When William Hogue was born from January 1839 to December 1839, in Georgia, United States, his father, Jonathan Wiley Hogue, was 26 and his mother, Mary Forrester, was 25. He lived in Batesville, Independence, Arkansas, United States in 1850.
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Civil War History - Some 11,000 Georgians gave their lives in defense of their state a state that suffered immense destruction. But wars end brought about an even more dramatic figure to tell: 460,000 African-Americans were set free from the shackles of slavery to begin new lives as free people.
Arkansas supplied an estimated 50,000 men to the Confederate Army andabout 15,000 to the Union Army.
The Mosaic Templar is an African American fraternal organization founded in Little Rock. it was founded by former slaves, John Edward Bush and Chester W. Keatts. It was part of a movement that was going on at the time, where everyone was forming fraternities and sororities. The main departments for this one where endowment, monument, analysis, uniform, rank, recapitulation, records, and a juvenile division.
French (Normandy, Maine): topographic name derived from Old Norse haugr ‘hill’, or a habitational name from La Hogue, the name of several places in the northwestern part of France.
History: Pierre Hogue from Bellifontaine in Somme, France, married Jeanne Théodore in Montreal, QC, in 1676.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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