Bazaleel Norman served four years in the Seventh Maryland Regiment, fighting at Monmouth, Camden, Cowpens, Guilford Court House, and Eutaw Springs. After the war he moved to Marietta, which was founded by former Revolutionary War officers as the first permanent American settlement in the Northwest Territory. Three of his descendants died in service during the Civil War: Henry Norman served in the West Virginia cavalry and died as a prisoner of war at the notorious Confederate prison in Andersonville; Azariah Norman died of wounds and is likely buried in an unknown grave in Arlington National Cemetery; Corporal Horace Norman died on April 24, 1864, and is buried at Hampton National Cemetery.
Bazaleel Norman’s great-great-grandson Henry A. Norman graduated in one of the earliest classes of the flight school at the Tuskegee Institute, serving in both World War II and Korea, and retiring from the U.S. Air Force as a major. Bazaleel died in July 1830, his obituary appearing in the local paper and noting his Revolutionary War service. His final resting place is unknown, but is remembered at Mound Cemetery in Marietta.