208:, where he prospered and owned two properties by 1820. At one of those, he owned no slaves, but his other location in the 1820 census shows him as owning 12 slaves (3 males and 9 females), and his family also included 8 white males between 16 and 26 and 14 white men between 26 and 45 (hence a likely manufacturing or steamboat operation). Although several brothers and sisters died as infants or without issue, his sister Virginia married David Smith Benedict of Louisville. Both his younger brothers who had children married women from Fredericksburg, and survived the Civil War and are buried in St. Louis, Missouri. Frank Carter (1813–1896) was a steamboat captain who transported mail, freight and passengers on the
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like his father. The children of Capt. Walker
Randolph Carter Jr. {1807–1889) included CSA Major Frank Carter (b.1838) who enlisted as a student at the University of Virginia, survived the conflict, and after the war became a respected St. Louis businessman, and was buried like his father in historic
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Carter received a naval appointment as a
Kentucky resident on March 1, 1825. As a midshipman he served on the sloop 'Lexington' in 1827, then on the frigate 'Delaware' in the Mediterranean squadron in 1829–30. He was commissioned as a lieutenant on February 9, 1837. During the
193:(1732–1796), a patriot during the American Revolutionary War (and member of the House of Burgesses and the Virginia House of Delegates), dissipated the wealth inherited from his paternal grandfather
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Born in
Virginia to the former Sarah Champe Stanard (1741–1814) and her husband (and distant cousin) Walker Carter (1772-d. after 1820 and before 1830), he could trace his ancestry to the
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Following the war, Carter commanded the receiving ship 'Vermont' and was based at San
Francisco. On April 4, 1867, he was commissioned as a Commodore and placed on the retired list.
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Commander Carter married
Elizabeth S. Phelps and they had a son, Charles Edward Carter and Rebecca (who married U.S. Army Col. Crawford).
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His father Walker Carter owned 9 slaves in
Spotsylvania County in 1810 After serving in the War of 1812, he moved his family to
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Carter served on the steamer 'Mississippi' of the home squadron. On
September 14, 1855, he was promoted to the rank of
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1820 U.S. Federal Census for
Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky p. 2 of 10, available on ancestry.com
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U.S.Federal Census City for
Spotsylvania County, Virginia, image 21 of 41 on ancestry.com
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A Genealogy of the Known
Descendants of Robert Carter of Corotoman
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319:. Irvington: Foundation for Christ Church Inc. pp. 88, 91.
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Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography (1915), vol. 3, pp. 164-165
161:(c. 1805 – November 24, 1870) was a Virginia-born career
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For the Confederate military officer born in 1837, see
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173:ended with his retirement in 1870 at the rank of
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212:and was buried in Louisville's historic
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217:Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis.
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364:19th-century American naval officers
16:19th-century American naval officer
165:officer whose service during the
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315:Tyler Carlton, Florence (1982).
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369:United States Navy commodores
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206:Jefferson County, Kentucky
187:First Families of Virginia
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252:Commodore Carter died in
84:United States of America
256:on November 24, 1870.
285:Appleton's Cyclopedia
181:Early and family life
169:and later during the
109:Years of service
231:Mexican-American War
167:Mexican-American War
136:Mexican-American War
273:Lyon Gardiner Tyler
254:Brooklyn, New York
214:Cave Hill Cemetery
171:American Civil War
140:American Civil War
103:United States Navy
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359:1870 deaths
348:Categories
260:References
210:Ohio River
202:Louisville
72:Allegiance
235:Commander
175:Commodore
163:U.S. Navy
146:Relations
126:Commodore
112:1825-1867
325:83081512
90:Service/
61:Brooklyn
44:Virginia
41:c. 1805
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224:Career
92:branch
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67:, U.S.
46:, U.S.
321:LCCN
117:Rank
51:Died
38:Born
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