USA > Ohio > Fulton County > A standard history of Fulton County, Ohio, an authentic narrative of the past, with an extended survey of modern developments in the progress of town and county, Vol. I > Part 11
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The republican predominance has continued almost uninterrupted to the present.
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
FULTON COUNTY'S CIVIL LIST
Although, it is not necessary here to give biographical reviews of those prominent and capable citizens who have participated in the administration of the county, biographical reference being made to many in the township chapters, and extensively to some, in the second, the biographical, volume of this current historical work. it would be proper to list here the names of those who undertook county office. Re- view of the judiciary and legal offices is made in another chapter, which, with the following statistics will complete the list. Congress- men, and state senators are not listed, the districts covering a greater area than that of Fulton county, and those elected consequently being not always men of Fulton county. It may, however, be stated that the following leading citizens of this county have held senatorial office: Dresden W. H. Howard, John A. Wilkins, Joseph H. Brigham, Will- iam Geyser, John C. Rorick.
Beginning, therefore, with state representatives, the statistics are:
STATE REPRESENTATIVES
1852, Lucius B. Lathrop: 1854, Samuel Durgin ; 1856, Lucius HI. Upham; 1858, Samuel A. Raymond; 1860, Dennison Steele; 1862, Ezekiel Masters; 1864, Octavius Waters; 1866, E. Masters; 1868, Amos HIill; 1872, Ezra Mann; 1876, John Fenton; 1880, Charles L. Allen; 1884, Albert Deyo; 1888, Estell H. Rorick; 1892, L. G. Ely; 1896, William A. Scott, Jr .; 1900, Charles L. Allen; 1904, Frank Briggs; 1908, Arthur B. Canfield; 1912, Frank H. Reighard ; 1918, C. K. Miller.
RECORDERS
Carl Allman, four years; Joseph Jewell, two years; S. B. Darby, four years; R. H. Howard, three years; J. K. Newcomer, three years; W. H. Stevens, Jr., nine years; Richard Taylor, Albert S. Bloomer, Harrison E. Randall, A. M. Lee, George Lee. II. E. Prentiss, Frank W. Zerman, John Theobald, four years; C. L. Reed, four years; and Ralph Robinson, present occupant.
AUDITORS
Mortimer D. Hibbard, April, 1850; Alfred C. Hough, October, 1 1850; Mortimer D. Hibbard, 1854; A. C. Hough, 1856; Jason Hib- bard, 1858; Ozias Merrill, 1866; L. G. Ely, 1870; Isaae Springer, 1877; A. W. McConnell, 1883; Thomas Kelley (by appointment), A. W. McConnell, 1888; Wm. W. Croninger, 1889; Harrison W. Ely, 1895: James E. Merrill, 1901 : Charles J. Ives, 1908; Wm. W. Aeker- man, 1912; Fred E. Perry, 1916-20.
COMMISSIONERS
Dates up to 1864 cannot, unfortunately, be given, for the records were destroyed in the gutting by fire of the court house, on July 15th of that year, but James S. Riddle gives the terms in office of the early commissioners as follows: Christ. Watkins, six years and six months;
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
William Sutton, five years, eight months; Jonathan Barnes, four months; Warren Mccutcheon, three years, four months; Stephen Houghton, six years; E. Masters, three years; Joseph Ely, fifteen years (part of which presumably comes into the record after 1864) ; A. B. Thompson, nine years; A. B. Gunn, six years; George Taft, three years; Joel Brigham, five years; James Cornell, ten months; William Dye, six months; Henry Jordan, three years; Elias Richardson, six years. Elias Richardson, apparently, entered upon his second term of three years in 1864, and the record from that year is: Joseph Ely, 1865; A. B. Gunn, 1866; Milton O. McCaskey, 1867; Joseph Ely, 1868; A. B. Gunn, 1869; A. B. Thompson, 1870; H. A. Canfield, 1871; Joseph Shadle, 1872; A. B. Thompson, 1873; D. B. Allen, 1874; Joseph Shadle, 1875; A. B. Thompson, 1876; E. L. Barber, 1877; Richard H. Scott, 1878; Charles Blake, 1879; E. L. Barber, 1880; Richard H. Scott, 1881; Charles Blake, 1882; Charles H. VanOstrand, 1883; James C. Vaughan, 1884; Henry H. Williams, 1885; Sylvester W. Baum, 1886; James C. Vaughan, 1887; Daniel T. Biddle, 1888; George W. Walters, 1889; Jonathan C. Cornell, 1890; Daniel T. Biddle, 1891; George W. Walters, 1892; J. C. Cornell, 1893; William A. Fenton, 1894; James K. Campbell, 1895; Leander Buxton, 1896; William A. Fenton, 1897 ; James K. Campbell, 1898; Leander Buxton, 1899; Ed- gar Ritchie, 1900; George D. Newcomer, 1901; Charles H. Stutesman, 1902; E. H. Ritchie, 1903; George D. Newcomer, 1904; C. H. Stutz- man and John Robasser, in 1906; G. R. Shaffer, E. B. Robinson and C. H. Stutzman, in 1908; G. R. Shaffer, A. Q. Price, and E. B. Robin- son, in 1910; A. Q. Price, John Barden and Frank Griffin, in 1912; John Bardin, Frank Griffin and Clark Aumend, in 1914; Clark Au- mend, Albert Edgar and E. E. Spring, in 1916; and Charles H. Leist, Albert Edgar, and E. E. Spring, in 1918.
TREASURERS
The destruction of county records in 1864 makes it impossible now to state the years of office of the first three county treasurers. Nathan- iel Leggett took office in 1850, being elected, unopposed, at the April election of 1850. He was treasurer for five years, but whether for five successive years is not clear. Isaac Springer succeeded him, and was treasurer for four years. Next, in order of election to the treasureship was Julius March, who served for four years. L. L. Carpenter was in office in 1864, and altogether served four years. The succession since has been : A. B. Canfield, 1866; David Ayers, 1870; Hiram L. Moseley, 1874; Jared M. Longnecker, 1878; Thomas A. Kelley, 1879; James W. Howard, 1881, John B. Schnetzler, 1885; Jacob S. Newcomer, 1889; A. C. Daniels, 1893; J. F. Grove, 1897; C. E. Guilford, 1901; G. W. Howard, 1905; Dorr S. Knight, 1910; G. Scott Roos, 1914; and C. F. Orth, 1918-20.
CORONERS
W. M. Schnetzler, 1864; Josiah H. Bennett, 1865; John Fenton, 1866; Charles M. Canfield, 1868; John Odell, 1871; S. T. Worden, 1875; Charles E. Bennett, 1879; George W. Hartman, 1883; L. E. Miley, 1887; S. Odell, 1892; Hal M. Parker, 1896; J. Howard John-
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
son, 1901; Louis C. Cosgrove, 1908; Henry W. Shaffer, 1910; C. F. Hartman, 1914; Park S. Bishop (appointed), 1917; John A. Wilkins, 1918.
SURVEYORS
John Spillane, 1865; O. E. M. Howard, 1868; Anthony B. Robin- son, 1871; Lueius B. Fraker, 1883; M. B. Hoyt, 1892; Frank H. Reighard, 1895; John F. Hettinger, 1902; O. U. Griffin, 1909; Clyde O. Castle, 1913; Cornelius P. Weber, 1917; R. I. Bernath, 1919.
Further statistics will be included in the capter on the Bench and Bar of Fulton county.
To close this chapter, it might be appropriate to give eensus statisties, as far as there is reeord. The 1840 figures of course are not of Fulton county, but of eight townships of Lueas county, and probably do not include the figures for those portions of Williams and Henry counties ceded to Fulton county, when the latter was erected in 1850. And the 1920 figures are only those of the "Preliminary Announcement of Population" issued in June, 1920, by the Bureau of the Census, Washington. However, so far as it is possible to give the statistics, the
POPULATION OF FULTON COUNTY
According to the decadal eensus since 1840, is as follows: 1840, 3,190; 1850, 7,780; 1860, 14,043; 1870, 16,089; 1880, 20,114; 1890, 22,023; 1900, 22,801; 1910, 23,914; 1920, 23,445. The township statistics for 1920 are: Amboy, 1,522; Chesterfield, 1,012; Clinton, 4,778; Dover, 990; Franklin, 926; Fulton, 1,677; German, 3,173; Gorham, 2,076; Pike, 1,001; Royalton, 1,135; Swan Creek, 2,356; and York, 2,835 These figures include the population of the incorporated places of the county. The separate figures for these incorporated places are: Arch- bold, 1,125; Delta, 1,543; Fayette, 936; Lyons, 329: Metamora, 484; Swanton, 1,243; and Wauseon, the county seat, 3,035.
CHAPTER V
FULTON COUNTY'S WAR RECORD
Fulton county was not organized until 1850, and was not settled until 1833, anterior to which its inhabitants were of Indian tribes. Yet, Fulton county may claim that its military history began with the Revolutionary war, for at least one of its ultimate residents saw national service in that portentous struggle which was destined to give the United States a place among nations. Ephraim Pennington, who came with his son, William to Fulton county in 1847, and set- tled in Chesterfield Township, where he died at the venerable age of ninety years, was a soldier of the Revolution, and as such is en- titled to the place of honor in the record of the patriots of Fulton county.
Next, chronologically, come those patriots who offered and gave their services to the nation in the War of 1812. Names listed below are those of veterans of that war who later became residents of Ful- ton county, and were eventually buried within its borders. There were twenty-two, in all:
Abbott, Henry Knapp, Archy Shepler, Martin
Barden, Jacob
Lamb, Avery Smith, William
Briggs, Alanson Marks, Comfort Tiney, Richard
Bundy, Caleb Robinson, William Trowbridge, Willard
Carpenter, Samuel
Root, Jesse Wilbur, Radford
Culver, Timothy
Saulpaugh, Philip R. Wilson, William M.
Huntington, Alanson
Sheely, Andrew Wilbur, John Morse.
Gorsuch, Nathan
Then there were those resolute men, of the actual early settlers in what is now part of Fulton county, who rallied to the call of the state, when it seemed that war with Michigan would result from the boundary dispute in the '30s, but the names of those mobilized men can hardly be brought into this record, for war did not then come, fortunately.
THE CIVIL WAR
The great test of patriotism came in 1861-65, and in the records of that dark time of civil war Fulton county has a glorious place, giving practically all of its physically-fit man-power to the Union. When it is known that the population of Fulton county in 1861 was only about fourteen thousand, and that during the years of war it sent into the field much more than a thousand men it will be realized how strong was the spirit of patriotism, and how brave the hearts, within the sturdy. frames of the pioneer settlers of Fulton county. During America's part of the World war, 1917-18, Fulton county sent into service about eight hundred men, out of a population of
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
more than 24,000. The Civil war period will be thus, in this respect, the most glorious in the war history of Fulton county.
Space is not here available, unfortunately, to enter as fully as former historical works have into the restating of the deeds of the various military units in which Fulton county men were during the Civil war. It is therefore pleasing to know that complete record has already permanent place in county and national historical works, and that thus the sacrifices and triumphs of the noble men who marched away from Fulton county to emancipate the slave have been placed in proper record for posterity. Briefly reviewing the Civil war period of Fulton county history, it should be stated that, according to former county historians, 2,207 Fulton county men actually entered the serv- icc, and that of that number 1,457 men were mustered into the service for three years; 102 men for one year of service, 94 men for six months of serviee; 216 men for three months; 254 for an enlistment of 100 days; and the remainder for miscellaneous periods in various regi- ments. Those statistics are taken from the military chapter, written by Maj. Moses R. Brailey, for the "History of Henry and Fulton Counties" (Aldrich, 1888). There probably, however, was some dup- lication, and the names of some would appear in the rosters of more than one regiment, or unit. Consequently, for the present recording, the list compiled for the purposes of the Fulton County Soldiers' and Sailors' Memorial and Monumental Association, by Allen Shadle, com- mander of the Losure Post, No. 35 (Wauseon) of the Grand Army of the Republic, will be taken. Said list shows the names of only 1,318 men, but it was patiently and painstakingly compiled, with a particular and important object in view, and may be assumed to be the most authentic list extant. It opens with the names of Fulton county men who saw service with the
SIXTY-EIGHTH INFANTRY,
which was recruited in the counties of Defiance, Fulton, and Henry, Paulding and Williams, during the autumn and winter of 1861-62. The regiment commenced to rendezvous at Camp Latty, Napoleon, Ohio, on November 21, 1861. On January 5, 1862, the regiment moved to Camp Chase, where it remained until February 7th, when it was transferred to Fort Donelson, Tennessee, at which station it ar- rived on the 14th. It took part in the operations there, being assigned to Gen. Charles F. Smith's division. After the surrender, the regi- ment encamped near Dover until the 15th of March, when it moved to Metal Landing, on the Tennessee, and from there to Crump's Land- ing, and thence to Pittsburgh Landing, in this time being reduced in numbers, chiefly by sickness, from 1,000 to 300 men. At Pitts- burgh Landing it was part of Gen. Lew Wallace's division. It took part in the operations before Corinth, and after the evacuation was stationed at Bolivar, Tennessee. The regiment closed the campaign of 1862 by forming the advance of an expedition which attempted to get into the rear of Vicksburg, by way of Holly Springs and Gran- ada, Mississippi. After the surrender of Holly Springs, the Sixty- Eighth returned to Memphis. During the campaign in Mississippi. the regiment was assigned to the Second Brigade, Third Division
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
Seventeenth Army Corps, as a unit of which it remained until the close of the war. During its term of service, the regiment was on the "sacred soil" of every rebel state except Florida and Texas. It marched over seven thousand miles, and travelled by railroad and steamboat over six thousand miles. Between 1,900 and 2,000 men belonged to the regiment, and of these ninety per cent were native Americans, the others being German, Irish, or English. The muster out rolls were signed on the 10th of July, and the regiment was ordered from Louisville, Kentucky, to Camp Taylor, near Cleveland, for pay- ment and discharge, which was accomplished on the 18th of July, 1865. The record of the regiment was a worthy one. The regiment was organized in the State of Ohio, at large, in October, November and December, 1861, to serve three years. On the expiration of its term of service, the original members, except veterans, were mustered out, and the organization, composed of veterans and recruits, retained in service until July 10, 1865. The list of battles "compiled after care- ful research, credits this regiment with participation in the following: Thompson's Hill, Mississippi, May 1, 1863; Champion Hills, Missis- sippi, May 16, 1863; siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi, May 18 to July 4, 1863; Clinton and Jackson, Mississippi, February 5, 1864; Kene- saw Mountain, Georgia, June 9 to 30, 1864; Big Shanty, Georgia, June 15, 1864; Kenesaw Mountain, general assault, June 27, 1864; Atlanta, Georgia, (Hood's first sortie) July 24, 1864; siege of At- lanta, Georgia, July 28 to September 2, 1864; Jonesboro, Georgia, August 31 to September 1, 1864; Lovejoy Station, Georgia, Septem- ber 2 to 6, 1864. As will have been noticed, the Sixty-Eighth Regi- ment took part in Sherman's famous march to the sea. Many Fulton county men stayed with it until the final muster out, but individual service records cannot be here stated. The Fulton county men of the Sixty-Eighth Regiment were:
Austin, James Emerick, J. P.
Lyons, E.
Bates, Charles
Fowler, John
Lorimer, L. L.
Biery, Samuel
Fowler, Ben Lyon, S.
Bartlet, Jacob
Fouty, S.
Lingle, B.
Baer, Abe
Foster, D.
Lingle, Elmer Y.
Brink, Watson
Ford, Henry F.
Lingle, W. A.
Belding, Mortimer
Galman, Joseph
Mattison, G. F.
Bayes, Thomas
Galbraith, James
Miller, S. A.
Barnes, F. M.
Graetz, F. L.
Markley, G. H.
Burk, F. M.
Grice, F.
Mikesell. J. B.
Burk, J.
Hall, Morgan
Miley, Ben
Clark, W. B.
Highshew, W. H.
Miller, Warren T.
Cornell, Charles W. Cox, S.
Hayward, R. D.
Myers, Herman
Culbertson, J.
Hall, L. Hoffmire, J. R.
Miller, Eli
Coleman, Benj.
Higby, W.
Moyer, Daniel
Coleman, Oscar
Hutchins, M.
Osborn, Geo.
Creglow, Noah
Hale, Smith
Oldfield, Gilbert
Dickson, C.
Jones, D. W.
Onweller, James
Eaton, Ezra
Losier, J. J.
Palmer, Martin
Hart, Julius
Myers, Lorenzo,
Mvers. George W. .
Coleman, John
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
Pontious. David
Raker, Oliver
Schenk. Conrad
Pomeroy, Timothy
Rosey, Joseph
Stites, J. B.
Pannel, J.
Roger, Elmer
Stites, Amaza
Purdy, A.
Robinson, Frank B.
Tator, Hiram
Purdy, J.
Robinson, Lorenzo
Turpining, W.
Rashley, Solomon,
Sommers, Martin
Warner, D.
Richards, Israel
Shank, H.
Warner, O. B.
Richards, W. S.
Skeels, Nelson
Wilcox, William
Richards, Curtis
Sheelenberger, D.
Waters, W. A.
Reece, S.
Sweeney, Elijah
Wilcox, A.
Reece, C. M.
Scott, Caleb
Williams, Wm.
Remo, Fred
Stewart, J. C.
Wright, Nathan
Radcliff, T.
Schenk, Henry
The majority of these men belonged to Company E. which was commanded by a gallant Fulton county man, Nelson A. Skeels, until he was killed in action, in the battle of Atlanta, Georgia, July 22, 1864.
Next on the list is the 1
EIGHTY-SIXTH REGIMENT OF INFANTRY
which was recruited from the northern counties of Ohio, for a serv. ice of six months. Fulton county contributed one whole company. Company HI. The regiment was organized at Camp Cleveland, and recruited to a full regiment in the months of June and July, 1863. At about the time of its organization, the rebel general, John Mor- gan, was making his northern raid through Indiana into Ohio. The regiment therefore went at once actively into the field, and on ar- rival of the unit at Zanesville, 200 men, under Lieutenant-Colonel McFarland, were sent to Eagleport, where it was thought Morgan would attempt to cross the Muskingum. The detachment arrived just in time to witness the crossing of the rearguard. Colonel Mc- Farland, by skillful skirmishing detained the enemy, thus helping General Shackleford who was pursuing. The remainder of the Eighty- Sixth were soon on the spot and joined in the pursuit, the rebels even- tually being overtaken and captured, near Salineville, Columbiana county. Thus, the Eighty-Sixth, in its "Baptism of Fire" acquitted itself creditably. It did much other useful service during that year, particularly at Cumberland Gap, and on the 16th of January, 1864, the time for which the regiment was enlisted having expired, the unit began its march to Ohio, after seven days reaching Nicholsville. It arrived at Cleveland on January 26, 1864, and was mustered out on the 10th of February, of that year. The list gives the following names as those of Fulton county men who saw service with the Eighty-Sixth Regiment of Infantry :
Aultman, Solomon Bayes, Henry
Blizzard. E. W.
Anchutz, P. H. Bayes, P. H.
Briggs, E. W.
Burtch, Adoniram
Bayes, J. E.
Bulger, Haman
Beaverson, Fred
Bancroft, Henry Cantleberry, W'm.
Bayes, Wesley
Brigham, H. T.
Cantleberry, Levi
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
. Cunningham, David
Halwick, Gabeil
Rice, Edward
Cameron, William
Hardy, Warren
Smith, Warren
Dinnius, John W.
Hogeboom, Abe
Smith, John D.
Donahue, John
Handy, Wm. H.
Schlappi, James
Durbin, Preasley
Kinney, Henry
Shulters, W. D.
Fairchilds, Silas
Kelly, G.
Shank, C.
Faylor, Nelson
Lozure, Marion
Scott, David
Fouty, Spencer
Lyon, Cyrus
Schwain, Peter
Fouty, John
Long, Martin
Spring, Cornelius M.
Gleason, Warren
Moyer, Edward
Tabor, Philip
Holmes, A. J.
Mikesell, Thomas
Vine, Jacob
Hodges, Samuel
Mikesell, Andrew
Wise, Harris
Hodges, Josiah
Mckibben, Robert
Wood, A. A.
Hoffmire, F. G.
Pontious, Isaac M.
Williams, T. F.
Hughes, Hugh
Rex, John
Wise, Harrison
Haley, Lorenzo
Reece, Lowell
Warner, Joe
Harrington, L. W.
Raker, Martin
Wilson, George
Fulton county contributed 302 men to the
SIXTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT, OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY
in which two regiments, the Forty-Fifth and the Sixty-Seventh, were merged, in the winter of 1861-62. The regiment left Columbus for the front on January 19, 1862, going to West Virginia, where it saw much skirmishing during the next two months. On March 14th, the regiment met the enemy at Winchester and the next day was ordered to reinforce General Taylor's brigade. It sustained forty- two casualties in the subsequent engagement. For three months there- after, the regiment was on the march through Virginia, and on June 29th embarked on a steamer and barge for the James River, to reinforce General Mcclellan. At Harrison's Landing, it campaigned with the Army of the Potomac until Mcclellan retreated from the Peninsula, when it marched to Suffolk, Virginia. The regiment had by that time been reduced by actual fighting and by sickness to ap- proximately one-third of its normal strength. On April 2, 1863, it landed on Cole's Island, and for seven months thereafter endured the hardships of siege, participating in the charge on Fort Wagner. Then followed an expedition into Florida. The regiment joined General Butler at Bermuda Hundred on May 6, 1864, and on the ninth was detached to guard the flank of the Tenth Army Corps, at Chester railroad station. Severe fighting took place there, but the Sixty- Seventh maintained its position, although it lost on May 10th seven- ty-six officers and men, killed and wounded. Later in that month in one charge the regiment sustained almost as many casualties. On the 16th of August, four companies of the Sixty-Seventh charged the rifle pits at Deep River, and although at the first volley of the rebels one-third of the charging column fell, the rifle pits were captured before the rebels could reload. During 1864 the regiment was under fire 200 times, and lost heavily in killed and wounded during that time. In 1865, the regiment distinguished itself before Petersburg, and led the charge on Fort Gregg and Appomattox Courthouse. The
.
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HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
regiment was eventually one of the units reviewed at the Grand Re- view, at Washington, and was one of the last regiments to be mus- tered out, which event did not come until December 12, 1865. Ful- ton county men of the Sixty-Seventh Regiment were:
Adamson, Robert Cole, Thomas J.
Guilford, George
Aldrich, Harvey L.
Cole, Simon P.
Griesinger, David
Baer, Unas
Clough, E. R.
Gleason, C.
Boyer, Simeon J.
Clark, Perry
Gardiner, Arthur
Brown, Isaac
Carpenter, J. B.
Gilmore, George
Brown, Dan
Carter, N. B.
Gigax, Fred Hewitt, George
Batdorf, John
Carpenter, Wayne
Hepfinger, Jacob
Barnes, George
Carpenter, George
Harnedn, P.
Bennet, Harrison
Colman, Elisha
Hatt, Frank
Brown, John
Cottrell, Jacob
Hoekins, Jacob
Bower, George
Disbrow, David
Broekway, Charles
Dean, J. S.
Hanley, John Hatfield, Gilson Hallett, Ephraim
Bailey, John T.
Dennis, Michael
Hinkle, Richard
Blain, Wellington
Dowell, Frank
Hoover, Calvin
Becker, David
Donahoe, Thomas
Henriek, Jeremiah
Barden, Fred
Duncan, Samuel
Hibbard, C. A.
Baxter, James
Duncan Peter
Hibbard, Francis
Beekham, S.
Duncan, Isaac
Handy, C. F.
Blain, M. D.
Duncan, George
Hoffman, J. P.
Blain, Samuel
Duncan, W. H.
Hughes, Joseph
Boree, J. W.
Daniel, A. C.
Hampson, Henry
Borton, Samuel
Driskell, Alfred
Harriman, Henry
Borton, Simeon
Driskell, William
Borton, Joseph
Egnew, James
Jones, Joseph A. Justice, Nathan
Bird, Asher
Eaton, John
Jay, Moses
Buehrer, John
Emerson, Hiram
Justice, Thomas J.
Buehrer, Martin
Emerson, Emmett
Justice, Wesley, N.
Burkholder, Dan
Elliott, Mariam
Johnson, Alexander
Bayes, J.
Eckley, Isaae
Jordan, Sam
Bayes, S. P.
Eckley, Levi
Jordan, Stephen
Clark, Edgar
Elsworth, S.
Judson, Sam
Clark, Israel
Fisher, Andrew
Jewell, Simeon
Cuff, Thomas
Fisher, John
Jones, I. N.
Clark, Leander
Fletcher, William
Jones, Sherman
Cass, Leonard
Ford, George
Jones, Amos
Cass, Calvin
Ford, James
Kreiger, Andrew
Clark, Amziah
Foreman, Dan
Kreiger, Peter
Carter. Lorenzo Cobb, Ernest
Futter, Henry
Kendeigh, Wm.
Crout, Elihu
Funkhouser. John
Kendeigh, Daniel
Crout. G. W. Fullerton, Joseph
Knowels, Osear
Call, Michael
Gleason, Calvin
Knapp, V. A.
Call, W. J.
Gay, Hiram
Leybarker, Gilbert
Conklin, Datos
Gay, Velors
La Salle, Milton
Conklin, George
La Salle, George
Cole, David P.
Gleason, Warner Green, Samuel
Livingston, James
Buehrer, Andrew
Carrel, Albanus
Brenaman, Benjamin
Dye, Joseph
Fitzsimmons, J. C.
Kreiger, A.
HISTORY OF FULTON COUNTY
91
Lott, David
Robinson, Edward
Sellinger, Jolın
Lewis, Crummel
Robinson, Harrison
Stryker, William
Mansfield, Horace
Robinson, Wallace
Spring, S. J.
Masters, Nelson
Robinson, Lyman
Spring, Nial
Martin, John
Rufer, Ben
Stoltz, William
Miller, Addison
Reichert, Fred
Smith, Martin
Miller, John
Robinson, M. B.
Stowe, B. F.
Miller, Isaae
Robinson, James
Sheppard, J. K.
Masters, Nelson R.
Roos, William
Struble, J. B.
Moebus, John
Robinson, Joseph
Stryker, James
Markley, Martin
Robak, Joseph
Taylor, Jesse
Manan. Hiram
Robinson, Welcome
Taylor, Orrin
Marks, Alonzo
Stevens, Royal
Trowbridge, Sylvester
MeConkey, L.
Shaffer, George
Thompson, Isaae J.
Metz, Adam
Shaffer, William
Thornton, Chas.
Miller, Joseph P.
Shaffer, Samuel
Thornton, William
Marshall, R. G.
Sindle, William
Terry, Stephen
Nearing, Napoleon
Sindle, Leonard
Terry, Seymour
Nevitt, William
Snell, Hezekiah
Thompson, Frank
Onweller, Sam
Smaley, William
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