We left home in July ‘64. We left our furniture. We took a few chairs and bedding, the best or the most of our clothes--our cattle we sold to the government except three cows and calves. We have one cow and calf is all the stock except 2 mules. We lost our hogs and horses. We refugeed to Washington County, stayed there until November ‘65. The fighting was mostly from Peachtree Road around to Decatur. Our houses burned, our timber cut down on the home lot, our shade trees--pretty well all of our fruit trees. There has been thousands of pounds of lead picked up on our land. People supported their family picking up lead. They got 50 cents a pound before the surrender. The bombshells is plenty, many with the load in them.the war cost them a lot personally, including their oldest son who was wounded at malvern hill in 1862 and nearly blinded at chickamauga before being discharged and sent home, where he died in february of the medlocks' annus horribilis, 1864 ---
john and sara medlock left it to their surviving son to resurrect the old farm after the war and died there in 1882 and 1883 respectively --- they did not stay long in the family cemetery at what is now monroe drive and st. charles avenue, however, being dis-interred and moved to the decatur cemetery in 1890 when their heirs sold just seven acres of the old farm for $20,000 ---
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