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・ John Callow
・ John Calman Shaw
・ John Calver
・ John Calvert
・ John Calvert (magician)
・ John Calvert (radio)
・ John Calvert (scholar)
・ John Calvert Griffiths
・ John Calvey
・ John Calvin
・ John Calvin Abney
・ John Calvin bibliography
・ John Calvin Broomfield
・ John Calvin Coolidge, Sr.
・ John Calvin Ferguson
John Calvin Fiser
・ John Calvin International School
・ John Calvin Jeffries
・ John Calvin Jureit
・ John Calvin Mason
・ John Calvin McCoy
・ John Calvin Owings House
・ John Calvin Pollock
・ John Calvin Stevens
・ John Calvin Stevens House
・ John Calvin Wilson House
・ John Calvin's view of Scripture
・ John Calvin's views on Mary
・ John Camden Hotten
・ John Camden Neild


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John Calvin Fiser : ウィキペディア英語版
John Calvin Fiser

John Calvin Fiser (May 4, 1838 – June 4, 14, or 15, 1876)〔Sources vary as to the exact date of his death. Banks (p. 87) gives June 4; both "Antietam on the Web" and Allardice (p. 87) state June 14; Eicher (p. 596) gives June 15.〕 was an American merchant and soldier. He served as an officer in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, fighting in both the Eastern as well as the Western theaters. Fiser was seriously wounded five times in the conflict, losing an arm in 1863's Battle of Fort Sanders, and he was appointed a general officer late in the war; however, the appointment was never confirmed by the Confederate Senate. Afterward he returned to his business interests and was active in Confederate veterans organizations.
==Early life and career==
John Fiser was born in 1838 in the city of Dyersburg located in Dyer County, Tennessee. His father was Matthew Day Fiser (died 1852) and his mother's identity (died 1849) is not known.〔Banks, ''United Daughters of the Confederacy'', p. 86.〕 In 1848 Fiser's family moved to Batesville in Panola County, Mississippi. After his father died Fiser was raised by his uncle, John B. Fiser, a politician and merchant also living in Panola County.〔Allardice, ''More Generals in Gray'', p. 86.〕 In 1853 he began working in Lafayette County, clerking in a country store near the shore of the Tallahatchie River. In 1855 Fiser moved to Memphis, Tennessee, and found work as a cotton merchant and later in the mercantile business.〔Banks, ''United Daughters of the Confederacy'', p. 86; Antietam on the Web site biography of Fiser; Allardice, ''More Generals in Gray'', p. 86.〕

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