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Washington Duke
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==Early life and Civil War== Washington Duke was born on December 18, 1820, in eastern [[Orange County, North Carolina|Orange County]], [[North Carolina]], in what is today the township of [[Bahama, North Carolina|Bahama]] in [[Durham County, North Carolina|Durham County]]. The eighth of ten children of Taylor Duke (c. 1770 β 1830) and Dicey Jones (born c. 1780), Washington worked as a tenant farmer until he married Mary Caroline Clinton (1825β1847) in 1842. At the time of their marriage, his father-in-law gave the couple 72 acres of land located in what is today Durham County. It was on this land that he began his career as a subsistence farmer. The couple had two sons: Sidney Taylor Duke (1844β1858), and [[Brodie Duke|Brodie Leonidas Duke]] (1846β1919). Mary Duke died in 1847 at the age of 22. In 1852, Duke built a homestead for his second wife, Artelia Roney (1829β1858), who was from [[Alamance County, North Carolina]]. It still exists.<ref>{{Cite book|title = The Dukes of Durham: 1865-1929|url = https://archive.org/details/dukesofdurham18600robe|url-access = registration|last = Durden|first = Robert F.|publisher = Duke University Press|year = 1975|pages = [https://archive.org/details/dukesofdurham18600robe/page/4 4]| isbn=9780822303305 }}</ref> Artelia gave birth to three children between 1853 and 1856: daughter Mary Elizabeth Duke (1853β1899), and sons [[Benjamin Newton Duke]] and [[James Buchanan Duke]] (the latter more commonly known as "Buck"). In 1858, oldest son Sidney caught typhoid fever and died. Artelia, who had been caring for Sidney, also succumbed to the illness ten days later. Very little is known about Duke's antebellum views on politics. It is known that Duke owned one slave, named Caroline, whom he purchased for $601, and had hired out the labor of another slave from his neighbors to work on his farm.<ref>Durden, 8.</ref> At the outbreak of the American Civil War, Duke was 40 years old, too old for the initial conscription into service for the Confederacy. However, the second [[Confederate Conscription Acts 1862β1864|Confederate Conscription Act]] passed in September 1862 increased the draft-eligible age to 45. Duke, aware that he would soon be called into military service, held a sale at his home on October 20, 1863, to sell the entirety of his farm equipment.<ref name="Durden 7">{{Cite book|title = The Dukes of Durham: 1865-1929|url = https://archive.org/details/dukesofdurham18600robe|url-access = registration|last = Durden|first = Robert F.|publisher = Duke University Press|year = 1975|pages = [https://archive.org/details/dukesofdurham18600robe/page/7 7]| isbn=9780822303305 }}</ref> He enlisted in the Confederate navy, and served in [[Charleston, South Carolina]], and [[Richmond, Virginia]], until his capture by Union forces in April 1865. After a brief stint in a Federal prison, he was paroled and was sent by ship to [[New Bern, North Carolina]], and from there, walked 134 miles (216 km) back to his homestead.<ref>Durden, 10.</ref>
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