John Q. Loomis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bornc. 1824
DiedDecember 4, 1869(1869-12-04) (aged 44–45)
Buried
Wetumpka City Cemetery
Allegiance
John Quincy Loomis
Bornc. 1824
DiedDecember 4, 1869(1869-12-04) (aged 44–45)
Buried
Wetumpka City Cemetery
Allegiance
Branch
Years of service
  • 1847–1848
  • 1861–1863
RankColonel
Commands
Battles / wars
Other workLawyer

John Quincy Loomis (c.1824 – December 4, 1869) was a Confederate States Army officer who held brigade command during the American Civil War.

A veteran of the Mexican–American War, Loomis became a small-town lawyer during the antebellum period. An advocate of secession, he led the local militia company in the first weeks of the Siege of Pensacola. After the start of the American Civil War, Loomis became commander of an artillery company and then rose to battalion command in late 1861. Before the Battle of Shiloh, he was made colonel of the 25th Alabama Infantry Regiment. Wounded while leading the regiment at Shiloh, Loomis commanded a brigade at the beginning of the Battle of Stones River. However, he was wounded at the beginning of the Confederate attack at Stones River and resigned from the army afterwards. Returning to his practice as a lawyer, Loomis died several years after the end of the war.

Born c. 1824 in South Carolina according to census and muster data, Loomis became a lawyer in Alabama during the antebellum period. He was first sergeant of Captain John Gorham Barr's Company A of the 1st Alabama Volunteer Infantry Battalion that mustered into service during the Mexican–American War on November 25, 1847.[1] Loomis served with the unit on garrison duty at Orizaba and mustered out with it at the end of the war in June 1848.[2][3] By the 1850 census, he was a lawyer living in Shelby.[4] He married Mary Henry in Bibb County that year on December 19.[5][6] Loomis and his wife moved to Wetumpka, a small town in Coosa County near the state capital of Montgomery, where he became a practicing attorney-at-law and solicitor by 1856,[7] described as a "prominent citizen" in the county history.[1] Loomis was selected by the mayor to be among the delegates representing the town at the 1856 Southern Commercial Convention in Savannah, Georgia,[8] which became a venue for secessionist rhetoric.[9] Loomis and his wife had three sons and a daughter by 1860, when the census recorded him as the owner of real estate valued at $2,000 and the same amount in other assets.[10] He was also master of the local masonic lodge.[11] Loomis captained the local Wetumpka Light Guards militia company,[12] which he led in Montgomery's 1860 Independence Day parade.[13]

Secession and American Civil War

Later life

References

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