History of Grafton, Worcester county, Massachusetts, from its early settlement by the Indians in 1647 to the present time, 1879. Including the genealogies of seventy-nine of the older families, Part 9

Author: Pierce, Frederick Clifton, 1855-1904
Publication date: 1879
Publisher: Worcester : Press of C. Hamilton
Number of Pages: 728


USA > Massachusetts > Worcester County > Grafton > History of Grafton, Worcester county, Massachusetts, from its early settlement by the Indians in 1647 to the present time, 1879. Including the genealogies of seventy-nine of the older families > Part 9


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GRAFTON, September 11, 1778


EPH'M LYON, } Captains for the two


JOS. WARRIN. S companies in Grafton.


WORCESTER, ss., Grafton, Sept. 22, 1778.


Then the above named, Jos. Warrin and Eplı. Lyon, personally appeared and made oath to the truth of the above certificate, before me, justice of the peace.


CHARLES BRIGHAM.


* Enlistment Rolls, Vol. 41-379. Sec. State office. 16


122


HISTORY OF GRAFTON.


RECEIPTS FOR BOUNTIES.


GRAFTON, April 9th, 1781.


Received of the committee, chosen by this town to hire soldiers for three years or during the war, £180 in old Con- tinental money, and £75 in hardy money, which is in full for three years' service :-


Date enlistment.


Occupation.


Age.


1781.


Noah Viles, .


Farmer.


18 years.


April 9.


Samuel Johns,


Cooper.


25


66


Elijah Bruce, Jr.,


Farmer.


16


66


John Stacy,


Nathaniel Gowing,


May 14.


Hezekiah How,


Farmer.


16


Juue 13.


Jacob How,


Cordwainer.


20


June 18.


Ebenezer Cutler,


Farmer.


16


Samuel Rixford,


66


16


66


April 9.


Thaddeus Reed,


-


April 27.


Elijah Stanton,


Cordwainer.


20


May 17.


-


In the return of men belonging to the town of Grafton, January, 1781, in the Continental Army, for three years or during the war, was Benjamin Grover, who enlisted in Cap- tain Goodale's company, Colonel Putnam's 5th Massachu- setts regiment, April 19, 1779.


The patriotie spirit evinced here during the French and Revolutionary wars, was the same spirit that pervaded the whole of New England. And the greatest honor that this or any other town can have from these events, is in the gen- erous support it has given to all the measures which have created and sustained the free and prosperous institutions it is our fortune to enjoy.


Grafton in the Civil War of 1861-5.


When the assault was made on Fort Sumter, the nation was roused to the defense of its integrity and existence. In Grafton, as everywhere throughout the North, the spirit of loyalty and devotion to the Union our forefathers had


20


June 20.


George Ross,


19


June 5.


123


FIRST COMPANY, THEIR DEPARTURE.


formed, and the government they had created, welded all discordant sentiments. The news of the attack npon the Massachusetts Sixth Regiment in Baltimore, April 19, 1861, was received in Grafton on the morning of the 20th, and cansed great interest and excitement. The selectmen called an informal meeting at the Town Hall in the afternoon ; messengers were sent to different parts of the town to notify the inhabitants. At four o'clock P. M. the large Town Hall was filled with citizens. Col. Charles Brigham presided. Benjamin Smith, a soldier of the Revolution, ninety-eight years old, was present and took a seat on the platform. Several patriotic speeches were made, and resolutions adopted for the immediate formation of a military com- pany ; and the selectmen were requested " to call a legal town meeting at the earliest possible day," to provide means for equipping and drilling the company. A warrant for the meeting on the 29th, was issued the same evening. A very full meeting was held on the 29th, at which it was voted to appropriate $4,000 as a fund for organizing the company ; each member was to receive $1 per day while engaged in drilling, and when called into active service each was to receive from the town the same monthly pay as he received from the government. A company was immediately formed, which afterwards was sent to "Camp Scott," in Worcester, and became Company G, of the Fifteenth Regiment, Mass Vols., for three years service. "It is impossible to forget * the scenes presented in two of these churches, the Sunday before the company departed, when it marched in a body into them to listen to sermons addressed particularly to the members. In the morning, the soldiers' true friend, and afterwards companion, Rev. Mr. Scandlin, addressed them in the Unitarian Church ; and what an impression was made, as, in the midst of a terrible thunder and hail storm, he gave out that prophetic and cheering hymn, reading to the


* Oration by Rev. E. Frank Howe.


124


HISTORY OF GRAFTON.


music of rattling hail and rolling thunder, the following words :---


' Through night to light! And though to mortal eyes Creation's face a pall of horror wear,


Good cheer ! good cheer! The gloom of midnight flies : Soon shall a sunrise follow, mild and fair.


Through storm to calm ! And though his thunder-car The rumbling tempest drives through earth and sky,


Good cheer ! good cheer! The elemental war Tells that a blessed, healing hour is nigh.'


In the afternoon, he who ministered in the pulpit of the Congregational Church for upwards of thirty years, and whose eloquence there are nonc to question, Rev. Thomas C. Biscoe, delivered to 'the boys' a most eloquent and im- pressive sermon from the text, 'Quit you like men; be strong.' Perchance you can now see the little girls, like white robed angels, moving among that band of soldiers after the sermon, and giving to each member a copy of God's Word of Truth. What stories these Bibles would tell if now gathered and permitted to speak! And you cannot have forgotten how, just before starting, solemn re- ligious services were held upon the common, nor that the company was then escorted to Worcester by the selectmen and citizens, on horseback and in carriages. That parting at the camp, when the soldier-boys were left behind, and loving and honoring relatives and friends returned home to begin the painful watch for tidings, who but they who were there can tell its pain, its hopes, its fears ? Cursed be war, and thrice cursed be the evil cause that creates the necessity for it ! From that early day to the end of the fearful strife -and many were the dark and disheartening days when evil tidings came-Grafton never faltered in her patriotic devotion. Only one less than a round four hundred men, out of a population of about four thousand, did she send to the war-a number larger by nearly half a hundred than all demands upon lier. On the base of yonder beautiful monu-


125


FIRST COMPANY, THEIR DEPARTURE.


ment are inscribed, in letters which the patriots coming after us for centuries will keep clear and legible, the names of the fifty-nine vietims whom Grafton gave-rather who gave themselves-for the nation's life. These names will be read by children, and children's children, for generation after generation ; and, as they are read, voices will come from the scattered graves of the dead, bidding those who read, to love, to honor, to cherish, to defend the institutions for which they laid down their lives.


But while men constitute the most valned treasures given to the nation, yet it must not be forgotten that Grafton was generous with material aid also. With a valuation of prop- erty amounting to little more than a million and a half dol lars, she paid, for war purposes, the sum of thirty-nine thousand three hundred and fifty dollars, exclusive of State aid. Bearing in mind that, in addition to its other burdens of taxation, Grafton freely poured out of its material treasures nearly forty thousand dollars during the war, and gave one in ten of her entire population to stand in the ranks of the army, and generously surpassed all demands upon her for men, all will agree that it was a well earned compliment which Governor Bullock paid the town, on the day when that monument was dedicated, as he said, *' I feel bound in truth and justice, to say that no other town appears to have contributed to the late war a larger proportion than yours of its treasures and its men.' And to-day, pointing your eyes to that beautiful monument, I say to you in the words of the beloved and honored Scandlin, a worthy sue- eessor in the ministry of the patriotic Grosvenor of 1775, t' I rejoice in the public spirit that could rise above the pressure of taxes and the burden of debt-faithful to its plighted word-true to those who have honored the town by deeds of daring, by the offering of life.' In behalf of the hundreds of Grafton's sons, whose homes are no longer on


* The Worcester Daily Spy, October 14th, 1867. t Ibid.


126


HISTORY OF GRAFTON.


your grand and beautiful hills, nor in your deep and fertile valleys, I say, in all honesty, and with the deepest fervor, we are proud of your record during the war, and in our homes in other villages and eities, and on western prairies, we will teach our children to honor the place of their fathers' nativity, because it has honored itself by a record so grand and glorious !"


Abraham M. Bigelow, Winthrop Faulkner, Rufus E. Warren, Chandler M. Pratt, Jasper S. Nelson, Alfred Morse, Dr. Levi Rawson, Esek Saunders, S. P. Champney, Joseph B. Adams, Charles Brigham, Lawson Munyan, Seth J. Axtell, were a committee from different seetions of the town, to whom, in connection with the seleetmen, was given the management of the expenditure of the money, and the general supervision of war matters, which continued during the years of the Rebellion.


It having been aseertained that the monthly pay eould not be assessed, it was not paid after the men were mustered in: The vote, however, shows the liberal and patriotie spirit of the people.


Petitions were presented May 14, 1861, from James W. White, and eighty others of Grafton, and of the commis- sioned officers of the Twelfth Regiment of Infantry (Col- onel Webster), severally, for an act to legalize the appro- priations of cities and towns in behalf of the volunteer militia, which was referred to the Judiciary Committee.


The Fifteenth Regiment was recruited in the County of Woreester, at "Camp Lincoln," in the city of Worcester. Major Charles Devens, Jr., who commanded the Second Bat- talion of Rifles in the three months' service, was appointed colonel. It left the State on the 8th of August, 1861; it bore a prominent part in the battle of Ball's Bluff, of that year, which made it one of the marked regiments of Massa- chusetts. October 20th, Colonel Devens was sent to Harri- son's Island in two flat boats, from the Chesapeak and Ohio canal, bearing four companies of his Massachusetts Fif-


.


127


SHORT SKETCHES OF REGIMENTS AND BATTLES.


teenth; one company of the same regiment was already there. A reserve, numbering about three thousand men, was held in readiness to co-operate should a battle ensue. In the meantime, a scouting party of about twenty men had been sent out from Harrison's Island, under Captain Phil- brick, of the Fifteenth. They ascended a steep bank on the Virginia side, opposite the island, known as Ball's Bluff, which rises about one hundred feet above the Potomac. Philbrick went a short distance toward Leesburg, when he discovered, as he supposed, a small camp of Confederates apparently not well guarded. Upon receiving information of this fact, General Stone, who supposed that McCall was near to assist if necessary, sent orders to Colonel Devens to eross from Harrison's Island with five companies of his regi- ment, and proceed at dawn to surprise the eamp. Colonel Lee was also ordered to cross from the Maryland shore with four companies of his regiment, and a four-oared boat, to oeenpy the island after Devens' departure, and to send one company to the Virginia shore, to take position on the heights there, and cover his return. Devens advanced at dawn, but the reported camp could not be found. It proved that other objects had been mistaken for tents. After marching to within a mile of Leesburg, he halted and sent a courier to General Stone for further orders. Devens had been closely watched by the vigilant Confederates. He had a slight skirmislı with the riflemen, in which one of his men were killed and nine wounded. He then fell back to the bluff, where the remainder of the regiment had been brought over by his lieutenant-colonel, George A. Ward, and his entire foree now was only six hundred and twenty- five men. At a little past noon, Devens and his band were assailed by Confederates under Colonels Jenifer and Hun- ton, in the woods that skirted the open field in which they had halted. Infantry attacked the main body on the left, and cavalry fell upon the skirmishers in front. His men stood their ground firmly ; but, being pressed by overwhelm-


128


HISTORY OF GRAFTON.


ing numbers, and reinforcements not arriving, they fell back about sixty paces to foil an attempt to flank them. This was accomplished, and they took a position about half a mile in front of Colonel Lee, where he was reinforced by Colonel Baker, who took command of all the forces on the bluff, numbering nineteen hundred. They immediately formed in battle order, and awaited attack. The ground on which our forces were compelled to give battle was very un- favorable. It was an open field, surrounded on three sides by a dense forest, and terminating on the fourth at the brow of a high bluff at the river.


Woods


OPEN FIELD


WOOD'S


CAL REGT


MASS.15


MA-S 5. 20


18 MISS


ISLAND


HARRIS


RIVER.


UNION


POTOMAC


N


REBEL


2 COS TAMMANY RECT.


The contest began at three o'clock, and instantly became general and severe. Colonel Baker was killed, and Colonel Lee commanded. By a wrong maneuver a very destructive fire, at close distance, was poured upon the whole column by the Mississippi regiment. The soldiers immediately re- treated, which instantly became a ront, down the steep bank to the Potomac. As the boats were insufficient, there was no means left for escape but by swimming, and several were shot in the water and drowned. Colonel Devens escaped on his horse, that swam across the turbulent Potomac. Thus


129


SHORT SKETCHES OF REGIMENTS AND BATTLES.


ended, October 22d, 1861, the disastrons battle of Ball's Bluff .* The Fifteenth and Twentieth Massachusetts regi- ments, engaged in it, behaved with great gallantry, and suffered severely. This disastrous battle carried grief into many of our Massachusetts families, and depressed the buoyant and patriotic spirit of our people for a time. J. D. Sherman and Elmer N. Newton were killed in this battle.


The Twenty-first Regiment was recruited at " Camp Lin- eoln," at Worcester. The men belonged to the central and western portions of the Commonwealth. This was one of the five regiments recruited in Massachusetts for special ser- vice, designed originally to be commanded by Gen. Thomas W. Sherman, but which command was afterwards given to General Burnside; Augustus Morse, of Leominster, one of the three major-generals of militia of the Commonwealth, was commissioned colonel. A. C. Maggi, of New Bedford, who had volunteered as quartermaster-sergeant in the Third Regiment of the three months' militia, was commissioned lientenant-colonel. He was an Italian by birth, a citizen by choice, and a thoroughly educated officer. William S. Clarke, professor in Amherst College, was commissioned as major. This regiment, after a brief stay in camp, started for the seat of war August 23, 1861, and first encamped at Annapolis, where for nearly five months it performed the duty of protecting the road to the Capital, and keeping the State of Maryland in the Union. In January, 1862, it started for North Carolina ; its colonel, who had been a brigadier general in the militia, resigned soon after their arrival, and Lieutenant-Colonel Clarke was commissioned colonel the next day. It made part of General Burnside's expedition, and was engaged in the battles at Roanoke Island, at Newbern, and at Camden. The regiment re- mained South till the famous campaign of General Pope, in


* Called by Confederate writers the battle of Leesburg.


17


130


HISTORY OF GRAFTON.


July, 1862, when the command of General Burnside was sent in as a reinforcement, and it landed at Aqna Creek so as to take part in the battles at second Bull Run, Sonth Mountain, Chantilly, Antietam and Fredericsburg. At Falmouth it remained on picket duty through the months of December and January, and broke camp withont regret February 9, 1863, reaching Paris, Ky., April 1, where the State Fair grounds furnished the men a resting-place of four days, when they proceeded twenty-two miles to Mount Sterling, where it remained three months, vindicating the character and title to respect of Massachusetts troops at the hands of Western men. In July they were at Lexington, and afterwards at Canip Nelson, and started for East Ten- nessee 12th September, marching one hundred and eighty- five miles to Knoxville. October 11th, a spirited engage- ment occurred at Blue Springs, when the Twenty-first drove the enemy from its position, and pursued it twenty-six miles, having marched fifty-one miles to reach that point. From this time to the end of the year their service was severe, and their conduct heroic. They are said to have marched and countermarched through storm and cold without tents, and on half rations, poorly elothed and badly shod, twenty inen doing duty through November barefoot, and yet doing their dnty cheerfully and with such alacrity as to have acquired the name of the "Fighting Regiment." At the siege of Knoxville they did active duty, being one night on picket, and the next in the rifle-pits ; and the 24th November, in company with another picked regiment, they made one of the most brilliant charges of the siege, driving the enemy from the houses, the fences, and the rifle-pits in the neigh- borhood, and keeping up the work constantly till the siege was raised the 5th December ; and though only able to have for their subsistence two ears of corn per day, yet following hard on the footsteps of the retreating enemy, into the woods of East Tennessee ; and then, with the memory of what they had passed through, and realizing what was before


131


SHORT SKETCHES OF REGIMENTS AND BATTLES.


them, half starved as they were, they crowned their service of two and a half years by a further enlistment for three years. If any men over deserved well of their country, surely such as these did. It is worthy of note, that all but thirty-six of the regiment, who were alive and present for duty, became veterans. In January, 1864, they came home on a furlough, and were honored with an enthusiastic recep- tion at Worcester as a regiment. Returning, they were re- viewed and welcomed back by President Lincoln, and, marching by the battle-fields of Bull Run and Bristow's Station, to the Rapidan, to co-operate with the army of the Potomac in the final "pounding out" of the Rebellion, they made a part of that force with which Grant said he should "fight it ont on that line if it took all summer." They were on the road to Richmond all that year; and in the Wilderness, at Spottsylvania, at North Anna, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Welden Railroad, Poplar Spring Creek, and at Hatches Run, they met the shock of arnis, and proved vet- erans in deed as well as in namne.


The casualties of the service, and the draft which had been made upon the physical systems of the men, had re- dneed the numbers of the regiment to that point that it be- came necessary to break up the organization ; aud so, on the 18th August, 1864, the regiment was broken up, and its men transferred to the Thirty-sixth Massachusetts, and the officers were mustered out of service, together with the men who had not re-enlisted. The record of this regiment, dur- ing its entire period of service, was a most honorable one, and more than once it had the eredit of having, by its courage and dash, saved and turned the fortunes of the day, and either achieved a success or prevented a rout. Espec- ially was this true of the first battle of the Wilderness, when the Second Corps gave way, and, rushing across the lines of the Ninth, threw everything into confusion ; then the Twenty-first Massachusetts and the One Hundredth Penn- sylvania, succeeded in restoring order out of confusion, and


132


HISTORY OF GRAFTON.


prevented the entire destruction of the army. All bonor, then, to the officers and men of the Twenty-first Massachu- setts !


The Twenty-fifth Regiment was raised in Worcester County, and was organized at "Camp Lincoln," Worcester. It left the State for Annapolis, October 31, 1861, and formed a part of General Burnside's division. The field officers were Edward Upton, Fitchburg, colonel; A. B. R. Sprague, Worcester, lieutenant-colonel ; M. J. MeCafferty, Worcester, major. These men had held commissions in the volunteer service, and were possessed of considerable mili- tary knowledge.


The Fifty-first Regiment was recruited at "Camp John E. Wool," Worcester. On November 11th, the regiment was ordered to Newbern, N. C. A few days afterwards it came to Boston, and entered on board a transport, and pro- ceeded at onee to its destination. A. B. R. Sprague, of Worcester, was colonel.


The following are the names of all persons who enlisted or served during the war of the late Rebellion, from this town. The figures which follow the name represents the age of the person at enlistment; the first date is the date of muster; and the latter the date of the termination of ser- vice, and canse thereof. Where no explanation is given, it is understood to be the date of expiration of service :-


THIRD BATTALION RIFLEMEN.


Company B.


Age.


. Date of Muster. May 19, 1861.


Discharge.


Champney, Preston A., 20


Gee, James S. W.,


27


Hayes, Martin M.,


18


Disability.


Company C.


Dunn, John .


23


May 19, 1861.


Jennings, Edward .


20


FORTY-SECOND REGIMENT, INFANTRY. (100 DAYS). Company G.


Cook, Walter I., .


Age.


Date of Muster.


Discharge.


18


July 21, 1864.


Farrar, George A.,


21


133


LIST OF MEN WHO ENLISTED.


SIXTEENTH REGIMENT, INFANTRY. (100 DAYS).


Company F.


Age. Date of Muster. Discharge.


Dehron, Silvain


32


July 20, 1864.


Terrill, Edward


20


FORTY-SECOND REGIMENT, INFANTRY. (NINE MONTHS).


Company F.


Age. Date of Muster. Discharge.


Pratt, Henry W.


25


Sept. 30, 1862.


Dec. 3, 1862. Disability.


FIFTY-FIRST REGIMENT, INFANTRY. (NINE MONTHS).


Company C.


Age.


Date of Muster. Sept. 25, 1862.


Discharge. July 27, 1863.


Company E.


William F. Wheeler, Captain . - George F. Jourdan, 2nd Lieut. 26


Sept, 25, 1862.


July 25, 1863.


66


James Gleason, Sergeant . 35


¥


66


John W. Bigelow, 28


James W. Mckenzie, “ 32


66


John Wheeler,


33


=


66


Seth J. Axtell, Corporal


20


John F. Searle,


44


22


Daniel C. Brown,


. 24


¥


Joseph K. Axtell,


27


¥


James E. Mcclellan, . 24


¥


George Ferry, Musician . 18


Dwight L. Moore, Wagoner 29


Aldrich, Ira C.,


18


Balcom, Willard


33


Bartlett, George A.,


Biscoe, Arthur G.,


20


Caswell, Moses S.,


18


66


66


Feb. 7, 1863. Disability. July 25, 1863. " 27, 1863. March 3, 1863. Disability. July 27, 1863.


Chamberlin, Edward F. 27


=


Copp, William A.,


18


=


Daniels, Marcus.


21


66


Davis, James 27


66


66


Drury, John H., . 18


¥


",


Fisher, William H., 28


Fletcher, William C.,


19


=


.€


March 21, 1863. Disability. July 27, 1863.


66


Drowned in Chesa- peake Canal. July 27, 1863.


60


66


Greene, Robert E.,


19


134


HISTORY OF GRAFTON.


French, Charles W.,


Age. 18


Date of Muster. Sept. 25, 1862.


Discharge. Died Mar. 1, 1863, Newbern, N. C. July 27, 1863.


French, George H., .


21


Garvin, Lucius F. C.,


21


66


66


Gifford, Welcom F.,


Goddard, Perley ..


28


Hammond, William H., 21


66


66


66


Holden, Charles J., 31


Kempton, Russell A.,


22


Lathe, Cheney, Jr.,


18


Leland, John J.,


21


Monroe, Charles


19


Pogue, John


19


Pratt, George B.,


28


Pratt, Otis B.,


36


66


Pratt, Samuel H.,


21


Taft, Emory A.,


40


66


Van Curan, Abram


43


Walker, James S.,


24


66


Walcott, Lyman A., 21


Waters, Andrew 37


Webster, George C.,


18


66


Wesson, Henry A.,


20


Company I.


Jourdan, Asa H.,.


28


SIXTH REGIMENT, HEAVY ARTILLERY. (THREE YEARS).


Company C.


Age.


Date of Muster.


Discharge. Sept. 3, 1865.


McLoughlin, John


22


Aug. 4, 1863.


Company G.


MeHenery, James


42


66


Died Aug. 22, 1863,


in a rebel prison.


SECOND REGIMENT, HEAVY ARTILLERY. (THREE YEARS).


Company I.


Age. Date of Muster. Discharge.


Davis, Mariner O.,


18


Dec. 11, 1863. Died Oct. 20, 1864,


Newbern, N. C.


THIRD REGIMENT, HEAVY ARTILLERY. (THREE YEARS).


Company K.


Discharge.


Skinner, Charles


Age. Date of Muster. 26 May 12, 1864. Sept. 18, 1865.


66


66


¥


66


Died Jan. 23, 1863, Newbern, N. C. July 27, 1863.


Died Feb. 2, 1863, Newbern, N. C. July 27, 1863.


Jan. 30, 1863. Disability. Died June 16, 1863, Newbern, N. C. July 27, 1863.


.


66


66


66


66


135


LIST OF MEN WHO ENLISTED.


FIRST BATTALION, HEAVY ARTILLERY. (THREE YEARS). Company F.


Age.


Date of Muster. Aug. 15, 1864.


Discharge. June 28, 1865.


Fletcher, William C., Sergeant. 20


Gleason, James


37


Searle, John F.,


25


Chamberlin, Edward F., Corp. 29


66


=


66


Newton, George M.,


24


Aug. 8,


Plaisted, Simeon M.,


25


Ang. 15,


Ferry, George W., Musician . 18


Allen, Simon B., Artificer . 21


18


Balcom, Marcus D., " 27


66


Bartlett, George A.,


32


Bigelow, Alden M.,


18


66


Boynton, Ambrose


18


66


66


Brophy, John


29


66


66


¥


66


Burns, Alanson E.,


21


Chickering, Jonas H.,


33


66


Drury, Johu H., .


21


66


Estabrook, George F.


18


66


¥


66


French, George H., 23


66


66


Frissell, George E.


18


21


Kelsey, Darwin N.,


34


66


Leland, Samuel E.,


32


66


.€


Magrath, James W.


35


66


66


66


Mann, Henry


30


66


66


Mcclellan, John E.,


18


Mellor, James .


44


Nichols, Jonathan E.,


40


66


66


Pierce, Simon T.,


21


Pratt, George B.,


31


Pratt, Luke G.,


18


¥


Prentice, John E.,


30


66


66


66


Putnam, William H.,


33


Remick, Nathaniel P.,




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