USA > Pennsylvania > Susquehanna County > Centennial history of Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania > Part 157
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Captain Jonathan Burns, an elder brother of David, first lived in the neighborhood of Dundaff, but, in 1802, located north of the East Branch, near the mouth of the brook which bears his name. From him descended the Burns family of the town- ship, his sons being Henry, Orrey, Alexander, Ziba, Jonathan, Thomas and Ellery. Some of these re- moved from the county, and others died in the town- ship. A daughter married Nathaniel Cotteral, who removed to Providence. The Burns were of Scotch Irish descent, a hardy race, and some of the descen- dants still live in the northern part of Clifford and the southern part of Herrick.
James Norton, the father-in-law of David Burns, came from Saratoga, N. Y., in 1803, and settled near him on what is now known as the Burch road. He had sons named Reuben, Samuel and Ishi, who lived in the same locality, the latter living where is now the Crystal Lake Hotel. Near the same time the widow Norton, with three daughters and sons, named Abner, Daniel, Asahel, Luther, Lemuel and Silas, came into the township and settled north and east from Dundaff. Asahel Norton was the first settler at Elkdale, and both he and Lemuel were interested in the early mills there. This once numerous family has no descendants remaining in Clifford. In 1813 Lemuel Norton was one of the heaviest tax-payers.
" William Finn, the youngest of five brothers, who eventually came to Clifford, was the son of James, a Baptist preacher, who was in the Wyoming Valley in 1778, and one of the party who were left to defend the women and children gathered together in the block-house or fort at the time of the massacre. He was forced to retire to Orange County, N. Y., whence he had emigrated ; but in a few years he returned to
Wyoming, and subsequently moved to Tunkhannock, where he died. His widow came with William Finn soon after, or in 1802, to the present township of Clifford, and afterwards married Daniel Gore. Wil- liam Finn cleared and cultivated a large farm lying one mile west of Dundaff, where he reared his family of eight children. He built three dwelling-houses, one of stone, which was then considered a fine affair. His first framed house was the second of the kind in Dundaff. His saw-mill was the first in successful op- eration there. He married the youngest daughter of James Norton. Solomon, John, James and Daniel, brothers of William Finn, also came in, and some of their descendants are still in the township. John was a blacksmith ; James was a justice of the peace in 1821, and had twelve children, ten of whom lived to adult age. Of eight sons, Clark, living on Elk Mountain, is the only one in Clifford."
As early as 1806, James Wells, a miller, came from the Minisink, on the Delaware, and located on a hundred-acre farm at Elkdale, after having lived a short time at the mouth of the Tunkhannock. Here he put up mills and also a substantial house, with a sloping roof and well-guarded porch, which is still standing at Elkdale. He sold his farm to Lemuel Norton and Horace G. Phelps, and moved several miles down the East Branch to the flats, where is now the farm of James C. Decker. Here his wife died, in 1831; but James Wells lived until 1839, when he died at the home of his son, Eliphalet, at the age of eighty-nine years. Eliphalet afterwards moved to Carbondale. He was one of thirteen chil- dren,-eight daughters and five sons. The oldest son, John W., was married to Anna Miller, daughter of Adam, and finally settled on the south side of Elk Mountain, where he died, in 1843, aged fifty-five years. He was the father of the Wellses living in that part of the township, several of whom died of a dis- ease called the black fever. James Wells, Jr., an- other son, lived on a farm north from Dundaff, the place being still occupied by his descendants. Wil- liam, still another son, was a millwright, and lived at Dundaff. He was the father of Sidney B. Wells, for thirty years a merchant in New York City.
1 " Matthew Newton came from Connecticut, in 1806, with his wife, daughter and five sons,-Henry, Matthew, Benjamin, Isaac and Thomas. He bought the first improvements of Jonathan Burns. Newton Pond commemorates the name of this family. Mat- thew Newton, Jr., manufactured all the wheels used by the first settlers in spinning wool or flax. Erastus West succeeded him in the business, but moved into New York State over fifty years ago. From 1806 to 1811, we have no certain data, except that Epaphras Thompson, a Baptist minister, became a resident. The year 1812 is spoken of as 'a religious time.' Ransford Smith settled near the forks of the Lacka-
1 Miss Blackman.
Y
Philip Burdick
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CLIFFORD.
wanna, just above Stillwater Pond. His sons were Ladon, Ransford, Benjamin, Samuel and Philander."
Joel Stevens, a clothier, came from Massachusetts, in 1813, locating near Elkdale. Later he lived on a two hundred-acre farm east, where he died, at the age of eighty-four years. Of his sons,-Joel occupied the homestead; David B. died August 10, 1819, on the farm occupied by his son, D. L. Stevens ; Hiram moved to Ohio; Elias lives near Clifford ; and Wil- liam lives at Elkdale. Frank and Edmund moved to the West.
In 1813 the name of Richard Meredith appeared on the tax-list. He was the first person who applied for naturalization in Susquehanna County. He was born in the parish of Bubourn, County of Kent, England, July, 1773; sailed from Liverpool, June, 1808, and landed in New York the September fol- lowing. His application to the court was made January, 1814; but it does not appear that he re- ceived his papers until February, 1822.
In 1815 the taxables in the township of Clifford, including that part which was set off to form Her- rick in 1825, were the following :
Andrew Buck, John Buck, Burnett Buckingham, James Bennett, Jonathan Burns, David Burns, C. Brayton, Peter F. Ball, Albigence Bucklin, Elnathan Baker, Ebenezer Baker, Henry Cobb, Asa Cobb, Eze- kiel Chapman, James Coil, James Coil, Jr., Enoch Curtis, James Cur- tis, Edward Dimmick, Mortial Dimmick, Calvin Daley, Luther Daley, Stephen Ellis, John Finn, Wm. Finn, Solomon Finn, James Finn, James Giddings, Abijah Hubbell, Wm. Halstead, Jas. Halstead, Alanson D. Hal- stead, Jno. Halstead, Jonas Halstead, Truman Holmes, Salmon E. Hard- ing, Luke T. Harding, Amos Harding, Ira Justin, Calvin Knox, Gideon Kent, Amos Knapp, David N. Lewis, Levi Lewis, Walter Lyon, Geo. Lowry, Wm. Miller, Samuel Miller, Adam Miller, Wm. Miller, (2d,) Chas. Miller, Wm. A. Morse, Benajah Millard, Richard Meredith, Saml. Norton, Lemuel Norton, Luther Norton, Abner Norton, Ishi Norton Silas Norton, Jas. Norton, Daniel Norton, Jno. B. Nichols, Eli Nichols, Thos. Newton, Wm. O'Brien, Jas. Reeves, Wm. C. Robinson, Leonard Rought, Jacob Stephens, Joel Stevens, Thomas Scott, Ransford Smith, James Stearnes, Benjamin Tripp, Isaac Tripp, Daniel Taylor, William Upton, Erastus West, James Wells, William Wells, John Wells, James Wells.
In the northeastern part of the township a number of places were now located and improved in the course of the next half a dozen years, among the set- tlers being Ellery Crandall, the Burdicks, Tinkers and Asher Peck. The latter came from Connecticut in 1818, and settled on the place now occupied by his son, Bela T., where he lived until his death, in May, 1878, aged eighty-six years. Other sons were. Seril and Asel H., both of whom died in the township.
Elias Burdick and his nephews, Thomas and Bil- lings, came from Rhode Island in 1815, settling on farms east from Peck's. The farm improved by Elias is now owned by his son, Elisha. Other sons were Luther, Stephen and Caleb. On this farm is the Burdick Cemetery. Thomas Burdick lived on the farm south, now owned by one of his sons, Avery. Other sons were Thomas, Asher and David. Simeon Burdick, another brother, came in 1816, and lived on the Robert Tinker farm, where he reared a large
family. He died in December, 1870, nearly eighty- two years old.
PHILIP BURDICK .- After the close of the Revolu- tionary War, among the many persons bearing the above family name in Rhode Island was a farmer known as Stephen Burdick, a good member of the Baptist persuasion, and who enjoyed the esteem of his fellows. He married Mary Church, who bore him Joel, Billings, Caleb, Joshua, Thomas, Zebadiah, Stephen Kendall and Elias Burdick; al-o Polly, who became the wife of Barber Cardner. Kendall Burdick, born in 1778, married Hannah Gray (1775-1843), and had the following children : Elias, was a mechanic, in Rhode Island, until his death; Mason, a farmer, in Clifford, afterwards removed to Lackawanna County, where he died; Dolly, married, first, Putnam Ed- wards, in Rhode Island, and came to this town- ship, where he died (she subsequently married Ros- well Ames, and is now deceased); Abraham and Zeba- diah were farmers, and died in Clifton; Philip, as above; Harriet is the widow of L. S. Burdick, a far- mer of this township ; and Happy Burdick, who mar- ried Ezra Carpenter, a farmer, of Herrick, and has since died. Kendall Burdick, with his wife and chil- dren, left his early home in 1824 for the West, and bought a farm near the present Seventh-Day Baptist Church, in Clifford. Feeling the need of religious connection, he soon interested himself in the estab- lishment of a place of worship, and was one of the cou- stituent members of the church above-named and re- tained his membership until the last. He died in 1871, in his ninety-third year, having preserved his mental and physical powers to an unusual degree. He was well informed on matters of Scripture and an earnest Christian.
Philip Burdick, born in Rhode Island, July 1, 1814, had but few school advantages, as he had to accompany his parents to a new country when but ten years old, and the family was large, so that all able to do anything had to work. He helped his father on the farm until twenty-two years old, and became a practical man, energetic and earnest. In 1837 he married his cousin, Mary Burdick (born August 31, 1816), and bought a small farm near the church, whereon they remained a few years before re- moving to the present home. Both himself and wife assisted in the organization of the Seventh-Day Baptist Church, of which he has been one of the hon- ored deacons for over thirty years. For many years he has been its delegate to the Annual Conference, held in various parts of the country, and his counsels there and elsewhere are valuable. A Republican, he desires to place the best men in public places. The father of Mrs. Burdick was Elias (1780-1858), the youngest son of Stephen Burdick, before mentioned. He was born in Rhode Island and, in 1806, married Patty Brightman (1786-1810), who bore him Patty, born 1807, was the wife of Gideon Palmer, of Rhode
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HISTORY OF SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA.
Island; and Thankful, born 1809, the widow of Abram Burdick, and now living in Clifford. For his second wife, 1811, he married Sarah Brightman (1788-1859), whose children were Luther (1812-78), a farmer of this township; Sally, (1814-77), was the wife of Samuel Cole, a farmer, of Clifford; Mary (now Mrs. Philip Burdick) ; Julia, born 1818, is the wife of Rev. B. B. Palmer, a pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Nebraska ; Stephen, 1820, is a farmer in Clifford; Abigail, 1822, the widow of William H. Main, lives in Wisconsin; Elisha, 1824, carries on the old home farm in this township; and Caleb (1826-74), was also a farmer in Clifford. Elias Burdick worked as a ship-carpenter in Rhode İsland, but after removing to Pennsylvania, in 1815, he became a farmer, located in the Burdick neigh- borhood, and was a consistent member of the Seventh- Day Baptist Church. The only child of Deacon and Mrs. Philip Burdick is Dolly, born January 16, 1838, the wife of D. B. Carpenter, a jeweler. Two of their children, George and Myrabella, died in childhood, and their son, Frank B. Carpenter, born December 2, 1867, has been educated by his grandfather, the deacon. He studied two years at the Alfred Uni- versity, New York, and then became connected with the Gaskell Business College, Jersey City, as teacher of book-keeping and arithmetic.
John Westgate came from Rhode Island to Mount Pleasant in 1816, and the following year to a farm three miles northeast from Dundaff, where he died, more than eighty years old. His descendants still live in Clifford and Herrick. William Tinker came at a later day and settled southwest from Westgate, where members of the family still remain. James and John, sons, were taxables in 1842. Robert Tinker is of another generation. The family has made substantial improvements and are among the most prosperous citizens of Clifford.
In 1818, among other new arrivals in the township, were Nathan Callender, James Green, Reuben Ar- nold and Lawton Gardner. Asa Dimock and his sons, Asa and Warren, and Philip I. Stewart came from Herrick, and a number of them settled at Dun- daff. George Brownell located at Lonsdale, occupy- ing the place where Peter Rynearson had previously been. Benjamin Brownell was at Dundaff. A few years later Martin Decker settled on the farm where now lives his son, James C., and where he reared other sons,-Nelson, Peter and Chauncey. In the same neighborhood Peter Rivenburg finally lived and died, at the home of his son, Hiram R. He came from Albany County, N. Y., and located on the Clifford road below Dundaff, on a farm where some improvements had been made by James Coil, Jr. His son, William, lives in the same neighborhood. Orrin has deceased. Jonas lives in the State of New York; John, at Dundaff, and Henry, northeast from Clifford. The latter is the father of the Rev. Sidney W. Rivenburg, missionary in Assam, and Josephine
W., a thoroughly educated instructor of music in the Keystone Academy.
In 1820 Levi Chamberlain came from Gibson and opened a public-house on the pike east of West Clif- ford, but, four years later, was west of that hamlet, on the farm of his son, Pulaski W., where he died in 1878, at the age of eighty-six years. Northeast from him was Isaac Truesdell, the first settler on the west slope of Elk Mountain, and James Rolles, the father of twenty-two children, also came in 1822. Samuel Miller was here earlier, and followed the occupation indicated by his name. He was the father of Wil- liam D. Miller, of Lenox, Charles H., of Harford, and of daughters who married Elisha Bell and Joel Tingley. George W. Mackey came from Rensselaer- ville, Albany County, N. Y., about 1824, and located on the Harding farm, near Clifford Corners, on the farm now occupied by Monroe Callendar. He was a hatter by trade, and followed the hatter business and farming. He died in 1845, aged fifty-six, and his wife, Elizabeth Samuels, died in 1864, aged seventy- five. They had several children,-Rhoda; Parmelia, wife of William Bolton, a printer; David, a farmer and active abolitionist, died in New Milford in 1869; Zophar. R. S. Mackey, in 1849, purchased one hun- dred and sixty acres of timber land, one-half mile east of Truesdell school-house, which he sold to D. Richards, and in 1856 removed to Lathrop.
THE WELSH must have the credit of clearing up most of the slopes of Elk Mountain and making the substan- tial improvements now to be seen in the northwestern part of the township. They have here proven them- selves an honest, industrious class of people, capable of the highest citizenship. The pioneers among them were Thomas Watkins and wife, Hannah, natives of Carmarthenshire, South Wales. They left that country in 1831, and after a voyage of two months landed in New York. The following spring found them at Carbondale, where Mr. Watkins ob- tained work in a coal-mine, but on the 10th of May, 1833, they came to Clifford, where they located on a tract of land near the southwest base of the South Knob of the Elk Mountain. With the exception of a small clearing below him, everything was a dense woods, with a heavy undergrowth, which afforded hiding-places for deer, elk and many noxious animals, which were so bold that it made the work of pro- tecting domestic animals difficult. The work of clearing progressed slowly, but Mr. Watkins was a man of strong constitution (being full six feet high and measured nearly four feet around the chest), and the forests at last yielded to his efforts. Before his death, in May, 1870, he had cleared up a large farm, which is still in possession of Hannah Watkins, (now in her eighty-eighth year), and one of her sons, Wat- kin W. Watkins. Another son, John, lives in the same locality. For more than a year the Watkins family was deprived of the society of its countrymen, but in 1834 a number of Welsh families located
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CLIFFORD.
around them and made permanent the Welsh settle- ment, which, with the families living in Gibson and Herrick, now numbers more than three hundred souls. Those coming in 1834 were Zacharias Jenkins, David Reese, Wm. P. Davis, David Moses, David Anthony, Rev. Thomas Edwards, David Edwards and Robert Ellis and their families. The latter was a native of North Wales, and came with the others from New York. He located near the head of Long Pond, on the farm where his son Robert afterwards lived. The rest of the immigrants in this party were from South Wales. They left their native country May 21, 1834, from Swansea, in a brig bound for Quebec. The vessel was only of two hundred tons burden, not much larger than a canal-boat. There were on board the captain and five sailors, with thirty-four passen- gers. Most of the latter were religious people- Dissenters-now "coming to a country where they could be freed from paying tithes and supporting a church they did not believe in." They held relig- ious meetings on board the ship, and as they had cross-winds the greater part of their voyage, they were seven weeks on the water before landing at Que- bec. Three families among the passengers remained in Canada ; the others came to Clifford. For many years the families endured all the hardships of pioneers, often carrying heavy burdens to mills, and from Carbondale, twelve miles distant. The few cows they owned browsed in the woods during the summer season, and, as they often failed to come home at night, their owners were obliged to hunt them up, and they were often lost in the woods.
Zacharias Jenkins settled east of Long Pond, where Samuel Owen now lives. He was accompanied by his son Evan, who married a daughter of Wm. P. Davis, and has since removed to a farm near the line of Gibson. Ann, a daughter of Zacharias Jenkins, was the first person buried in the Welsh settlement. Mr. Jenkins, when sixty-seven years of age, was lost in a swamp near Mud Pond. Night overtook him, and, as wolves in great numbers, and an occasional bear or panther, roved through the woods, he climbed a tall pine for safety. Here he remained through the night, the wolves howling around him. In the morning he followed the outlet of the pond through water and thickets, until he came to the Milford and Owego turnpike, within one mile of where Lonsdale now is. When asked how he spent the night, he replied, " Hap- py, praying and singing most of the time." He is remembered as "an excellent singer and a good Christian." Evan Jenkins was the father of sons named Thomas, living in Wisconsin ; William, who died in the army ; John, living in Australia, has re- cently been elected a member of Parliament ; David, on the Pacific coast; and Zachariah, the present sheriff of the county.
Wm. P. Davis settled on the turnpike, where he died at the age of sixty-six. His son William moved to Iowa, and Thomas R. is living near Lons- 52
dale. The daughters were married to Richard Bell, Evan Jenkins and William Leek. A son of Thomas R. (Samuel P.) died in New York City, in March, 1886, while pursuing a course in a medical college. Another son, Thomas J., is an attorney at Mon- trose.
Henry Davis, a native of Glamorganshire, came to America in 1832, but did not come from Carbondale until 1836. He was the father of Samuel Davis, a teacher of repute, who died while superintendent of the Ashland schools, in August, 1886, at the age of thirty-seven years. A little earlier, David J. and David E. Thomas, Evan Jones (from North Wales), Job Nicholas, John Michael and other families joined the settlement. Others coming at later periods were equally prominent in the affairs of the neighborhood. Their names appear in a history of the Welsh Church, whose establishment and maintenance was one of the first cares of this people, and whose teachings have aided to make them a temperate and intelligent com- munity. Many of the young people have become teachers; a number graduating from the normal schools of the State, among them being daughters of David L. Richards and Rev. Daniel Daniels. A son of the former has become a successful book pub- lisher.
The settlement and development of Clifford pro- gressed rapidly after 1830. Twelve years later, in 1842, the taxable were as follows :
Roswell S. Ames, John Aitkin, Johu Aitkin, Jr., Benjamin Ayres, Simeon P. Avery, Solomon Arnold, Joseph Arnold, Robert Arnott, John Anderson, Jr., John Alworth, Milton S. Alworth, David Anthony, Rich- ard Anthony, Lewis Anthony, Henry Armstrong, Jonathan Burns, Ellery C. Burns, Rufus Burritt, Christian Bruce, Reuben Bailey, Thos. Burch, Joseph Babson, Goodwin Baker, Alpheus B. Baker, Daniel Ba- ker, Wheaton C. Barney, Miles B. Benedict, Abraham Burdick, Kendall Burdick, Zebediah Burdick, Philip Burdick, Simeon B. Burdick, Thos. Burdick, Elias Burdick, Luther S. Burdick, Stephen Burdick, Thomas Burdick (2d), John Baker, Artemas Baker, Archibald Browning, John Browning, James Broadford, George Brownell, James Brownell, Wm. S. Baldwin, Solomon Bolton, Levi Bell, Sterling Bell, Henry Bennett, Wines Bennett, Asa Brundage, Benjamin Brownell, Alexander Burns, Jonathan Burns, Richard Bell, Job Briggs, Charles Blackman, John Cottrell, John Cottrell, Jr., Thomas B. Cottrell, Zenas Carpenter, Arte- mas Carpenter, Ezra Carpenter, William R. Coleman, Garrett Coleman, William Coleman, Alexander Coleman, Ezra Coleman, Jeremiah Cole- man, John Coleman, Ellery Crandall, Ellery Crandall, Jr , Hynan G. Coates, Slocum Carr, Peter Campbell, Enoch Chambers, James Chambers, Abraham Cramer, Jacob G. Cuddeback, Levi Chamberlain, Pulaski W. Chamberlain, Tirza Callender, Stephen Callender, Elias Callender, Wm. Coil, Wm. Coil, Jr., James Coil, Jr., George Coil, John Coil, Henry Coil, James Coil, Charles Coil, John Chandler, Ezra Chandler, Thomas Chand- ler, Levi Dearborn, James Douglass, Philip Dow, Martin Decker, Chaun- cy Decker, Nelson Decker, Peter Decker, Peter Dennis, Thomas Doud, John Doud, Harrison Doud, Franklin Doud, Benjamin Daniels, Walter Dickey, William P. Davis, Wm. Davis, Henry Davis, Lyman Doolittle, Alfred Dart, Horace Dart, Oliver Daniels, Benjamin Ellis, Robert Ellis, Jonathan T. Ellis, David Edwards, Charles P. Edwards, Walter Forres- ter, James Finn, Alvah Finn, Clark Finn, William S. Finn, Wm. Finu, Urial Finn, Joseph Faulkner, George Gladhill, James Green, William T. Gritman, Peter Graham, Benjamin Galbraith, Hubbard Hadsall, David W. Halstead, Alanson Halstead, Edward Ilalford, Robert Hunter, Jr., Peleg Hopkins, Robert L. Hunter, Sloane Hamilton, John W. Hazard, Henry C. Healey, Stephen Ilodgson, Samuel Hodgson, John W. Hazard, Henry C. Healey, Francis Hull, William Hill, Aaron Hawver, Hiram llawver, William Hughes, Edward Hughes, John Howells, John Irving, Steplien Johnson, Benjamin W. Johnson, Isaac Johnson, William
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HISTORY OF SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA.
Jackson, Elizabeth Jackson, Evan Jones, Evan Jenkins, Jenkin Jen- kins, Thomas Kelley, Nathan Kelley, Orrin D. King, Holloway Lowry, George Linnin, Orvis Lewis, Miller P. Lorne, John McCalla, Richard Meredith, William Meredith, Archibald McNeal, Abiathar Millard, Dudley Maxon, Edward Maxon, Isaac V. Maxon, Charles N. Miller, Charles Miller, William D. Miller, Zebulon P. Marcy, Daniel Moses, William Mason, John Michael, David Mackey, George Mackey, Samuel Nutting, Thomas Nutting, George Nutting, George W. North- rop, Abner Norton, Dorastns Norton, Roger Orvis, Edward Oram, Sidney G. Oram, Noah Owens, George Patton, Asher Peck, Samuel Payne, Samnel Payne, Jr., Edmund Payne, Thomas Powell, Gideon Palmer, Gideon W. Palmer, Thomas P. Phinny, Elisha Phinny, Joman H. Phelps, Jesse Packer, James Parker, John Patterson, John Pow- ell, William Powell, Jeremiah Rounds, Duty Reynolds, James Rey- nolds, Jenkin Reynolds, John Reynolds, Addison C. Read, Peter Riv- enburg, James Rolles, Jr., David Rees, Harvey Rogers, Jas. Rolles, George Salsbnry, David B. Stivers, Joel Stivers, Ziba Stivers, Benj. Smith, Ransford Smith, Ransford Smith, Jr., Arthur Smith, Jacob S. Smith, David Smith, John Smith, Burgess Smith, Joseph B, Slocum, Wm. H. Sloenm, Isaac Stiles, Eben H. Stephens, William Stephens, John Stephens, William Spencer, Isaiah Spencer, Jolin Spaden, Joel Ste- vens, Jr., Philip I. Stewart, Mahlon C. Stewart, James C. Stewart, William Shannon, Stephen St. John, Otis C. Severance, Jonathan Stage, Benajah Tingley, Isaac Tripp, Orrin Thatcher, Jeremiah Ting- ley, John Tinker, James Tinker, Adney C. Tomkins, Perry H. Tnt- tle, Isaac Truesdell, Wm. Tripp, David Thomas, David E. Thomas, John I. Whitman, Charles H. Whitman, John Westgate, George D. Westgate, William Wells, James Wells, Wright Wells, John W. Wells, Sidney B. Wells, Charles H. Wells, John Wells, Adamn Wells, Eliph- alet Wells, Wm. Wells (2d), Honry H. Wheeler, Silas G. Weaver, Abraham Weaver, Henry A. Weaver, Samuel T. Wood, Abel Wright, William Wilbur, Lewis White, Daniel Wedeman, Henry A. Williams, Otis Williams, Charles D. Wilson, Dimock Wilson, Amzi Wilson, Michael West, Charles M. West, Thomas Watkins, Abel Wright, Dilton Yarrington, Alanson Yarrington, Sinton Yarrington.
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