Genealogical and family history of the state of Vermont; a record of the achievements of her people in the making of a commonwealth and the founding of a nation, Vol I, Part 1

Author: Carleton, Hiram, 1838- ed
Publication date: 1903
Publisher: New York, Chicago, The Lewis Publishing Company
Number of Pages: 1032


USA > Vermont > Genealogical and family history of the state of Vermont; a record of the achievements of her people in the making of a commonwealth and the founding of a nation, Vol I > Part 1


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.


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 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121 | Part 122 | Part 123 | Part 124 | Part 125 | Part 126 | Part 127


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ENEALOGY COLLECTION


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ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 00055 6305


Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2015


https://archive.org/details/genealogicalfami01carl


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Frederick Noebrooks


Ine Lewis Publishing .


GENEALOGICAL AND FAMILY HISTORY


OF THE


STATE OF VERMONT


A RECORD OF THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF HER PEOPLE IN THE MAKING OF A COMMONWEALTH AND THE FOUNDING OF A NATION


COMPILED UNDER THE EDITORIAL SUPERVISION OF


HON. HIRAM CARLETON OF MONTPELIER


VOL. I


"Knowledge of kindred and the genealogies of the ancient families deserveth the highest praise. Herein consisteth a part of the knowledge of a man's own self. It is a great spur to virtue to look back on the worth of our line."-LORD BACON.


"There is no heroic poem in the world but is at the bottom the life of a man."-SIR WALTER SCOTT.


ILLUSTRATED


NEW YORK CHICAGO


THE LEWIS PUBLISHING COMPANY


1903


VERMONT.


1136095


By JOHN H. FLAGG. 1 Thy very name doth symbolize Thy verdant peaks that proudly rise, As if to buttress with their might The unpropped dome of heavenly light.


The beauty of thy matchless hills The ravished eye with rapture fills, While thy fair fields and fertile plains Bear flocks and herds and bounteous grains.


Thy Druid forests still conceal The eagles that high o'er them wheel, And shelter well the panting deer When driven from the open near. 1


Thy hillside homes and hamlets all Proclaim content and thrift withal ;- No servile lines yet mark the face Of thy courageous, sturdy race.


No trembling slave yet breathed thy air Who felt his shackles bind him there, For by the ancient Bill of Rights* All men stood equal on thy heights.


Such land is thine, sons of thy birth, Whose sires, with blood, paid Freedom's worth ; Who vanquished each invading foe And swept him back, or laid him low.


O happy land, by heaven caressed, Where all are free and none oppressed, Thank well those sires whose master hand Built from thy rock and not thy sand !


*Vermont in July, 1777-fourteen years anterior to ad- mission into the Union-was first on this continent to pro- hibit slavery by constitutional provision.


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VERMONT STATE HOUSE.


GENEALOGICAL AND FAMILY HISTORY.


INTRODUCTORY.


The history of Vermont, civil, political and military, has been written by various authors and at various times, each succeeding writer adding a new chapter of annals, or treating his sub- ject from a different view point. Such history is, however, splendid narrative that it is, princi- pally concerned with what has been accomplished by the people in the mass, and takes little note of individuals, except those so pre-eminent as leaders as to come under the full glare of fame.


Hence it follows that genealogical and family memoirs are of peculiar importance, including, as they do, the personal annals of those who make heroes possible-those who have marched in the ranks of progress, bearing the heat and burden of the day-portraying the spirit which actuated them, and holding up their effort for an example to those who come afterward. As was written by Martineau, "To have had forefathers renowned for honorable deeds, to belong by nature to those who have bravely borne their part in life and refreshed the world with mighty thoughts and healthy admiration, is a privilege which it were mean and self-willed to despise. It is as a security given for us of old, which it were falsehearted not to redeem; and in virtues bred of a noble stock, mel- lowed as they are by reverence, there is often a grace and ripeness wanting to self-made and brand- new excellence. Of like value to a people are heroic national traditions, giving them a de- terminate character to sustain among the tribes of men, making them familiar with images of great and strenuous life, and kindling them with faith in glorious possibilities."


The State of Vermont affords a peculiarly interesting field for a study of family traits, in- dividual character and personal achievements. To its soil came a sturdy people, men, and women, too, of brawn and brain and conscience, their hearts fervent in reverence of God and love for religious and personal liberty. Predominantly English, they were alike to that overflow from Plymouth, which, under the leadership of Thomas Hooker, migrated from Massachusetts to Con- necticut, inspired by the purpose of escaping the influence which would exclude all but church members from "the liberties of the commonwealth," meaning the right to form and administer their own local governments. Of the Vermont pioneers it was said by a deep thinker, "A certain process of natural selection had drawn out of the colonies of Connecticut and Massachusetts, and grouped in Southern Vermont, a collection of men superior in physical frame, in intelligence and information, in mental vigor and independence of thought upon the principles of civil liberty and civil government." Hon. Edward S. Isham, "Address on Ethan Allen, a Study of Civic Authority," delivered before the Vermont Historical Society, November 2, 1898. They had traversed an unbroken wilderness, infested with savages and wild beasts, to conquer primeval na-


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INTRODUCTORY.


ture and contend with a rigorous climate. They were no mere adventurers, but actual home- makers, whose sole belongings were a few domestic animals, an axe and a plow. The habitations which they builded were log cabins, and here they reared children of athletic frame and rugged constitution, and possessing their own manly virtues.


It was not long before the Vermont pioneers found occasion to exhibit their marked in- dividuality and independence of thought. They made stout protest when a great injustice was visited upon them-when they were told that their land titles were invalid, and that they must make repurchase from privileged speculators deriving their so-called rights from another colony. It was then that their "Green Mountain Boys" held their meetings to devise plans to defeat those who would despoil them. One of their famous gather- ing places was "the Catamount Tavern," at Benning- ton, with its sign reared upon a tall pole-a stuffed catamount skin, with grinning jaws, and facing toward New York, the abode of the oppressor. The building was used at a later day by the Council of Safety, which directed public affairs until a constitutional government was established. The historic old edifice was burned on March 30, 1871, and perished with it the great stone over the fireplace in the parlor, upon which had been THE CATAMOUNT TAVERN. carved the words "Council Room," to commemorate the purposes for which the apartment was used in Revolutionary days.


At bottom the land title question turned upon the political relations of the entire territory, and the settlers in convention at Bennington, resolved upon maintaining their rights by force of arms, and, for that purpose, organized a military force which was placed under the command of Colonel Ethan Allen. This vigorous action moved the writer previously quoted to remark that "the practical assertion of independence and the actual autonomy of Vermont date at least from 1764, and it is justly declared to have been the first actual autonomy on either American continent since the wreck of the great Indian monarchies of Mexico and Peru."


The events referred to, now appear to have formed a prologue to the Revolutionary strug- gle which was soon to dawn. The maladministration of the courts had become insufferable. The people had been subjected to vexatious suits and false imprisonments, principally with reference to their land titles, and, so they declared, "contrary to the laws of the province and the statutes of the crown." This condition of affairs led up to occurrences which made the old Westminster Court House and the first State House at Windsor veritable Shrines of Freedom.


The "Westminster Massacre" marks one of the crucial points of Vermont history. The people had protested against the conduct of the courts, pronounced it dangerous to trust their lives and fortunes in the hands of those whom they deemed the foes of American liberty, and de- clared their intention "to resist and oppose all authority that would not accede to the resolves of the Continental Congress." The crisis came when (March 10th, 1775) forty men waited upon Chief Justice Thomas Chandler and requested that no court be held. Justice Chandler was dis- posed to temporize, but events were hurrying along. On March 13th, understanding that the Tories, under Sheriff Paterson, were determined upon taking possession of the court-house at Westminster, the Whigs, under the leadership of Azariah Wright, anticipated them with something like an equal force, and seized the building. At midnight, Sheriff Paterson, with his men, under- took to dispossess the occupants. There was a collision in which ten of the Whigs were wounded, two of them mortally and seven were taken prisoners, while two of the sheriff's party were slightly


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INTRODUCTORY.


wounded. This bloody affair occurred five weeks before that of Lexington, thus "consecrating by bloodshed, in avowed participation in the cause of the colonies, an open attack upon the authority and power of the King."


In Dorset, on July 26, 1776, assembled that convention which is said to have been the first body in the territory of Vermont to assume general legislative functions in the development of civil government. The scene then changes again to the court-house in Westminster, where, on January 15, 1777, without a dissenting voice, it was decreed "that the district of land commonly called and known by the name of New Hampshire Grants be a new and separate State." Here, too, two days later, the convention, speaking for the people of Vermont, declared their inde; pendence of Great Britain and of all other governments claiming jurisdiction, and appointed a "committee of war."


The "Old Constitution House" in Windsor commemorates the first constitutional conven- tion and the first State Legislature. Here, in June, 1777, was held an adjourned meeting of the Westminster convention, when a committee was appointed to draft a constitution, and a call was made upon the towns to elect delegates to establish a State government, and here, July 2nd, following, pursuant to that call, assembled those who were chosen for the momentous task as- signed them. The pencil of the artist has preserved to us a representation of the humble edifice which was the scene of their week's labors. It would be worth much could we be afforded a glimpse of the men themselves. It was an assemblage of plain farmers, probably without what may be termed a lettered man among them, yet were they men of no ordinary mould. Great as was their strength of character, and broad as was their mental scope, they were building far better than they knew. The setting to the picture was highly dramatic. A state of war already existed. Information had just been received of the evacuation of Fort Ticonderoga before the advancing army of General Burgoyne. The British troops, the right arm of the crown, flushed with victory and proud in their arrogant might, were about to overrun the land, whose inhabitants were al- ready fleeing from their homes, forsaking property, to procure safety for their families. The very elements, too, seemed to conspire against these builders of a State, as they sat in the little tavern at Windsor. A violent storm was raging, and voices were scarcely to be heard above its din. At another time, and in another State, occurred a somewhat similar scene which was depicted by the Quaker poet, Whittier, when affrighted ones declared it the Lord's day of judgment. and clamored for an adjournment. But one of their number, John Davenport, said, "Let God do his work, let us see to ours. Bring in the candles." There were John Davenports in Windsor that memorable day of 1777. Not affrighted by advancing foe or war of the elements, they held them- selves to their task, read their constitution paragraph by paragraph, amending it with con- summate care, and adopting it in regular order, producing what has been pronounced by high authority, to be, that of Pennsylvania not excepted, an organic act which was "the purest con- ception of democracy, the best formulation of man's rights, that the world had ever seen up to that time." It contained the first ban put upon slavery in all America. It went beyond the con- stitution of Pennsylvania, product of the wisdom of Penn and Franklin, in providing for com- pensation for private property taken for public uses, in claiming for the people the right of establishing and controlling the internal police, in guarding the right of hunting and fishing against exclusive privilege, and, by the creation of a Council of Censors, making provision against the hasty enactment of laws. And, splendid monument to'its authors, this selfsame constitution laid a deep and ample foundation for the present excellent educational system of the State, in its provision that "A school or schools shall be established in each town for the convenient in- struction of youth, with such salaries to the masters paid by each town making proper use of


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INTRNDUCTORY.


school lands in each town, thereby to enable them to instruct youth at low prices. One Grammar school in each county and one University in the State ought to be established by direction of the General Assembly."


At Windsor, on March 12th, 1778, assembled the first legislature of the State of Vermont, and from that time there was organized civil government. Local and sovereign government there had been long before. As was said by Ethan Allen, in his "Vindication of Vermont:" "During near two years in the first of the war with Britain, the inhabitants of these contested lands governed themselves, and managed their internal police under direction of committees and con- ventions, as they had done from the commencement of their controversy with the government of New York," and Governor Chittenden wrote that "the inhabitants of Vermont had lived in a state of independence from their first settlement, governing themselves, until their State government was formed in January, 1777, by committees and conventions in the manner afterward followed in the other States on their first separation from the British govern- ment."


The names of Dr. Jones Fay, Thomas Chittenden, Heman Allen and Reuben Jones, among the foremost in the great work of State building, are preserved. So, too, are those of Nathaniel Chipman, statesman and jurist, and of Ira Allen, diplomat and financier. So, also, are the names of Ethan Allen and Seth Warner, sterling patriots and incomparable soldiers, while to the memory of the heroes of Bennington, and located near the site of the Continental store house which was the objective point of General Burgoyne's supply-seeking detachment, whose appearance resulted in the historic engagement, rises the stately Battle Monument, in appearance somewhat remindful of the Washington Monument at the national capital.


Thus it appears that while the leaders in public affairs, civil and military, are readily identified, we know little concerning those who were their aiders and supporters. To them is reared a general monument containing few if any names. Yet the history of the State which was founded through their effort affords ample attestation that they labored not in vain, and that the spirit which animated the sires was transmitted to the sons, who have preserved, in remarkable degree, their inherited mental and moral characteristics. During the Civil war, the men of that period shed an added lustre upon their State, while in the arts of peace, in statemanship, in affairs and in letters, the men of the present generation and their progenitors have borne a full part. It is to connect these with their splendid ancestry that the present work has been undertaken, and its pages will serve to show that


"It is indeed a blessing when the virtues Of noble races are hereditary, And do derive themselves from the imitation Of virtuous ancestors."


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ICONDEROCAA


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THREE STATUES OF ETHAN ALLEN, IN VERMONT.


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INDEX.


Abernathy, Charles P., 506 Abernethy, Frank D., 155 Agan, Frank W., 647 Alexander, Willard H., 160 Allen, Charles E., 173


Allen, Heman W., 153 Allen. Joseph D., 171 Allen, Mrs. Julia E. S., 447 Allen, The Family, 170 Archibald, Thomas H., 632 Arthur, John A., 712 Atkins, George W., 234 Auld, Joseph, 465 Averill, George C., 448


.


Backus, Fred E., 537 Backus, Quimby S., 536 Bailey, Abner B., 19 Bailey, Horace W., 642 Bailey, Norman A., 159 Baldwin, Orange A., 678 Baldwin, Oscar D., 502 Baldwin, Walter N., 501 Bancroft, Charles DeF., 699


Barber, Orion M., 391 Barclay, William, 500 Barden, Merritt C., 68 Barney, Dorrance G., 229 Barrows, Augustus, 377 Barstow, John L., 478 Bartlett, Edward J., 39 Batchelder, Arch M., 71 Beach, Ferdinand, 354 Beckett, George, 563 Benedict, George G., 244 Benjamin, John E., 588 Benjamin, Samuel W., 591 Berry, Walter H., 225 Bickford, George Hamilton, 93 Bickford, George Harrison, 92 Bingham, Albert L., 290 Bingham, Henry S., 274 Bisbee, Edward W., 188 Bisbee, Elijah W., 189 Bixby, Henry A., 350 Blackmer, Annie (Huling), 299 Blackmer, Franklin, 300 Blackmer, John C., 240


Blackmer, S. H., 300 Blodgett, G. S., 316 Boardman, 178 Boardman, Harland P. S., 140


Booth, Henry H., 582


Booth, Henry W., 216 Bottum, Julius O., 482 Bouton, Jennette B., 584 Boutwell, James M., 164 Bowles, Robert J., 452 Boyce, William A., 302 Boyd, Gilbert A., 469 Bradley, Gilbert W., 224 Bradley, John W., 612 Bradley, William I., 561 Braisted, Adelbert W., 357 Bridgman, Dorman, 595 Briggs, Frank T., 53I Briggs, William A., 363 Bristol, Russel T., 437 Brooks, Lynn B., 274 Brown, Andrew C., 348


Brown, Joseph G., 350 Brown, Martin A., 636 Brown, Rufus E., 612


Brown, Sherrod, 51I Bryant, Lester A., 529 Bryant, William N., 631 Buck, James H., 628


Buckham, Matthew H., 221


Bullard, Vernon A., 461 Bullock. Elmer J., 287 Burbank, Albin S., 644 Burdett, Cornelia C. L., 120


Burdett, Jesse, 122


Burdick, John L. F., 402


Burgess, Merrett E., 219 Burt, Henry A., 389 Burt, J. Oliver, 218


Bushnell, James, 386 Buswell, Charles F., 187 Byington, Alfred A., 252


Cabot, Norman F., 168 Cain, Albert L., 535 Canfield. Eli H., 344 Canfield, Martha, 344 Canfield, Thomas H., 392


Cannon, LeGrand B., 462 Carleton, Hiram, 85 Carney, John V., 207 Carter, Joseph, 592 Chamberlin. Solon T., 475 Chapin, Willis F., 43 Chapman, Charles A., 487 Chase, Charles S., 162 Childs, Asaph P., 60 Chittenden, Thomas, I Clark, Albert B., 266 Clark, Charles E., 20 Clark, Joseph, 95


Clark, Marvin W., 713 Clark, Osman D., 259 Clark, William C., 601 Clarke, John M., 351 Clemons, Seneca S., 336 Cochran. Alexander, 583 Cole, William A., 498 Collins Elvin M., 504 Colton, Henry C., 262 Colton, Willard C., 263 Colvin, Harvey E., 265 Conant, Edward, 606 Conant, Henry C., 513 Converse, Charles A., 553 Converse, John H., 542 Converse, The Family, 539 Covell, Arthur E., 57 Cowles, Josiah, 419 Crandall, George H., 58 Crane, Ephraim, 652 Crane, Willard, 182 Cristy. Robert C., 660 Crosby, Edward, 626 Crosby, Edward C., 625 Cross, Lewis B., 443 Crowell, George E., 146 Cummins, Albert O., 291 Currier, Paschal W., 61 Cushman, Harry T., 233 Cutler, Harry M., 263 Cutler, Herman E., 62


Daggett, George, 320 Darling, Charles M., 677 Darling, Elmer A., 677


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INDEX.


Darling, Heury G., 676 Davenport, Edgar 11 .. 510 Davis, Frank E., 186 Dean, Fred II., 505 Dean, Marion 11., 499 Denny, Andrew E., 320 Derby, Buel J., 495 Dewey, Albert G., 77 Dewey, Arthur J., 52 Dewey, John J., 79 Dewey, William S., 79 Dillingham, Paul, 10 Dillingham, William P., 13 Dodge, Grenville M., 49 Doud, Silas 1)., 715 Drake, Thomas S., 555


Drew, Luman A., 460


Drysdale, Robert S., 215 DuBois, William II., 378 Dubuc, John B., 556 Dumas, J. Julian, 527 Dunnett, Alexander, 581 Dustin. Gardner W., 496 Dwinell, Franklin A., 203 Dyer, Douglass H., 413 Dyer, Horace H., 445


Eastman, Frank L., 477 Eaton, Arthur G., 246 Edmunds, George F., 71I Egerton, Charles B., 314 Egerton, Joseph K., 314 Egerton, The Family, 31I Egerton, William B., 648 Eldridge, George H., 719 Ellis, Edward D., 633 Emerson, Samuel F., 231 Englesby, Leverett B., 264 Estey, 87


Fairbanks, Edward T., 118 Fairbanks, Erastus, 109 Fairbanks, Franklin, III Fairbanks, Henry, 116 Fairbanks, Horace, 112 Fairbanks, Joseph P., 117 Fairbanks, 'Thaddeus, 113 Fairbanks, The Family, 108 Fairbanks, William P., 118 Farnham, Roswell, 375


* Farrington, Frederick H., 600 Fay, Alland G., 298 Fay, Ellery C., 9 Ferguson, Alfred, 473 Ferrin, Albert W., 282 Field, Frederic G., 453 Fillmore, Leland L., 206 Fiske, Henry C., 675 Fleetwood, Frederick G., 705 Foote, George A., 418 Foote, Williams B., 716 Forbush, Charles A., 054 Foss, James M., 454 Foster, Austin S., 627 Fowler, Harvey K., 132 Francisco, M. J., 54 Fuller, Levi K., 380 Fullerton, James K., 339


Gates, Joel 11., 329 Gay, Frederick, 208 Gay, The Family, 596 Gee, William II., 507 Gill, Daniel O., 449 Gillette, Leon H., 409 Gilmore, Charles C., 455 Gleason, Louis P., 243


Gleason, Samuel M., 673 Gleed, Philip K., 704 Godfrey, Mrs. S. L., 386 Godfrey, S. L., 386 Goodell, Tyler D., 390 Goodenough, Jonas E., 289 Goodhue, Henry A., 634 Goodrich, Eugene, 204 Gordon, Alexander, 560 Gordon, Matthew M., 298


Gove, Webster N., 471 Grant, Lowell C., 366 Graves, Collins M., 222 Greene, Channing B., 659


Greene, Lester H., 127


Greenleaf, William L., 685 Grout, Josiah, 621 Grout, Lewis, 193


Grout, Miss Annie L., 200


Grout, Mrs. Lydia B., 198


Hall, George A., 639 Hall, Henry D., 579 Hamlen, Lafayette, 373 Hamlen, Mortimer T., 372


Hanks, Wilbur E., 531


Hartness, James, 671


Haselton, Seneca, 14 Haskins, Fred G., 526 Hatch, Jo D., 305 Hathorn, Ransom E., 680


Hays, Lindsay M., 656


Heath, Charles H., 280


Heaton, Charles H., 167


Heaton, Homer W., 165 Henry, William W., 387 Hickok, Henry P., 249


Hickok, Horatio, 135 Hickok, The Family, 649 Hicks, Joseph H., 258 Hill, Frank N., 522


Hill, S. C., 459 Hoit, Theophilus, 56


Holbrook, Frederick, 646 Holbrook, Frederick, 4 Holden, George B., 131 Holden, John S., 340 Holton, Henry D., 128 Hooker, Emory G., 184 Hopkins, John H., 98 Hopkins, Theodore A., 10I


Horsford, Frederick H., 572 Houghton, Edmund C., 119 Houghton, James C., 97 Houghton, Mial B., 214 Howard, Oliver O., 36 Howden, William S., 481 Howland, Frank G., 295 Hubbell, Elijah D., 146 Hubbell, Gertrude C., 145


Huling, Mrs. Sophronia, 323 Humphrey, Albert O., 438 Hungerford, Edward, 141 Hungerford, Mrs. Maria B., 143 Hunt, Edmund G., 489 Huntington, Lewis B., 175 Huntley, William E., 328 Huse, Hiram A., 136


lilah, John, 686 Irish, Homer, 557


Jackson, Samuel N., 256


James, John A., 353 Jenne, James N., 666 Johnson, George E., 362 Johnson, Horatio S., 300 Johonnott, Albert, 270


Jones, Hugh J. M., 192 Jones, Mary E., 590 Joyce, Charles 11., 64


Kellogg, Daniel, 286 Kelton, Otis N., 624 Kemp, Harlan W., 158 Kenyon, Henry L., 322 Keyes, Samuel, 667 King, Clark, 368 Kinsley, Edward, 212 Knight, Eugene W., 68


Laird, Fred L., 289 Lamson, Guy A., 29 Landon, Fred, 523 Landon, Mills J., 18 Larrabee, Elmer E., 210 Lasher, Frank, 226 Lathrop, Ernest M., 309 Lawrence, William A., 533 Leland, George F., 665 Linsley, George L., 254 Livingston, James H., 334 Livingston, J. O., 242 Luce, Byron H., 658 Lyman, Edward, 664


Mansur, Zophar M., 604 Marr, Charles, 513 Marshall, Willie W., 568 = Martin, Allen, 304 Martin, Howard P., 35 Mason, Charles H., 248 Mason, Mrs. Andrew J., 518 Mattison, Clayton S., 228 Mattison, William P., 228 McGee, Charles L., 483 Meacham, James B., 433 Merriam, Bert E., 702 Michaud, John S., 123 Miller, Jackson, 28 Miller, Norris R., 514 Miner, Charles E., 24I Moody, George E., 21I Morrill, Justin S., 83 Morse, Frederick W., 285 Morse, George W., 352 Moseley, John L., 303


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INDEX.


Moulton, Clarence E., 365 Murray, Daniel, 347


Newton, William D., 364 Nichols, Levi H., 430 Noble, Robert, 269 North, Clayton N., 694 Noyes, Albert L., 176


Noyes, Harry A., 178 Nutting, David H., 609


Ormsbee, Ebenezer J., 82


Packard, William L., 610 Page, Carroll S., 32 Page, Dan 1., 51 Page, John B., 80 Page, Leslie T., 370


Parish, Luke, 706


Parish, The Family, 705 Parker, The Family, 616 Parmenter, George W., 19I Parmenter, Jerome B., 326


Parsons, H. Ellsworth, 371 Partch, William H., 515 Pearl, Isaac L ... 663 Peck, Cassius, 272 Peck, Charles W., 690 Peck, Roswell K., 163 Peck, Theodore S., 490


Peck, Warren, 42I Peckett, John B., 688 Perrin, George K., 57 Perrin, Justus N., 63 Perry, Crosby A., 337 Pettee, Frederick G., 683 Phelps, Edward J., 708 Phelps, Henry A., 33 Phelps, Nelson D., 508 Pierson, James S., 342 Pike, Paphro D., 662 Pilon, Edward, 577 Pingree, Samuel E., 16 Pirie, James K., 534 Place, Roswell H., 639 Plumley, Frank, 472 Porter, Edwin, 327 Potter. Henry J., 383 Powell, Edward H., 307 Powell, Mrs. Edgar S., 159 Powers, Horace H., 691 Pratt, William Z., 603 - Proctor, Redfield, 44




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