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Dr Charles Jouett Mitchell

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Dr Charles Jouett Mitchell

Birth
Frankfort, Franklin County, Kentucky, USA
Death
31 Jan 1886 (aged 72)
Madison Parish, Louisiana, USA
Burial
Vicksburg, Warren County, Mississippi, USA Add to Map
Plot
Div. C, Square 165, Lot 1
Memorial ID
View Source
From "Gaillard's Medical Journal" Vol. 42; pg. 343:

DEATH OF DR. CHARLES JOUETT MITCHELL. - This occurred on the 31st day of January, 1886, in Madison Parish, La., of pneumonia. Dr. Mitchell was in the seventy-third year of his age, having been born in Frankfort, Ky., in 1813. He graduated at Transylvania University at Lexington, Ky., in 1835, going from there to the New York University of Medicine, and then to the University of Paris, France, where he graduated in 1840. On his return to the United States he settled in Madison Parish, and just after the war he located in Vicksburg, which he made his home until his death. As a classical scholar Dr. Mitchell had few equals, and his knowledge of his profession was most thorough. Many will remember his noble work during the last yellow-fever epidemic, when, in spite of his advanced age and delicate health, he refused to leave his post, and was himself seized by the disease, the effects of which he never entirely recovered from.

From "The Papers of Jefferson Davis: June 1865 - December 1870":

Charles J. Mitchell had farmed in Houston County, Texas, since 1862. In 1866 he wanted to resume his medical practice somewhere near Vicksburg and offered to take charge of Hurricane [plantation] for his former father-in-law. In November he said that he and his ex-slaves planned to be back on his Louisiana plantation by Christmas. He had returned by mid-January 1867, reporting from Madison Parish that he was uncertain about planting; two months later he had a "miserable little house put up in great haste" and faced the prospect of overflow and ruin. At the end of 1867 Ben Montgomery talked with someone from "Dr. Mitchell's place," opining that if the men there "remain[ed] together and work[ed]," they could "make something, as well as save the place from going to distruction [sic]" (Davis Papers, 2:9; Mitchell to J. E. Davis, Jan. 16, May 6, June 16, Nov. 13-19, 1866, Jan. 21, 1867, Lise Mitchell to J. E. Davis, Jan. 21, [1867], LNT, Mitchell Papers, LNT, Mitchell Jour., 117-18; J. E. Davis to Davis, Mar. [3-7], 1867; Montgomery to J. E. Davis, Dec. 30, 1867, Ms-Ar Z1028, J. E. Davis Papers.)

On May 6, 1866, Mitchell requested information about "how many doctors [are] in V Burg - I mean to each house - and how many have starved"(to J. E. Davis, LNT, Mitchell Papers). By mid-1870 Mitchell was a local medical examiner for Davis' insurance company (Vicksburg Times, July 14, 1870).

The Times-Democrat.
February 3, 1886
Page 2

The remains of Dr. Charles J. Mitchell, arrived here from Milliken's Bend to-day, and will be buried from the Catholic Church at 9 o'clock to-morrow morning.

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Dr. Charles Jouett Mitchell's first wife was Lucinda's cousin, Mary Lucinda Davis, the daughter of Joseph Emory Davis. They were both nieces of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Mary lived at Hurricane Plantation as a young woman and in 1838 married Dr. Mitchell. They removed to Paris, France, where Dr. Mitchell would pursue his medical and classical studies. In Paris, they would have their first child, a son, Joseph Davis Mitchell, and return to Louisiana. Daughter Mary Elizabeth Mitchell [Hamer] was born next, back at Hurricane followed by another son, Hugh in 1843. Mary's condition after Hugh was weakened and Dr. Mitchell sent her to Cuba in order to restore her health, however she died in 1846 and is buried in Brierfield Plantation in Letourneau, Warren County, Mississippi.

Dr. Charles Jouett Mitchell married Lucinda Stamps Bradford .
From "Gaillard's Medical Journal" Vol. 42; pg. 343:

DEATH OF DR. CHARLES JOUETT MITCHELL. - This occurred on the 31st day of January, 1886, in Madison Parish, La., of pneumonia. Dr. Mitchell was in the seventy-third year of his age, having been born in Frankfort, Ky., in 1813. He graduated at Transylvania University at Lexington, Ky., in 1835, going from there to the New York University of Medicine, and then to the University of Paris, France, where he graduated in 1840. On his return to the United States he settled in Madison Parish, and just after the war he located in Vicksburg, which he made his home until his death. As a classical scholar Dr. Mitchell had few equals, and his knowledge of his profession was most thorough. Many will remember his noble work during the last yellow-fever epidemic, when, in spite of his advanced age and delicate health, he refused to leave his post, and was himself seized by the disease, the effects of which he never entirely recovered from.

From "The Papers of Jefferson Davis: June 1865 - December 1870":

Charles J. Mitchell had farmed in Houston County, Texas, since 1862. In 1866 he wanted to resume his medical practice somewhere near Vicksburg and offered to take charge of Hurricane [plantation] for his former father-in-law. In November he said that he and his ex-slaves planned to be back on his Louisiana plantation by Christmas. He had returned by mid-January 1867, reporting from Madison Parish that he was uncertain about planting; two months later he had a "miserable little house put up in great haste" and faced the prospect of overflow and ruin. At the end of 1867 Ben Montgomery talked with someone from "Dr. Mitchell's place," opining that if the men there "remain[ed] together and work[ed]," they could "make something, as well as save the place from going to distruction [sic]" (Davis Papers, 2:9; Mitchell to J. E. Davis, Jan. 16, May 6, June 16, Nov. 13-19, 1866, Jan. 21, 1867, Lise Mitchell to J. E. Davis, Jan. 21, [1867], LNT, Mitchell Papers, LNT, Mitchell Jour., 117-18; J. E. Davis to Davis, Mar. [3-7], 1867; Montgomery to J. E. Davis, Dec. 30, 1867, Ms-Ar Z1028, J. E. Davis Papers.)

On May 6, 1866, Mitchell requested information about "how many doctors [are] in V Burg - I mean to each house - and how many have starved"(to J. E. Davis, LNT, Mitchell Papers). By mid-1870 Mitchell was a local medical examiner for Davis' insurance company (Vicksburg Times, July 14, 1870).

The Times-Democrat.
February 3, 1886
Page 2

The remains of Dr. Charles J. Mitchell, arrived here from Milliken's Bend to-day, and will be buried from the Catholic Church at 9 o'clock to-morrow morning.

****************************

Dr. Charles Jouett Mitchell's first wife was Lucinda's cousin, Mary Lucinda Davis, the daughter of Joseph Emory Davis. They were both nieces of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Mary lived at Hurricane Plantation as a young woman and in 1838 married Dr. Mitchell. They removed to Paris, France, where Dr. Mitchell would pursue his medical and classical studies. In Paris, they would have their first child, a son, Joseph Davis Mitchell, and return to Louisiana. Daughter Mary Elizabeth Mitchell [Hamer] was born next, back at Hurricane followed by another son, Hugh in 1843. Mary's condition after Hugh was weakened and Dr. Mitchell sent her to Cuba in order to restore her health, however she died in 1846 and is buried in Brierfield Plantation in Letourneau, Warren County, Mississippi.

Dr. Charles Jouett Mitchell married Lucinda Stamps Bradford .


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