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  1. George Wythe Baylor (August 24, 1832 – March 24, 1916) was a Confederate cavalry officer from Texas, and a veteran of many battles of the American Civil War. He was also a noted lawman and frontiersman with the Texas Rangers .

  2. www.tshaonline.org › entries › baylor-george-wytheBaylor, George Wythe - TSHA

    31 de ene. de 2017 · George Wythe Baylor, Confederate military officer and Texas Ranger, the son of John Walker Baylor, was born in Fort Gibson, Cherokee Nation, on August 2, 1832. On June 5, 1860, Baylor, then living in Weatherford with John R. Baylor and others, ran down a party of Indian raiders on Paint Creek in Parker County and killed and scalped nine of them.

  3. 1832 - 1916. George Wythe Baylor was born August 2, 1832 in Fort Gibson, Indian Territory. The family moved often during his early years. In 1836 they relocated to Natchez, Mississippi where his father died. Over the next several years the family moved to Fort Gibson to Pine Bluff, Arkansas, Little Rock, Arkansas, and finally back to Fort Gibson.

  4. George Wythe Baylor, Confederate military officer and Texas Ranger, the son of United States Army surgeon John Walker Baylor, was born in Fort Gibson, Cherokee Nation, on August 2, 1832. His father died in January 1834.

  5. Colonel John George Wythe Baylor. Born 24 Aug 1832 in Fort Gibson, Muskogee County, Oklahoma. Ancestors. Son of John Walker Baylor and Sophie Marie (Weidner) Baylor. Brother of Mary Jane (Baylor) Maltby and John Robert Baylor. [spouse (s) unknown] [children unknown] Died 24 Mar 1916 at age 83 in San Antonio, Bexar, Texas, United States.

    • August 24, 1832
    • March 24, 1916
  6. George Baylor (January 17, 1752 – November 9, 1784) was an officer in the Continental Army, serving throughout the American Revolutionary War. Military career [ edit ] Baylor was first aide-de-camp to George Washington , and brought the news of the Battle of Trenton to the Continental Congress .

  7. George Wythe Baylor was born. When the boy was about four years of age his father died near Natchez, Mississippl. His mother, after trying to adjust herself in Mississippi and Arkansas, re-turned to Fort Gibson. In 1845, George went to live with his brother, John R., in Fayette County, Texas; subsequently he at-