This blog grew out of my "Down Da Road I Go Blog," which was originally to be about stuff I was interested in, music and what I was doing. There was so much history and Civil War entries, I spun two more off. Starting Jan. 1, 2012, I will be spinning a Naval blog off this one called "Running the Blockade."
Monday, May 4, 2020
John Ross Key, Engineer CSA-- Part 1: Yep, That Key Name
One of the men appointed to the Board to detail the defense of Fort Sumter and Charleston Harbor was John Ross Key. Well, last name of Key. Could he be related to that other famous Francis Scott Key?
The answer is yes, he was.
From the North Point Gallery site. Turns out John R. Key was quite the artist and mapmaker.
John Ross Key was born July 16, 1837, two months after the death of his father, and was raised until the age of five by his grandfather, none other that Francis Scott Key, who wrote, of course, "The National Anthem." His grandfather died in 1843.
As a teenager, he was forced to work to support his widowed mother.
His talent for drawing led to a job as a topographical artist and draftsman with the U.S. Coast Survey. In 1859, he was hired as mapmaker in the advance party of the Lander Expedition to chart the best overland through hostile Indian territories of Wyoming and Nevada.
In 1861, along with several other Francis Scott Key grandsons, he threw in his lot with the Confederacy.
--Old SeceshKey
Labels:
artists,
Charleston,
Coast Survey,
Fort Sumter,
Francis Scott Key,
John Ross Key,
mapmaking,
maps,
national anthem,
Nevada,
Wyoming
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