Details for Captain Isaac Newton Moreland Turner, C. S. A.

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5373010428

Data

Marker Number 10428
Atlas Number 5373010428
Marker Title Captain Isaac Newton Moreland Turner, C. S. A.
Index Entry Turner, Captain Isaac Newton Moreland, C. S. A.
Address
City Livingston
County Polk
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 342701
UTM Northing 3404978
Subject Codes Civil War; military topics
Marker Year
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location go east on US 190 about 18.4 mi. to Midway Center Rd., go 2 mi. north to dead end, go east to cemetery sign, follow to cemetery - marker is in Turner Cemetery
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (April 3, 1839 - April 15, 1863) was born in Putnam County, Georgia. His father, J. A. S. Turner, was a plantation owner with Texas landholdings in Polk and Liberty counties. The Turner family moved to Texas prior to the outbreak of the Civil War. Ike Turner helped to organize and train a mounted artillery company of 80 Polk County volunteers for the Confederacy. Turner, who was elected captain, assembled his company at the County Courthouse in Livingston on September 3, 1861. He led them to serve in Virginia as Company K, 5th Texas Infantry, in Gen. John Bell Hood's Texas Brigade. The youngest company commander in Hood's Texas Brigade, Capt. Turner led his troops in 16 battles, mostly in Virginia. He was injured twice before suffering a fatal wound near Suffolk, Virginia. Capt. Turner's brother. Charles took his body by train to be buried at the family's former plantation "Turnwold" near Milledgeville, Georgia. Family legend has maintained that it was Capt. Turner's wish to be buried in his family's cemetery in Texas. In 1994 his remains were disinterred and transported from Georgia to Texas and reburied here among his family members. (1997) Incise on base: Sons of the Confederate Veterans Ike Turner Camp 1275, Livingston, Texas

Location Map

View this record in full map (opens in new tab/window)