessee river & crossed it in the night and went into
[Sequatshe?]
Valley, say about sixty miles from Cleveland where I took sick and was
not
able to go on. I remained there about fifteen or twenty days and then
slipped
back home. From this time I was hid at home and about home till the
17th
of May, 1863. This was the first time I had a chance to get a pilot to
take
me through the lines. At this time my family heard that a pilot named
Thomas
Springen, who was recruiting for General Spear's Brigade, was in the
county
that night. I met a party of Union men and these men collected in
Candys
Creek Valley and on the night of the 18th of May, 1863 we crossed
Tennessee
River. There were eighty-three of us got through under the guidance of
Springen
to Somerset in Kentucky inside of the Federal lines. There I went to
Louisville
and there to Nashville, Tennessee. I went to get out of the influence
&
control of the rebels. I got employed at Nashville under the Federal
Goverment
in loading and unloading boats and remained about the 15th of August,
1863
when knowing that my wife was on the eve of confinemen; I started back
expecting the Federal lines to reach Cleveland every day. I got home
about the 1st
of September, 1863. I had to hide out a few days till the rebels got
off
south of us. After the Battle of Chickamauga, the Rebels got control of
Bradley County again?till the battle of [Mission?] Bridge. After the
battle
of Chickamauga, I left home & piloted some friends to the Federal
lines
about ??????????????????????????????????all the rebels again fled south
after the battle of [Mission?] Bridge.
#25 I had one fine bay mare taken by the Confederate. I had a larger
quantity of corn taken by them. I also had a large fat cow killed by
them.
They took up about a hundred dozen of sheaf oats. They in fact took all
the corn and oats that I had got raised in 1863. There were proceedings
commenced against my property in the latter part of the year 1862 while
I was lying out. They supposed that I had got through the Union lines.
I
never received any pay for the property taken by the rebels.
#26 I heard of threats being made again and again but after I first
left I never showed myself any more. Others did, but did not hear them
myself.
#27 I was. They took my property and told my family I got drowned in
crossing Tennessee River.
#28 I aided all the Union men that I could that passed my house to the
Union lines. After the Union armies got the country I always gave them
what I could to eat but my property had so nearly all been taken that I
had but little to help or to spare.
#29 I did what I could for it. I piloted a few dismounted Federal
Cavalry men to a point within the union lines and at different times
gave officers and soldiers all the information I could to help on the
cause.
#30 I had no near relatives in the Confederate army.
#40 From the beginning to the end, my sympathies were with the United
States. My feelings and language was on that side and my influences. I
voted against "separation" from the U.S.A. We never had a chance to
vote for the rejection of their scheme of separation. I clung to the
Union and let the State go. On the subject of property taken. [by the
Union Army] On May
1864 a Cavaly Regiment [Union] if I recollect right took possession of
my
clover field of twenty acres of good clover and pastured and fed it
away
so as to entirely destroy the field so that the clover did not after
that
produce any other crop; though I tried it the next season, till I saw
it
would not make anything. The clover would have averaged a ton and a
half
to the acre. This was all the clover I had. The bacon charged for is
the
meat of thirteen hogs I had that were taken by Genr'l O.O. Howard's
Division
[11th army] of General Sherman's riding on their return from their
relief
of Knoxville. A body of men were sent out and got the hogs. Some
officers
sent word to me by a neighbor to come and get a voucher for my hogs but
before
I got the word the army had moved on and I did not get any voucher or
showing
of any such. These hogs were estimated by neighbors to well over a
hundred
pounds each. Pork was worth at least 12 1/2 cents per pound. I got no
voucher
for the pork or hay. I did not at the time know anything about getting
receipts
or vouchers or the necessity for them. I was so glad to see the Federal
army
around me that I thought but little of the property at the time. It was
only
after the army was gone & I found myself without provisions or
money
or any provider with which to raise a crop, or get a start again in the
world
that I saw the necessity for a little pay to help me again get a start
in
the world. The hogs were taken December the 13th, 1863. No others but
soldiers took my hay. And it was soldiers got my hogs-as I learned, for
I did not
see the hogs taken. A neighbor named [Emmet] Johnson
sent
me word that the Lieutenant in charge of the men who got my hogs said
for
me to come and get the voucher but I did not get the word for some four
or
five days. [Emmet] Johnson sent the word by
Joseph
B. Cobb but Cobb failed for the four or five days to give me
the
word. The hogs were brought to Cleveland and killed and eaten by the
army.
They were taken in the daytime. I know that the army was on the return
from
the forced march for the relief of Gen'l [Burnside?]
at
Knoxville and that the army was living off of the country. The hay was
used on the farm for the regiment [were recruiting?] up their horses.
No complaint was made either about the hay or the pork. No part of this
claim has ever
peen paid.
signed, C.A. Norman
Sworn statements were made by witnesses and neighbors of C.A.Norman
attesting to the facts he gave.
Deposition #1 My name is J.C.Tipton, my age is 58,
residence Cleveland Tenn. I am Clerk of the Circuit Court of Bradley
County. Tenn.
I am not related to the claimant C.A. Norman and have no interest in
his
claim. I was well acquainted with the family of the claimant for many
years
but the clamaint was a young man and I was not so well acquainted him,
but
had a slight acquaintance with him. I understood at the time that he
left
in 1862 or so that he left and went to the Federal Army. I am satisfied
that he was loyal to the cause of the Union. Such was his reputation
and this was understood among the Union men of Cleveland, Tenn. But I
do not now remember that I ever talked to him before he left for the
Union Army. But I saw him repeatedly after the Federal troops got
possession of the county. For he came
back with them or about the same time.
Deposition #2 My name is William H. [Dow?]. My age 52
years, residence Cleveland Tenn. I am a blacksmith. I am not related to
the claimant and have no interest in his claim. I have known the
claimant for more than 20 years and lived, until we both left and went
to the Federal lines,
in about two miles of him. I knew both him and his father intimately
and
they were the firmest of Union men. I knew him intimately till he left
and
frequently talked to him about the war. His father was one of our main
minute
men that rode about the county to get the news for us. I knew the
sentiments
of the claimant and they were all the time for the Union. I was an
adherent
of the Union cause and the claimant knew it and did not fear to speak
to
me confidentially. I also knew his public reputation that he was a firm
and
steadfast Union man and the Union men about Cleveland all knew it. I
knew
that he left this part of the county to avoid the rebel rub and went to
Nashville.
I saw him at that place and he did not return to Cleveland till the
Federal
army reached Cleveland. I know that his devotion to the Union cause
never
failed, and I am satisfied that he never did anything to aid the rebel
cause.
Deposition #3 My name is Andrew J. White, age 59,
reside in Cleveland, Tenn. I am Public Trustee for Bradley county,
Tenn. I have
know the claimant 18 or 20 years and I lived about five miles from him.
I
knew that the claimant was a Union man. i talked with him frequently in
the
early part of the war before he left this part of the country and went
inside
the Union lines. After that I did not see him any more till he came
back
after the Union army got here. I knew his public reputation for loyalty
to
the United States and it was that he was loyal all the time. I was an
adherent of the Union cause and claimant knew it. Our talks were
private, for we
were closely watched in this county in the early part of the war by
rebels.
I am satisfied the claimant never did anything intentionally to aid or
comfort the Confederate cause.
Deposition #4 My name is Robert E. Johnson, residence
near Cleveland. I'm a farmer over forty five years of age. I had in the
fall or early of 1863 been asked by the father of the claimant to look
after
the claimant's hogs that ran near me. The claimant at that time being
absent from that part of the country. These hogs were hardly a half
mile from my house and I was engaged hauling seed corn and saw the hogs
frequently till the return of General Sherman's army to this place from
Knoxville in December 1863, when one day an officer of the Federal army
with some men came to my house with a drove of sheep and hogs taking to
the army that was then camped about Cleveland. He stopped at my house
and asked me about my sheep and whether he had any of my hogs in his
drove. I told him I saw one. And I told him he
had the neighbors hogs generally; for I knew some of them. Among the
hogs that I knew were the claimants. I knew the claimants hogs, having
for sometime paid attention to them. I do not now recollect the exact
number, size or description,
but there must have been at least ten of the hogs and some of them at
least
were good killing hogs and in good condition. They were taken on to
camp.
The officer told me to tell my neighbors to come next day and get
vouchers
and I tried to send word to the claimant by a neighbor of his, who had
first
got home from through the Federal lines, to come and get a voucher; but
I
found out afterwards that this neighbor failed to give the word to the
claimant,
who thus failed to come and get his voucher. Pork was very scarce and
dear.
It was worth ten to fifteen cents per pound. I do not know anything
about
the other matters in the claim. That part of the army remained but a
few
days at Cleveland. The neighbor who I sent word by to the claimant was
Joseph
B. Cobb, who had been for sometime at Nashville, Tennessee. The officer
said
they did not have anything to eat at camp.
Deposition #5 My name is William Cate, age 61 years,
residence 2 1/2 miles north of Cleveland. I am a farmer. I was
acquainted
with the claimants farm and our farms joined each other and in passing
his
farm in the spring of 1864 I saw the horses belonging to the Federal
army
and especially of the --- camp at Cleveland on his meadow. The crop of
that
year was eaten out. The land was not first crop, but was second crop
and
fresh and in the hands of a good farmer and yielded good crops. It was
clover,
though there was a slip of --grass along our side where the land was
moist.
There was one field of about fifteen acres that was eaten out by the
stock
of the Federal army. But the Federal army pastured on two other fields
of
the claimant but did not entirely eat out the crop for that year. The
claimant
pastured these fields some himself. One of these fields contained about
twelve
acres and the other field about forty acres. The Federal army got at
least
two thirds of the good of the first crop from these two fields. In my
judgement, the field pastured out would at a very reasonable estimate
have yielded from fifteen hundred to eighteen hundred pounds of hay per
acre. The two others and smaller fields would have made not more than a
thousand pounds of good cured hay. These two small small fields were
thinner and older land. I sold the Federal army that year a larger
quantity of hay at one dollar per hundred pounds and that was the
---the government gave for hay in this country. The Court of Claims
final decision. Cyrus Norman asked for compensation for 1,225 pounds of
pork valued at $153 and 20 acres of clover valued at
$600 ; a total of $753. The following is the courts findings. "Cyrus
Norman
is a farmer over 45 years of age. He owned a farm near Cleveland
Tennessee,
which was his home throughout the war. In June 1863, he want to
Nashville
and was in the employment of the U.S. Government. He made one or two
attempts
previous to that time to escape from the Confederate lines but failed.
Muuch
of his property was taken by the Confederates without making payment.
Supposing
he had got within the Union lines, proceedings were commenced against
his
property in the fall of 1862. He aided Union men leaving the
Confederate
lines, furnished them with provisions, gave information to officers and
soldiers
of the Federal army and was threatened on account of his Unionism. The
proofs
establish his loyalty." "Hogs were taken by the Union army in December
1863.
The proof shows about ten hogs taken netting about 100 pounds each.
Vouchers
were promised, but never given. Bacon at that time was 8 cents per
pound
as appears on commissary prices. The 20 acres of clover was pastured by
Federal
horses in May 1864. At this time of the year no such amount of clover
could
have been grown and standing on the ground as is charged. This item is
grossly
extravagant. This is apparent from the testimony of Cate, the last
witness.
The claim has never before been presented for payment. We recommend the
payment
of $150 Cyrus apparently received this amount in March of 1877-four
years
after giving his claim.
Cyrus Norman was the son of James H. and Nancy [Wiley] Norman. They lived along Clingan Ridge just North of Cleveland Tennessee for perhaps as long as 20 years before the Civil War. Cyrus married Martha Jane Clingan, who was part Cherokee, shortly before the War. The Cobb, Clingan, Cowan and Sprigg families?all of which were related through marriage to the Clingans, also lived around or near this area in the 1860's. After the war, Cyrus's family moved along with some members of these other families to Cherokee Indian Nation in what is now Oklahoma. All were apparently Union supporters; and my thoughts are, that part of the reason they left was they hoped to escape the atmosphere that was sure to have been lingering between them and their downtrodden neighbors. Cyrus Norman was my G-G-Grandfather and I was born and raised a few miles from where he settled near Wagoner, OK. You are welcome to use this info any way you like. My name is Danny Williams and I live in Sand Springs, OK.