Departments



Articles

Less

Features: Levy County History
July 10th, 2003

Features: Open House at Historic Light Station
July 8th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
July 3rd, 2003

Features: Levy County History
June 26th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
June 19th, 2003

Features: Pioneer Levy County Family Finds Final Resting Place
June 17th, 2003

Features: Seeking Lost Relatives
June 13th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
June 12th, 2003

Features: Disaster Preparedness and Your Pet
June 9th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
May 29th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
May 23rd, 2003

Features: "The Essence of Florida" - Landscape Artist Susan Dauphinee
May 20th, 2003

Features: Finding Cedar Key is Sometimes Just a Twist of Fate
May 18th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
May 15th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
May 8th, 2003

More

Historic Profile - Louis Appel

Historic Profile - Louis Appel

Toni Collins

TAX ASSESSOR (PROPERTY APPRAISER) LOUIS APPEL

2004 promises to be an interesting political year for Levy County. For historic political interest, each month for eight months, we will present a brief profile of one of Levy County`s political officers who held office during the 1870s, 1880s, and 1890s.


When Louis Appel returned from the Civil War, he was missing his right leg. Appel, a Levy County resident, volunteered in the Fall of 1861 to serve in Company "I," 1st Florida Cavalry, Confederate Army, under the command of Captain N.S. Cobb of Bronson.

Appel`s company joined up with the Tennessee Army and on 04 December 1864, in a skirmish with the enemy encamped a short distance from Murfreesboro, Tennessee,
he was shot in the right leg below the knee. His leg was amputated immediately and Appel was carried to Camp Chase in Columbus Ohio and imprisoned until the end of the war.

Appel was born 14 April 1832 in Bromberg, Prussia and became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1858. His name first appears among the records of Levy County in 1859. On 04 January 1889, Appel married Mahala E. Overstreet in Levy County and the couple had two sons, Louis, Jr. and Ruben James. Mahala died 14 April 1907.

Appel served as Levy County`s Tax Assessor from 1881 until 1887. His records and books were kept in a fine hand and were readily approved by the Board of County Commissioners and the State Comptroller. Appel resigned his post to care for his ill wife.

In later years Appel suffered from the loss of use of his right hand and arm caused by paralysis generally known as writers paralysis. He died in 1912 and it is unknown where he and his wife are buried.

Click for printer friendly version

Email this article to a friend

 

 

© 2013
Cedar Key News

cedarkeynews@gmail.com