USA > New York > Wayne County > Landmarks of Wayne County, New York, Pt. 1 > Part 10
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42
٠٠١ ٠١٠٫٠
1
١.
:1
ليكم
::
11
1
88
LANDMARKS OF
What became the 160th Regiment, and the third from Wayne and Cayuga counties, was recruited from the last of August, 1862, through September. The first company (B) was raised in Palmyra and went into the barracks August 29. The other three Wayne companies were A from Newark ; C, from Lyons; and D, from Marion. The regiment went out under command of Colonel Dwight, left Auburn November 18 and was mustered into the United States service at New York on the 21st. Embarked on a transport, the regiment then constituted a part of General Banks's celebrated expedition, and proceeded to Ship Island at the mouth of the Mississippi, reaching there December 14. In the extended operations to the southward of New Orleans, having the cap- ture of that city as their main object, in January, February, March and April, the 160th took part, while attached to Weitzel's Brigade. While this duty was arduous, the losses were small. In April the regiment advanced with the brigade to Opelousas, and thence by a rapid three days' march to Alexandria. On the 24th of May Weitzel's Brigade reached Simmsburg, at the head of the Atchafalaya River, whence it went on transports to St. Francisville, fourteen miles by land above Port Hudson. By easy marches the rear of Port Hudson was reached on the 25th of May. Here a part of the regiment shared in the attack on Port Hudson, and on the 27th Company B lost one man killed and the regi- ment about twenty wounded. In the succeeding charge of June 14 Richard Jones was killed and thirty-five wounded. Following the sur- render of Vicksburg, on the 7th of July, Port Hudson did likewise on the 8th, and on the 9th Weitzel's Brigade was the first to enter the works. At evening the regiment embarked and the next day landed at Donaldsonville, and on August 1, proceeded to New Thibedeaux, and went into camp. . On Thursday, January 7, 1864, theregiment with the 19th Corps started for Franklin. 'In March Weitzel's Brigade was broken up and the 160th was brigaded with three Maine and one Pennsylvania regiments. The next movement of importance in which the 160th shared was the Red River expedition under General Banks. On this service the 160th found severe fighting several days and after an engage- ment on the 9th of March, Lieutenant Colonel Van Petten was called to headquarters to receive for his regiment the thanks of Generals Banks, Emory, and MeMullen. It was said that the heroism of the 160th turned the tide of the day's battle. Eight of the regiment were killed, among them two captains; thirty-seven were wounded and fourteen missing. The 19th Corps was now ordered north to form a part of
11
٠١٠م
:1
1
1:1
89
WAYNE COUNTY.
Sheridan's army in the Shenandoah Valley. In the active operations in that region this regiment performed its allotted share. At the battle of Winchester, September 19, the 160th behaved with great gallantry, and saw the hardest fighting in which the regiment had participated. The loss was about twenty killed and fifty wounded. After the rebels were driven out of the valley the regiment was sent first to Savannah, Ga., and then to Hawkinsville, whence it proceeded to Elmira and was there mustered out in November, 1865. The number of men mustered out then was about 240, under commond of Lieut. Col. H. B. Under- hill.
The First Regiment of Veteran Cavalry contained a considerable number of Wayne county men, who were chiefly from Palmyra. The regiment was composed of several bodies of men, many of whom were veterans, that had been recruited in the summer and fall of 1863, and was mustered in on the 24th of October. The regiment was sent into Virginia over ground that was familiar to many of the veterans. It is almost impossible to follow in detail the operations of a body of cavalry. In the Valley of the Shenandoah, in the spring and summer of 1864, the regiment was constantly in active duty and acquired distinction for its gallantry. On June 1 the regiment, with the 28th Ohio Infantry, was sent across the mountains in charge of 1,200 prisoners. The dis- tance to Beverly, 110 miles, was made in four days. During the re- mainder of the summer the Veteran Cavalry was in the saddle the larger part of the time, and in October was placed in guard of the salt works of Kanawha, in Camp Piatt, Western Virginia. On the 8th of January, 1865, the regiment went into camp at Gauley Bridge, at the headwaters of the Kanawha. After two or three other changes in location the reg- iment returned home about the last of July and was mustered out.
The Eighth Regiment New York Cavalry was organized for three years' service, in Rochester, in the fall of 1861, was sent to Washington and into. Camp Selden. Though having enlisted to serve as cavalry, the men were not mounted for nearly a year. Meanwhile the regiment was posted for a time along the Potomac and Winchester Railroad. On the morning of May 24, 1862, four companies were ordered to Winches- ter and participated in fighting at that point. Colonel Samuel J. Crooks resigned in February, and the command was given to Benjamin F. Davis, of the Regular Army, his commission bearing date of July 7. On the Sth the regiment was stationed at the Relay House, and in a short time
12
٢٠
90
LANDMARKS OF
the efficient commander had his men well disciplined, mounted and the regiment recruited up to full number.
On the 11th of September the 8th was surrounded by Jackson's force at Harper's Ferry. When it was seen the place could not be held, Colo- nel Davis asked and was refused permission to break through the ene- my's lines. He, however, called his officers together on the night of the 14th, expressed his determination, and about midnight led his com- mand across the pontoon bridge, dashed through the rebel army, cap- tured Lee's ammunition train, which was on its way to Antietam, and arrived at Greenfield at noon of the 15th, there finding Mcclellan's army marching towards Antietam. After sharing in the fighting of the 11th, the Sth pursued and harassed the rear of the retreating army, and after a short rest at Hagerstown, pursued the rebels up the Shenandoah to- wards the Rappahannock. Other minor engagements of the remainder of the year in which the 8th shared were at Snicker's Gap, Philemont, Union, Upperville, Barber's Cross Roads, and Amosville. The regi- ment went into camp at Belle Plain. A summary of the other principal conflicts in which this regiment took part were at Freeman's Ford, April 14, 1863; Rapidan Bridge, May 4; at Chancellorsville, Beverly Ford, Middleburg, Gettysburg (on which field it is said that the 8th was the first to fire a gun), at Culpepper, Raccoon Ford, and at Germania Ford, October 10; Stevensburg, October 11; Brandy Plains, October 13; Oak IIill, October 15; Belton Station, October 26; Muddy Run, November 8; Locust Grove, November 27; at Barnett's Ford, February 6, 1864 (after wintering at Culpepper Court House); Germania Ford, May 5; White Oak Swamp, June 13; Malvern Hill, June 15; Nottoway Court House, June 23; Roanoke Station, June 25; Stony Creek, June 28; Winchester, August 16; Kearneysville, August 25; Occoquan Creek, September 19; Front Royal, September 21; Milford, September 23; Fisher's Hill, September 30; Jones's Brook, October 9; Winchester, November 12, after having gone into winter quarters; Lacy Springs, December 31; Waynesboro, March 2, 1865, where the Eighth displayed the most daring gallantry. Soon after this Major Compson was detailed by General Sheridan as a bearer of dispatches to the secretary of war, taking with him seventeen captured battle flags, ten of which had been taken by the Eighth. In the operations in front of Petersburg in the spring of 1865, which practically closed the war, this regiment was con- stantly active. . After the surrender at Appomattox the 8th returned to Petersburg and thence went to Washington and took part in the grand
--
91
WAYNE COUNTY.
review, May 22. . It reached Rochester June 28, with 190 of the 940 men who went away in 1861. The battle flag bore the name of sixty- four actions. Among the slain of the regiment were one colonel, eleven captains, two lieutenants, and one color-bearer. The regiment was disbanded July 3.
The 22d Regiment of Cavalry was organized at Rochester, contained a number of Wayne county men, and was mustered into service in Feb- ruary, 1864. It was mustered out, after a comparatively brief term, August 1, 1865. In the various military operations in Virginia of the last campaign, the regiment performed efficient service. It formed a part of the First Brigade, Third Cavalry Division. An order issued April 9, 1865, after the surrender, paid the highest compliments to the valor of this division.
These very brief incomplete sketches of the several organizations which contained one or more companies or considerable numbers of Wayne county men, do not, of course, exhibit in detail the deeds of the men who took their lives in their hands in defense of the country. To do this would require an entire volume; and it is a gratifying fact that such a work has been well performed in Wayne county by Prof. Lewis II. Clark of Sodus, which permanently preserves the deeds of the sol- diers of Wayne county.
CHAPTER VIII.
Since the War-Internal Improvements-Legislative Acts-Agricultural Produc- tions-Peppermint-Statistics, etc .- Civil List-Recapitulation.
The general history of Wayne county since the close of the civil war may be briefly written, exept as it will be found in more detail in the later town histories and chapters devoted to specific topics. With the close of the war we entered upon a period of inflation and expansion in all mercantile and manufacturing centers. Money was plenty, prices of farmers' products were high, markets were active, and a general spirit of recklessness was abroad. New enterprises of various kinds were established, while the older ones which had passed through a period of success on a rising market, were not, as a rule, prepared for the time of retrenchment that should, perhaps, have been more generally fore-
2
LANDMARKS OF
seen. ' As a consequence, when the inevitable reaction came, in 1872-73, all kinds of business suffered severely. But the same reasons existed to lighten the burden in Wayne county to which we have alluded in re- lation to carlier periods of financial stringency. The county is largely agricultural, and such districts, if healthful in other directions, are the last to feel the effects of financial revulsion. During the period now in question the general statement may be made that the people of this county have enjoyed a fair degree of prosperity.
Considerable legislation has been effected since that before chronicled in which the county at large was interested. Among the more impor- tant of these acts was the incorporation of the Palmyra Academy and the Palmyra Savings Bank in 1842, both of which are described in later pages; the act of April 11, 1853, providing for the erection of a new . court house and jail; an act of March 24, 1859, giving Hiram W. Brad- shaw permission to establish a ferry across Sodus Bay "from where the bridge road approaches on the west side, to the highway on the east side;" the incorporation of the Wayne County Savings Bank, April 13, 1861; acts authorizing the building of iron bridges over the canal in the town of. Macedon and at other points. In the appropriation bill of 1871, the sum of $5, 400 was set aside for the vertical wall of the canal in Mace- don, and $2,000 for improvement of the canal in Newark; act of April 26, 1871, appropriating $3,000 for a bridge over Sodus Bay "at or near the site of the old bridge at Port Glasgow." This sum was to be raised by tax, and Edwin H. Draper, of Wolcott; De Witt Parshall, of Lyons; Merritt Thornton, of Sodus; James M. Cosad and William W. Gatchell, of Huron, were made the commissioners. Act of April 24, 1822, au- thorizing the Canandaigua, Palmyra and Ontario Railroad to construct a draw bridge over the canal at or near Palmyra village; (this was not, of course, ever built. ) Act of May 12, 1873, for the protection of fish in the Clyde and Seneca Rivers (a part of the extensive and beneficent legislation of the past twenty years tending to the preservation of the fish supply of this State. ) Act of May 19, 1887, authorizing the super- intendent of public works to build a hoist bridge over the canal at Glas- gow street in Clyde; and a similar act of June 9, 1888, for a bridge over the canal at Geneva street, Lyons, for which $10,000 was appro- priated. Act of April 15, 1887, authorizing the supervisor of the town of Ontario to pay and cancel the bonds constituting the town indebted- ness. . Act of April 9, 1891, authorizing the superintendent of the town of Galen to borrow $5,000 on the town credit, to pay Thomas Reynolds
-
: 9
【いますい!
11 1
1
11 .. . j. l
93
WAYNE COUNTY.
for damages and injury sustained by falling off of a defective bridge. Act of February 24, 1891, making the office of sheriff of Wayne county a salaried office, with salary of $1, 200. Many other other acts have been passed in recent years incorporating various institutions in the county and amending the several village charters, to place them in line with the best governed municipalities of the State.
The reader of the foregoing pages has learned that the attention of the farmers of this county was largely devoted to the growing of wheat in early years. It was the grain that would sell most readily and, of course, supplied the inhabitants with flour. Other grains were culti- vated, but in a more limited way; and the surplus of all was converted into whisky in the numerous small distilleries that abounded in every town.
Apples and pears have always been extensively produced in Wayne county. For the first named fruit the soil and climate seem to be par- ticularly well adapted and the quality of the fruit rivals that of Orleans and Niagara counties, which is the highest praise that can be given it. The first settlers in Sodus, Palmyra, and at other points, planted apple seeds almost as soon as they arrived, and ere long they were supplied with the ever-welcome fruit, the excellent quality of which led to the extensive planting of orchards. Large quantities are shipped annually to market. The first grafted apples brought to Wayne county were brought by William Bond from Long Island and were termed the Long Island, the Long Island Greening, and the Billy Bond. Pears also have been produced successfully in the county, the locally celebrated Sheldon pear and the Osband pear having originated in the towns of Huron and Palmyra respectively.
In recent years raspberries have been extensively cultivated, espe- cially in the north and northwest parts of the county. This fruit is mar- keted generally in an evaporated form.
Another product which has given Wayne county a world-wide fame is peppermint. The first production of this herb was about 1820, and from 1825 until quite recently the quantity grown was on the increase. For many years the quantity of oil distilled in this county constituted by far the larger part of the product of the world. By the year 1837 considerable quantities of the herb were offered for sale. In 1841 H. G. Hotchkiss was keeping a country store at Phelps, Ontario county, and in the course of his dealings with the farmers of that vicinity he had taken their peppermint oil in payment for goods until he had on hand
-
-
9.4
LANDMARKS OF
so much that he would lose money if he could not dispose of the lot for $1,000. He attempted to sell it in New York but without success. This led to the attempt to produce oil at home and was the initial step in what became a very extensive and profitable manufacture. After the year 1841 Mr. Hotchkiss gave his entire attention to this business. Other enterprising men took up the work of manufacturing the oil, and the farmers were thus inspired to further cultivation of the herb, until it became almost if not quite the chief agricultural product of the coun- ty. The average annual yield of peppermint oil in this county is 150, 000 pounds, nine-tenths of which is controlled by the Hotchkiss family of Lyons, which is virtually dictating the peppermint oil market, as Wayne county is practically the only peppermint-growing district where the plant is cultivated and the oil, distilled. Wayne county oil com- mands from forty to fifty cents a pound more than any other peppermint oil. Twenty-five pounds of oil to the acre is the lowest general average of the crop. It is not uncommon for the market to reach $3 a pound, and it has been as high as $5 a pound. Some farmers distill their own oil, but the product is usually treated by regular distillers, of whom there are about 100 in Wayne county. They toll the crop for the dis- tilling.
In 1801 the prices for various products were as follows: wheat, 75 cents; corn, 3 shillings; rye, 50 cents; hay, $6 to $12 per ton; butter and cheese, 11 to 16 cents; salt pork, 8 to 10 cents; whisky, 50 to 75 cents per gallon ; salt, $5 per barel; sheep, $? to $+ per head; neat cat- tle, $3 to $4 per cwt. ; milch cows, $16 to $25 per head; horses, $100 to $125 a span; working oxen, $50 to $80 per yoke; laborer's wages, in- cluding board, $10 to $15 per month; suit of clothes, $4 to $5; shoes, $1.75 to $2 per pair.
In 1858 the county had 254, 451 acres improved land; real estate val- med at $12,308,024; personal property, $1,364,222; there were that year 23,964 male and 22,796 female inhabitants, 8,708 dwellings, 9,376 families, 6,844 freeholders, 219 school districts, 17,222 school children, 14,928 horses, 21,695 oxen and calves, 104, 845 sheep, 29,799 swine; the county produced that year 45,272 tons hay, 289, 734 bushels winter and 1,918,572 bushels spring wheat. 261, 403 bushels potatoes, 509, 626 bush- els apples, 1,446,080 pounds butter, 163, 764 pounds cheese; and 13,065 yards domestic cloths.
The population of Wayne county by decades isas follows: 1800, 1,410; 1810, 6,575; 1820, 20,309; 1830, 33,643; 1840, 42,057; 1850, 44,953; 1860, 47,762; 1870, 47,710; 1880, 51,700; and 1890, 49,729.
٢١١٣
٦ - جديد أم + جوجيب 5 .
19 yttotchlin
95
WAYNE COUNTY.
In 1855 the county had 226 blacksmiths, 265 shoemakers, 65 cabinet- makers and dealers, 561 carpenters, 83 clergymen, 126 wagonmakers, etc., 156 coopers, 6,494 farmers, 66 grocers, 43 tavern-keepers, 43 law- yers, 44 machinists, 161 masons, etc., 186 merchants, 67 millers, 103 milliners, 83 painters, etc., 116 physicians, 14 printers, 85 harness mak- ers, etc., 257 tailors, 45 tanners and curriers, 203 teachers, 49 tinsmiths, and 7 weavers.
In 1893 the 349, 912 acres of land in the county were assessed at $13, 252,206; village and mill property, $6, 121, 401; value of railroads and telegraphs, $4,010.470; personal property, value, $2,398,508; total as- sessed value, $25,782, 230.
Schedule of taxes, 1893: town contingent funds, $32,009.33; town poor funds, $12, 798.48; roads and bridges, $6,914.42; special town tax- es, $34,389.17; re-assessed on towns, $254.53; audited by supervisors, $4,015.73; reimburse county poor fund, $1, 195 14; school taxes, $23,- 588.81; county tax, $56, 438.93; state tax, $31, 100.91 ; state insane tax, $8,023.41. Total tax, $216, 228.86; dog tax, $2,027.50.
The county has forty-five election districts, and at the general elec- tion in 1893 polled 9, 143 votes.
Wayne county is divided into two school commissioner districts, named respectively First and Second. The First district comprises the towns of Butler, Galen, Huron, Lyons, Rose, Savannah, Sodus, and Wolcott, and the annual report of Everett ('Neill, school chmmissioner, for 1892 -93 gives the following; Districts with school houses, 114; teachers employed during legal term, 170; whole number of children attending school, 6, 138; valuie school buildings and sites, $202,530; assessed val- uation of districts, $13,300, 468; public money received from the State, $23,993. 11; raised by local tax, $46, 667.24; trees planted in 1893, 121.
The Second school commissioner district embraces the towns of Ar- cadia, Macedon, Marion, Ontario, Palmyra, Walworth, and Williamson, and from the report of M. C. Finley, commissioner, for 1892-93, is ob- tained the following: Districts with school houses, 101; teachers em- played during legal term, 132; whole number of children attending school, 5,172; value of school buildings and sites, $153,040; assessed valuation of districts, $12,663,000; public money received from the State, $18, 450.74; raised by local tax, $34, 048.62; trees planted in 1893, 121.
--
.- -
96
LANDMARKS OF
CIVIL. LIST.
At the convention held in Albany in October, 1801, to consider the powers of the governor and of the Council of Appointments (which were decided as equal) the number of State senators was fixed at thirty-two and assemblymen at one hundred. Members of this convention from Onondaga, Ontario and Steuben were Messrs. Carpenter, Moses At- water, and John Knox. A canal commissioner was appointed on April 12, 1816, from Lyons, Wayne county, in the person of Myron Holley. The second constitution was adopted by an election held in February, 1822. Many changes were made and a large number of offices were made elective. These measures were carried by a vote of 74,732, to 41,402. The constitution finally grew into disfavor, and a third consti- tution was formed during the year 1846. The delegates to this conven- tion from Wayne county were Ornon Archer and Horatio N. Taft.
By act act of April 17, 1822, Ontario, Seneca, Wayne, erected in 1823, and Yates, same date, were constituted the Twenty-sixth Congressional District. By act of June 29, 1832, Seneca and Wayne became the Twen- ty-fifth District, changed to the Twenty-seventh by act of September 6, 1842. Cayuga and Wayne were made the Twenty-fifth District by act of July 19, 1851, and Seneca was added by act of April 23, 1862, and the three constituted the Twenty-fourth District. By act of April 13 1892, Wayne, Cayuga, Cortland, Ontario and Yates were made the Twenty-eighth District. The following citizens of Wayne county have been elected to Congress: Esbon Blackmar, 1848-49; Martin Butter- field, 1859-61; George W. Cowles, 1869; John M. Holley, 1847-48; John H. Camp, 1876.
The office of presidential elector has been held by the following res- ¡dents of Wayne county : Solomon W. John, appointed by the Legisla- jature in 1824. John Beal, elected in 1828; Alanson M. Knapp, 1836; Charles Bradish, 1840; Jonathan Boynton, 1844; Joseph W. Gates, 1848; William Van Marter, 1860; and George W. Knowles, 1826.
The State of. New York was divided into eight senatorial districts, and each entitled to four senators; term four years, one elected each year. On April 11, 1823, Wayne was annexed to the Seventh District. which then included Cayuga, Onondaga, Ontario, Seneca, Yates, Wayne, and, in 1836, Cortland counties. By an act passed April 30, 1892, Wayne, Cayuga, Tompkins, Ontario and Yates were made the Twenty-sixth Senatorial District. Senators from Wayne have been Byram Green,
١ ٠١١
i.
1:
٠٠
1
1
١٠
97
WAYNE COUNTY.
1823-24; Truman Hart, 1826-29; Thomas Armstrong, 1830-37; Lyman Sherwood, 1840-41; William Clark, 1854-55; Alexander B. Williams, 1858-61; Stephen K. Williams, 1864-69, Samuel C. Cuyler, 1846-47; Thomas Robinson, 1884-85; Charles T. Saxton, 1889, the present sen- ator.
Upon the organization of Wayne county it was entitled to two repre- sentatives by appointment. The following persons have held the office from Wayne county from the respective dates given: 1824, James Dick- son, Russell Whipple; 1825, Wm. II. Adams, Enoch Moore; 1826, Thomas Armstrong, Jonathan Boynton; 1830, Luther Chapin, Seth Eddy; 1831, A. Wells, Seth Eddy ; 1832-33, James Humeston, A. Salis- bury; 1834, James P. Bartle, Russell Whipple; 1835, E. Benjamin, WV. D. Wylie; 1836, Reuben H. Foster, Robert Alsop; 1837, David Arne, jr., Pomeroy Tucker; 1838, John M. Holley, Esbon Blackmar; 1839, T. Armstrong, A. Salisbury; 1840, Horace Morley, Durfee Os- band; 1841, J. M. Halley, E. Blackmar; 1842, James M. Wilson, The- ron R. Strons; 1843, Philip Sours, Fred U. Sheffield; 1844, Austin Roc, Isaac R. Sanford; 1845, John J. Dickson, A. M. Knapp; 1846, James T. Wisner, Elias Durfee; 1847, I. R. Southard, S. Moore; 1848, E. Pettit, John Lapham; 1849, Isaac Leavenworth, Peter Boyce; 1850, James M. Wilson, Elihu Dunfee; 1851, Ed. W. Bottom, T. G. Yeomans; 1852, William Dutton, T. G. Yeomans; 1853, B. H. Streeter, L. Whit- comb; 1851, Willis G. Wade, John P. Bennett; 1856, Harlow Hyde, Thomas Barnes; 1857, Thomas Johnson, Joseph Peacock; 1858, Ed- ward W. Sentell, Charles Estes; 1859, Henry K. Graves, John A. Laing; 1860, James M. Servis, Abel J. Bixby; 1861, J. S. L'Amoreaux, J. W. Corning; 1862, E. N. Thomas, Abram Payne; 1863-64, Thaddeus W. Collins, Lemuel Durfee; 1865, Thaddeus W. Collins, W. H. Rogers; 1866, John Vandenburg, W. H. Rogers; 1867, John Vandenburg, Ornon Archer; 1868, De Witt Parshall, Elijah M. K. Glenn; 1869, Merritt Thornton, Elijah M. K. Glenn; 1870, Anson S. Wood, Amasa Hall; 1871, Anson S. Wood, Henry Durfee; 1872-73, Edward B. Wells, Lu- cien T. Yeomans; 1874, Emory W. Gurnee, H. H. Clark; 1875, Will- iam H. Clark, A. S Russell; 1876, Emory W. Gurnee, A. S. Russell ;. 1827, Jackson Valentine, Jeremiah Thistlethwaite; 1878, Jackson Val- entine, James H. Miller; 1879, John A. Munson, Jefferson Sherman ; 1880, Alfred P. Crafts, Jefferson Sherman; 1881, Rowland Robinson, Addison W. Gates; 1882, Oscar Weed, William E. Greenwood; 1883, Oscar Weed, Lemon Hotchkiss; 1884, Ammon S. Farnum, Silas S. 13
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.