4 entries match your criteria.
Related Historical Markers
Lt. Colonel Olin Miller Dantzler
![Tabernacle Cemetery Marker (<i>wide view from Old State Road • cemetery entrance on right</i>) image, Touch for more information](Photos4/476/Photo476551.jpg)
By Cosmos Mariner, May 4, 2019
Tabernacle Cemetery Marker (wide view from Old State Road • cemetery entrance on right)
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
| On Old State Road (U.S. 176) north of Shrike Road, on the right when traveling north. |
| | Burial place of Lt. Col. Olin M. Dantzler, C.S.A. Appointed Brigadier General 1 June 1864 Defender of Charleston, SC and Petersburg, VA His recorded notes to General P.G.T. Beauregard led to the location of the submarine H.L. Hunley in 1995 Killed . . . — — Map (db m134424) HM |
| On Battery Dantzler Road, 0.2 miles east of Old Stage Road, on the left when traveling east. |
| | Olin Miller Dantzler (1826-1824) was a native of South Carolina. He graduated from Randolph-Macon College in Virginia in 1846. He married Caroline Clover on July 10, 1850, and they had five children. Prior to the war Dantzler served as a South . . . — — Map (db m16060) HM |
| Near Battery Dantzler Road, 0.2 miles east of Old Stage Road. |
| | First named Ft. Howlett, the battery was renamed after Col. Olin M. Dantzler, who was killed on June 2, 1864, in an attempt to capture Ft. Dutton. Leading the 22nd South Carolina Inf. the attack failed. Battery Dantzler played a major role in . . . — — Map (db m16066) HM |
| On Howlett Line Drive, 0.3 miles south of Woods Edge Road, on the right when traveling south. |
| | Following the Battle of Ware Bottom Church on May 20, 1864, Confederate forces began digging the earthworks that would become known as the Howlett Line. Named after the Howlett house, which stood at the northernmost point, the line stretched across . . . — — Map (db m16096) HM |
Jun. 18, 2024