Our county and its people : a descriptive and biographical record of Saratoga County, New York, Part 36

Author: Anderson, George Baker; Boston History Company, Boston, pub
Publication date: 1899
Publisher: [Boston] : The Boston History Company
Number of Pages: 950


USA > New York > Saratoga County > Our county and its people : a descriptive and biographical record of Saratoga County, New York > Part 36


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OUR COUNTY AND ITS PEOPLE.


ence of the division. Pursuant to orders issued by Major-General Cop- pinger under date of June 15, Major Austin A. Yates, Captain Loyal L. Davis and Captain Merrill M. Dunspaugh, with one man from each company, left Tampa on the same day on recruiting service, with in- structions to recruit each company up to the maximum strength of one hundred and six enlisted men.


After the regiment was mustered in at Camp Black notification was received that it would be entitled to another major and three battalion adjutants. Attempts were made to have the officers appointed to fill these positions mustered in at Camp Alger by the mustering officer there because the officers had not received their formal commissions. On June 20, at Tampa, the following officers of the regiment were mus- tered in:


Thomas C. Collin, captain of Company B, as major of the Third Battalion with rank from May 23.


George De B. Greene, first lieutenant of Company E.


Thomas W. Hyslop, private of Company A, and


William Swift Martin, regimental sergeant-major, as battalion adjutants with rank from May 23.


Daniel J. Hogan, sergeant of Company K, as second lieutenant of Company K, with rank from May 18, and


Calvin S. McChesney, quartermaster-sergeant of Company A, as second lieutenant of Company A, with rank from June 13, vice Carroll L. Maxcy resigned.


June 28 the following additional officers were mustered in:


John McGaffin as captain of Company B, vice Collin promoted, with rank from June 22.


Edward J. White as first lieutenant of Company B, vice McGaffin promoted, with rank from June 22,


William Leland Thompson, a private of Company A as second lieutenant of Company B, vice White promoted, with rank from June 22, and


Donald J. Hutton as first lieutenant of Company E, vice Greene appointed battal- ion adjutant, with rank from June 22.


June 25 orders were received that the regiment be fully equipped to be loaded on to transports destined for Cuba or Porto Rico. But the order to sail did not come.


July 1 several men were discharged to accept positions as second lieutenants in the new volunteer regiments to be formed in the State of New York as follows:


Private George L. Hare, jr., of Company A and Private H. C. Todd of Company L, in the Two Hundred and Second Regiment.


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SARATOGA IN THE SPANISH WAR.


Private Esek B. Williamson of Company A and Private Winsor P. French of Com- pany L in the Two Hundred and First Regiment.


Privates Griswold Green and George Alford Cluett of Company A in the Two Hundred and Third Regiment.


During the month of July a vast amount of sickness occurred among the troops stationed at Tampa and during the latter part of the month the Second Regiment was ordered to remove to Fernandina, Fla., where the climate was more salubrious. The regiment arrived at the latter place July 27 and was assigned to a place on the extreme south of the camp. Many cases of sickness were reported, mostly malarial fever contracted at Tampa; but the men were enthusiastic over the new camp, greeting the cooler air and more healthful surroundings with expressions of delight.


On July 24 the regiment was transferred to the First Brigade, First Division, of the Fourth Army Corps and brigaded with the Fifth Ohio and Thirty-second Michigan Volunteers. Two days later it left its camp at Tampa and proceeded to Fernandina. August 21 it was re- lieved from duty, transferred from the Department of the East and ordered to Troy, N. Y. Camp was struck August 24 and three days later the command reached Troy. The following day the regiment moved to Averill Park, pitching camp near Sand Lake.


September 12 the regiment received a furlough for thirty days and the muster out took place as follows: October 25, Companies A, B, C and D; October 26, Company M; October 27, Companies I and L; October 28, Company K; October 31, Companies E and F; November 1, Companies G and H; November 2, the regimental field and staff as follows:


Colonel, Edward E. Hardin; lieutenant-colonel, James H. Lloyd; majors, James W. Lester, Austin A. Yates, Thomas Campbell Collin ; regimental adjutant, James J. Phelan; battalion adjutants, Thomas W. Hislop, George De B. Greene, William Swift Martin; quartermaster George M. Alden; surgeon, Henry C. Baum; assistant surgeon, Albert F. Brugman; chaplain, Edmund P. Easterbrook.


The following members of Company L (the Saratoga company) died in the service:


Private Frank S. Legnard, died July 31, 1898, of cerebral apoplexy, at Fernandina, Fla.


Private Tracey E. West, died August 7, 1898, of typhoid fever, at Fernandina, Fla.


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OUR COUNTY AND ITS PEOPLE.


Private Elmer J. Jourdan, died August 17, 1898, of typhoid fever, at Fort McPherson hospital, Ga.


Private William J. Searing, died August 19, 1898, of typhoid fever, at Fernandina, Fla.


Private Robertson A. Parker, died September 5, 1898, of typhoid fever, at Troy, N. Y.


Private Thomas W. McNamara, died September 7, 1898, of typhoid fever, at Troy, N. Y.


Private James A. Holden, died September 13, 1898, of typhoid fever, at Troy, N. Y.


Corporal Frederick P. McNair, died October 18, 1898, of typhoid fever, at Saratoga Springs, N. Y.


EARLY HISTORY OF THE COMPANY.


For twenty years Saratoga county has been represented in the New York National Guard by the military company which became one of first to offer its services to the federal government when the war with Spain began.


No national guard company existed in Saratoga county previous to 1877. The idea of organizing the Twenty-second Separate Company, or the Saratoga Citizens' Corps, originated at the time of the centennial celebration at Bemus Heights in 1877, when general attention was called to the fact that there was no military organization in Saratoga county to receive the Governor's Foot Guards. In the fall of 1877 the work of enlistment was begun. The company was organized March 14, 1878, and mustered into the service of the State March 25 follow- ing, with a total strength of three officers and one hundred men. The first officers were: Captain, John T. Fassett; first lieutenant, George H. Gillis; second lieutenant, Hamilton P. Burney; third lieutenant, John L. Perry, M. D. Captain Fassett remained in command of the company until May, 1883, when Dr. R. C. McEwen was elected cap- tain, serving until 1891. In January, 1892, James W. Lester was elected to the captaincy and had charge of the organization until promoted to major of the Fourteenth Battalion, Third Brigade (of which the Twen- ty-second Company forms a part) in March, 1898. In April, 1898, Amos C. Rich was elected captain and as such headed the command in its expedition to the front as a part of the Second Regiment, New York Volunteers.


Succeeding the first officers of the company, besides the captains, the following have served in the order given:


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SARATOGA IN THE SPANISH WAR.


First lieutenants, Patrick McDonald, A. L. Hall, Amos C. Rich, John A. Schwarte; second lieutenants, Patrick McDonald, A. L. Hall, Waldo L. Rich, Obed M. Cole- man, Frederick M. Waterbury; surgeons, Dr. W. H. Hall, Dr. John A. Moore.


For several years the armory of the company was in the Saratoga Town Hall building, and drills were held in the Town Hall and the Casino. Since 1891 the company has occupied its handsome and com- modious armory on Lake avenue.


From the date of the organization of this company, the pride of Sar- atoga, to the present time, some of the more important events in its career have been as follows:


1878: June 21-A. B. C. and S. C. C. banquet at Clarendon hotel. August 8- Escort Worcester Continentals. September 12-Sham battle, Twenty-second Sepa- rate Company, Eighteenth Separate Company, Glen Mitchell. October 11-Excur- sion to Ballston. December 9-16-Fair of Twenty-second Separate Company.


1879: February 6-Glens Falls, reception Eighteenth Separate Company. June 17-Albany, re-union G. A. R. September 4-Sham battle at county fair, Glen Mitchell.


1880: January 26-February 2-Fair of Twenty-second Separate Company. July 5-Independence Day at Cohoes. August 16-Escort to Company B, Tenth Regi- ment. September 7-Escort Tibbits Veteran Corps of Troy. October 16-One hundred and third anniversary Burgoyne's surrender, Schuylerville.


1881: July 4-Independence Day at Johnstown. August 3-Ecsort Worcester Continentals. September 12-Escort Tibbits Veteran Corps of Troy-Presentation of colors. September 16-Picnic to Saratoga lake.


1882: January 30-February 4-Fair of Twenty-second Separate Company. May 30-Banquet Adelphi hotel. May 30-June 1-Excursion to Worcester, Mass.


1883: September 5-Escort Paterson Light Guards of Paterson, N. J.


1884: September 23-Escort Putnam Phalanx of Hartford, Conn.


1885. February 12-16-"Love and Duty," produced at Town hall. July 4-Inde- pendence Day at Plattsburgh. July 22-Escort Elizabeth Veteran Zouaves of Elizabeth, N. J. August 4 .- Guard duty. Funeral of General Ulysses S. Grant.


1836: January 25-30-Fair Twenty-second Separate Company. July 5-Inde- pendence Day at Johnstown. July 22 -- Albany, Bi Centennial celebration.


1887: May 25-31-Excursion to Washington, D. C. May 30-Escort, Logan Guard of Honor, Washington, D. C. June 7-Albany, entertained by Company A, Tenth Battalion. June 22-Escort Army of the Potomac re-union at Saratoga. September 8-Ballston, escort to Governor David B. Hill. September 15-17-Cen- tennial celebration, Philadelphia.


1888: June 14-Ballston, dedication of Soldiers' monument. August 7-Escort Keck Zouaves of Johnstown. October 1-Escort Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Boston.


1889: January 1-Albany, inauguration Governor David B. Hill. April 29-May 1-New York, via " Grand Republic," Centennial celebration, Washington's inaug- uration. November 22-Corner stone armory Twenty-second Separate Company laid.


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OUR COUNTY AND ITS PEOPLE.


1890: November 26-Entertained by Thirty-second Separate Company at Hoo sick Falls.


1891: February 2-7-Fair of Twenty-second Separate Company. August 21- Saratoga, escort to Benjamin Harrison, President of the United States. October 13 -Utica, dedication soldiers' monument.


1892: June 25-July 2-State Camp, Peekskill. July 4-Banquet to A. B. C. at Windsor hotel. July 12-Escort to Benjamin Harrison, President of the United States. October 21-Albany, Columbus Day celebration.


1893: April 26-28-Naval parade in New York city. July 4 -- Skirmish drill at Woodlawn Oval. November 20-25-Fair of Twenty-second Separate Company.


1894: June 23-30 -- State Camp at Peekskill.


1895: September 5-Floral parade. Escort to Governor Levi P. Morton. Sep- tember 16-21-Field service. Saratoga battle ground, Bemus Heights, Saratoga lake.


1896: June 6-Albany, guests of Company A, Tenth Battalion.


1897: April 27-New York city, dedication Grant monument. September 6-En- tertain Company A, Tenth Battalion, at Saratoga lake. September 7-Floral parade Bicycle Corps.


1898: May 2 -- Left Saratoga for Camp Black, Hempstead Plains, Long Island. May 16-Sworn into the service of the United States. May 18-Left Camp Black for Chickamauga Park. June 1-Proceeded from Chickamauga Park for Tampa, Fla.


OTHERS WHO SERVED.


In addition to the Twenty-second Separate company of Saratoga, a number of other inhabitants of Saratoga county took up arms against Spain, and many others endeavored to volunteer, but found that when they offered themselves the quota of New York already had been filled. Captain Guy Ellis Baker of Ballston was an aide on the staff of General Robert Shaw Oliver, commander of the Third Brigade of the National Guard of New York. Paul M. Pelletreau, son of Rev. Dr. Charles Pelletreau of Ballston Spa, accompanied the Second Regiment as a corporal in the Thirty-sixth Separate Company of Schenectady. Charles E. Van Pelt of Saratoga was a member of John Jacob Astor's Light Battery, destined for service in the Philippines. William H. Newkom of Ballston Spa served as a musician in the regular army. Gerrit V. S. Quackenbush, son of Edwin Quackenbush of Ballston Spa, was com- missioned second lieutenant of Company L of the Sixty-fifth Regiment of Buffalo, which he helped to recruit. Capt. William H. McKittrick, son of Capt. William H. McKittrick of Ballston Spa, who was killed in the war of the Rebellion, served as a member of the staff of his father- in-law, Major-General Shafter, of California. Among the others who enlisted as volunteers were Charles C. Cook, Charles Crippen, Harry


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SARATOGA IN THE SPANISH WAR.


B. Ford, Charles H. Williams and Harry Snyder, all of Ballston Spa. Cadet Joseph W. Powell, who took part in the expedition which sank the American collier Merrimac in the entrance to the harbor of Santiago de Cuba, under command of Lieutenant Richmond Pearson Hobson, by which action Admiral Cervera's fleet was imprisoned in that harbor, is a grandson of ex-Sheriff Powell of Milton, and a great-grandson of Elisha Powell of Milton, a former judge of the Saratoga county Court of Common Pleas.


PATRIOTISM AT HOME.


But Saratoga county's patriotism in this war did not stop here. The citizens of Saratoga Springs raised, by subscription, several thousand dollars, to be devoted to the purchase of necessities and comforts for the men in the field, and other places in the county followed their ex- ample. The Woman's National War Relief Association of the United States of America, incorporated at Albany, May 31, 1898, had for its president Mrs. Ellen Hardin Walworth of Saratoga Springs. The society was formed to give expression in a practical way to the patri- otic sentiment of the women of the nation by finding means to supple- ment with material aid the sacrifices of time, strength, and life by men of the nation in the present war; to keep in remembrance the cause of humanity and the preservation of liberty which made this war neces- sary, and to cultivate a sensitive regard for the honor of the nation and the flag; to collect money and have it applied to the promotion of the health and comfort of officers, soldiers, and sailors in the army and navy according to the approval of the president of the United States, the secretaries of war and of the navy, and the surgeon general. This association raised large sums of money for the surgeon-general's fund of the army and navy, and to help to equip the ambulance ship Relief, fitted out in New York harbor to accompany the ships and troops to Cuba.


On July 4, 1898, the inhabitants of Saratoga county were afforded another opportunity to display their patriotism by furnishing comforts to the soldiers of the Second Regiment in the field. On that day thousands of persons attended the festivities held on the fair grounds at Ballston Spa under the management of citizens of that village. Sat- urday evening, June 11, a mass meeting was held at the Sans Souci opera house, when it was unanimously decided to hold a gigantic festi- val on the nation's birthday, the proceeds of which should go to the


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OUR COUNTY AND ITS PEOPLE.


soldiers of the Second Regiment. Rev. Dr. Charles Pelletreau was chosen manager of the festival. He named several committees to look after the details of the work, including an advisory committee consist- ing of Rev. B. J. McDonough, Rev. G. G. Johnson, Rev. Henry L. Teller, Rev. W. W. Cox, Rev. C. W. Eede, Frank Jones, Hon. Har- vey J. Donaldson, Thomas Kerley, Hon. Stephen C. Medbery, Hon. John H. Burke, Andrew S. Booth, T. C. Kelley and H. H. Ferris. Large quantities of provisions, etc., were donated by citizens, and the celebration was one of the most interesting ever held in Saratoga county. There were horse races, bicycle races and other sports, and all the choirs of the village joined together and sang patriotic songs. The sum of $1,200 was realized from the occasion.


A NEW COMPANY ORGANIZED.


Soon after the departure of the Twenty-second Separate company from Saratoga Springs, the work of recruiting a new company was be- gan by Lieutenant Frederick M. Waterbury; and so rapidly was the work prosecuted that on May 16 the new company, the One Hundred and Twenty-second Separate company, was mustered into the National Guard and ready to respond to another call to arms if its services should be desired. The ceremony of mustering in took place at the armory. Those who took the oath were:


Members of the original Twenty-second Co .- E. B. Ashton, Bernard Brunner, H. J. Blichfeldt, Arthur L. Churchill, W. R. Calkins, George Clements, Frank W. Case, Charles A. Douglass, George Ellsworth, H. J. Epler, Clarence J. Fish, Arthur P. Hope, Fred C. Humeston, W. F. Ingham, Frank M. Jenkins, John H. Morris, Robert McNaughton, George A. Putnam, H. Allison Rood, E. M. Sipperly, jr., Charles Smith, Charles L. Starks, Charles F. Vaughn, Philip S. Wakeley, Fred West, James H. Reagan, R. Mingay, jr., G. R. P. Shackelford, W. L. Thompson, Mervin Sanford.


Volunteers .- James Burdick, Harry Brazee, Josiah W. Boyce, O. E. Deyoe, A. L. Deyoe, Charles Doolittle, J. Harry Eddy, Alvin Freeman, George W. Fish, William Gamby, W. M. Hill, Alfred R. Houseworth, Fred Harper, Harry Hall, Alfred Holmquest, Albert Hudson, James Holden, Archibald Kaulfuss, F. S. Legnard, Joseph Matthews, W. H. Myers, Harry Ostrander, W. P. O'Brien, W. E. Ouderkirk, W. Porter, George Phillips, E. M. Rouse, Francis Reilly, William Stein, Will W. Smith, Teeling, George Turner, E. S. Warner, Harry Fosmire, O. A. Mosher Will Snyder.


Before the men were dismissed these officers were elected: Captain, Frederick M. Waterbury; first lieutenant, James H. Reagan; second lieutenant, Richard Mingay, jr.


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GAZETTEER OF TOWNS-SARATOGA SPRINGS.


Since its organization this company has twice filled the ranks of Company L, at the front, having sent in all thirty-nine additional men.


CHAPTER XV.


GAZETTEER OF TOWNS.


TOWN OF SARATOGA SPRINGS.


The town of Saratoga Springs is located a little to the southeast of the geographical centre of the county. It is bounded on the north by the towns of Greenfield and Wilton, on the east by Saratoga, on the south by Malta and on the west by Milton. The Revised Statutes of New York State define the town as follows:


The town of Saratoga Springs shall contain all that part of said county bounded northerly by Greenfield and Wilton, westerly by Milton, southerly by Malta, and easterly by a line beginning at the northeast corner of Malta, then down the middle of Saratoga lake and Fish creek to a point two rods above Stafford's Bridge, and running thence, so as to include said bridge and a piece of land four rods wide, to a point two rods below said bridge, and then due north to the south bounds of Wilton.


The surface of the town is gently undulating. A portion of Saratoga lake forms the southeast corner of the town. Kayaderosseras creek traverses the southern boundary. Its most important creek beside Kayaderosseras and Fish creeks, lying on the boundaries, are Ellis creek, which empties into the Kayaderosseras. There are several small lakes or ponds within the borders of the town. The tracks of the Del- aware & Hudson Canal company's railroad traverse the county from the south western to the northeastern parts; a branch of the Fitchburg railroad enters the town from the east and extends to the village of Saratoga Springs; the Adirondack railroad runs northerly from that village, and the Mount McGregor railroad takes a northeasterly course therefrom. This town possesses that which is claimed by few other localities-beds of peat of considerable extent-though the fact is not generally known. It is also celebrated the world over for the number and excellence of its mineral springs, which are more fully described in another chapter.


The first settler in the town is believed to have been Samuel Norton,


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OUR COUNTY AND ITS PEOPLE.


who for several years conducted a rude log hotel near High Rock spring. Others had preceded him, but for one reason or another they remained but a short time. Norton came in 1776 and made the immediate locality of old High Rock spring his permanent home. Amos Stafford was the first to locate in that part of the town afterwards known as Staf- ford's Bridge. A short time after John, Henry and Nicholas Wagman, brothers, located near by, as did Amos Peck. The families were all related by marriage. In the southeastern part of the town Benjamin Frenchwas the first settler of whom anything is known, he having lo- cated there about 1780. Jonathan Ramsdell built a home on the west side of the lake about 1801. David Abell and Benjamin Avery came to the town about 1790.


Upon the farm of Mr. Abell, on the shores of Saratoga lake, proba- bly the first school in town was established some time before 1800. Very little is known of the other early schools. Few have ever been established in town except those in the village of Saratoga Springs. Grist mills and saw mills were established at an early day. Robert Ellis built a saw mill soon after 1800 at the locality now known as The Geysers. A few years later he built a grist mill at the same place. Sylvester Bishop and Warren Cady were early tavern keepers, their primitive hostelries being located near the site of the Star spring. John and Ziba Taylor, brothers, were doubtless the pioneer merchants of the town, their store being located at Saratoga Springs village. George Peck did an extensive business as a scythe maker, near the Gey- ser spring, soon after 1800. Early in the century the population of the town began to increase at a rapid rate, the newcomers being an ener- getic and prosperous class of men. In 1831 work upon the Saratoga and Schenectady railroad was begun. This road subsequently came under the control of the Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad company, organized in 1832, and both roads ultimately passed into the hands of the Delaware and Hudson Canal company. The Saratoga and Wash- ington railroad, now a part of the Delaware and Hudson system, was begun in 1835, but it was 1848 before it was opened for business as far as Gansevoort. In the fall of 1863 the work of constructing the Adi- rondack railway was begun, and the track in the town of Saratoga Springs was laid at once. The Mount McGregor railroad was con- structed in 1882, and the Troy, Saratoga and Northern, now a part of the Fitchburg system, in 1886 and 1887.


Saratoga Springs is the principal village in the town. It is situated


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GAZETTEER OF TOWNS-SARATOGA SPRINGS.


in the northern part of the town, just west of the centre. Its first per- manent settler was Samuel Norton, who ran a small log tavern near High Rock spring in the fall of 1776. This early tavern had been built in 1771 by Dirck Schouten, from Waterford, and occupied by him; then by John Arnold, in 1774. In 1790 Benjamin Risley and his son- in-law, Gideon Putnam, bought considerable land in the vicinity of the springs; and in 1800 the latter began the erection of Union Hall, the first large hotel in the village. In 1811 he began the erection of Con- gress Hall. The mineral springs here, to which extended reference is made elsewhere in this work, already had become famous, and with the construction of these hotels the future greatness of Saratoga was as- sured. The population increased rapidly; new springs were discovered and new hotels of magnificent proportions were built for the accommo- dation of the thousands of visitors who now flocked to the springs every year. The village was incorporated by the Legislature April 17, 1826, the act defining the corporate limits as follows:


All that district of country lying in the town of Saratoga Springs, county of Sara- toga, and State of New York, situated between two lines parallel to, and each half of a mile distant from the following described line, to wit: Beginning on the line between the Livingston and Ostrander lots, in the centre of the highway, near the house of Jesse Ostrander; running northerly as the highway runs, till it strikes Broad street, as laid out on a map of lots at Saratoga Springs, belonging to Gideon Putnam ; thence northerly along the centre of Broad street till the said line intersects the high . way leading from the upper village to Greenfield, near the Methodist meeting-house ; thence north to Greenfield line, shall continue to be called and known by the name of the village of Saratoga Springs.


The boundaries of the village have been greatly altered since then notably in 1866, by act of the Legislature. The first officers of the new village were: Presiding justices, John H. Steel, William L. F. Warren ; president, Joshua Porter; trustees, John Bryan, Rockwell Putnam Robert McDonnal, David Cobb; clerk, Peter V. Wiggins; treasurer, John A. Waterbury; constables, Joshua Blum, Joseph White; path- master, Samuel Matthews. The following is a complete list of the village presidents and clerks since the incorporation of the village.


VILLAGE PRESIDENTS.


1826, Joshua Porter; 1829-36, John H. Steel; 1837, Samuel Chapman; 1838-39, Thomas J. Marvin; 1840, Robert Gardner; 1841-42, Thomas J. Marvin; 1843, Abel A. Kellogg; 1844, T. J. Marvin; 1845, Daniel D. Benedict; 1846-49, Washington Putnam; 1850-56, John A. Corey; 1857-58, John H. White; 1859-60, Peckham H. Green; 1861, John H. White; 1862, Charles S. Lester; 1863, J. H. White; 1864-65,




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