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A. J. Turner

Augustus John Turner, (October 12, 1818 – May 14, 1905), known as "A. J. Turner", was an American composer, band leader and music professor. He was the first director of the Stonewall Brigade Band of Staunton, Virginia, the oldest continuous community band funded by tax moneys in the United States. They were mustered into the Stonewall Brigade under Stonewall Jackson of the Confederacy during the Civil War. Turner was a professor of music at both the Wesleyan Female Institute and the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute, and he played a part in the temperance movement.

Augustus John Turner
Nickname(s)A. J.
Born(1818-10-12)October 12, 1818
Spartanburg County, South Carolina, U.S.
DiedMay 14, 1905(1905-05-14) (aged 86)
Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
Allegiance Confederate States of America
Service/branch Confederate States Army
Years of service1862
RankChief Musician
UnitCompany Band, 5th Virginia Infantry
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War
Spouse(s)Kate M. Aby
ChildrenCharles W. Turner
Thomas Memory Turner
Milton Stuart Turner
George Aby Turner
Frank C. Turner
Katherine Turner Wash
Cora Turner Freijs
Maude E. Turner
Claude Eugene Turner
Florence A. Bancroft
Carrie Turner

Ancestry and early years

Augustus John Turner was born on October 12, 1818, in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, to Samuel M. Turner and Mahala Johnson Chapman.[1][2] His father Samuel was a farmer living near the site of Fort Prince.[3]

Both Turner's grandfathers fought in the Revolutionary War. His father Samuel's father was James Turner, who settled in South Carolina near Coulter's Ford on the Pacolet River with his father George Henry Turner, after the death of his mother Hannah Middleton in Virginia.[1][4] James Turner prepared beef for the patriots the night before the Battle of Cowpens.[4] He married Margaret Headen. Horseshoe Robinson married Sarah Headen, making James Turner and Robinson brothers-in-law.[1]

Turner's mother's father was Jack Chapman, a Revolutionary war captain in Virginia. Jack Chapman married the sister of Jammie Seay.[1] Both Samuel Turner and Jack Chapman were active at Mount Zion Baptist Church, whose pastor was John Gill Landrum. On his death, A. J. Turner wrote this acrostic:

Lo! a Prince in Zion has been taken away.

And mourners thread the streets day after day.

No face is seen that does not deepest sorrow show;

Departed are our joys and only bitter woe

Remains, since thou, oh! Counselor and friend,

Unto thy grave are gone can no longer lend

Mankind thy sage advise - God pity on us send.[5]

Frederick County

Before moving to Staunton, Turner lived in Middletown and Newtown (now Stephen's' City), near Winchester in Frederick County, Virginia. He married Catherine ("Kate") Montrose Aby on July 1, 1845, in Frederick County. The ceremony was performed by John Allemong.[6] Kate Aby's father was a shoemaker and veteran of the War of 1812.[7][8] Her mother, who lived at Thorndale Farm, was the daughter of a drummer in the American Revolution.[9][10]

In 1846, a son was born in Newtown, Charles W. Turner. Turner also spent time at Greenville, where he played with the famous banjoist Joel Sweeney in 1847,[11] and organized a band in Middlebrook.[12] In 1847 a second son was born in Middletown, T. M. Turner.

Turner's house in Newtown was destroyed in a fire on December 2, 1856.[13]

Staunton

Stonewall Brigade Band

In Staunton, Virginia, in 1855, David W. Drake sought help in founding a band. He enlisted the help of Turner, his former music teacher in Newtown, persuading him to move to Staunton.[14][15] Together with two other citizens of Staunton, they formed the Mountain Saxhorn Band.[16][17][18] Turner was the band's first director,[1][19][20] and it is still active today, the oldest continuous community band funded by tax moneys in the United States.[14]

They gave their first formal concert on July 17, 1857, at Union Hall on Beverley Street in Staunton.[21] By 1859 the band had come to be known as Turner's Silver Cornet Band.[22][23] At Armory Hall on April 4, 1861, Turner's Silver Cornet Band, together with the Staunton Musical Association and the Glee Club, presented the last concert to be given before the Civil War.[14] Turner played the soprano cornet.

Civil War

 
Turner was Stonewall Jackson's (pictured) band leader.

The band was mustered into the 5th Virginia Infantry Regiment under Stonewall Jackson and Colonel William S. Baylor, and left Staunton on April 17, 1861.[14][24] Soon after the Battle of First Manassas, the band earned the name Stonewall Brigade Band,[25] and has been known as such ever since. As well as playing their instruments, band members fought and acted as couriers and letter bearers[26] or medical assistants.[25] In addition to entertaining the troops in the field, the band frequently appeared in concerts in Fredericksburg, Richmond, Staunton, and elsewhere to support recruiting rallies, clothing drives, and war relief fundraising.

An account of the Battle of Hoke's Run in the Staunton Spectator reads: "Little Charley Turner, a boy about 15 years of age, insisted so strongly on going with the Augusta Guards that his father finally yielded to his importunities and allowed him to go. The result shows that little Charley went to perform service, for he made one of the enemy bite the dust."[27] Though not in the band, Turner's first son Charles was an orderly and courier for Stonewall Jackson.[28]

A. J. Turner and his son T. M. Turner enlisted for the Confederacy on April 1, 1862.[29] They were in the Churchville Cavalry Troop, 14th Virginia Infantry Company I for a time, commanded by James A. Cochran, before transferring into the 5th.[30] They served through the Valley Campaign, the Seven Days Battles around Richmond, and were at the Battle of Cedar Mountain.[30][31] They were discharged because of age (A. J. too old and T. M. too young) on August 22, 1862.[32]

Post-war

The band was reorganized in 1869 with Turner as leader and his son T. M. Turner as assistant leader.[33] A. J. Turner directed the band until 1884.[29] In 1881, he organized Fravel's Cornet Band in Woodstock.[34][35]

Music teacher

Turner could play many instruments.[36] An 1860 advert for his services reads, "Teaches Piano, Guitar, Flute, Violin, &c, &c; also Ballad Singing".[37] An 1896 ad reads, "Prof. A. J. Turner respectfully solicits a class of young people of both sexes in music ... Instruments: violin, piano, guitar, mandolin, cello and cornet."[38] He was also an agent for the sale of Stieff pianos.[14][39][40] He lived at 15 Fayette St.

Wesleyan Female Institute

Turner's first job in Staunton was teaching vocal and instrumental music at the Wesleyan Female Institute, next to the Methodist Church, and across from Trinity Episcopal Church.[14][41]

Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute

 
Turner taught music at Staunton's Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute (pictured).

Turner was appointed professor of music at the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute in November 1866[42] and served there for several years, teaching the blind pupils.[43][44][45] He "evolved many of the methods now in vogue for giving blind children a musical education."[46] One account of the institute's annual concert praises the pupils for "a high degree of musical taste and talent".[47] His salary was increased $200 in 1871.[48] He taught there until some time in the 1890s.

Temperance

Turner was active in the temperance movement and in 1878 was elected the Most Worthy Grand Chief of the Sons of Jonadab,[29][49] for the district covering Virginia and West Virginia.[30]

Indianapolis

Turner left for Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1900 to live with his daughter Cora Turner Freijs.[50] He would reside there until his death in Washington Township.[51][35] His former house in Staunton sold for $3,350 soon after his death.[52]

List of compositions

  • "Gallopade", 1857[14]
  • "At Eve Beneath Stars' Soft Light: or Memories of Old", 1858[53]
  • "Bessie Bell Waltz", 1858[54][55]
  • "Pray Maiden, Pray", 1864,[56] lyrics by A. W. Kercheval. Bobby Horton of Ken Burns fame has a rendition of the song.[57]
  • "Palmetto Schottisch", 1864[58]
  • "Spring time polka", 1864[59]
  • "La Perle", 1875,[60] melody by J. P. Kavenaugh, arranged for piano by A. J. Turner
  • "Peyton Summerson's Funeral March", 1879[61]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Landrum 1900, p. 407
  2. ^ "Obituary". Spartanburg Herald. June 11, 1879. p. 3.
  3. ^ Landrum 1897, p. 32
  4. ^ a b Moss 1991, p. 293
  5. ^ Griffith 1885, p. 260
  6. ^ Dodd, Jordan R., et al.. Early American Marriages: Virginia to 1850. Bountiful, UT, USA: Precision Indexing Publishers.
  7. ^ Cutter, William Richard (1913). New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of Commonwealths and the Founding of a Nation. Lewis historical publishing Company. p. 1109 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ "Family and School Magazine: 1. The monthly class book. 2. The monthly Lyceum". J. W. Seymour. 1831. p. 299 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ "Death of an Estimable Lady". Staunton Spectator. June 10, 1879.
  10. ^ see Charles Hulett, Continental Army Drummer: A Revolutionary Life Reexamined by Anne Midgley
  11. ^ "Stonewall Band Honor First Directors Memory". Staunton Daily Leader. May 17, 1905. p. 4. Retrieved February 2, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.  
  12. ^ Staunton Daily Leader, May 24, 1905, p. 1
  13. ^ "Fire Near Winchester". Richmond Whig. December 2, 1856.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  15. ^ "Deaths During the Week". Staunton Spectator and vindicator. October 29, 1909.
  16. ^ Brice 1967, p. 9
  17. ^ Virginia. Acts of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Vol. 3. p. 2583.
  18. ^ J. A. Hiner (1900). "The Stonewall Brigade Band". Confederate Veteran: Published Monthly in the Interest of Confederate Veterans and Kindred Topics. 8: 304.
  19. ^ Zenas J Grey (October 4, 1881). "The Blue and the Gray at Carlisle, PA". Staunton Spectator.
  20. ^ "A Band of 1845 (sic)". Popular Science. March 1935.
  21. ^ "The Concert". Staunton Vindicator. July 22, 1857. p. 2.
  22. ^ "[No Title]". Staunton Vindicator. June 4, 1859. p. 2.
  23. ^ "The Concert". Staunton Vindicator. June 1, 1860. p. 2.
  24. ^ Casler 1906, p. 48
  25. ^ a b Robertson 1977, p. 47
  26. ^ Künstler 2006, p. 142
  27. ^ "Brilliant Victory--Gallantry of the Augusta Volunteers". Staunton Spectator. July 9, 1861. p. 1.
  28. ^ Couper 2005, p. 209
  29. ^ a b c "Soldiers Records". Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  30. ^ a b c Brice 1967, p. 178
  31. ^ Brice 1967, p. 32
  32. ^ U.S., American Civil War Regiments, 1861-1866 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1999.
  33. ^ "Reorganized". Republican Vindicator. November 19, 1869.
  34. ^ "The Band Concert". Shenandoah Herald. September 7, 1881. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.  
  35. ^ a b "Death of Prof. A. J. Turner". Shenandoah Herald. May 26, 1905.
  36. ^ "NOTED BANDMASTER DEAD". Harrisonburg Daily News. May 18, 1905. p. 5.
  37. ^ "A. J. Turner Prof. Music, Wesleyan Female Institute". Staunton Spectator. January 10, 1860.
  38. ^ "Music". Staunton Spectator. September 9, 1896.
  39. ^ "Pianos, Pianos, Pianos!". Staunton Spectator. December 26, 1865.
  40. ^ "Pianos, Pianos". Staunton Spectator. April 17, 1866.
  41. ^ "Wesleyan Female Institute". Staunton Spectator. July 5, 1870.
  42. ^ "Local News". Staunton Spectator. November 13, 1866. p. 3.
  43. ^ Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind, Staunton (1876). Report.
  44. ^ Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind, Staunton (1886). Report.
  45. ^ "Concert By The Blind Pupils". Staunton Spectator. June 30, 1868.
  46. ^ "Prominent Virginia Musician Dead". Evening Star. May 21, 1905. p. 16. Retrieved January 12, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.  
  47. ^ "[No Title]". Staunton Spectator. June 28, 1870.
  48. ^ "D. D. & B. Institution". Staunton Spectator. August 8, 1871.
  49. ^ "Briefs". Staunton Spectator. May 21, 1878.
  50. ^ "Personal". Staunton Spectator. January 26, 1900.
  51. ^ "Virginia News". Alexandria Gazette. May 17, 1905.
  52. ^ "Local Briefs". Staunton spectator and vindicator. August 25, 1905.
  53. ^ "New Music-Good Music". Staunton Spectator. March 1, 1859. p. 2.
  54. ^ "Bessie Bell Waltz". June 15, 1858. p. 3.
  55. ^ "Bessie Bell waltz". Duke Digital Collections.
  56. ^ "Pray Maiden Pray". Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  57. ^ Homespun Songs of the CSA Vol. 4
  58. ^ "To the ladies of the Confederate States : Palmetto schottisch". Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  59. ^ "Spring time polka". Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  60. ^ "La Perle". Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  61. ^ "Memorial Day at Staunton". Staunton Spectator. June 10, 1879.

Bibliography

  • Brice, Marshall Moore (1967). The Stonewall Brigade Band.
  • Couper, William (2005). The Corps Forward.
  • Casler, John Overton (1906). Four Years in the Stonewall Brigade. Appeal Publishing Company. p. 48.
  • Griffith, H. P. (1885). The life and times of Rev. John G. Landrum.
  • Künstler, Mort (2006). The Civil War Paintings of Mort Künstler. ISBN 9781581825565.
  • Landrum, J. B. O. (1897). Colonial and Revolutionary History of South Carolina.
  • Landrum, J. B. O. (1900). History of Spartanburg County.
  • Moss, Bobby (1991). The Patriots at the Cowpens.
  • Robertson, James I. (1977). The Stonewall Brigade. ISBN 9780807103968.

turner, this, article, about, american, musician, australian, pediatrician, entomologist, alfred, jefferis, turner, 19th, century, wisconsin, politician, andrew, jackson, turner, augustus, john, turner, october, 1818, 1905, known, american, composer, band, lea. This article is about the American musician For the Australian pediatrician and entomologist see Alfred Jefferis Turner For the 19th century Wisconsin politician see Andrew Jackson Turner Augustus John Turner October 12 1818 May 14 1905 known as A J Turner was an American composer band leader and music professor He was the first director of the Stonewall Brigade Band of Staunton Virginia the oldest continuous community band funded by tax moneys in the United States They were mustered into the Stonewall Brigade under Stonewall Jackson of the Confederacy during the Civil War Turner was a professor of music at both the Wesleyan Female Institute and the Deaf Dumb and Blind Institute and he played a part in the temperance movement Augustus John TurnerTurner in Staunton Virginia Nickname s A J Born 1818 10 12 October 12 1818Spartanburg County South Carolina U S DiedMay 14 1905 1905 05 14 aged 86 Indianapolis Indiana U S Allegiance Confederate States of AmericaService wbr branch Confederate States ArmyYears of service1862RankChief MusicianUnitCompany Band 5th Virginia InfantryBattles warsAmerican Civil War Valley Campaign Seven Days Battles Battle of Cedar MountainSpouse s Kate M AbyChildrenCharles W TurnerThomas Memory TurnerMilton Stuart TurnerGeorge Aby TurnerFrank C TurnerKatherine Turner WashCora Turner FreijsMaude E TurnerClaude Eugene TurnerFlorence A BancroftCarrie Turner Contents 1 Ancestry and early years 2 Frederick County 3 Staunton 3 1 Stonewall Brigade Band 3 1 1 Civil War 3 1 2 Post war 3 2 Music teacher 3 2 1 Wesleyan Female Institute 3 2 2 Deaf Dumb and Blind Institute 3 3 Temperance 4 Indianapolis 5 List of compositions 6 References 7 BibliographyAncestry and early years EditAugustus John Turner was born on October 12 1818 in Spartanburg County South Carolina to Samuel M Turner and Mahala Johnson Chapman 1 2 His father Samuel was a farmer living near the site of Fort Prince 3 Both Turner s grandfathers fought in the Revolutionary War His father Samuel s father was James Turner who settled in South Carolina near Coulter s Ford on the Pacolet River with his father George Henry Turner after the death of his mother Hannah Middleton in Virginia 1 4 James Turner prepared beef for the patriots the night before the Battle of Cowpens 4 He married Margaret Headen Horseshoe Robinson married Sarah Headen making James Turner and Robinson brothers in law 1 Turner s mother s father was Jack Chapman a Revolutionary war captain in Virginia Jack Chapman married the sister of Jammie Seay 1 Both Samuel Turner and Jack Chapman were active at Mount Zion Baptist Church whose pastor was John Gill Landrum On his death A J Turner wrote this acrostic Lo a Prince in Zion has been taken away And mourners thread the streets day after day No face is seen that does not deepest sorrow show Departed are our joys and only bitter woeRemains since thou oh Counselor and friend Unto thy grave are gone can no longer lendMankind thy sage advise God pity on us send 5 Frederick County EditBefore moving to Staunton Turner lived in Middletown and Newtown now Stephen s City near Winchester in Frederick County Virginia He married Catherine Kate Montrose Aby on July 1 1845 in Frederick County The ceremony was performed by John Allemong 6 Kate Aby s father was a shoemaker and veteran of the War of 1812 7 8 Her mother who lived at Thorndale Farm was the daughter of a drummer in the American Revolution 9 10 In 1846 a son was born in Newtown Charles W Turner Turner also spent time at Greenville where he played with the famous banjoist Joel Sweeney in 1847 11 and organized a band in Middlebrook 12 In 1847 a second son was born in Middletown T M Turner Turner s house in Newtown was destroyed in a fire on December 2 1856 13 Staunton EditStonewall Brigade Band Edit In Staunton Virginia in 1855 David W Drake sought help in founding a band He enlisted the help of Turner his former music teacher in Newtown persuading him to move to Staunton 14 15 Together with two other citizens of Staunton they formed the Mountain Saxhorn Band 16 17 18 Turner was the band s first director 1 19 20 and it is still active today the oldest continuous community band funded by tax moneys in the United States 14 They gave their first formal concert on July 17 1857 at Union Hall on Beverley Street in Staunton 21 By 1859 the band had come to be known as Turner s Silver Cornet Band 22 23 At Armory Hall on April 4 1861 Turner s Silver Cornet Band together with the Staunton Musical Association and the Glee Club presented the last concert to be given before the Civil War 14 Turner played the soprano cornet Civil War Edit Turner was Stonewall Jackson s pictured band leader The band was mustered into the 5th Virginia Infantry Regiment under Stonewall Jackson and Colonel William S Baylor and left Staunton on April 17 1861 14 24 Soon after the Battle of First Manassas the band earned the name Stonewall Brigade Band 25 and has been known as such ever since As well as playing their instruments band members fought and acted as couriers and letter bearers 26 or medical assistants 25 In addition to entertaining the troops in the field the band frequently appeared in concerts in Fredericksburg Richmond Staunton and elsewhere to support recruiting rallies clothing drives and war relief fundraising An account of the Battle of Hoke s Run in the Staunton Spectator reads Little Charley Turner a boy about 15 years of age insisted so strongly on going with the Augusta Guards that his father finally yielded to his importunities and allowed him to go The result shows that little Charley went to perform service for he made one of the enemy bite the dust 27 Though not in the band Turner s first son Charles was an orderly and courier for Stonewall Jackson 28 A J Turner and his son T M Turner enlisted for the Confederacy on April 1 1862 29 They were in the Churchville Cavalry Troop 14th Virginia Infantry Company I for a time commanded by James A Cochran before transferring into the 5th 30 They served through the Valley Campaign the Seven Days Battles around Richmond and were at the Battle of Cedar Mountain 30 31 They were discharged because of age A J too old and T M too young on August 22 1862 32 Post war Edit The band was reorganized in 1869 with Turner as leader and his son T M Turner as assistant leader 33 A J Turner directed the band until 1884 29 In 1881 he organized Fravel s Cornet Band in Woodstock 34 35 Music teacher Edit Turner could play many instruments 36 An 1860 advert for his services reads Teaches Piano Guitar Flute Violin amp c amp c also Ballad Singing 37 An 1896 ad reads Prof A J Turner respectfully solicits a class of young people of both sexes in music Instruments violin piano guitar mandolin cello and cornet 38 He was also an agent for the sale of Stieff pianos 14 39 40 He lived at 15 Fayette St Wesleyan Female Institute Edit Turner s first job in Staunton was teaching vocal and instrumental music at the Wesleyan Female Institute next to the Methodist Church and across from Trinity Episcopal Church 14 41 Deaf Dumb and Blind Institute Edit Turner taught music at Staunton s Deaf Dumb and Blind Institute pictured Turner was appointed professor of music at the Deaf Dumb and Blind Institute in November 1866 42 and served there for several years teaching the blind pupils 43 44 45 He evolved many of the methods now in vogue for giving blind children a musical education 46 One account of the institute s annual concert praises the pupils for a high degree of musical taste and talent 47 His salary was increased 200 in 1871 48 He taught there until some time in the 1890s Temperance Edit Turner was active in the temperance movement and in 1878 was elected the Most Worthy Grand Chief of the Sons of Jonadab 29 49 for the district covering Virginia and West Virginia 30 Indianapolis EditTurner left for Indianapolis Indiana in 1900 to live with his daughter Cora Turner Freijs 50 He would reside there until his death in Washington Township 51 35 His former house in Staunton sold for 3 350 soon after his death 52 List of compositions Edit Gallopade 1857 14 At Eve Beneath Stars Soft Light or Memories of Old 1858 53 Bessie Bell Waltz 1858 54 55 Pray Maiden Pray 1864 56 lyrics by A W Kercheval Bobby Horton of Ken Burns fame has a rendition of the song 57 Palmetto Schottisch 1864 58 Spring time polka 1864 59 La Perle 1875 60 melody by J P Kavenaugh arranged for piano by A J Turner Peyton Summerson s Funeral March 1879 61 References Edit a b c d e Landrum 1900 p 407 Obituary Spartanburg Herald June 11 1879 p 3 Landrum 1897 p 32 a b Moss 1991 p 293 Griffith 1885 p 260 Dodd Jordan R et al Early American Marriages Virginia to 1850 Bountiful UT USA Precision Indexing Publishers Cutter William Richard 1913 New England Families Genealogical and Memorial A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of Commonwealths and the Founding of a Nation Lewis historical publishing Company p 1109 via Internet Archive Family and School Magazine 1 The monthly class book 2 The monthly Lyceum J W Seymour 1831 p 299 via Google Books Death of an Estimable Lady Staunton Spectator June 10 1879 see Charles Hulett Continental Army Drummer A Revolutionary Life Reexamined by Anne Midgley Stonewall Band Honor First Directors Memory Staunton Daily Leader May 17 1905 p 4 Retrieved February 2 2018 via Newspapers com Staunton Daily Leader May 24 1905 p 1 Fire Near Winchester Richmond Whig December 2 1856 a b c d e f g Stonewall Brigade Band Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved February 28 2015 Deaths During the Week Staunton Spectator and vindicator October 29 1909 Brice 1967 p 9 Virginia Acts of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Virginia Vol 3 p 2583 J A Hiner 1900 The Stonewall Brigade Band Confederate Veteran Published Monthly in the Interest of Confederate Veterans and Kindred Topics 8 304 Zenas J Grey October 4 1881 The Blue and the Gray at Carlisle PA Staunton Spectator A Band of 1845 sic Popular Science March 1935 The Concert Staunton Vindicator July 22 1857 p 2 No Title Staunton Vindicator June 4 1859 p 2 The Concert Staunton Vindicator June 1 1860 p 2 Casler 1906 p 48 a b Robertson 1977 p 47 Kunstler 2006 p 142 Brilliant Victory Gallantry of the Augusta Volunteers Staunton Spectator July 9 1861 p 1 Couper 2005 p 209 a b c Soldiers Records Retrieved February 28 2015 a b c Brice 1967 p 178 Brice 1967 p 32 U S American Civil War Regiments 1861 1866 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 1999 Reorganized Republican Vindicator November 19 1869 The Band Concert Shenandoah Herald September 7 1881 p 3 via Newspapers com a b Death of Prof A J Turner Shenandoah Herald May 26 1905 NOTED BANDMASTER DEAD Harrisonburg Daily News May 18 1905 p 5 A J Turner Prof Music Wesleyan Female Institute Staunton Spectator January 10 1860 Music Staunton Spectator September 9 1896 Pianos Pianos Pianos Staunton Spectator December 26 1865 Pianos Pianos Staunton Spectator April 17 1866 Wesleyan Female Institute Staunton Spectator July 5 1870 Local News Staunton Spectator November 13 1866 p 3 Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind Staunton 1876 Report Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind Staunton 1886 Report Concert By The Blind Pupils Staunton Spectator June 30 1868 Prominent Virginia Musician Dead Evening Star May 21 1905 p 16 Retrieved January 12 2018 via Newspapers com No Title Staunton Spectator June 28 1870 D D amp B Institution Staunton Spectator August 8 1871 Briefs Staunton Spectator May 21 1878 Personal Staunton Spectator January 26 1900 Virginia News Alexandria Gazette May 17 1905 Local Briefs Staunton spectator and vindicator August 25 1905 New Music Good Music Staunton Spectator March 1 1859 p 2 Bessie Bell Waltz June 15 1858 p 3 Bessie Bell waltz Duke Digital Collections Pray Maiden Pray Retrieved February 28 2015 Homespun Songs of the CSA Vol 4 To the ladies of the Confederate States Palmetto schottisch Retrieved February 28 2015 Spring time polka Retrieved February 28 2015 La Perle Retrieved February 28 2015 Memorial Day at Staunton Staunton Spectator June 10 1879 Bibliography EditBrice Marshall Moore 1967 The Stonewall Brigade Band Couper William 2005 The Corps Forward Casler John Overton 1906 Four Years in the Stonewall Brigade Appeal Publishing Company p 48 Griffith H P 1885 The life and times of Rev John G Landrum Kunstler Mort 2006 The Civil War Paintings of Mort Kunstler ISBN 9781581825565 Landrum J B O 1897 Colonial and Revolutionary History of South Carolina Landrum J B O 1900 History of Spartanburg County Moss Bobby 1991 The Patriots at the Cowpens Robertson James I 1977 The Stonewall Brigade ISBN 9780807103968 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A J Turner amp oldid 1127657151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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