History of Windsor County, Vermont, with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers, Part 77

Author: Aldrich, Lewis Cass. ed. cn; Holmes, Frank R
Publication date: 1891
Publisher: Syracuse, N. Y., D. Mason & Co.
Number of Pages: 1260


USA > Vermont > Windsor County > History of Windsor County, Vermont, with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers > Part 77


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).


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757


OLD FAMILIES.


emigrant from England. She was born December 27, 1707, and died March 3, 1806. Gresham lived at Northboro, which was then a part of Westboro, Mass., and had a fam - ily of eight children. Joseph, his fifth child, was born September 17, 1738. He mar- ried Lucy Warren, who was born at Shrewsbury, Mass., about 1742. She was related to General Joseph Warren. Joseph settled for some time at Boston, but removed to Walpole, N. H., in the early part of 1776. He was a Revolutionary soldier. Joseph, son of the above, was born in Boston, December 28, 1762. He served in the Revolu- tion from March I, 1777, to June 27, 1780. He was married November 14, 1782, to Sarah Graves, who was born in Seabrook, Conn., July 15, 1762. Their children were Calvin, Artemas, Sally, Luther, Fanny, Rebecca, Robert, Betsey, Joseph Lewis, Tirzah, and Allen Clark. Joseph died at Walpole, N. H., October 13, 1831; his wife April 25, 1847. Luther, the son of Joseph, was born in Walpole, October 3, 1788. He married Nancy Kibling, of Westmoreland, N. H. He became a resident of Vermont in 1812, settling in Vershire. After remaining there one year he removed to Strafford, and in 1825 located at Sharon, where he died December 30, 1864. He had six children : Joseph Lewis, died at Sharon ; Calvin Kibling; Rollins Burke, died young; Jacob Lu- ther, died in Sharon; Sarah Ann (deceased), married Azro Mosher; and Nancy Maria, died young. Calvin Kibling was born in Walpole, N. H., March 8, 1810, and married January 3, 1832, Betsey Northrop, who was born at Strafford, Vt., February 8, 1810. He is a stone mason and carpenter by trade, and has also been engaged in farming, hav- ing purchased his present farm in 1834. He had four children, all of whom were born in Sharon. They are Rollins Burke, born December 29, 1832, married Jane Shepard. He is a Congregational minister, and resids in Sheldon, Vt. He had two sons, viz : Alba Greenleaf, born in Sharon, June 12, 1857, and married Sophia Cynthia Harrington ; he is a lawyer and resides in Reedsboro, Vt .; and Charles Myron, died June 23. 1886. George Edward, born September 28, 1836, married Mary Jane Tyler. He resides in Sharon, and is a carpenter and builder. He has three children : Fredwin Tyler, unmar- ried, a resident of Lowell, Mass .; Sarah Minnie, wife of Nahum Heath, of Lowell, Mass .; and Ellen Jane. Ellen Sarah (deceased) married Harry Parkhurst; and Luther Calvin, born September 4, 1842. The latter became a member of Company D, Sixteenthi Ver- mont Infantry, and owing to sickness contracted in the army died March 4, 1872. He married Stephanie Eliza Fagan, who survives him. He had two children : Jennie Mary, wife of William Keyler, of Arlington, N. J .; and George Calvin, a resident of the same place.


Follett, Martin D., was born in Enosburg, Vt., July 18, 1793. He came to Pomfret in 1833, and removed to Royalton twenty years later, where he died September 18, 1865. He married Lurana Winchell, and had six children : Sarah P., died single ; Truman, died aged three years ; Lucy F., married Harry B. Goff; Ammi; Norman, died April 18, 1890, at Cameron, Mo .; and Calista, widow of Carlos Miller, resides in Royalton. Ammı, son of Martin D., born in Enosburg, married April 4, 1848, Lydia Arvilla Dodge, who was born in Johnson, Vt., May 20, 1826. Mr. Follett became a resident of Sharon in 1867, and is engaged in farming. He had six children: Persis Hannah, now living in Sharon ; Phineas Dodge, died in infancy ; Fred Clarence, died aged two years; Ammi Ward, now living at Somerville, Mass .; he is a physician ; Lucy Arvilla, wife of Alson C. Ralph, of Cambridge, Mass .; and Marian Elizabeth, died aged sixteen.


Holt, Isaac, a native of Connecticut, moved shortly after his marriage and settled in the eastern part of Sharon. He had three children : Freeman ; Caleb, died in Sharon ; and Hannah, wife of Elisha Terry. Freeman married Lucy, daughter of Samuel Page, and died June 16, 1865, aged seventy-five. His wife died October 25, 1859, aged sixty- two. They had three children : Francis Freeman ; Harlem Samuel, died in Hartford, Oc- tober, 1874; Harmony P., married E. Williamson. Freeman Holt was selectman, lister, etc. Francis Freeman, born in Sharon, married Welthaney Williamson. They had no children. He lived at home until he was thirty-one years old. He opened a general store at West Hartford, December I, 1856, and has carried on business there since. Harmony P. died in Sharon, January 26, 1890.


758


HISTORY OF WINDSOR COUNTY.


Marsh, Joel Henry, was born in Sharon, October 30, 1826, the eldest of the three chil- dren of Timothy and Philena (Burbank) Marsh. His great-grandfather, Isaac, in com- pany with Willard Shepard, Parkhurst, and Havens, first settled in the town of Sharon. He, alone of the four, remained in Sharon the first winter. He came from Plainfield, Conn., and returned and died there. His son Joel was born in Plainfield, January 6, 1747, and married April 7, 1766, in Plainfield, Sarah Wheeler, born September 27, 1716. Their children were Elias, Eunice, Polly, Hannah, Wealthy, Joel, Timothy, Zebina. Joel Marsh died October 19, 1811. His wife, Sarah, died January 8, 1843. Timothy was twice married. He married first Fanny Durkee. They had four children, viz .: Fanny, wife of Timothy Kittridge; Emeline, wife of Calvin Dimmick; George, died in Boston ; and Charles died in Marlboro, Mass. Timothy married second Philena Burbank. Their children were Joel Henry and Mary Spring. Joel Henry married October 3, 1853, Sa- rah, daughter of Paul and Saralı (Smithi) Howe. They had five children : Emma D., William C., Alice G., Celia H. and Timothy. Joel II. owns and occupies the homestead in Sharon. He was a member of the Legislature in 1872, chairman of the board of seleetinen six years, and is at present a member of the board, and was justice of the peace a number of years.


Mosher .- This family in Sharon are descended from Nicholas Mosher, who resided at Tyringham, Conn. He married Elizabeth Crandall, and had fourteen children : Gideon, Sarah, Lydia, Aaron, Freeman, Eber, Pardon, Mary, Thomas, Rodman, Silas, Elizabeth, Phebe and Godfrey. Pardon, of the above, was born March 3, 1765, and was one of the early settlers of Strafford, Vt. He married Sarah Garfield, who was born May 3, 1772. His children were Alanson ; Dan, died in Sharon; Thomas, died in Michigan ; Christiana (deceased), married first Ambrose Preston, second Levi Mosher ; Margaret (deceased), married Amphias Patterson : Isaac, resides at Ferrysburgh, Vt .; Ephraim, died aged sixteen ; Amanda, married and died in Massachusetts; Lucy, widow of Luke Bliss, re- sides in West Springfield, Mass .; and Pluto lives in Winconsin. Pardon died January 4, 1852, his wife January 6, 1852. Alanson, son of l'ardon, born in Sharon, September 9, 1791, married Azubah Preston. They had seven children : Alanson, resident of Nebo, III .; Emeline M. (deceased), wife of William Quimby; Amanda J. (deceased), wife of Lyman Wheeler; Luria Ann, widow of Jacob Fay, resides in Sharon; Sarah Sophia (deceased), wife of George Chilson ; William Howard, died at Montpelier ; and Niles Quimby, born in Sharon, April 22, 1836, resides in his native town. Alanson died March 22, 1879. Rodman, son of Nicholas above, removed from Connecticut after his mar- riage and settled on the farm now owned and occupied by Chandler Ladd. He had eight children : Abijah C .; Silas died in 1864, at Morristown, Vt .; Hannah, married Joel Hunter, and died at Janesville, Wis, in 1887 ; Levi, died in Hoosick, N. Y .; Harvey, died at Troy, N. Y., in 1889; Morris, died in Maine; Clarissa P., widow of John Becker, lives in Schoharie, N. Y .; and Dighton Z., died at Schoharie. Abijah C., the eldest above, born in Sharon, April 20, 1792, married Relief Booth. He had three children, and died December 28, 1874. His wife died in Sharon, August 27, 1844. Albert B., the eldest of his children, was born in Sharon, January 29, 1817, and married first Mary L. Eldredge, by whom he had two children, viz .: George A., an attorney living in Troy, N. Y., and Charles A., who married first Lora Williamson. She died June 2, 1874. They had one child, a son, Loren A. Charles A. married Celia P. Howe for his second wife. He is a farmer residing in Sharon on the old homestead. Albert B., the above, married for his second wife Maria A. (Bisbee) Ralph, who died March 6, 1887. He has always resided in Sharon with the exception of three years, when he lived in Schoharie county, N. Y., teaching school there. He taught five terms in Vermont, and has since followed farm- ing. He has been lister, selectman, etc., several years, school district clerk forty-five years, justice of the peace over twenty years, and member of the Legislature two years, 1864 and 1865. Ruth D., the second of the above of Abijah C. Mosher's children, mar- ried George Dimick. They had two children, Ellen and Emma, who are living, the former in Ludlow, Vt., who married Charles Raymond ; the latter, Emma, who married


759


OLD FAMILIES.


Rufus Barton, M. D., lives in Altamont, Albany county, N. Y. The third child of Abijah C. Mosher, George W., died when five years old, July 23, 1826.


Parker, Lieutenant Joseph, was born September 15, 1725, and married November 20, 1746, Rachel Muran. He died March 8, 1792. He had children as follows : Ennice, Rachel, Elizabeth, Joseph, Solomon, Amos, Rachel, second, James, Johannah, David and Jonathan. James, above, was born in Coventry, Conn., April 9, 1763, settled in the fall of 1787 on the farm now occupied by his grandson, J. J. Parker. He was a Baptist minister and a Revolutionary soldier and for nine successive years represented the town in the Legislature. He married Kesiah Weatherby and his children were Harmony (deceased), married David Moore; Sabine; Luke, married Adacia Parker; Junia, mar- ried Ruth Poole; Sybil, died single ; Clarissa (deceased), married Caleb Holt; Calm, died young; Almira (deceased), married Roswell Huntington ; Betsey (deceased), mar- ried Elias Newton; and James. He died March 17, 1839. James, the youngest above, was born in Sharon, September 20, 1806, married Mary Merrill. Of his six children, one died in infancy. The others were Mary Josephine, wife of Sylvester F. Huckins of Bellows Falls; Sarah Almarine, died aged two months; Armantha C., wife of Henry Phillips of Bellows ,Falls; Ellen Georgianna, married, first, Albert Ferguson, second, Elijah W. Brown, she resides in Bellows Falls; and James Judson. Mr. Parker resided in Sharon until 1887, when he removed to Bellows Falls. He was a member of the Legislature in 1868-69, and died June 7, 1890. James Judson, son of James, was born in Sharon, November 24, 1846, married Marcia Babcock and had three children : Arthur ; Alice May, died in infancy ; and Minnie May.


Parkhurst, Walter, son of Elias, was born in Royalton. At the age of two years his father moved to Barnstead, C. E .. where he died. Walter returned from Canada and married Avaline Brownell. They had five children : Edwin C., a resident of California ; Henry B., resides in Barnard ; Ellis N., died in Barnard ; Daniel E .; and Jason A., lives in Pomfret. Walter died in Barnard, July 11, 1870. Daniel E. was born in Rochester, Vt., June 20, 1845. His father removed to Barnard in 1856, where Daniel E. resided until September, 1871, when he became a resident of Sharon. He is a shoemaker by trade, and since the spring of 1882 he has been town clerk and treasurer. He has been justice of the peace for six years. He is also a notary public. He married first Lenora B. Adams. They had one child, Lizzie A. He married second Lutheria, widow of Allen Barrett, and daughter of Leonard D. Cross.


Preston, Colonel Moses, born in Strafford, Vt., August 27, 1798, was the son of Ed- ward and Thankful (Bidwell) Preston. He was a blacksmith and gunsmith, and was engaged in the manufacture of guns in Sharon, of which town he was a resident for over fifty-five years, where he died November 27, 1870. He built the saw-mill in Sharon now owned and operated by his son. He married Almira Baldwin and had seven children : Hiram, Rozilla J., Lucinda B., Almira, Albert Baldwin, Moses F. and Chauncey E. Albert Baldwin was born in Sharon, October 16, 1837, married Mary Alzada Ladd. They had seven children : Alice P., Albert O., Homer F., Ira P., Lucy E., Lottie N. and Celia A. Albert B. is engaged in lumbering and farming and has been selectman, lister, justice of the peace, and was member of the House of Representa- tives in 1882.


Quimby, William, was born in Springfield, N. H., in 1789, and removed to Norwich, Vt., in 1828 and died there March 9, 1859. He married Mary Sanborn, who died De- cember 6, 1855, aged sixty-two. They had ten children: Mary (deceased), married William Hopkins; Almira, widow of Gardner Davis, resides in Norwich, Vt .; Sophia (deceased), married Abner Flanders ; Hannah, married, first, James Culver, second, William Taylor; she lives at Plano, Ill .; Martha (deceased), married William Morrison ; Amanda (deceased), married John T. Robinson; David, married Marcia Blanchard, lives at Elkhart, Ind .; Alma, resides at Manchester, N. H .; and Jane, wife of M. W. Foster of Haikley, Ill. William, son of William, was born in Springfield, N. H., July 10, 1820, married March 4, 1884, Mary M. Lull. The same year he removed to Sharon,


760


HISTORY OF WINDSOR COUNTY.


where he engaged in lumbering and farming, and died February 20, 1867 ; he had four children : James S., who succeeded to his father's business in Sharon ; Clara F. widow of William H. Halbridge, resides in Boston; Justin O., died aged twenty-three; and Alice A .. died aged eighteen.


Shirlock, Francis, born in Kildare county, Ireland, April 16, 1811, emigrated to America during Jackson's administration. He married Miss Mary McDonough of Bur- lington, February 10, 1844, and located at Sharon, Vt., on a farm which he owned pre- vious to his marriage. Twelve children came to bless the union, ten of whom survive their father. Mr. Shirlock died in Sharon, March 3, 1880. His family are located as follows: Annie M., wife of P. S. McGinnis of Boston; Edward, who occupies the home farm in Sharon, and cares for his mother and unmarried sisters; John, a farmer residing in Royalton. Vt .; Maggie, Joseph, Katie and Sarah, all living at Sharon. Joseph occu- pies one of his father's farms and acts as foreman at the H. A. Clark stock farm in Sharon ; Katie is a teacher in the public schools of Windsor county; William, a resident of of Middlesex, Vt., is engaged in railroad business ; Ellen, wife of David Daly of St. Albans, Vt .; and George, a resident of St. Albans, in the employ of the railroad company. James and Charles died when quite young. Mrs. Shirlock was born in Ireland, Septem- ber 26, 1826, and emigrated to America in 1831.


Smith, John Porter, was born in Hanover, N. H., September 23, 1804, and married Harriet Bush. She was born February 8, 1807. He was a blacksmith by trade. He resided in Canada, Hanover and Boston up to the time of his marriage. He then moved to Lebanon, N. H., and in 1837 came to Sharon, locating on what is known as the Stoughton farm. After living on this farm four years he removed to the village of Sharon, where he carried on his trade about thirty years. He was town clerk, justice of the peace, and selectman. He died in Sharon in 1883, his wife January 3, 1874. Their only child, George D., was born in Lebanon, N. H., February 15, 1836. After attending the local schools he was fitted for college at the Newbury and Montpelier academies, but was obliged to forego a college education on account of ill-health. From his youth he has paid particular attention to the study of music, his last instructor being Professor George J. Webb of Boston. He taught music a number of years. By trade he is a carpenter, a business which he has followed for twenty-six years. He was select- man two years. He married, first, Mary A., daughter of Cyrus and Thankful (Preston) Robinson. By this union he had one child, Lily May, born May 1, 1865, died March 15, 1885. His wife died December 23, 1872. He married, second, Clara S., widow of Gardner W. Gibson. They had one child, William Steele, born in Coldwater, Mich., January 25, 1860, and died in Sharon, January 15, 1863. Mrs. Smith was born in Sharon, Vt., October 27, 1835, was the daughter of Judge William Steele, who was born in Randolph, Vt., February 10, 1778, and married March 25, 1811, Lydia Gleason, born May 26, 1790, in Barre, Mass.


Walbridge, Josiah, born in Sharon, Vt., May 1, 1803, married Mary Ladd, by whom he had two children : William Henry Harrison, born July 6, 1840, married Clara Quimby, and had one child, Arthur Henry; he died October 28, 1880; and Chester B., born in Sharon, December 22, 1842, married Ella Graves. They had no children. He resides in the village of Sharon and carries on a farm. Josiah Walbridge was the leading mer- chant in Sharon for many years, and died in Sharon, September 22, 1881.


761


TOWN OF ROYALTON.


CHAPTER XXXVII.


HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF ROYALTON.


T HE district of land now and heretofore known by the name of Roy- alton was one of the very few civil divisions or tracts that form a part of Windsor county, that was not granted or chartered by Benning Wentworth; and why the doughty governor happened not to make some disposition of this particular town, when he did of the others to the east and south of it, both of which were less desirable than this, is a mys- tery, the solution of which will not be attempted here. And while the other towns east and south, and possibly some north, were chartered and occupied between 1765 and 1770, generally under New Hampshire grants, it still remained for the New York control to bring into exist- ence, survey and settle what became the town of Royalton, the first pro- ceeding toward that end being taken during the year 1769.


As the reader must understand, whatever of rights the governor of New Hampshire had, in or to the district known as the New Hampshire Grants, was extinguished and ended by the order of the king in 1764; and that same order declared the district to belong to the colony of New York. Thus vested, the governor of the latter province, on the 13th of November, 1769, issued a charter to certain of his special favorites, by name George Banyar, William Smith, Whitehead Hicks and John Kelly, all of whom it is understood were residents of the city of New York. These proprietors at once caused a survey of the town to be made, also a plan of the most elaborate character, dividing the territory into tracts, lots and districts, and then made a bid for settlement, or at least the sale of the lands and tracts to speculators and anyone, in fact, whether they sought to become actual settlers or not. And it seems that these pro- prietors must have sold a part of the lands to some of their own resi- dents, for, by an instrument in writing, dated August 21, 1771, the lands of the town were partitioned between William Livingston, Golds- boro Banyar, Whitehead Hicks, William Smith and John Kelly. Under these proprietors the first permanent settlement was made in the town during the year 1771, by the coming of Robert Havens and his family ;


96


762


HISTORY OF WINDSOR COUNTY.


and in the next year Elisha Kent and family appeared as settlers. After this time the settlers rapidly increased in numbers, as much so, perhaps, as in any similarly situated town in the region ; and it is estimated that in 1780 the town had a population of three hundred persons. And of course these settlers considered themselves as residents and citizens of the State of New York, and so they, in fact, were, for the time at least, and until the new State of Vermont was created. And it is true, too, although there appears to be no record to the effect, that the town was organized under the laws of New York, and elected the town officers in accordance with the custom prevailing in the province at that time. But when the new State of Vermont was formed and declared to be an inde- pendent jurisdiction the people of Royalton very readily accommodated themselves to the new order of things, elected officers as required by the laws of Vermont, and became and considered themselves to all intents and purposes as a part of the latter jurisdiction. Thus easily did they alienate themselves from the State that had created their town, whose very proprietors were New Yorkers, and to whom, undoubtedly, some of them were obligated.


And it may be said as an undoubted fact that the people of Royal- ton were heartily in favor of the new State, and although the town was not represented in the Dorset conventions, nor in fact by a personal del- egate at the Westminster convention of January 15, 1777, it was at the latter represented by a letter issuing out of the town, from which it ap- peared that the inhabitants had voted in favor of the new State, and so expressed themselves to the convention. But it is proper to say in this connection that the town was influenced in this action by the fact that it was promised on the part of the new State advocates that the towns east of the Connecticut would be received into permanent union with those on the west side of the river, that all would be organized into the one State, which promise seemed particularly gratifying to Royalton, and several other towns as well, and influenced their action in joining the new State project. The eastern union was formed, but it proved, on account of certain complications, to be only temporary, and its dissolution so grieved the good people of Royalton that they joined with several other towns in convention, wherein they expressed the greatest dissatisfaction with the turn of affairs, declined to send a representative to the Vermont


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763


TOWN OF ROYALTON.


Assembly, withdrew all allegiance to the State, and joined in the peti- tion to Congress that the State might not be admitted to the Federal Union.


This action, however pure or sincere may have been the motive that induced it, was certainly an unfortunate one for the town to take, for it very nearly cost the people the lands which they had cleared and upon which they had built their homes. That action so provoked the leading statesmen then at the head of affairs of the State that they felt con - strained to ignore or treat as worthless the charter under which the peo- ple of Royalton held title, and to treat the town as so much vacant land. This was at a time when the treasury of the State sadly needed replen- ishing, and, to the end that funds might be forthcoming, the authorities were willing to make grants of lands to certain petitioners, for consider- ation. One of these petitions was from Danforth Keyes and his asso- ciates, who asked for a charter for the town of Royalton, the matter coming before the Governor and Council and the General Assembly in October, 1779, and the committee to which the matter of granting town charters was referred on the 26th of October, reported to the effect that the Assembly should proceed and grant the towns, with a condition that any settlers " now on either of the aforesaid tracts " should not be mo- lested or dispossessed, "provided they pay a proportion of the costs"; and further, that " each settler paying his equal part of the costs be en- titled to have one hundred acres of land where he has settled and im- proved." Ethan Allen was chairman of this committee. On the 27th of October the Assembly did pass an act granting several towns, among them Royalton, and the latter to Danforth Keyes and others, and the Council authorized the governor to execute the charters; and on the 28th it was resolved that the proprietors of Royalton, the new grantees, pay two dollars per acre for the lands of the town. A still later " re- solve " directed that in case any of the proprietors neglected or refused to pay the committee were authorized to substitute others who would pay.


It now became apparent to the settlers in Royalton that they were about to lose their lands, and they at once joined in a petition to the authorities of the State, choosing Captain Comfort Seaver their agent to present it, praying that the issuing of a charter to other proprietors


764


HISTORY OF WINDSOR COUNTY.


should be deferred until the petitioners might have an opportunity of being heard in the premises. The Council then appointed a committee of four-Benjamin Emmons, John Throop, Samuel Robinson and Cap- tain Edmund Hodges-to proceed to the town and hear the grievances of the petitioners. The expense of the committee was directed to be borne by the petitioners. But it appears that the committee found the matter of the title to the lands to be in dispute, the controversy being between the non-resident proprietors, the proposed proprietors under Vermont, and the actual settlers on the land. The further proceedings and re- port of the committee are not to be found, and any speculation upon what they may have done is not appropriate ; suffice it to say that no charter was issued to Danforth Keyes and his associates, one of whom was Eliakim Spooner, and who was paid by the State twenty pounds in consideration of his giving up the grant for his " expense and damages sustained thereby "; but that on December 20, 1781, by an act of the Legislature, the town was granted, subsequently chartered, to Comfort Seaver and his associates, the above mentioned petitioners, the actual set- tlers on the soil, those who had acquired their lands under the New York charter, and who, all of them, were as follows: Comfort Seaver, Elias Stevens, Elisha Kent, John Kent, Elisha Kent, jr., John Hibbard, James Hibbard, Jedediah Hide, Ebenezer Dewey, Ebenezer Church, Nathan Fish, John Safford, Benjamin Parkhurst, Simon Shepard, Reuben Parkhurst, Daniel Gilbert, Daniel Ricks, John Kimball, Garner Ricks, Ebenezer Park- hurst, David Fish, David Brewster, Robert Havens, William Blackmer, Herman Durkee, Ebenezer Brewster, Medad Benton, Nathaniel Morse, Robert Handay, Benjamin Day, Timothy Durkee, John Gillett, Aden Durkee, John Billings, Joseph Fish, John Wilson, John Hibbard, jr., Samuel Benedict, Calvin Parkhurst, Josiah Wheeler, Joseph Parkhurst, Elias Curtis, John Havens, Johnson Safford, John Stevens, jr., Isaac Morgan, Zebulon Lyon, Nathan Morgan, Daniel Fuller, William Joiner, Martin Fuller, Daniel Havens, Benjamin Day, jr., John Evans, Jeremiah Trescott, Israel Waller, William Jones, John House, Tillie Parkhurst, Phineas Parkhurst, Samuel Clark, Joel Marsh.




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