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Confederate Documents
Compiled Military Service Records (CMSR)
Each volunteer soldier
has one Compiled Military Service Record (CMSR) for each regiment in which
he served. An index is available online at the
Civil War Soldiers and
Sailors System
website or on microfilm at selected NARA facilities and large genealogical
research libraries. The CMSR contains basic information about the soldier's
military career, and it is the first source the researcher should consult.
The CMSR is an envelope (a jacket) containing one or more cards. These cards
typically indicate that the soldier was present or absent during a certain
period of time. Other cards may indicate the date of enlistment and
discharge, amount of bounty paid him, and other information such as wounds
received during battle or hospitalization for injury or illness. The
soldier's place of birth may be indicated. If a soldier was born outside of
the United States, only the country of birth is stated. The CMSR may contain
an internal jacket for so-called "personal papers" of various kinds. These
may include a copy of the soldier's enlistment paper, papers relating to his
capture and release as a prisoner of war, or a statement that he had no
personal property with him when he died. Note, however, that the CMSR rarely
indicates battles in which a soldier fought; that information must be
derived from other sources. Confederate Pension Records Confederate Veteran’s were eligible to apply for a pension to the State in which he lived, even if he served in a unit from a different State. Generally, an applicant was eligible for a pension only if he was indigent or disabled. In your letter to the repository, state the Confederate veteran's name, his widow's name, the unit(s) in which he served, and the counties in which he and his widow lived after the Civil War. The only states to offer Confederate Pensions were Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North and South Carolina, Oklahoma, Texas, Tennessee and Virginia.
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