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LOGAN, JOHN C.Private
AgePettus' Company

John C. Logan signed the Convention Memorial at Refugio about February 5, 1836, apparently as a member of the New Orleans Grays, and the name "Logan" without initials or first name, appears in that company on the original and all subsequent versions of the T&TR roll of Fannin's men; and his heirs were granted bounty and donation lands, he having been "killed at Goliad," by special act of the Legislature of Texas approved Feb. 13, 1858. [Gammell's Laws of Texas, IV, p. 1089.]

There is some reason for believing that Wm. Brenan, John C. Logan, and Milton Irish may have come from Nacogdoches to Refugio as members of Wyatt's Company, and that they were the three men discharged by Wyatt as stated in his letter of January 16, 1836 to Governor Smith; although Wyatt says that the men so discharged desired to return to their homes.
 

LOVE, JOHN H.Private
AgeLlewellyn's Company
Georgia

John H. Love was a younger brother of Hugh Love, a Georgian who specialized on missions to the Indians. The


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© 1936 Harbert Davenport
NOTES FROM AN UNFINISHED STUDY OF FANNIN AND HIS MEN
H. David Maxey, Editor             Webpage of January 1, 2000