USA > Vermont > Chittenden County > History of Chittenden County, Vermont, with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers > Part 40
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | 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
326
HISTORY OF CHITTENDEN COUNTY.
the Rialto." Soon after this the manner of shipping lumber was changed, and the schooner and canal boat were substituted for the raft. Justus Burdick and Follett & Bradley, of Burlington, were extensive dealers, and with Samuel Brownell, of Williston, manufactured lumber at the Little Falls on the Wi- nooski. About 1835 the rafting system had disappeared, and by 1843 it " seemed as though the trade must perish from lack of material. The country was apparently completely stripped of all its valuable timber, so prodigal had the lumbermen been of their possessions. The eastern New England States were afflicted with the same scarcity and could no longer carry on the trade which had been the subject of all their competition with the inhabitants on Lake Champlain. But Burlington was more fortunate in its situation ; for on the opening of the Central Vermont, the Rutland and Burlington, and subse- quently of the Burlington and Lamoille Railroads, with their several New Eng- land connections, immediate communication with all parts of the East as well as South was obtained, and the forests of Canada and the West became the source of supply. Burlington being the only point on the lake at which the railroads and lake navigation came together, was the most conveniently situ- ated før transhipment. She therefore regained her old-time prestige as a lum- ber depot, and acquired even greater prosperity. She has ceased to produce, but her extensive market is fully supplied. This accounts for the vast accumu- lation of lumber on and around her wharves, and for the number of planing and dressing-mills and other kindred manufactories which have given this city the reputation of being one of the most important business centers in North- ern New England. To L. C. Bigelow belongs the honor of bringing to Bur- lington in 1850 the first cargo of lumber from Canada for the East. In com- pany with Enos Peterson he carried on the trade until 1855. Calvin Blodgett & Son, then of Waterbury, continued the business. The first planing-mill was erected in 1857. The St. Maurice Lumber Company soon after selected this point for its lumber shipments. The Hunterstown Lumber Company followed and located its sales depot here, for several years under the management of Henry Rolfe. Messrs. Blodgett & Son were succeeded by James McClaren, of Buckingham, P. Q., who retired from business in 1878. In 1856 Lawrence Barnes, who had previously been largely engaged in the lumber business in Maine, New Hampshire and Canada, sagaciously foreseeing the many business advantages which Burlington possessed as a shipping port, established a yard here. Four years later he took Messrs. Charles and David Whitney, jr., of Lowell, Mass., into partnership. In 1862 D. N. Skillings, of Boston, Mass., was admitted into the firm, and branch offices were opened in Montreal, Og- densburg, Detroit, Albany, Lowell and Boston. Mial Davis became a mem- ber of the firm in 1864, but retired five years later. In January, 1873, Mr. Barnes sold out his outside interests, which had grown to be very extensive, and formed a partnership with his son, L. K. Barnes, and D. W. Robinson.
1
327
LAKE COMMERCE AND THE LUMBER TRADE.
Two years after his son retired, and in 1878 the Skillings, Whitneys & Barnes Lumber Company was organized, Mr. Barnes being president of the company from 1881 to the time of his death in June, 1886. Under his intelligent and vigorous leadership the lumber business rapidly increased until at one time Bur- lington ranked the third in the lumber markets of the United States. At pres- ent five large firms are engaged in the business, having an aggregate capital of over two millions of dollars. About 150,000,000 of feet of lumber are an- nually shipped by boat and rail from this port, the most of it being brought here by boat for dressing and distribution, giving employment to 1,500 men. Extensive mills not only for dressing lumber have been erected, but also for the manufacture of doors, sash, blinds of every variety, packing boxes, cloth boards, etc. The firms now engaged in the business are the Skillings, Whitneys & Barnes just alluded to, which occupies about sixteen acres for piling ground, and with its several branches at Boston and Ogdensburg, it handles about 90,000,000 of feet a year. D. W. Robinson is the manager of the company in this city.
The firm of W. & D. G. Crane commenced the lumber business here in 1858. They occupy ten acres of piling ground, having fourteen hundred feet of dockage. Their sales amount to ten millions of feet here, and twenty-five millions of feet at their branch house at Muskegan, Mich., under charge of W. G. Watson. 5
The Shepard & Morse Lumber Company is the successor of the firmn of Shepard, Davis & Company, who succeeded Lawrence Barnes & Company, in 1868. This company was incorporated in 1878. Besides their large dress- ing mill here it has also a mill in Tonawanda, N. Y., and a large interest in a mill in Saginaw, Mich. Twenty-five acres of piling ground, with a dock front of four thousand feet, are required for its business. This company, including its branches, ships about one hundred and twenty millions of feet annually. Three hundred men are employed. Its Burlington office is managed most successfully by Messrs. G. H. Morse and W. A. Crombie, the resident directors here of the company.
In 1872 the firm of Bronsons, Weston, Dunham & Company, for many years leading lumber dealers in Albany, N. Y., selected Burlington for the location of its principal branch. Since this date its business has been annually increasing, and now it uses fifteen acres of piling ground, furnishing two thousand feet of wharfage. It runs a large dressing-mill, and employs one hundred and fifty men, and handles here about forty millions of feet of lum- ber. It is under the efficient management of J. W. Dunham, formerly of Al- bany, N. Y.
John R. Booth, the largest owner of timber lands in Canada, having ex- tensive saw-mills in Ottawa, commenced business here in 1876, under the man- agement of U. A. Woodbury, the present mayor of the city. The business
328
HISTORY OF CHITTENDEN COUNTY.
has grown to be one of the most important in Burlington, having ten acres of piling ground with twenty-five hundred feet of dockage. The sales amount to twenty-five millions of feet, and one hundred and twenty-five men are employed.
Growing out of this business are the mills for making packing-boxes and cloth-boards. These are owned by Mathews & Hickok, who succeeded the firm of Mathews & Davis in 1875. This firm has branch mills in Canada, which, with their mill here, work up fifteen millions of feet of lumber each year. They have seven acres of piling ground, six hundred feet of wharfage, and furnish employment to fifty men. Messrs. Pope & Watson, who were the successors of W. S. Mayo & Company in 1875, use up ten millions of feet an- nually in the manufacture of boxes and cloth boards. They employ sixty-five men. E. A. Pope has charge of the business here, and W. G. Watson of the branch at Muskegan, Mich.
In the distribution, as well as the receipt of the lumber thus handled in its various modified forms, the great advantage of water navigation is fully appre- ciated, and a large number of canal boats and barges are employed.
Among the other business interests principally represented by shipments by water is coal. In Burlington the largest dealer is Elias Lyman, the successor of the old firm of Wilkins & Lyman. He also runs a mill for grinding plaster purchased and brought by him from Nova Scotia. George L. Linsley is also an extensive dealer, also Adsit & Bigelow and J. W. Hayes. Marble, granite and flagging are largely shipped. The principal dealers in these products, of which Vermont furnishes so large a supply, are the Burlington Manufacturing Company and J. W. Goodell, who have steam mills for sawing and finishing. L. A. Walker and H. M. Phelps are also dealers. Nails, heavy iron ware, salt and cement are principally handled by Messrs. Van Sicklen, Seymour & Company and O. J. Walker & Brothers.
Such is a brief and therefore necessarily somewhat imperfect description of Lake Champlain and its commercial importance. But should the Caughnawaga Canal ever be built, and the Champlain Canal be correspondingly enlarged, a scheme the great importance of which is unquestioned, and which it may not be deemed too visionary to hope will be successfully accomplished in the near future, we shall yet see huge elevators arise among the wharves which will then line the entire semi-circle of Burlington Bay, and our beautiful lake become a part of a continuous waterway extending from the great lakes to the shores of the Atlantic, bearing upon its surface ships laden with the productions of the Far West, to be in turn exchanged for those of the East and foreign lands, which are required to supply the ever-increasing wants of the interior and the slopes of the Pacific. With the development of American industries comes the demand for new arteries of trade. The time when water and railway lines of communication were considered to be antagonistic has passed. In the fu-
329
IN THE REBELLION.
ture both will prosper together, and the commercial advantages of our lake will be fully recognized, and only a generous rivalry will exist between her and the railroads built along her shores.
CHAPTER XVI.
CHITTENDEN COUNTY IN THE REBELLION.1
Introduction - Names of Volunteers from the Towns of the County - Table of Enlistments - Miscellaneous Enlistments and Drafts - The First Company to go Out-The Second Regi- ment - Third Regiment - Fifth Regiment - Sixth Regiment - The Vermont Brigade - Sev- enth Regiment - Ninth Regiment - Tenth Regiment - Twelfth Regiment - Thirteenth Regi- ment - Fourteenth Regiment - Seventeenth Regiment - Other Regiments - Artillery and Cavalry.
TT may safely be said that no State in the Union earned a more brilliant rec-
ord of heroism and self-sacrifice in the War of the Rebellion than Vermont. With almost unexampled promptitude and the most generous prodigality she sent her best blood to baptize the Southern fields, and lavished her treasure in support of the great principles involved in the struggle ; so to-day no one can do the memory of her heroes, dead and living, too much honor. The keen anguish following close upon the loss of father, husband, or brother may have become softened by the kindly hand of time; but the vacant places around thousands of hearthstones are still there, and must for many more years awaken mournful memories in innumerable hearts. To perpetuate the records and memories of the brave deeds of dead and dying heroes is the duty of every country-loving citizen.
Chittenden county was particularly prompt and patriotic, as shown by the large number of volunteers from the various towns. Burlington alone con- tributed more than six hundred soldiers to the war. The larger cities and vil- . lages, as a rule, responded more freely to the calls for troops that the rural dis- tricts-a fact not difficult to account for through the more spontaneous enthu- siasm of large communities and the superior facilities of varied character for
1 Prepared by H. P. Smith, of Syracuse, N. Y., editor of the Rutland and Addison county histories. In the limited space allotted to this subject in this work we can attempt little more than to gather into condensed and convenient form the more important military statistics of Chittenden county, as pre- served in the very complete records made in the office of the adjutant and inspector-general of the State, with very brief sketches of several of the regiments which received large accessions from this county. The subject merits, perhaps more than any other, the fullest and ablest treatment by the his- torian, with such resources at his command as to place his work before the masses of the people, that the heroic deeds of those who are fast passing away may be known and remembered by coming genera- tions ; and it is a pleasure to know that there is in course of preparation, by G. G. Benedict, esq., of Burlington, a work on this subject which will, without doubt, prove an exhanstive and correct military history of the State.
330
HISTORY OF CHITTENDEN COUNTY.
the promotion of enlistments. Of the 34,238 men who took up arms in the State, this county's quota was promptly contributed almost without the sem- blance of compulsion ; and the most liberal measures were adopted for the pay- ment of the several bounties and the aid of the soldiers in the field and their families at home.
In the succeeding few pages are given the names of all of the volunteers from the various towns, with the length of their terms of services, as compiled in the adjutant-general's report; the re-enlistments are not included in this list, nor the few who served as conscripts :
Bolton .- Volunteers for three years credited previous to call for 300,000, October 17, 1863 .- Henry Beeman, Marcus A. Bennett, James Carr, Elam A. Clark, Henry F. Farnsworth, Silas A. Farnsworth, Franklin Guyette, George J. Hatch, Samuel S. Jackman, Woodman Jackman, Eber Johnson, John Lewis, Andrew H. McGee, Joseph Raymond, Harlow Sanders, John Smith, Albert Tomlinson, Russell Tomlinson, Addison Warren, Milo H. Williams.
Credits under call of October 17, 1863, for 300,000, and subsequent calls .- Cassius N. Case, Geo. E. Cunningham, Robert Cunningham, Geo. P. Davis, Harrison H. Smith, Philo Tomlinson.
Volunteers for one year .- Kinsman P. Chase, Henry N. Deavitt, Edwin F. Hinkson, Samuel S. Jackman.
Volunteers for nine months .- Harmon Hall, Joseph H. Smith, Frederick A. Southwick, George W. Tomlinson, Hollis P. Tomlinson, Royal C. Ward, Wilbur F. Ward, John Carr, Andrew L. Cox, Luther Kennedy, Richmond Preston, Ransom Sabens, Paul Slockwell, Warren Hull, Edwin Whitcomb.
Burlington .- Volunteers for three years credited previous to call for 300,000. men, October 17, 1863 .- Henry Adams, Nelson Adams, Nelson D. Adams, Thomas Aggus, Morey L. Aldridge, Robert Alex. Heman F. Allen, John Allen, Henry Amblo, Franklin Anderson, Geo. D. Anson, Giles F. Appleton, Cor- nelius Aubrey, Henry Aubrey, Wm. Aubrey, Geo. W. Austin, Jonathan Myers, Alvin Babcock, John Bain, John J. Bain, Henry W. Baldwin, Newton H. Ballou, Austin Bartomy, Edward Bartomy, Geo. A. Beebe, Henry D. Belden, Alexander Bell, James Bell, Lucious Bigelow, Hiram J. Bishop, Hascall Bixby, Robert Bixby, Benjamin Blanchard, Charles Blanchard, Charles H. Blinn, Horace C. Blinn, Alexander Blo, Alfred Bourke, John Boucher, Philetus Brace, Patrick Brahnon, Nelson Brasted, Thomas Brett, John H. Brooks, Carmichael A. Brown, John Brown, James Bruin, George Brush, John Bully, Amos H. Bunker, Peter Burke, Asa R. Burleson, Allen Burt, Loren A. Butler, Martin Butler, Thomas. Butler, Thomas Butler, James H. Cain, William Cain, Charles F. W. Carlton, Benjamin W. Carpenter, Franklin Carpenter, Lucius Carpenter, Martin Casey, Joseph Champlane, William Chelsey, Henry B. Chiott, Frederick A. Church, John Coates, William H. Cobb, Dan. L. C. Colburn, Asa A. Cooley, John. Connelly, James Connery, Thomas Cosgriff, James Coughlin, Reuben Cough-
331
IN THE REBELLION.
lin, Augustus J. Crain, William Cronan, Edward M. Curtiss, John Daley, Lewis Dana, Charles Daniels, Samuel Darrah, George E. Davis, Hiram A. Dean, Joseph Demon, Chester Derby, Fabien Des Rosiers, Henry Devoid, Archi- bald S. Dewey, John Dolan, Thomas Donahue, Thomas Downs, Frank Doyle, John T. Drew, Francis Ducat, Wm. J. Dupaw, Peter Durand, John Eagan, Albert B. Edgall, Joel B. Erhardt, James Farrell, Frederick Faulkner, Oscar B. Ferguson, Thomas Fitzgibbon, Charles Fitzpatrick, John Fitzsimmons, Mor- ris Flanaghan, Solan W. Fletcher, Joseph Fountain, Charles Fremont, Au- gustus Frenier, Herman Frost, Louis Gabourie, Oliver Garron, James Gray, Francis Germain, Josiah H. Gibbs, Robert Gibson, James O. Gilbert, Patrick Gillerly, John Golden, Charles P. Goodrich, Lucius J. Goodwin, Benjamin Gordon, William A. Griswold, Frank Guyette, Joseph Guyette, Haley H. Hall, Fitz G. Hallock, Thomas Hamilton, Phillip Hammer, Levi P. Hammond, Daniel Hanley, Nathan Hannon, John Hannah, John Hardy, William L. Har- ris, Frank Hastings, Charles W. Hathaway, Reuben Hayes, Bradbury W. Hight, John Hogan, Patrick Hogan, Wallace W. Holmes, Sylvester J. Hoose, Ansel H. Howard, Isaac Howard, Roswell Hunt, Charles Hurley, Henry C. Irish, Jas. Irish, Silas C. Isham, John Jackson, Wm. Johns, Wm. L. Jones, Francis Jor- don, John Kane, Thomas Kavanah, George Keese, Michael A. Kehoe, John Kelley, Henry D. Kennedy, Michael Kerrigan, Albert R. Keyes, Horace M. Knapp, Edwin R. Kinney, Henry Labounty, William Labounty, William Labounty, Stephen Lajoie, John Lamoine, Peter Lander, Charles Lander, Joseph Laplante, Noyse N. H. Larnard, Joseph S. Lavake, Benjamin Law, William H. Leach, Michael Lee, John R. Lewis, Daniel G. Lloyd, George E. Lord, Homer Lyman, Wyllys Lyman, Patrick Lynch, Thomas Lynch, Henry Lynde, Frederick A. Lyon, James G. Lyon, Thomas MaGuire, John Maloney, John Maloney, Thomas Mandler, Paul Manor, Thomas G. Mayne, James McCarthy, John L. McCarty, Thomas McCullock, James McDermott, Daniel McDixon, John McGraith, John McGuire, Thomas McGuire, George McHenry, James McHenry, Michael Mckenzie, James E. McKewen, Charles McLaughlin, Thomas McMahon, William McMurray, John McSorley, James Miles, Edward Miller, Clement Mitchell, Julius Morrow, Cornelius W. Morse, Stephen Morse, Calvin L. Morton, John Mosier, James Mullins, Peter Mullu -_ gan, Russell C. Munsell, Edward Murray, Neal C. Murray, Ferguson Nelson, John L. Newton, William H. Newton, Alfred K. Nichols, Charles W. Nichols, Henry C. Nichols, John W. Noonan, Lyman F. Norton, John O'Brien, Thomas. O'Brien, Thomas O'Brien, John O'Dell, Florence O'Donahue, Henry O'Grady, Edward O'Neil, Michael O'Neil, Michael O'Neil, James A. Palmer, Joseph Parker, Peter Paro, Antoine Pasha, William Parady, David B. Peck, Theodore S. Peck, William H. H. Peck, John G. Peckham, Joseph S. Perkins, William A. Perry, Michael Phillips, Edgar Pitkin, Wareham N. Pierce, Archibald S. Poole, Maxim Poro, Samuel D. Preston, Thomas Rafter, William H. Ramsay, ..
332
HISTORY OF CHITTENDEN COUNTY.
Robert Rankin, Ellis M. Rawson, Julius Rawson, Denison A. Raxford, James M. Reed, Ogden B. Reed, Henry Reed, Thomas Reed, Charles Reynolds, Edward O. Roach, John Robears, Joseph Rober, Samuel B. Roberts, Edgar W. Robinson, George A. Rogers, Peter Rondo, Edwin Rowe, Henry W. Rowe, Daniel Z. Royce, Willard, A. Royce, Edward S. Russell, William Rus- sell, Joel Sabin, Edward Saltus, Frank Saltus, Frank O. Sawyer, Alexander Scott, jr., Herman Seligson, Ovid Seymour, Albert Shatzel, Henry Shattle, David L. Sharpley, Thomas Sharpley, Harry G. Sheldon, John W. Shelly, James Sheridan, Dennis Shortsleeves, Charles P. Silloway, Clark Smith, Isaac S. Smith, Warren S. Smith, William Smith, Samuel Somerville, Sylvester So- per, Andrew Spaulding, Charles H. Spaulding, J. Selly Spaulding, Solon E. Spaulding, Alonzo R. Spear, Horace S. Spear, Patrick Starr, Charles Stay, Eli Z. Stearns, Riley B. Stearns, Lyman J. Sterling, William Sterner, William N. Stevens, Charles St. Michael, Cyrille Stone, Henry H. Stone, George Streeter, Joseph L. Sutherland, John Swail, William H. Swail, Orvis H. Sweet, Albert Taylor, William Tebo, Alexander W. Terrill, Joel B. Thomas, Joel B. Thomas, James M. Thompson, William H. Thompson, William H. Thompson, Edmund Tobin, Edwin H. Trick, Thomas Turnbull, Charles T. Vanornum, George Vorce, Samuel Waldo, William H. Walker, James Ward, Phillip Ward, Alex- ander G. Watson, Samuel S. Watson, William G. Watson, William Watson, George Weber, John E. Wells, Edwin P. Whicher, Alex. M. Whitcomb, Ed- win P. Whitney, Zimri Willard, Theodore Willett, John Williams, Hiram R. Willis, Curtis S. Woodard, John W. Woodard, Lyman Woodard, Carroll V. Wood, John E. Wright, Theodore F. Wright, Martin Youatt, Nathan N. York.
Credits under call of October 17, 1863, for 300,000, and subsequent calls. - Foster Armstrong, Thomas Baker, Henry A. Barnard, Michael Bart, Will- iam Bassett, Alexander Bell, William Bennett, Edward Bertram, William F. Blinn, Ebenezer Blongy, Napoleon Bona, Peter Bridge, John C. Bridges, Lewis Brothers, John Brown, Michael Brown, Warren Brown, John Burke, James Butler, Michael Cannon, Joseph Carson, Peter Casey, Hiram G. Child, Peter Ciffare, Patrick Coffey, Andrew Colvin, George Comstock, Frank Conley, William Cronan, James Cusack, Michael O. Day, Calvin Deal, William B. Derby, Alfred Devoid, Elijah Douglass, Timothy Doyle, Nelson Dragoon, George J. Duncan, John Dunn, Adolph Fagrett, William Faulkner, James Finn, Thomas Fitzsimons, George W. Follansbee, Archibald Fortune, Israel L. Freeman, John Futerrer, Isidore Gaboury, Daniel Gordon, Isaac Gray, Samuel 'E. Griffin, Joseph Guiette, Francis Hagan, Thomas Hale, Edward Haynes, John Horighan, William Hurley, Harvey James, Henry Jerdo, Robert John- son, Frank Keith, John Kelley, Mathew Kelley, Michael Kenney, Lewis La- bounty, Peter Lagge, John Lamountain, Peter Lander, jr., Samuel Laplant, Elbert R. Leet, David Livingson, John Q. Lockwood, Abel Long, Stephen Lord, William Lynch, Martin Maloy, John Maple, jr., Bernard McCaffrey,
333
IN THE REBELLION.
John McCune, Daniel L. McGinn, Thomas Merchant, Ambrose Mitchell, Jacob Mitchell, Zeb Mitchell, Joseph Monock, Charles H. Montgomery, Leroy Monty, John Mullins, Timothy Murray, Robert Nichols, Lewis Norman, Peter O'Brien, Henry O'Grady, Peter Orrin, Thomas Orrin, Charles Parker, John S. Peck- ham, Joseph Pelkey, Joseph Pepin, George Perrigo, Joseph Pickor, Alexander Powers, William Roach, Peter Robinson, Frank Ross, Herman Schwetze, Lewis Seymour, Patrick Shanly, Isephere Sharland, Theodore Sharlow, Michael Sheehy, Robert Sheridan, William Sheridan, John A. Sherman, Thomas Shirley, James Simpson, Joseph Stay, George Sweeney, Abel Tart, John W. Thomas, John Thompson, Elbert P. Van Orman, John Villemire, Ira Wallace, William H. Ward, Henry White, Martin Willard, William Will- iams, Cornelius Woods, Joseph Young.
Volunteers for one year .- John Bacon, Peter M. Clure, Dennis Flaherty, Charles A. Garrick, Freeman German, Michael Haley, Adolphus Miller, Clem- ent Mitchell.
Naval credits .- William H. Anderson, Job Corbin, Dennis Culligan James Donnelly, Daniel Dyonisius, Albert E. Edgell, Edward Flynn, Martin Guniman, Luther R. Haney, Robert T. Holley, Henry L. Johnson, Albert L. Kenny, Harry S. Pitkin, Henry M. Proctor, James Martin, John Martin, Thomas J. Murray, Eugene A. Smalley, Jacob M. Smalley, Lovirus J. Smith, Hollis Tryon, George H. Van Dusen, Thomas S. Watson, Peter Laroe, Will- iam Marsha, Julius Derix, Clarence Hazen, William A. Perry, Cyrille Stone.
Volunteers for nine months .- Charles H. Austin, Joseph J. Austin, Joseph Bacon, Charles H. Barker, William F. Bancroft, Horace Barlow, Frank W. Baxter, George Grenville Benedict, Orlando L. Bicknell, George H. Bigelow, John Brewin, John Cain, Michael Cannon, Henry G. Catlin, Benjamin A. Church, Charles W. Cox, William O. Crane, James Cusack, Charles H. Cut- ting, Edgar T. Daniels, Louis A. Daniels, Cornelius Desmond, Perley R. Downer, Joshua Fisk, Edward E. Fletcher, Fernald F. Fletcher, Alfred D. Florence, Charles O. French, Charles A. Garrick, John Gleason, Henry F. Griffin, George E. Hagar, George I. Hagar, John Hamlin, Lyndon K. Har- rington, John Horrigan, Frank D. Hoyt, Guy N. Irish, Richard J. Irwin, Will- iam B. Jennings, William W. Kenny, John Lang, Abel Long, Pomeroy Loomis, William Loomis, William B. Lund, James A. Madden, Martin Malay, Henry W. McLane, Edward McNellis, Adolphus Miller, Robert H. Miller, Zeb Mitchell, Michael B. Murry, John Nugent, Michael O'Neil, Lemuel W. Page, Rollin Pease, Henry M. Pierson, James S. Pierson, John Pope, Samuel H. Ransom, Patrick Ready, Morris Rice, Lewis Roberts, James Scully, Burn- ham Seaver, Osmond K. Seaver, Paul Segar, John Shanaghan, Peter Schiatte, George E. Silver, William Smith, William C. Spaulding, Michael Stark, Hamp- ton L. Story, Guy Stoughton, Henry C. Tennant, Charles Thatcher, Charles P. Thayer, George D. Thompson, Marquis D. L. Thompson, Charles H. Tux- 22
334
HISTORY OF CHITTENDEN COUNTY.
bury, Albert B. Tyler, Israel Videlle, Lucius N. Vilas, Charles N. Wainright, William W. Walker, Edward Walton, James Ward, Thomas H. Warren, Joseph Weeks, Charles H. Whitney, Charles Wright, Henry M. Wright, He- man R. Wing, Guy C. Zattman.
Charlotte .- Volunteers for three years credited previous to call for 300,- 000 men, October 17, 1863 .- Daniel S. Ball, James N. Ball, Rollin W. Barton, John Besett, Alfred S. Burnham, John Coleman, John Daniels, James A. Davis, Abner Fonda, Joseph Fonda, Joseph Gravell, Henry H. Huff, Joseph Kehoe, Jacob Lacoy, Truman C. Naramore, Cassius F. Newell, Clark L. Parks, John Quinlan, Chas. W. Seaton, Geo. D. Sherman, George W. Spear, Alonzo B. Stearns, Henry B. Wilder.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.