Notes


Note    N16036         Index
Benjamin was a farmer in Tunbridge and Chelsea, Vermont. He served in the Civil War as a Private in Co. D, 12th Vermont Infantry (23 August 1862-14 July 1863) and, later, in the 2nd Artillery Battery (5 August 1864-25 July 1865).

Notes


Note    N16042         Index
Benjamin was a farmer (1920), livery stable keeper (1900), and the jail keeper (1910) in Chelsea, Vermoint.

Notes


Note    N16045         Index
William was a lawyer in Chelsea, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N16049         Index
Freeman was a farmer in Strafford, Vermont. He and Mary had a total of 10 children, only 4 of whom were alive in 1900.

Notes


Note    N16064         Index
David was a blacksmith.

Notes


Note    N16071         Index
Imri was a farmer in Cheney, Spokane County, Washington.
 During the Civil War, he served two enlistments. First, on 6 August 1862, he enlisted in Co. B, 22nd Iowa Infantry Regiment. He received a disability discharge on 22 Dec 1862, while in Rolla, Missouri. He then enlisted in Co. H, 8th Illinois Cavalry. He was mustered out 17 July 1865.
 After the war, he went to work as fireman on the Union Pacific Railroad. Soon after that, he went to Wash Basin, Idaho, where he worked at mining and prospecting until 1873, when he moved on to Walla Walla, then to Dayton, Washington, where he lived until 1883. In July of 1883, he married Jennie Dayton, and they settled in Spokane County. He lived there ever since, engaged in farming and raising fruit.
 During the years prior to his moving to Washington, Imri lived in the wild West. He took part in the Joseph War, and the Bannock Indian War, being involved in several battles (from AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF SPOKANE COUNTY, STATE OF WASHINGTON [op.cit.], 326-327).

Notes


Note    N16084         Index
Benjamin worked as a clerk in George C. Cook's store in Cookeville. After Mr. Cook, died, Benjamin purchased the business. In 1911 he moved to St. Johnsbury, where he was in the wholesale baking business, although he continued to operate the store in Corinth for some time. He was the Town Clerk for many years and, in 1910, was the State Senator from Orange County.

Notes


Note    N16086         Index
John was a farmer in Corinth, Vermont. He never married.

Notes


Note    N16088         Index
Mary died from pneumonia.

Notes


Note    N16100         Index
George was a schoolteacher in several Vermont communities. Kate was a nurse.
 After teaching for over 25 years, George took a position with the U.S. Pension Agency at Concord, New Hampshire in 1901. In 1909, he was transferred to the Census Bureau in Washington, DC. He served there until retiring in 1923, and returning to Vermont.

Notes


Note    N16115         Index
Daniel was a farmer in Chelsea, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N16124         Index
Truman was a farmer in Chelsea, Vermont.

Notes


Note    N16130         Index
Almon died in the typhoid fever epidemic that swept through Vermont in the fall of 1870.