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973.3406

S60Y,
1898

ALLEN COUNTY

iC

LIBRARY

REV. Kl-I A. TCBXE


North Amherst. Ohi'

Mk IAMES

M.'

l.IVIXC,

SONS OK KKVol.f Tln.WKV SOI.DIERS

MEMBERS OF omo

SOCIETY,

S.

A. R.

TeanBook
of

Ohio

the

Society
of

the

Sons of the American Revolution

1898

Edited for the Society

LUCIUS CARROLL HERRICK, M.

D.

Historian of the Ohio Society S. A. R. ; Secretary and


Librarian of The " Old Northwest" Genealogical Society ; Editor of The " Old Northwest" Genealogical
Quarterly,

etc., etc.

COLUMBUS, OHIO
Published by the Society

MDCCCXCVIII

COMMITTEE ON
REV.

898

YEAR BOOK

ARCHIBALD A. E. TAYLOR, D. D., LL. D., Chairman


LUCIUS CARROLL HERRICK, M. D., Secretary
KENNETH DODGE WOOD, A. B., Treasurer
Major HARRY PARKER WARD, M. A.

CONTENTS
PAGE
Introductory

ix

Members
Ancestors of Members

11
136

Living Sons of Revolutionary Soldiers

149

Roll of

Deceased Members who were Sons of Revolutionary Soldiers

Action Regarding Sons of Revolutionary Soldiers

151
151

Officers,

National Society S. A. R., 1898

152

Officers,

Ohio Society

153

Officers,

Western Reserve Society, 1898

S. A. R., 1898

Officers, Cincinnati Chapter,

No.

4,

155

1898

Officers,

Anthony Wayne Chapter, 1898

Officers,

Benjamin Franklin Chapter, No.

156
157
5,

1898

Mount Vernon. Poem by Col. W. L. Curry, read before Benjamin Franklin Chapter, S. A. R., December, 1897

158

159

Officers,

Nathaniel Greene Chapter, 1898

160

Officers,

George Washington Chapter, 1898

161

Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Ohio

162

Proceedings of the Annual Meeting, 1897

215

Proceedings of the Annual Meeting, 1898

219

Report of the Historian

225

Banquet

of the

Eligibility to

Ohio Society,

243

Membership

266

By-Laws

279

Constitution and

Insignia

S. A.

289

ILLUSTRATIONS
FACING

PAGE
Living Sons in Ohio Society
Col.

Frontispiece

John W. Harper

Genealogical
Officers

TableAncestry

59
of A. A. E. Taylor

Ill

Ohio Society

153

Board of Managers Ohio Society

154

Western Reserve Society

155

Officers

Board of Managers Western Reserve Society


Officers Cincinnati

155

Chapter

156

Officers

Anthony Wayne Chapter

157

Officers

Benjamin Franklin Chapter

158

Officers Nathaniel
Officers

Greene Chapter

160

George Washington Chapter

161

Dr. John Noble Beach

225

Hon. George Leroy Converse

228

Hon. Edward Hubbard Fitch

230

Frank

L. Ford, C.

Hon. Joseph Patterson Smith


Insignia

Page

233

....

236

288

INTRODUCTORY
HE

last

of the

Year Book of the Ohio Society, Sons


American Revolution was published

in 1896,

and

it

will naturally strike

many

Book " is a misnomer


would be more proper to call it

that the title " Year

and that
the "Biennial

Book"

it

of the Society.

The committee, elected at the annual meeting, to prepare


and publish the Year Book, consisting of Compatriots Rev.
Dr. A. A. E. Taylor, Major Harry P. Ward, M. A., Mr. Kenneth D. Wood and Lucius C. Herrick, M. D., met soon after
and organized. Rev. Dr. Taylor was chosen Chairman, Mr.
Wood Treasurer and Dr. Herrick as Secretary and Editor.
Circulars, calling for information desired and for subscriptions for extra copies of the book, were soon after prepared

and mailed to all the members of the Society. Responses


came so slowly that the work was very materially retarded,
and this, in part, accounts for the delay in completing the
book. The gathering of information concerning the location
of the graves of Revolutionary soldiers in Ohio, and compiling the

same

after its reception, caused

on the part of the

much

editor, and, consequently,

extra work
consumed much

more time than would otherwise have been necessary; but


we trust the result of that work, as presented in the list of
Revolutionary soldiers buried in this state will prove ample
compensation for the time consumed in its preparation. The
list is far from being complete, but we hope it will stimulate

the

members

of the Society in all parts of the state to

make

more diligent research in this work, so that the next issue


of the Year Book may contain nearly exhaustive information upon the subject.
The accessions to the roll of members in the last two years
have been quite numerous, as attested by the large number
of new names.
The Society has lost several by death, among
whom were three sons of Revolutionary fathers; which fact
reminds us that the ranks of the latter are now about as thin
as

were those of their fathers within the recollection of

many

and the time is not far distant when it will


add the prefix "grand" to the name of our

of our members,

be necessary to

Society in order to properly express

The book has

its significance.

increased quite materially in the

pages, notwithstanding the large


cised in the selection

amount

number

of

of pruning exer-

and arrangement of matter, and

it

will

continue to expand as the membership increases.

This

class of publications is

now

in great

demand among

and they could be made still more useful by


using a more liberal amount of the matter which can be
found in the application papers.
The Year Book Committee in the aggregate hereby return
their most sincere thanks to the Society for the confidence
reposed in them, and the editor in particular most gratefully
acknowledges his obligations to the members for their hearty
co-operation and returns his grateful thanks for their patience
and forbearance during the somewhat protracted prosecution
L. C. H.
of this work.
genealogists,

Columbus, November

1,

1S98.

ROLL OF MEMBERS.
W. R.
ABBOTT, WILLARD

N. 11052.

1897

S. 412.

146.

Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of Nathan Abbott, who served


seven days in Captain Thomas Lawson's Company from the town of Union, Connecticut ; also
in 5th Company, Captain Charles Ellsworth,
8th Connecticut Regiment, Colonel Jedediah
disEnlisted July 10, 1775;
Huntington.
charged, on expiration of term of service, December 18, 1775. The regiment was stationed
on Long Island Sound until September 14, when,
on requisition of General Washington, it was
ordered to Boston camps and was attached to
General Spencer's Brigade, where it remained
until expiration of its

N. 2472.
1896 ADAMS,

W.

term

R. 77.

of service.

S. 272.

WHITTLESEY

Warren, Ohio
Great-grandson of Colonel Eli Mygatt, who was
an officer of the Revolution; one of the defenders of Danbury; lost property in the conflagration, for which he received bounty land in the
Western Reserve of Ohio; member of the Con,

necticut Legislature for sixteen terms.


of Asahel Adams, who was a soldier of
the 7th Regiment, Connecticut Continental Line;
was in the battles of Germantown and Monmouth; wintered at Valley Forge.

Grandson

N. 7393.
1896 ALDEN,

W. E. 96.
ISAAC CAREY

S. 328.

Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of Nathan Alden, Jr., who was a
Private in Massachusetts troops; a descendant
of

John Alden and Miles Standish.

Great-grandson of Captain Joseph Smith,


served on the seas.

2308.

1890

who

S. 108.

B. F.

ALDRICH, ORLANDO

W., Ph. D., LL. D., D. C. L.


Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Asahel Franklin, who was
a soldier in Vermont troops; was in the battle
of Bennington; a nephew of Benjamin Franklin.
Great-great-grandson of Stephen York, who was a
soldier in Connecticut troops.

N. 2341.
1893 ALLEN,

W.

S. 141.

42.

HORATIO FISKE
Cleveland, Ohio

Grandson

of Phineas Allen,
Massachusetts troops.

N. 2265.

1889

who was

a Private in

B. F.

S. 65.

ANDERSON, Judge JAMES HOUSE


Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Thomas Anderson, who was a
Private for three years in Captain Gillison's
Company, Colonel Green's 6th Regiment Virginia Foot, formerly known as Captain Mountjoy's Company, Colonel Stevens' 10th Virginia
Battalion served subsequently as an officer.
;

N. 9526.
1897 ANDERSON,

W.

R. 110.

S. 361.

MILLARD FILLMORE

Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Rose, who was a Private
in the First Regiment Hunterdon County, New
12

Jersey, Militia; also Private in Captain Wm.


Bond's Company, 4th Battalion, Second Establishment, New Jersey Militia; also Private in
Captain Wm. Piatt's Company, First Regiment
New Jersey Continental Line, during the Revolution.

Great-great-grandson of William McCain, a "minute man" of the Sussex County, N. J., Militia.

W.R.

N. 9531.

1897

101.

S. 341.

ANGELL, ELGIN ADELBERT


495 Russell Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Eseck Angell, who was a Private in Captain Daniel Brown's Company, Colonel Benjamin Simonds' Regiment, marched October 13, 1780, and served six days on alarm at
Berkshire County; also in Captain Timothy
Reed's Company, Colonel Asa Barnes' Regiment,
marched October 13, 1781, from Lanesborough,
Berkshire County, Mass., to Stillwater, and
served ten days.

N. 2412
1895 ATWELL,
V. Art.

R. P.

S. 212.

Major CHARLES THOMPSON,

O.

Zanesville, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of William Suddoth, who
was a soldier in Colonel Daniel Morgan's Virginia Regiment.

A. W. 19.
S. 439.
AUSTIN, JAMES, Jr.
727 Oakwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio
Great-grandson of Elkanah Whiting, who was a

N. 11354.

1898

Private in Captain Oliver Pond's Company, Colonel Joseph Read's Regiment, May 2, 1775, service 3 months, 7 days; enrolled Private, same

Company and Regiment, September 25, 1775,


residence Wrentham, Mass.; drafted from Wren13

tham, in Captain Fisher's Company, and


marched to Horse Neck under Colonel Mcintosh; enlisted into Continental army from Samuel Cowell's Company of Hawes' Regiment, from
Wrentham, February 16, 1778, enlisted 8
months; enlisted into Continental army from
Wrentham, Suffolk County, for three years (return made by Major Metcalf, Colonel Wigglesworth's Eegiment, June 18, 1777); Sergeant on
muster and pay roll of Captain Samuel Fisher's
Company in 1th Suffolk Eegiment, for service
in Ehode Island, in March, 17S1, enlisted March
3, 1781, service 15 days; detached to serve under
Major General Lincoln for 10 days' campaign,
by order of General Hancock; a pensioner.
N. 2000.
W. E. 1.
S. 33.
1891 AVEEY, Hon. ELEOY M., Ph. D., LL. D.
657 Woodland Hills Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Abraham Avery, who was a
Corporal in Captain Nathan Hale's Company,
Colonel Webb's 7th Connecticut Eegiment; reenlisted in Captain Eldridge's Company, Colonel
Parsons' Eegiment; transferred to Captain
Baker's Corps of Artificers; appointed Armorer
and promoted to Orderly Sergeant, acting as
Lieutenant; armorer on privateer brig "Eagle,"
Captain Luce, from Boston; captured, in 1779,
off the Lesser Antilles; suffered the horrors of
prison-ship life in New York Harbor, at his own
request, in preference to enforced service on a
British ship; paroled and begged his way back
to Stonington, where he arrived entirely destitute;

a pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Ichabod Packer, who answered to the Bennington Alarm.


Great-great-grandson of Joseph Eobinson, who was
a "minute man" from Hardwick, Mass. in Captain Hazeltine's Company, Lexington Alarm;
;

14

served eight months, from September 15, 1777,


in Colonel Converse's 4th Massachusetts Regi-

ment.

W.

N. 9529.

1897

AVERY,

Rev.

R. 100.

S. 339.

FREDERICK BURT

Painesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Nathan Avery, who was a Private in Colonel Samuel Holding Parsons' 1st
Company, at New London, Conn., and May 9,
1775, marched with Regiment to Boston and
took part in engagement at Bunker Hill; mustered out, December 18, 1775; in 1776, Private
in Captain Edward Mott's Company for defense
of New London Harbor, etc; a pensioner.
Great-grandson of Frederick Jones Whiting, who
was a Lieutenant in the Continental Army, Connecticut Troops; was a member of the Order
of Cincinnatus, his certificate of membership,
signed by Generals Knox and Washington, be-

ing in existence.
Great-great-grandson of Daniel Starr, who was in
the expedition for the relief of Fort William
Henry, in 1757; Major in the Continental Army;
lost his life by an accident, April 27, 1777, just
after his return from a relief expedition to New
York City, and the morning after the destruction
Among the Fire Lands awarded
of his house.
his estate for losses by the burning of Danbury,
was "Bull's Island" (now Johnson's Island),
Sandusky Bay, Ohio.

S. 430.
W. R. 156.
N. 11070
1898 AVERY, HENRY WHITING
962 Case Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Same ancestry as his brother, Rev. Frederick Burt
Avery.
15

N. 2462.
1895 AYEKS,

S. 262.

B. P.

EDWARD

M.
Zanesville, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Asa Coburn, who was a


First Lieutenant in Colonel Danielson's Massachusetts s Eegiment, May to December, 1775;
First Lieutenant 5th Continental Infantry, January 1, to December 31, 1776; Captain 7th Massachusetts, January 1, 1777, to June, 1783.
S. 58.
B. F.
N. 2258.
1889 BACKUS, LAFAYETTE
280 East State Street, Columbus, Ohio
Grandson of John King, who was a Captain in the
Continental Line of Massachusetts; served at
Roxbury and Dorchester Heights in his father's
Company; was in several battles; the Company
was paid by Captain King's father, from his
own means.
S. 325.
B. F.
N. 7390.
1896 BACKUS, GEORGE
280 East State Street, Columbus, Ohio
Same ancestry as his father, Lafayette Backus.

ANDREW

W. R. 162.
S. 435.
N. 11075
1898 BAKER, ALBERT RUFUS, M. D.
122 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Jonathan Baker, who was a Private in the Second Regiment, Pennsylvania
Line, in the Revolution, serving from January 1,
1777, to
N.

2234.

1891

January

W.

1,

1781.

R.

3.

S. 34.

BAKER, ELBERT HALL


57 Streator Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of General Samuel Fletcher,
who was a Corporal at the battle of Bunker Hill;
16

Captain of Militia, 1776; Major, 1777; BrigadierGeneral, 1781; subsequently Major-General; at


battles of Bennington and Ticonderoga; one of
the founders of the State of Vermont; Member
of Convention, 1776^1777 Member of Assembly,
1778-1779; Member of Governor's Council, 1780.
;

N. 11369.

1898

S.

454.

BAKER, JOSEPH PARKER,

M. D.
Findlay, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Michael McCabe, who
served in a detachment of Virginians under Lieutenant Whiting in the Revolutionary War. His
name appears on a roll dated May 4, 1778, which
bears the remark, "Enlisted August 19, 17 ."

W. R. 78.
S. 273.
N. 2473.
1896 BALDWIN, HENRY ROBBINS
322 West Wood Street, Youngstown, Ohio
Great-grandson of Simeon Baldwin, who was a
Paymaster and Commissary; lost his property
through depreciation of Continental money; was
also Chairman of Committee for Inspection of
Provisions.

Great-great-grandson of Colonel Aaron Cleaveland, who was a Captain in Lexington Alarm;


Ensign, 6th Company 6th Battalion 1st Regiment, Connecticut; Second Lieutenant 2nd Battalion; Connecticut Recruiting Officer at Norwich for 3rd Regiment; Deputy from Norwich;
was in battle of Horseneck, Connecticut.
Great-great-grandson of Asahel Adams, who was
a soldier in the 7th Regiment Connecticut Continental Line; was in battles of Germantown and
Monmouth; wintered at Valley Forge.
17

N.
1896

B. F.

S.

BALL, FLAMEX,

Jr.
Cashier N. Y. Life Insurance Co., Columbus,

Ohio
Great-grandson of Frederick Follett, who was a
Private in Captain Durkee's and later Captain
Spaulding's Company of Continental Line, from
Westmoreland, Penn. saw hard service with
Washington's Army in campaign of 1777; early
in 1779 was shot twice, pierced nine times with
spears, and scalped alive by Indians near Wilkesbarre; recovered and entered the Navy; was a
prisoner at Halifax six months, exchanged, again
captured and sent a prisoner to England, where
he remained to close of war; received invalid
;

pension.

Great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Benjamin Follett, a Lieutenant in the French War in 1756,


who was one of the old men who assisted in defense of Wyoming Valley, Penn., in 1778.
N. 7394.
1896 BARNES,

W.

E. 95.

S. 329.

HARLEY
Painesville, Ohio

Great-grandson of Elijah Sperry, who was Corporal, Sergeant and Lieutenant in Captain Osborn's Company of Artificers, Colonel Baldwin's
Connecticut Regiment; in battles of Brandy wine,
Germantown, Monmouth, etc.; a pensioner.

N. 2364.
1893 BAENETT,

W. B. 50.
General JAMES

S. 164.

Cleveland, Ohio

Grandson

of

Jerome Clark, who was

a Private in

Lexington Alarm; in Captain James Clark's 6th


Company, Colonel Israel Putnam's 3rd Regiment,
from May 7 to December 18, 1775; in siege of
Boston; a pensioner.
18

W.

N. 10030.

1897

BATES,

R. 138.

S. 390.

ALEXANDER COWLEY

516 Giddings Ave., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of Christian Mowry, who was
a Private in Captain James Pigot's Company,
Colonel Aeneas Mackey's Sth Pennsylvania Regiment, from 1777 to end of war; in the battle of
Brandywine; wintered at Valley Forge.

W.

N. 11056.

1897

BATES,
Same

R. 149.

S. 416.

MOWRY

516 Giddings Ave., Cleveland, Ohio.


ancestry as his brother, Alexander Cowley

N. 2334.
W. R. 37.
S. 134.
1893 BATES, THEODORE M.
51 Mayfield Street, Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Ensign Abel Packard,
who, in 1776, was one of the "Committee of Safety
and Correspondence" for Cummington, Massachusetts; in 1780, one of a committee to hire
soldiers.

W. R, 65.
N. 2449.
S. 249.
1895 BAXTER, HARRIS HOLLAND, M. D.
1474 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Christopher Marshall, who was
a Captain of the 6th Company of Colonel Thomas
Marshall's Battalion; afterwards Captain in
10th Massachusetts Regiment, November 6,
1776; transferred to 1st Massachusetts, January 1, 1783, and served until November 1, 1783.
His two commissions are now in the possession
of descendants.

W.

N. 9542.

1897

B. 104.

M. D.
Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of David Beckwith, who enlisted in Continental Army in 1776, in Captain Miller's Company, Colonel De Voos' Begiment Massachusetts
Line; wounded.

11365.

1898

S. 352.

BECKWITH, DAVID HEEEICK,

S. 450.

BEEBE, EOBEET CASE,

M. D.
Nanking, China

Great-grandson of Colonel Bezaleel Beebe, who


was commissioned as Lieutenant in April, 1775,
and marched with his Company to Boston, and
thence in a short time to Crown Point, where he
was transferred to the quartermaster's department; rose to the rank of Colonel in the Continental Army, and remained in service until the
spring of 1781, when he applied for and received
an honorable discharge; served in the French
and Indian War; held various public offices after
he retired to civil life.

W.

N. 7392.

1896

B. 97.

BELKNAP, BALPH

S. 327.

S.

Penw, Ohio
Great-grandson of Calvin Belknap, who was a Private in Captain Blakeslee's Company of Vermont
Militia; also a Private in same Company, Colonel Fletcher's Battalion, General Enos' Brigade.

N. 7395.

1896

BETTS,

S. 330.

JOHN EDWARD
Findlay, Ohio

Great-grandson of Hezekiah Betts, who was a Private in Captain Gregory's Company, 9th Regiment Connecticut Militia; Sergeant in 2nd Connecticut Begiment; Captain in Washington's
Army at surrender of Cornwallis; subsequently
Captain in Connecticut Militia; a pensioner.
20

N. 10048.
1897 BIGELOW,

S. 408.

CHARLES

H.

Findlay, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Jacob Frisbie, who volunteered as a "minute man" at Bethlehem, Conn.,


July 18, 1776.

Great-grandson of Amos Frisbie, who was commissioned Ensign, 5th Company, Captain Elias
Dunning, 13th Regiment, Colonel B. Hinman,

May, 1776;
1777;

was

N. 11367.

1898

Lieutenant, same Company, May,


at New York in 1776.
G.

S. 452.

BLACK, FREDERICK MORTON


Newark, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Colonel Benjamin Wilson,
who commanded a regiment of Virginia troops
in the Revolution; Delegate to the Virginia Convention that ratified the Constitution of the
United States; was Colonel on the staff of Lord
Dunmore and in command of the troops in northwestern Virginia; equipped his own Regiment,
and for services rendered received a grant of
4000 acres of land in Licking county, Ohio.

N. 2426.

1895

R. P.

BLACK, Lieutenant WALTER

S. 226.

VAN HAM,

O.

V. Inf.
Zanesville, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Isaac Van Home, who
was Ensign, 5th Pennsylvania Battalion, January 8, 1776; Second Lieutenant, October 12,
1776; taken prisoner at Fort Washington, November 16, 1776; First Lieutenant 6th Pennsylvania, February 15, 1777; transferred to 2nd
Pennsylvania, January 17, 1781; Captain, June
10, 1781; retired January 1, 1783; Member of
"The Cincinnati"; Adjutant-General of Ohio,
1810 to 1818.
21

W. R. 86.
BOLTON, CHARLES CHESTER

N. 2496.

1896

S. 296.

Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of John Russell,


sioner for service in the

W.

N. 9944.

1897

war

who was

a pen-

of the Revolution.

R. 130.

S. 379.

BOWER, BUCKLAND PALMER


Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Bower, who was a Private
in Captain J. Wells' Company, Colonel Erastus
Wolcott's Regiment, at Boston, January to
March, 1776; Corporal in Captain Roswell
Grant's Company, Colonel Roger Enos' Connecticut Regiment, June to December, 1778; Private in Captain Samuel Granger's Company,
General Waterbury's State Brigade, May 5, 1781;
total service, twenty months and twenty-four
days.

N. 2220.
W. R. 18.
S. 20.
1892 BOWLER, NOADIAH POTTER
14 Winter Street, Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Charles Bowler, who was taken prisoner when the British took Newport, Rhode
Island, December 8, 1776; escaped February,
1777, by riding off on General Prescott's horse,
crossing on ice into Connecticut, where he joined
the American Army of occupation and marched
to the defense of Boston, Mass.

Grandson

of

Nathan Barber, who was Captain

the Senior Class


of Militia of
1780.

Company

of
in the 1st Battalion

Kings County, Rhode Island, Julv,

Great-grandson of Nathan Barber, who was Commissary of Military stores; Deputy from Westerly, R. I., to the General Assembly.
22

Great-grandson of Colonel George Irish, who was


Colonel of the First Kegiment from Newport
County, Ehode Island; Deputy from Middletown
to the General Assembly; loaned the Colonies
3257, and rendered other valuable services in
securing their independence.
Great-grandson of Amos Pendleton, who was an
Ensign in the Regiment raised in Westerly,

Ehode

Island.

Great-great-grandson of Colonel William Pendleton, a patriot; one of a committee formed to


draft resolutions on the alarming condition of the
Colonies in 1774; died in Westerly, B. I., in 1775,
aged 76 years.

W.

N. 2346.

1892

E. 45.

S. 146.

BOWLEE, WILLIAM
1097 Prospect St., Cleveland, Ohio
ancestry as his brother, Noadiah Potter
Bowler.

Same

N. 2446.
1895 BOWMAN,

W.

E. 61.

S. 246.

WILLIAM PITCHEE

Wade Building, Cleveland, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of Elijah Wadsworth, who
was a Lieutenant in Captain Talmadge's Company, Colonel Sheldon's Eegiment; served during the entire war in this Eegiment; was in the
battles of

Long

Island,

Monmouth and Pond

Eidge and was on guard having

in

charge Major
afterward

Andre" the night after his capture;


Captain in same regiment.
N. 9544.

1896

B. F.

S. 354.

BEADFOED, Lieutenant Colonel


-

JAMES

HEYWAED, U. S. Army (Eetired)


79 North Monroe Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Thomas Heyward, Jr., who was
a member of the First Continental Congress;

signer of the Declaration of Independence; Captain of a South Carolina Artillery Company,


Continental Line, 1779; wounded at Beaufort,
February 9, 1779; taken prisoner at Charleston,
May 12, 1780; released April, 1781; Judge of
State Court.

Great-grandson of Colonel Thomas Shubrick, who


was a First Lieutenant in the 2d South Carolina
Captain January 15, 1778; Aide-deCamp to General Greene in 1781; by Act of October 29, 1781, it was "Resolved, that MajorGeneral Greene be desired to present the thanks
of Congress to Captain Shubrick, his Aide-deCamp, on testimony of his particular activity and
good conduct during the whole action at Eutaw
Springs, S. G"; served to close of war.
;

N. 2997.
S. 307.
C.
1896 BRASHER, Captain LAWRENCE L. (Son)
Station "A," Cincinnati, Ohio
Son of John Brasher, who was a waiter to Captain
Henry Brasher; a Drummer in Connecticut
troops; subsequently a Private for about two
years and six months; a pensioner.
Grandson of Henry Brasher, who was a Captain
of

New York

troops.

N. 2376.

1894

176.

S.

BRINKERHOFF, Major HENRY ROWAN,


S. Army
Fort Bayard,

U.

New Mexico

Great-grandson of James Brinkerhoff, who was


one of the six brothers Brinkerhoff, who served
in the Continental Army.
N. 2206.

1892

S. 6.

BRINKERHOFF, General ROELIFF


Grandson

of

Mansfield, Ohio
Roeliff Brinkerhoff, from

Adams

County, Pennsylvania, who, with five brothers


served throughout the Revolutionary War.
24

N. 2251
1893 BRISTER,

G.

Judge

W.

S. 51.

EDWIN MICHAEL PUTNAM

Newark, Ohio
Great-grandson of Rufus Putnam, who was Lieutenant-Colonel of Brewer's Massachusetts Regiment, May to December, 1775; Lieutenant-Colonel 22d Continental Infantry, January 1, 1776;
Colonel of Engineers, August 5, 1776; Colonel
5th Massachusetts, November 1, 1776, to rank
from August 5, 1776; Brigadier-General Continental Army, January 7, 17S3, and served to close
of war.
S. 82.
B. F.
N. 2282.
1896 BROOKS, HERBERT
99 North Monroe Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of David Brooks, who was in Captain George King's Company, Colonel Benjamin
Symond's Berkshire County Regiment, December 16, 1776, to March 24, 1777; in Captain Zenas
Wheeler's Company, Colonel John Ashley's Berkshire County Regiment, which marched to Fort
Edward, N. Y., July 8, 1777, to August 15, 1777;
in Captain-Lieutenant Eleazar Taylor's Company, Colonel John Ashley's Berkshire County
Regiment, marched on Bennington alarm as far
as Pittsfield, enlisted August 17, 1777, served
four days in Captain Elijah Deming's Company,
Colonel Ashley's Berkshire County Regiment,
which was ordered to Stillwater by Major-Gen-

eral Gates,

ber

9,

from September 19, 1777, to Decemwith six months' men, raised by

1780;

New Marlboro, for service in Continental


during 1780, July 2, 1780, to December 9,
1780; in Captain Simon Adams' Company, Colonel John Collier's Regiment, General Fellows'
Brigade, ordered out by Colonel John Ashley on
alarm at the northward, enlisted October 13,
in service ten days.
17S1

town

of

Army

Great-great-grandson of Joseph White, who was


Captain of a Company in Colonel Asa Whitcomb's
Regiment which marched on the Lexington
alarm, April 19, 1775, from Lancaster to Cam
bridge town
his Company belonged to Lancas
ter, Mass.; was Sergeant of a foot company com
manded by Nathaniel Sawyer, of Lancaster, de
tached from Colonel Oliver Wilder's Regiment
that marched as far as Springfield on the alarm
for the relief of Fort William Henry, in 1757
was Ensign in Captain-Lieutenant James Wilder's 1st Company of Lancaster, Colonel Joseph
Wilder's Second Regiment of Militia, in Worcester County, in 1762.

N. 2312.

1893

W.

R.

S. 112.

BROOKS, OLIVER KINGSLEY


Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Joshua Brooks, of Lincoln, Massachusetts, who was a "minute man" at the battle of Concord Bridge, April 19, 1775.

N. 2436.
B. F.
S. 236.
.
1895 BROOKS, THOMAS S.
104 South Washington Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Same ancestry as his brother, Herbert Brooks.
X. 9536.

1897

W.

R. 107.

BROWN, FRANCIS

S. 346.

P.

306 Kennard St., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-grandson of Abraham Yreeland, who was
Private
in Captain Forman's Company, 4th
a
Battalion of Brigadier-General William Maxwell's Brigade; was in battles of Brandywine
and Germantown; spent most of the winter at
Valley Forge; on the evacuation of Philadelphia, this Brigade was detached from the
main army and united with 600 Virginia and
1000 Pennsylvania troops to harass the English,
then marching toward New York, the entire
force being in command of General LaFayette.
26

N. 11054.

1897

B. F.

S. 414.

BROWN, WILLIAM FELL


959 Franklin Ave., Columbus, Ohio

Great-grandson of Moses Wing, who enlisted as


Private in 1776, being only 16 years of age.
Great-great-grandson of Samuel Wing, who was
a Sergeant in Captain N. Hayden's Company in
the Lexington alarm; died in the army August
14, 1777, having held the several ranks of Corporal, Sergeant and Ensign in Colonel Gay's
Regiment.
Great-great-great-grandson of Martin Denslow,
who was in the party from Windsor, Conn., that
responded to the Lexington alarm; Corporal in
Captain Elihu Humphrey's Company, Colonel
Huntington's 8th Regiment, July 7 to December
18, 1775; Sergeant in 5th Regiment Connecticut
Line, Colonel Bradley, April 1, 1777; SergeantMa jor, May 15, 1779; Ensign, August 16, 1779,
continued in 1781 Ensign of Captain Morris'
Company, Colonel Swift's Regiment, 2nd Connecticut Line; retired in 1782, before June, as
Lieutenant, on half pay; member of the Society
of the Cincinnati.

N. 2403.
1895 BROWNING,

S. 203.

WILLIAM DUDLEY
Mt. Vernon, Ohio

Great-grandson of Rufus Putnam, who was Lieutenant-Colonel of Brewer's Massachusett's Regiment, May to December, 1775; Lieutenant-Colonel 22d Continental Infantry, January 1, 1776;
Colonel of Engineers, August 5, 1776; Colonel
5th Massachusetts, November 1, 1776; BrigadierGeneral Continental Army, January 7, 1783, and
served to close of war.
27

N. 2276.
1889 BRUSH,

K. P.

S. 76.

EDMUND CONE, A. M., M. D. (Colonel


First Light Artillery, O. N. G.)
Zanesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Joseph Cone, who was a Private
in Captain Meigs' Company, Colonel Spencer's
2d Connecticut Regiment.
Family tradition
states that he was subsequently a naval officer
and was lost during an engagement at sea.
Great-great-grandson of Joseph Spencer, who was
a Colonel in the Lexington alarm, April, 1775;
Colonel 2d Connecticut, May 1, 1775; BrigadierGeneral, Continental Army, June 22, 1775;
Major-General, August 9, 1776, resigned January 13, 1778; Major-General Connecticut Militia,

May, 1779; was in battles of Bunker Hill, Long


Island, White Plains, etc.; Delegate to Continental Congress, 177S-9; Member of Council,
1780, to time of his death, 1789. Was Major and
Lieutenant-Colonel in French and Indian War.
Great-great-grandson of Israel Brush, who was a
Private in Captain Tucker's Company, 1st Regiment, Connecticut Militia; Private in Captain
Polhemus' Company, 1st Battalion, 2d Establishment, New Jersey Line.
Great-great-grandson of Jacob Packard, who was
a member of the Committee of Correspondence

and Inspection, town

of Easton, Massachusetts,

1777.

Great-grandson of John Martin Cooper, who was


a Private in Zantzinger's Company, Colonel
Ross' Pennsylvania Regiment; served at Valley
Forge; was oue of three German-speaking soldiers whom General Washington induced to
feign desertion and join the Hessians; a pensioner.

Great-grandson of Seth Bailey, who was a Private


in Captain Pratt's Company, Colonel Williams'
Regiment, Massachusetts Militia; also a member of the Committee of Correspondence and
Safety of Easton, Massachusetts.

Off.

S.77.

2277.

1893

BEUSH,

Rev.

FRANK SPENCER
Alameda, California

Same

ancestry as his brother, Col.


Brush.

Edmund Cone

N. 2415.
S. 215.
1895 BRUSH,
PEABODY
599 East Broad St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Israel Brush, whose record appears in ancestry of Col. Edmund Cone
Brush.

MURRAY

N. 2240
1890 BRYAN,

W. R, 6.
Major FREDERICK CARLOS,

S. 40.

O. V.

I.

Akron, Ohio
Grandson of Elijah Bryan, who was a Private in
Captain Pond's Company, 3d Connecticut Regiment; was given a badge of merit for six years'
faithful service.

Great-great-grandson of Thomas Benedict, who


was a Private in the 9th Company, Colonel Waterbury's 5th Regiment, 1775; Private in Captain Keeler's Company, Bradley's Battalion,
Wadsworth's Brigade, 1776; captured at Fort
Washington; Private in Captain Smith's Company, General Waterbury's State Brigade, 1781.
Great-grandson of Eliphalet Barnum, who was a
Sergeant in Captain Benedict's 6th Company,
Colonel Waterbury's 5th Regiment; served in
New York City and under Schuyler on Lakes

George and Champlain.


N. 2360.

1893

S. 160.

BUCKLAND, Colonel HORACE STEPHEN


Fremont, Ohio
Great-grandson of Stephen Buckland, who was
Captain-Lieutenant of Bigelow's Independent
Company, Connecticut Artillery, January 22,

1776; Captain of Stevens' Battalion, Continental


Artillery, November 9, 1776; Battalion became
part of 3d Continental Artillery in 1778; resigned, April 12, 1780; family tradition says that
he died in the British prison ship "Jersey."

W. E. 92.
N. 7380.
S. 315.
1896 BURKE, Colonel CLARENCE ELISHA
1059 Prospect St., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Sylvanus Burke, who was a Private in a Hampshire County Regiment, Massachusetts troops, assigned to Colonel Vose's Regiment; Drummer, Captain Pray's Company,
same Regiment
N. 2482.
1896 BURKET,

S. 324.

Judge JACOB F.
Supreme Court of Ohio, Findlay, Ohio
Grandson of John Burkhardt, who was a member

Van Heer's Light Dragoons, Washington's


Life Guard, from November 1, 1778, to end of
war; at Valley Forge, etc.
of

N. 7389.
1896 BURKET,

S.

324.

HARLAN FESSENDEN
Findlay, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his father, Judge Jacob Burket.

N. 7388.
1896 BURKET,

S. 323.

JOHN

F.

Findlay, Ohio

Same
N.

ancestry as his father, Judge Jacob Burket.

2454.

1895

S. 254.

BUSHNELL, MARTIN BALDWIN


34 Sturges Ave., Mansfield, Ohio
Great-grandson of Alexander Bushnell, who was a
Sergeant in Captain Hutchens' Company, 18th
Regiment of New York Militia; served from
30

August 18, 1776, to September 25, 1776; was


afterwards Ensign in Captain Mills' Company,
Colonel Beeche's Eegiment of "minute men,"
raised in the spring of 1780, for service along
the eastern coast.
N. 10040.

1897

W.

E. 145.

S. 400.

BUTLER, JOSEPH MARION


229 Arlington St., Youngstown, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Thomas Butler, who was
a Private in Captain John Bankson's Company,
2d Pennsylvania Regiment, in 1777; in Captain
John Patterson's Company, same Regiment, in
June, 1778; was at Valley Forge and at Paoli
Tavern massacre.
Great-great-grandson of Joseph Green, who was a
member of the Committee of Safety of Northumberland County, Penn.
Great-great-great-grandson of Gottfried Orwig,
who was a member of "Old Men's Company," in
Revolutionary War, from about Reading or
Maiden Creek, Penn.

N. 2243.
W. R. 4.
S. 43.
1890 CAMPBELL, CHARLES DAVIDSON
47 Cedar Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Thomas Campbell, Sr., who
served in the 1st Company from Pennsylvania,
in 1775; First Lieutenant, 4th Pennsylvania,
January 3, 1777; Captain-Lieutenant, May 11,
1779; Captain, January 1, 1781; retired, January 1, 17S3; wounded in battles of Long Island,
Trenton and Germantown; served in Sullivan's
two expeditions against Indians, 1779; under
Wayne in Virginia until surrender of Cornwallis; served in South Carolina to close of war;
member of the Society of the Cincinnati; subsequently State Senator in Pennsylvania.
31

N. 9530.
1897 CAEPENTEE,

W.

99.

S. 340.

ALLAN WADSWOETH
Painesville, Ohio

Great-great-great-grandson of George Herkimer,


who was Captain of 8th Company, 4th Battalion,
Tryon County, N. Y., Militia; Colonel of "minute men" under command of General Herkimer;
fought against St. Leger in the battle of Oriskany; protected settlers of Mohawk "Valley
from ravages of Indians; was a member of the
Committee of Safety with his brother, General

Herkimer.
S. 411.
B. F.
N. 11051.
1897 CAEPENTEE, WILLAED BRYANT, M. D.
657 North High St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Nathan Carpenter, who was a
Private in Captain Solomon Willis' Company,
2d Connecticut Eegiment, General Spencer's,
May 5, 1775, to December 17, 1775; Private in
Captain Jonathan Parker's Company, Colonel
Sage's 3d Battalion, Wadsworth's Brigade, June
7 to December 25, 1776; in Captain Jonathan
Parker's Company, 2d Connecticut Eegiment,
Continental Line, Colonels Charles Webb and

Zebulon Butler, from May 7, 1777, to May 7,


1780; was engaged in battle of Bunker Hill,
Arnold's expedition to Quebec, battle of White
Plains and many other battles during the war;
wintered at Valley Forge.
N. 2379.
1894 CAEPENTEE,

B. F.

S.

179.

WILLIS EBENEZEE

Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Aaron Willson, who was a Private in Captain Samuel Weatherbe's Company,
of Keene, New Hampshire, Colonel Isaac Wyman's Eegiment; later in Company of David
Howlet of Keene, New Hampshire.
32

N. 2248.
1893 CAKE,

W.

E. 27.

S. 48.

WILLIAM FINLEY

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of John Harris, who was a
Private in Captain Bond's Company, 4th Battalion, 2d Establishment, New Jersey Continental
Line; also in Captain D'Hart's Company, 2d
Kegiment, New Jersey Line; in battles of Bran-

dywine, Germantown,

Monmouth and Yorktown.

N. 2500
C.
S. 300.
1896 CAEEUTHEBS, THOMAS HETHEEINGTON
Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Bernard Hubley, who was
a First Lieutenant in German Battalion of Pennsylvania, August 12, 1776; Captain, February
24, 1778; retired, January 1, 1781.

N. 2299.
1890 CASS,

S. 99.

EDWARD,

M. D.
Dresden, Ohio

of Major Jonathan Cass, who served at


Lexington; Private at Bunker Hill, June, 1775;
Ensign, 3d New Hampshire, November 8, 1776;
Second Lieutenant, August 4, 1777; First Lieu-

Grandson

tenant,

May

1,

1778;

transferred to 1st

New

Hampshire, January 1, 1781; Captain, December


He fought
8, 1782, and served to close of war.
in nearly all the great battles of the Eevolution
in the Crossing of the Delaware, with Washington's Division; at Valley Forge.

N. 10043.
1897 CHANDLEK,

N. G.

S. 403.

CHAELES W.

Xenia, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Chandler, who was
chosen a member of the Committee of Correspondence, Inspection and Safety at the annual
Town Meeting in New Ipswitch, New Hamp*
shire, in 1776.
33

Great-great-grandson of James Chandler, who was


chosen a member of the Committee of Correspondence of Concord, Massachusetts, at a special Town Meeting, September 26, 1774. In Shattuck's History of Concord, Mass., it is recorded
that thirty-five half barrels of gunpowder, sent
for the patriots' cause by Colonel Lee, of Marblehead, were distributed for safe keeping among
the members of that committee, and James
Chandler had his share of them.

A. W. 3.
S. 280.
N. 2480.
1896 CHASE, Colonel WALTER H.
Toledo, Ohio
Great-grandson of Colonel Josiah Chase, who was
Adjutant in a York County, Massachusetts Regiment, 1779; Lieutenant, Quartermaster and
Paymaster, 17S0.

W. R. 121.
N. 9934.
1897 CHENEY, Rev. JAMES LORING
17 Irvington St., Cleveland, Ohio

S. 369.

who was in the


Duxbury Company, First Plymouth (Mass.) Regiment; was a pensioner.
Great-great-grandson of Captain Samuel Bradford,
whose name appears in the list of Captains in the
Plymouth County soldiers.
Great-grandson of Isaac Drew,

Great-grandson of Elijah Batchelder, who served


in the Revolutionary Army;* received at his discharge a bushel of Continental money, which was
not worth enough to pay his way home.
Great-great-grandson of Prince Snow, who was a
soldier in the Revolution; his widow drew a
pension.
*

See'Massachusetts Revolutionary Soldiers,

34

p. 769.

B. F.
N. 2487.
1896 CHYNOWETH, Captain

S. 287.

EDWARD,

U.

Army

S.

Columbus Barracks, Ohio


Great-grandson of Gamaliel Bradford, who was
Colonel of the 1st Plymouth County Begiment,
Massachusetts Militia; also a member of Committee of Correspondence for the town of Plymouth.
N. 7376.

1896

C.

CIST,

CHABLES

S. 311.

M.
College Hill, Ohio

Great-grandson of Charles
tain

Easterly's

Cist,

who

served in Cap-

Company, Colonel Bradford's

Begiment, Pennsylvania Militia; was appointed


Commissioner of Continental Congress to sign
currency.
N. 2317.

1893

C.

CIST, General

HENRY

S. 117.

M.

Cincinnati, Ohio
of Charles Cist, who was enrolled as a
member of the 3d Battalion of Pennsylvania
Militia in 1776; in 1777, he was appointed by the
Continental Congress one of the Commissioners

Grandson

to sign the Continental currency; was a physician and a graduate in Medicine at the University of Halle, Germany.

N. 2416.

1895

B. F.

COIT, Colonel

ALONZO

S. 216.

B., O. V.

I.

Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Isaac Coit, who was a Sergeant
in Captain Belcher's Company, First Begiment,
Connecticut Line, January 20, 1777, to January
20, 1780.

Great-great-grandson of Benjamin Coit,


a soldier in the American devolution.

who was

1555023

N. 11059.
1897 COLE,

W.

DAVID

R. 151.

S. 419.

E.

1008 Cedar Ave., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-grandson of Reuben Ferris, who was First
Major of Colonel Moses Dusenbury's Dutchess
County (N. Y.) Regiment, in 1776.
N. 2414.
1895 COLE,

B. F.

S. 214.

EDWARD EVERETT

Board of Trade Building, Columbus, Ohio


Great-grandson of James Blakslee, who was a Private in Captain Wilson's Company, Colonel Williams' New York Regiment, in 1779; under Captain Blakslee, 1781; Captain Whelp and Captain
Livingston,

Colonel

Willett

commanding,

in

1783.

N. 2476.
1896 COLLINS,

S. 276.

C.

JAMES ALPHEUS

ML Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio


Great-grandson of James Wilson, who was a Private for three years in the Virginia Continental
Line; received land warrant for three years'
service.

N. 2486.

1896

S. 286.

CONLEY, Hon. WILLIAM

F.

Charles City, Iowa


Great-grandson of Charles Cracraft, who was a
Captain at sundry times and Major in General
Clark's expedition against western Indians in
1781; captured by Indians and confined a year
at Detroit, his health being impaired thereby;
he refused a grant of land in Ohio.
N. 2208.

1890

B. F.

COOPER, ALBERT,

S. 8.

M. D.

2686 North High St., Columbus, Ohio


Great-grandson of Archibald Wilson, who was
commissioned Lieutenant, June 20, 1776, of the

Militia of Dunmore County, Virginia; Captain


in 1777; served to close of war; his Company
was at the surrender of Cornwallis, in 1781.
<N.

B. F.

11356.

1898

S. 441.

COPELAND, FOSTEK
56 North Monroe Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Samuel Guild, M. D., who was
a Surgeon in the Continental Army, and member
of the Committee of Public Safety.
Great-great-grandson of Nathaniel Guild, who
owned an iron furnace and cast shot and shell
for the Kevolutionary Army.
Great-great-grandson of Elijah Copeland, who was
a soldier in Captain Keith's Company, Colnel Daggett's Eegiment, Massachusetts troops.
Great-great-grandson of Eliphalet Leonard, who

manufactured fire-arms for the American Army.


Great-great-grandson of Elijah Howard, who was
a soldier in Captain Macy Williams' Company,
Massachusetts troops.
Great-great-great-grandson of Henry Howard, who
was a soldier of Captain Ephraim Burr's Company, Colonel John Bailey's Regiment, Massachusetts troops; spent the winter at Valley
Forge.
N. 2474.
1896 CORNER,

W.

R. 79.

S. 274.

HORACE BASSETT

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Lot Bassett, who was a Private
in Captain Nye's Company, Massachusetts;
Corporal in Captain Palmer's Company, Colonel

Whitney's Regiment, Massachusetts;


in Captain Hedge's

Sergeant

Company, Colonel Freeman's

Regiment, Massachusetts; Sergeant in Captain


Hamlin's Company, Colonel Reed's Regiment,
Massachusetts; Sergeant in Captain Toby's
Company, Colonel Garrish's Regiment; was a
pensioner.
37

N. 2375.

1894

S. 175.

CORY, CHALEES

H.
Lima, Ohio

Great-grandson of Henry Axtell, who was a Major


of the Eastern Battalion, Morris County, New
Jersey, Militia; also Major in Colonel Jacob
Ford, Jr.'s, Battalion, New Jersey State troops,
during the Eevolutionary War.
Great-grandson of Timothy Mulford, who served
as a Private, "minute man," in the Morris
County, New Jersey, Militia, during the Bevolutionarv War.

W.

N. 2371.

1894

E. 54.

S. 171.

COWING, JOHN PHILO


275 Prospect St, Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of James Cowing, who was a Private in Captain-Lieutenant John Doty's Company, Colonel Ebenezer Sprout's Eegiment,
which marched on alarm at Dartmouth, enlisted
May 6, discharged May 7, 1778; same command,
September 5 to 11, 1778, marched on alarm to
Dartmouth; Private in Captain Montague's
Company, Colonel Israel Chapin's Eegiment,
raised to reinforce the Continental Army for
three months, enlisted October 14, discharged
November 21, 1779; Corporal in Captain Charles
Church's Company, Lieutenant-Colonel White's
4th Plymouth County Eegiment, for service at
Ehode* Island from July 30, 1780, to August 8,
nine days; raised flax to make shirts
1780

for the soldiers, etc.

Great-great-grandson of Benjamin Hall, who was


a Private in battle of Lexington; Sergeant in
Captain Hand's Company, Colonel Tallcott's
Eegiment, 1775; in Captain Sterling's Company,
Colonel Enos' Eegiment.

Great-grandson of Dr. Silas Hutcheson, who was


a Drummer Boy in the Company of his father,
Captain Eleazar Hutcheson.
Great-great-grandson of Eleazar Hutcheson, who
was Captain of an Independent Company of
Lebanon in the 12th Connecticut Regiment.
Great-great-grandson of William Kichardson, who
was a Corporal in Colonel Hinman's 4th Connecticut Kegiment; at siege of Boston.
of David Skinenlisted in Captain Olcott's Company,

Great-great-great-great-grandson
ner,

who

3, discharged September 21, 1778; was a


very old man.

August

W.

N. 9947.

1897

K. 127.

S. 382.

COWLES, JOHN GUITEAU WELCH


581 Sibley St, Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Samuel Cowles, who was a Sergeant in a Company from Norfolk, Connecticut,
during the Lexington alarm, April, 1775; was
in service subsequently during the war.

N. 10032.

1897

C.

S. 392.

CEANE, CLINTON
Grandin Boad, Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-grandson of Kobert Harbison, who was a
Private in Pennsylvania troops for seventeen
months, a part of which time he served under
Captain James Leach and General Hand; a pensioner.

Great-grandson of Thomas Morgan, who was a


Private in Captain Campbell's Company, Pennsylvania troops, under General Hand; Private
in Captain Samuel Moore's Company, Colonel
Joseph Wood's 73d Pennsylvania Kegiment; at
Valley Forge, winter of 1777-'78; in service two
years; a pensioner.

N. 2246.
W. R. 25.
S. 46.
1893 GROWL, SAMUEL HIRAM
411 North Perry St., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Rufus Johnson, State of New
York, who was a Private, Sergeant and Lieutenant in the Revolutionary Army; in battle of
Bennington, Vermont; a pensioner.

N. 2430.
1895 CULBERTSON,

S. 230.

LEWIS ROGERS,

M. D.
Zanesville, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Samuel Culbertson, who
was a Captain in Colonel Armstrong's Fifth Battalion,

Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, Asso-

ciators; July 31, 1777, Colonel of the Sixth Battalion of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania,

Associators;

May

[Commandant]

of

10, 1780,

Lieutenant -Colonel

Fourth Battalion of Cumber-

land County, Pennsylvania, Associators; took


the oath of allegiance September 17, 1777.
N. 2203.

1889

B. F.

S. 3.

CURRY, Colonel WILLIAM LEONTES

(Life

Member)
Marysville, Ohio
of Colonel James Curry, who was a Private in the Staunton, Virginia, Company, under
General Lewis, in Dunmore's war with Indians
on the Ohio River; severely wounded at Point
Pleasant, October 10, 1774, in battle with Indians
under Cornstalk; Private in Fourth Virginia
Infantry, Continental Line, at beginning of Revolution; Second Lieutenant, 8th Virginia, December, 1776; First Lieutenant, June 24, 1777;
transferred to 4th Virginia September 14, 1778;
Captain, September 23, 1779; was in battles of
Brandywine, Germantown, etc. at Valley Forge,
1777'78; taken prisoner with Lincoln's army at
Charleston, May 12, 1780; exchanged June, 1781;

Grandson

on

staff of

General Nathaniel Gist;

severely

wounded at siege of Yorktown acted as second


in two duels between officers while in service;
with Washington at triumphal entry into New
York, November 25, 1783; served nearly nine
years; subsequent to war was Brigade Inspector
of Virginia Militia, Clerk of Court of Augusta
;

County, Virginia, Colonel of Ohio Militia, County


Judge, member of Ohio Legislature, etc. a pensioner and received a grant of four thousand
;

acres of Ohio land.

Great-grandson of Robert Burns, who was a Second Lieutenant in 2d Battalion of Miles' Pennsylvania Rifle Regiment, March 16, 1776; transferred to 2d Canadian (Hazen's) Regiment, December 21, 1776; Captain, April 8, 1777; retired

January

1,

1781.

S. 139.
W. R. 40.
CUSICK, Captain CORNELIUS CHARLES, U.

N. 2339.

1893

S.

Army

(Retired.)

Albany, New York


of Nicholas Cusiek, who was a Lieutenant of the New York Line; commissioned by
General Washington, and served under General
LaFayette; a pensioner.

Grandson

N. 2133.
1895 DAKIN,

A.

W.

1.

S. 233.

ROBERT BARRETT
Toledo, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of James Barrett, who was


a Colonel in command of the Militia and "minute
men" at the battle of Concord, Massachusetts,
April 19, 1775.
Great-grandson of James Barrett, who was a Major
at the battle of Concord.
Great-great-grandson of Joseph Dakin, who was
a Captain at the battle of Concord.
Great-grandson of Samuel Dakin, who was at the
battle of Concord.
41

N. 2212
1892 DARROW,

B. F.

Colonel

WALTEK

S. 12.

NICHOLAS

PAINE
561 North High St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Titus Darrow, who was a Captain of Connecticut troops; was present at Burgoyne's surrender, October 17, 1777.
Great-great-grandson of Philip Paine, of Maine,
who enlisted at the outbreak of the Revolution

and served three years.


Great-great-grandson of Elisha Blackman, who
was Lieutenant of Captain William Hooker
Smith's Company of old men, who garrisoned
the fort at Wilkesbarre, Penn., during 177S,
previous to the Wyoming Massacre, July 3, 1778.
N. 9539.

1897

S. 349.

DAVID, Hon. WILLIAM LUTHER


Findlay, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of William Davis, who was
a soldier in the Revolutionary Army, and was
in the battles of Trenton and Brandy wine; was
an Ensign under Colonel Alexander Graydon,
in the French and Indian War, in 1747-'48.
Great-grandson of John Davis, who at the age of
14 years served as Deputy-Quartermaster in the
Revolutionary Army; also did other service.

N. 2359.
1893 DAYIDSON,

S. 159.

Major ROBERT MASON,

O. N. G.

(Retired.)
Newark, Ohio
Great-grandson of George Mathiot, who was a Private and Sergeant in Pennsylvania troops under
Captains Hubley, Kiegh and Newman, and Colonels Ross and Sleigh; served three years as
sailor on the U. S. ship "Cromwell."
Great-great-grandson of Edward Salisbury, who
served in tbe Revolution; was in the battle of
Ticonderoga.
42

X.

W. E. 64.
DAVIS, CHAELES CYEUS

2444

1895

S. 244.

51 Mayfield St., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of Isaac Chenery, who was
a Surgeon in the "Foot Eegiment" commanded
by Nathaniel Wade; appointed by Council and
General Court of Massachusetts; his commission, dated March 14, 1778, is still in existence.

N. 2209.

1891

A.

DAWSON,

Hon.

W.

S. 9.

2.

CHAELES CAEEOLL

Toledo, Ohio
Grandson of Timothy Dawson, Southington, Conn.,
who was a Private in Captain Matthew Smith's
Company, July 12, 1781 served to close of war.
;

who was a soldier of


the Eevolution, serving under General Putnam.

Grandson

of Oliver Eoberts,

Great-grandson of John Bunce, who was a Bevolutionary soldier from Woodbury, Conn.; at
Ticonderoga, 1775.

N. 2491.
1896 DAY,

S. 291.

EOBEET HENEY

Massillon, Ohio
Great-grandson of Noah Day, who was a Private
in Captain Elliott's Company, General Israel
Putnam's Third Eegiment, Connecticut Continental Line; Sergeant in Captain Jones' Company, Colonel Latimer's Eegiment Connecticut
Militia; Sergeant in Captain Tilden's Company,
Colonel McClelland's Eegiment Connecticut Militia; at siege of Boston, battles of Saratoga and
Stillwater,

and served

in

Ehode

Island.

N. 2237.
1890 DENT,

S. 37.

Major

ARTHUR MELVILLE,

Surgeon

17th Infantry, O. N. G.
Coshocton, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Dent, who was a Captain
of Scouts and Border Rangers during the Revolution; also Sheriff and Justice of the Peace of
Monongalia County, Virginia.
Great-great-grandson of Colonel John Evans, who
was a member of the Virginia Convention of
1776; Commandant of Monongalia County during the Revolution; first Clerk of the County;
member of the General Assembly; was a Colonel
under General Broadhead, and a LieutenantColonel in Dunmore's war.

N. 7385.
1896 DEVOL,

S. 320.

WILLIAM STOW

Professor
Member)

(LrFE

Riverside, California
Great-great-great-grandson of Israel Putnam, who
was Chairman of the Committee of Vigilance;
Lieutenant-Colonel in Lexington alarm, April,
1775; Colonel Third Connecticut, May, 1775;
Major-General Continental Army, June 19, 1775;
retired June 3, 17S3; an officer of the French
and Indian Wars, having served at Louisburg,
Ft. Duquesne and Crown Point; had signalized

himself in Indian warfare, having been captured


by savages, tied to a stake, to be tortured and
burned, etc.
Great-great-grandson of Israel Putnam, Jr., who
was a Captain, Third Connecticut, May 1, 1775;

Major and Aide-de-Camp to General Putnam,


July 22, 1775, to June 3, 17S3.
N. 2432.
1895 DEVOL,

S. 232.

LEE STOW
Corning, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his brother, William Stow Devol.


44

W. R. 161.
S. 434.
N. 11074.
1898 DeWITT, THOMAS
Cleveland,
Ohio
679 East Prospect St.,
Great-great-grandson of Colonel Charles DeWitt,
who was Colonel of a Regiment of "minute men"
December 21, 1775; member of the Colonial
Assembly, 1768 to 1775; of the Provincial Convention of April, 1775, and of the Third and
Fourth Provincial Congress; from 1781 to 1785
was in the State Assembly, and up to the time
of his death, in 1787, was almost constantly engaged in the service of his country in the State
and National Councils.

MAY

B. F.

N. 2254.

1893

DICKEY, Professor CLAYTON

S. 54.

L.

Worthington, Ohio
Great-grandson of William Gillespie, who was a
soldier in the Cavalry service in the Revolutionary War.

W. R. 116.
DOYLE, WILLIAM BARNABAS

N. 9929.

1897

S. 364.

Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of Peter Sypher, who was a Private
in Colonel Stephen Moylan's Regiment of Pennsylvania Cavalry, organized in 1777; his widow
drew a pension on account of her husband's
service.

N. 11053.

1897

B. F.

DURFEE, Lieutenant LUCIUS LOYD,


Army

S. 413.

U.

S.

Columbus Barracks, Ohio


Great-grandson of Ebenezer Durfey, who was a
Private in Captain Elijah Robinson's Company,
Colonel Ely's Connecticut Regiment, eight
months, from May, 1777; May, 1778, in Captain
45

Elijah Robinson's Company, Colonel Enos' Connecticut Eegiment, one year; in Captain Williams' Company, Colonel S. B. Webb's Connecticut Eegiment, April 29, 1782, eight months and
seven days; a pensioner.

Great-grandson of Ebenezer Hopkins, who served


two years as a Private in Vermont troops in the
Revolutionary War, a part of the time he served
under Captain Sawyer and Colonel Cooley; records in office of Adjutant-General of Vermont
show that he was paid for three years' service,
part, or all, of which time he was a prisoner of
war, in Canada; a pensioner.
N. 10026.
1897 EDWARDS,

W.

R. 133.

S. 386.

WILLIAM
Cleveland, Ohio

of Oliver Edwards, who was a Private


in Captain Jonathan Allan's Company, General
Pomeroy's Regiment, April 20, 1775, eight days;
Private in Captain Jonathan Allan's Company,
Colonel John Fellows' Regiment, August 1, 1775,

Grandson

three months, one week and four days; Private


in Third Company, Eighth Regiment of Foot,
Continental Army, Colonel John Fellows, eight
months; on expedition to Quebec, September
9,

1775.

S. 283.
W. R. 82.
N. 2483.
1896 ENSIGN, JOHN
574 Prospect St., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of John Ensign, who was
Captain of a Company of Militia from Canaan,
Connecticut; served on Hudson River, Fort

EDWARD

Clinton,

West

Point, etc.

S. 317.
W. E. 93.
N. 7382.
1896 ERWIN, Captain JAMES JAY, Assistant SukGEON, O. V. I.
1617 Cedar Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Squier, who was a Private in Essex County, New Jersey, Militia; saw
active service during hostilities in that state.
S. 150.

N. 2350.

1893

EVANS, NELSON WILEY


Portsmouth, Ohio
Great-grandson of Edward Evans, who was a Private in Captain Samuel Dawson's Company,
Colonel Richard Hampton's 11th Pennsylvania
Regiment; enlisted April, 1776, in his 16th year,
and served until after the battle of Monmouth;
in battles of Brandywine, Paoli, Germantown
and Monmouth; at Brandywine, was one of
twelve who cleared a bridge under British fire
for the American troops to charge over; at Valley Forge winter of 1776-'77.
Great-great-grandson of Hugh Evans, who served
a short time in Captain Vansant's Company,
Colonel Robert Magaw's 5th Pennsylvania Battalion.
S. 104.

N. 2304.

1890

EWING, JOHN GILLESPIE


Notre Dame P. O., Indiana
Great-grandson of George Ewing, who was a Private in 2d New Jersey Regiment, Captain Howell's Company, November 11, 1775; Sergeant in
Captain Barker's Company, New Jersey Line,
until April, 1777;

in battles of

Germantown

and Brandywine; wintered at Valley Forge;


June, 1777, Ensign in 7th Company, 3d New
Jersey Regiment; 1778, entered Captain Randall's Company of Artillery, Colonel Lamb's
Regiment,
war.

New

Jersey Line; served to close of


47

W.

N. 11358.

1898

S. 443.

R. 167.

FAIRBANK, GEORGE LORENZO


195 Bayne St., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Joshua Fairbank, whose name appears with the rank of
Lieutenant on the Lexington Alarm Roll of Captain Caleb Whiting's Company which marched
on the alarm of April 19, 1775, from Douglas,
Massachusetts; time of service, ten days; also
in a list of officers of the Massachusetts Militia,
as First Lieutenant in the 8th Company of the
Third Worcester County Regiment, commissioned July 9, 1776.

S. 28.
N. 2228.
W. R. 20.
1893 FARRAND, ADDISON JOHN
303 Waver ly Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Jared Farrand, who was a soldier and
a Sergeant for two years in Captain Safford's
Company of Vermont troops, 1777-1778; received
a land grant; a pensioner.

iff.

S. 189.

N. G.

2389.

1894

FESSENDEN, Professor LEVI

G.

Xenia, Ohio

Nathan Fessenden, who was a soldier


Captain John Parker's Company of "minute

Grandson
in

of

men," Lexington, Mass., April 19, 1775;


also detailed for duty at Cambridge.
N. 11364.
1898 FIRMIN,

was

S. 449.

JOHN

C.

Findlay, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Green, who was in a "Lexington Alarm List" eleven days; in Captain E.
Manning's Company in 1776, from May 29 to

December 15; in same Company, in 1777, from


April 5 to October 4; in Colonel Isaac Sherman's
Regiment, a Corporal; in 1780, a short period

(not

stated),

Company, and

in Lieutenant-Colonel
in 1782, from June 10 to

Sumner's

December

Captain Paul Brigham's Company, Colonel Durkie's Kegiment.

31, inclusive, in

N. 2394.
1895 FITCH,

W.

S. 194.

R. 80.

WINCHESTER

Unionville, Lake County, Ohio


Great-grandson of Abraham Fitch, who was a
Captain in the 2d Kegiment Light Horse Cavalry,
Connecticut; at New London at the burning of
that town by Arnold; served in French and
Indian Wars.
Great-great-grandson of Isaac Hubbard, who was
assistant to his brother, Colonel Nehemiah Hubbard, a Deputy Paymaster-General of Connecticut; member of "The Cincinnati."

Great-great-grandson of Henry Winchester, who


was a Private in the Ashburnham, Massachusetts, Company, in the Lexington alarm; served
at Ticonderoga and elsewhere.
Great-great-grandson of John Bunn, who was a
served under Colosoldier in New York troops
;

nel Frederick Fisher.

Great-great-grandson of

Jonathan Prentiss Calk-

who was

a Private in the Norwich, Connecin the Lexington alarm.


Great-great-great-grandson of Lieutenant William
Calkins, who served in the Norwich, Connecticut,.
Company, in the Lexington alarm.
ins,

ticut,

Company,

S. 238.
C.
N. 2438.
1895 FOGG, Colonel ARTHUR LLOYD
27 East Fourth St., Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-grandson of Phineas Fogg, who was a Private in Captain Nathan Brown's Company, Colonel Jacob Gales' Regiment of New Hampshire
Volunteers, and served under General John Sul-

livan in

Rhode

Island.
49

N. 2464.
1895 FOLLETT, JAMES (Son)
Hartford, Licking County, Ohio

S. 264.

of Captain Martin Dewey Follett, who, a boy,


at Forty Fort at the time of the Wyoming
Massacre, in which his father was killed; Private in Lieutenant Scott's Company, Colonel
Herrick's Kegiment; Private in Captain Sawyer's Company, and Captain Joseph Safford's
Company, Colonel Walbridge's Vermont Regiment; Captain in War of 1812.

Son

was

of Eliphalet Follett, who was an enlisted


(probably in Captain Buck's Kingston Company) in the local militia force defending the
Wyoming Valley settlement, Pennsylvania,
against the invasion of Indians and Tories; shot
and killed in the massacre of July 3, 1778, near
Forty Fort; his widow suffered the loss of all
his possessions and with six children endured
the hardships of a horseback journey back to

Grandson

man

Vermont.
Grandson of John Fassett,

Jr., who was a First


Lieutenant in Captain Hopkins' Company, LieuWarner's First Eegiment of
Green Mountain Boys, Vermont, in expedition
to Montreal in fall and winter of 1775; Captain,
Lieutenant-Colonel Warner's Second Regiment,
in expedition to Quebec, February, 1776; First
Lieutenant and Captain in Warner's Additional
Regiment, Continental Line; cashiered and reinstated; promoted Commissary to Hospital at
Bennington after battle of Bennington; Commissioner of Sequestration of Property of Tories;

tenant-Colonel

member

of

Vermont Board

of

War, Legislature,

Governor's Council and Committee for Secret


Negotiations in the Haldimand Affair; Judge
Supreme Court of Vermont, 1778 to 17S6.

Great-grandson of Captain John Fassett, Sr., who


was a member of the Vermont Legislature in

1778 and a recognized patriot of Bennington,


Vermont; his six sons had all served the Colonies in military and civil capacities.
Great-grandson of Joseph Safford, who was a recognized patriot of Bennington, Vermont; his
five sons were all in the military service.
N. 2451.
1895 FOLLETT,

S. 251.

C.

JOHN DAWSON
Cincinnati, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his great-uncle, James Follett.

N. 2450.

1895

S. 250.

C.

FOLLETT, Hon. JOHN FASSETT


Cincinnati, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his uncle, James Follett

N. 2373.
1894 FOLLETT,

Same

S. 172.

Judge

MARTIN DEWEY

Marietta, Ohio
ancestry as his uncle, James Follett.

N. 2475.
C.
1896 FORAKER, Captain
U. S. V.

S. 275.

JOSEPH BENSON,

Jr.,

Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of John James,

who was a
Corporal in the Lexington alarm; Sergeant in
Captain Mott's Company, raised for defense of
New London Harbor, 1776; in Captain Barker's
Company, 6th Connecticut Continental Line,
from February 23, 1778, to close of war.

N. 2388.

1894

S. 188.

FORCE, General MANNING FERGUSON


Home, Ohio
William Force, who was a Private
Soldiers'

Grandson

of
in the Continental

Essex County,

New Jersey, and the


Jersey, Militia.

Line of

New
51

N. 2397.

1895

S. 197.

C.

FORD, COLLIN
171 Vine St., Cincinnati, Ohio
of Alexander Ford, who was a Private
Captain Gill's Company, Fourth Pennsylvania
Cavalry; served throughout the war.

Grandson
in

S. 271.
N. 2471.
W. R. 76.
1896 FRASER, Rev. JOHN GAIUS, D. D.
Ohio
775 Doan St., Cleveland,
Great-grandson of Colonel Caleb Booth, who served
in Lexington alarm; served seventeen terms in
Connecticut Legislature.

N. 2447.
1895 FRYE,

S.

247

ABRAM THOMAS
Crestline,

Ohio

Great-grandson of John Deveny, who was a Private


in Captain Robinson's Company, 5th Pennsylvania Regiment, Colonel Anthony Wayne, 1775;
afterwards in Captain Bartholomew's Company,
same Regiment; served until July, 1783, in Captain Bond's Company, Colonel Harmon's Regiment.
S. 200.

N. 2400.

1895

FULTON,

HOWARD COLE
Zanesville, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of James Fulton, who was


a soldier in Pennsylvania troops; was wounded
in battle of

Brandywine.

Great-great-grandson of Daniel Matthews, Jr., who


was a Bombardier in Massachusetts Artillery;
served three years.
Great-great-grandson of John Leavens, who was
a Private in Captain Joseph Cady's Company,
Lexington alarm; was afterwards a Captain,
serving during remainder of the war.

N. 2247.
1893 GALE,

W.

S. 47.

E. 28.

CHARLES HANSON

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Daniel Gale, Worcester County,
Massachusetts, who was a Private in Colonel
Jonathan Ward's Regiment for the defense of
Boston; was in battles of Bunker Hill and White
Plains; also served in Colonel Cushing's Regiment; present at Burgoyne's surrender.
S. 208.

N. G.

N. 2408.

1895

GALLOWAY, CLARK MADISON,

M. D.

Xenia, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Galloway, who was a
Private in Captain Hatton's Company, Colonel
Watt's Regiment, Pennsylvania; Private in
Captain Thomson's Company, Colonel Buchanan's Regiment, Pennsylvania; Private in Captain Holliday's Company, Pennsylvania; also
served frequently in Kentucky during and after
1780, in expeditions against Indians; a pensioner.

Great-grandson of Joseph Galloway, who was a


Private in Captain Taylor's Company, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania.
Great-great-grandson of David Jackson, who was
a Private in Washington's army; was in the
battle of Trenton, where a cannon ball took
away his hand and broke his gun.
N. 9927.

1897

S. 362.

GALLOWAY, FRANK HUTCHINSON


Hotel Stenton, Philadelphia, Penn.
Great-great-grandson of Captain David Kirkpatrick, who was appointed from New York,
commissioned Ensign in Colonel Malcolm's additional Continental Regiment, April 24, 1777;
transferred to Colonel Spencer's Regiment
Continental Establishment, April 22, 1779;

Lieutenant,

April

24,

1779;

Jan-

retired,

uary 1, 1781; Captain, General Du PortaiPs


Corps of Sappers and Miners, Continental Establishment, July 25, 1781; wounded at siege of
Yorktown, October 14, 1781; served to June 3,
1783; presented with sword by LaFayette for
gallantry at battle of Brandywine, September
11, 1777.

N. 2410.

1895

N. G.

GALLOWAY,

Hon.

S. 210.

JAMES EDMUND

Xenia, Ohio
Grandson of James Galloway, who is mentioned
in the ancestry of Dr. Clark Madison Galloway.
N. 2210.
1891 GALLOWAY,

B. F.

Judge TOD

10.

BUCHANAN, A.M.

Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of John Galloway, who was
a soldier in Pennsylvania troops.
Great-great-grandson of James Smith, who was a
member of Convention to prevent the importing
of British goods; member of Pennsylvania Convention in 1776; signer of the Declaration of
Independence.
N. 2411.
1895 GALLOWAY,

Same

N. G.

WILLIAM ALBERT,

S. 211.

M. D.

Xenia, Ohio
ancestry as his brother, Dr. Clark Madison

Galloway.
N. 2267.

1889

B. F.

S. 67.

GARD, DANIEL HOSMER


189 North Twentieth St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Daniel Gage, who was a
Captain of "minute men" from Pelham, New
Hampshire, at the battle of Bunker Hill. Died
shortlv after the battle, a very old man.

Great-grandson of Abner Gage, who was a "minute


man" from Pelham, New Hampshire; at the
battle of Bunker Hill, while crossing Charlestown Neck, a red-hot British cannon ball took off
part of his foot

B. F.
N. 2269.
1889 GAED, IRVING
189 North Twentieth

Same

S. 69.

St.,

Columbus, Ohio
Hosmer Gard;

ancestry as his father, Daniel

also,

.Great-great-grandson

of

Thaddeus

Bead,

who

was Second Lieutenant and subsequently Captain,

Eighth Massachusetts Infantry.

Great-great-great-grandson of George Read, who


was a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

B. F.
S. 68.
N. 2268.
1889 GARD, WORDSWORTH, Sergeant, O. V. Art.
189 North Twentieth St., Columbus, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his brother, Irving Gard.

N. 2417.
1895 GATH,

PERRY

19 East

Gay

B. F.
D., U. S.
St.,

S. 217.

Army

Columbus, Ohio

Great-grandson of Joshua Davis, Sr., who was a


Private from June, 1776, to 1783; served under
Captains Randolph, Dunn, Lupertis, Manning,

Freeman, Heady and Still, and Colonels Dunn,


Potter, Crow, Jaquesh, Nelson and Webster;
was in battles of Elizabethtown, Monmouth and
other skirmishes; was wounded in battle of
pensioner.

Monmouth; a

N. 2378.

1894

S. 178.

GEYEE, Judge JOHN

C.

Piqua, Ohio

Great-grandson of David Manson, who was a Private in Captain Savage's Company, Colonel
Smith's Pennsylvania Kegiment; also Private

Company, Colonel McAllister's RegiPrivate in Rippey's Company, Colonel

in Corby's

ment;

McAllister's

N. 2373.
1894 GEYER,

Regiment
S. 177.

WILLIAM

H.
Piqua, Ohio

Same ancestry
N. 2295.

1889

GILL,

as his brother,

Judge John

B. F.

C.

Geyer.

S. 95.

HERBERT RICHMOND

48 Cleveland Ave., Columbus, Ohio


Great-grandson of Captain Asa Waters, who was
in Captain Southworth's Company, Colonel Robinson's Massachusetts Regiment; in Captain
Reading's Company, Colonel Whitney's Regiment; in Captain Dix's Company, Colonel Mackintosh's Regiment; in Captain Stoddart's Comsubsepany, 1st Massachusetts Regiment;
quently became Captain.

N. 2443.

1895

GOSS,

W.

R. 68.

S. 242.

THOMAS CARR
237 Kennard St, Cleveland, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Peter Goss, who was a


Corporal in Captain Josiah Crosby's 9th Company, Colonel Reed's Regiment, New Hampshire; re-enlisted in July, 1782, to serve until
close of war; was in battle of Bunker Hill.
Great-grandson of Ephraim Abbott Goss, who was
a Private from New Hampshire in 1782.
56

S. 173.

N. 2373.

1894

GOWEY, MARCUS CANFIELD


North Lewisburg, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Abraham Willey, who
was a Private in Captain Willey's Company, Colonel Spencer's Connecticut Regiment, for the
relief of Boston in the Lexington alarm, April,
1775.

N. 2205.
1891 GRANGER,

R. P.

S. 5.

SHERMAN MOORHEAD
Zanesville, Ohio

Great-grandson of Oliver Granger, who was a Private in Captain Austin's Company of Suffield
"minute men" in Lexington alarm; a Sergeant
in Captain Harmon's Company in Colonel Wolcott's Regiment, Connecticut State Troops, 1776;
at siege of Boston; an Ensign in 1778; Lieutenant in Connecticut troops iu 1781; a member of
State Legislature for eight terms.

Great-great-great-grandson of Judge Daniel Sherman, of Woodbury, Connecticut, who was a


member of the Committee of Inspection, serving
throughout the war; member of Council of
Safety; Representative for his native town in
the General Assembly sixty-five semi-annual
sessions; during the war he furnished provisions
to the soldiers' families to the value of nearly
three thousand pounds; entertained Generals
Washington and LaFayette.
Great-great-great-grandson of Major Moses Chapline, who was a First Lieutenant, 1st Maryland
Battalion of the "Flying Camp," June to December, 1776; First Lieutenant, 6th Maryland,
December 10, 1776; Captain, February 20, 1777;

wounded

at battle of Brandywine.

N. 2214.
1892 GRANT,

S. 14.

EDWARD

S.

Covington, Kentucky

Great-great-grandson of Jacob Brown, who was


a member of the first Constitutional Convention; Delegate from the State of Delaware;
signer of the Constitution of the United States;
was a Member of Congress several times.
Great-great-grandson of George Kleiber, who was
a Private in Captain Weiser's Company of
Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Militia
in 1777; served in the "Flying Camp" in 1776
and was at the battle of Long Island.

B. F.

N. 7386.

1896

GUTHRIE, TRACY

S. 321.

WALDO

Wyandotte Building, Columbus, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of Amos Chappell, who was
a First Lieutenant in Captain Elmore's Company, Colonel Hinman's 4th Regiment, Connecticut Continental Line, May to December, 1775;
Captain, Colonel Whitney's First Battalion, Connecticut State troops, November, 1776, to March,
1777.

N. 2448.
1895 HAMILTON,

S. 248.

CHARLES ROBERT
Zanesville, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Ebenezer Dale, who was


a Private in the Lexington Alarm Roll of Captain Abbott's Company; afterwards a member
of Captain Prince's Company, Colonel Manssubsequently in Colonel
Regiment;
field's
Hutchinson's Regiment.

Cot

JOHN W. HARPER

N. 10041
W. K. 144.
1897 HAMMOND, GEORGE F.
176 Dodge St., Cleveland, Ohio

S. 401.

Great-great-grandson of Daniel Hammond, who


was a Private in Captain Amariah Fuller's Company, which marched on Lexington alarm from
Newton to Cambridge, Mass., April 19, 1775;
served one day; served in the Canada expedition
of 1759.

Great-grandson of Phineas Hammond, who served


with his father as above, and was in service
twenty-three days; also served at various times
in 1776 and 1778.

N. 2229.
1893 HANNA, Hon.

W.

E. 39.

S. 29.

MARCUS

A. U. S. Senator
Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of Israel Converse, who enlisted


as soldier early in the war; for gallant service
was rapidly promoted to be Colonel of a Connecticut Regiment; served through the war.

S. 120.
C.
N. 2320.
State Senator
1893 HARPER, Col. JOHN W.
66 West Third St., Cincinnati, Ohio

of William Harper, who was a Private


in Captain Eccleston's Company, 2d Regiment,
Maryland Line, July, 1778; August 26, 1781, in
Captain Bird's Company, 1st Regiment, Maryland Line; served to close of war; at Valley
Forge winter of 1776-77; received depreciation
pay and bounty land.

Grandson

N. 2393.
1895 HARRIS, Hox.

S. 193.

STEPHEN

R.

Bucyrus, Ohio

John Harris, who was a Private in


Captain Bond's Company, 4th Battalion, 2d

Grandson

of

Establishment, New Jersey Continental Line;


Private in Captain D'Hart's Company, 2d Regiment, New Jersey Continental Line; in battle
of

Monmouth.

N. 11363.
W. R. 169.
1898 HAYES,
1500 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio

S. 418.

HARRY

Great-great-grandson of Jeremiah Burwell, who


was a soldier in Connecticut troops during the
war of the Revolution.

N. 2497.
1896 HAYNE,

W.

R. 87.

S. 297.

MARK ROYS

Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of Alpheus Underwood, who was
a Private in Captain Brookins' Company, Lieutenant-Colonel Collar's Berkshire County, Massachusetts, Regiment.

N. 7383.

1896

C.

S. 318.

HAYWARD, ALBERT W.
St Paul Building, Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-grandson of Eleazer Hayward, who was a
Matross in Captain Calender's Company, Colonel
Gridley's Regiment of Artillery from Massachusetts.

Great-great-grandson of John Marshall, who was


a Private in Captain Towne's Company in the
22d Regiment of Foot, Continental Armv.

S. 363.
N. 9928.
N. G.
1897 HEBBLE, CHARLES EOY, M. E.
810 Neave Building, Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-great-great-grandson of Samuel Spicer, who
was a Private and served four years, a part of
the time in Captain Weaver's Company, Colonel
Hampton's Pennsylvania Regiment; dislocated
his wrist while building huts at Morristown,

1779; a pensioner.

N. 10050.
1897 HEMPSTED,

G.

W.

S. 410.

CHARLES

Newark, Ohio
Great-grandson of Samuel Holliday, who was a
Private in Captain Noah Lankton's Company,
Colonel John Ashley's Berkshire County Regiment, which served at Saratoga, April 26 to May
20, 1777; also a Private in Captain Ezekiel Herrick's Company, Colonel John Ashley's Berkshire County Regiment, from October 13 to October 20, 1781; marched on an alarm under command of Colonel John Ashley, Jr.
B. F.
N. 2280.
S. 80.
1889 HERRICK, LUCIUS CARROLL, M. D.
1447 Highland St., Columbus, Ohio
Grandson of Stephen Herrick, who was a Private,
January, 1776, one year, in Captain Brewster's
Company, Colonel Ebenezer Larned Parsons'
Massachusetts and Connecticut Regiment; a
Teamster, March, 1777, eight months, in Captain
Roger Bulkley's Company, Colonel Wadsworth's
Connecticut Regiment; November, 1777, six
months, same rank and command; in autumn
of 1778, eight months, same rank and command;
shipped on a Privateer, in 1779; captured by a
British frigate; confined in prison ship "Jersey,"
which was anchored in Wallabout Bay, near
present site of Brooklyn Navy Yard, eighteen
months, the last half of the time serving as chief
cook to prisoners; a pensioner.
61

W. R, 34.
N. 2273.
1893 HODGE, Coloxel ORLANDO JOHN
Cleveland, Ohio

S. 73.

of Benjamin Hodge, who was a Private


Captain Jonathan Hale's Company (Glastonbury, Conn.), Colonel Erastus Wolcott's Regiment, which was one of the regiments called into
service, in 1775, by Washington, to guard the
lines until the new army authorized by Congress
was well established; was discharged in 1776
by reason of sickness resulting from exposure
on Lake George; subsequently, while in Marine
Service, the ship upon which he was sailing was
captured by the British, but he with others of
the crew escaped. Ten of the Hodge family were
in the war, among the number was Asahel
Hodge, a cousin, who arose from Private to the
rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, and when the Society of Cincinnatus was formed, became a mem-

Grandson
in

ber.

N. 2231.
1892 HOLDEN, Hon.

W.

R.

S. 31.

7.

LIBERTY EMERY

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Holden, who was a Lieutenant in Captain Green's Company, Colonel
Howe's Massachusetts Regiment; Lieutenant
in Captain Gage's Company, Colonel Webb's
Massachusetts Regiment; in battles of Butts'
Hill, R. L,

New
N. 9549.
1897 HOLT,

West

Point, Fishkill

and Peekskill,

York; a pensioner.

W.

HENRY

R. 112.

S. 359.

C.

94 Kenilworth St., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-grandson of Reuben Hart, who was Ensign
of 3d Company Alarm Lists, 15th Connecticut
Regiment, 1777; Captain's Commission, dated
May 28, 1778, signed by Jonathan Trumbull,
Governor.

N. 2477.
1896 HOUK,

A.

W.

4.

S. 277.

MOULTON
Toledo, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Stephen Moulton, who


was Lieutenant-Colonel in 22d Regiment Connecticut Militia; was taken prisoner September 15,
1776, and exchanged March, 1777.
Great-grandson of Noah Fuller, who was a Private
in Captain Washburn's and Captain Drew's Massachusetts Companies, and in Colonel John
Chandler's Connecticut Regiment.
Great-great-grandson of John Wilson, who was a
Private in the Lexington alarm; also Private in
Colonel Seth Warner's Regiment.
Great-great-grandson of John Johnson, who was
Ensign of Lieutenant Thomas Way's Company,
which went from Lynn for the relief of Boston
in the Lexington alarm, April, 1775, served 9
days; Ensign of Captain Roger Ryley's Company, Colonel Enos' Regiment, 1776; Captain
in guard service at Lynn.
Great-great-great-grandson of Josiah Converse,
who was a Lieutenant in Captain Amos Walbridge's Compauy in the Lexington alarm, April,
1775, ten days; Ensign in Captain Roger Enos'
3d Company, Continental Regiment, June 26 to
December is, 1775; First Lieutenant, 2d Company, Captain Parsons, Colonel Sage, General
Wadsworth's Brigade, from June, 1776, to December 26, 1776; served in New York City and
on Long Island; was in battle of White Plains.

N. 2345.
1893 HOYT, Hon.

W.

R. 44.

S. 145.

JAMES HUMPHREY

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Noah Hoyt, who was a Private
in Captain Benedict's Company, Colonel Bradley's Regiment of Connecticut Militia; in campaign against Burgoyne; was granted a share
of the "Fire Lands."
63

S. 106.

N. 2306.

HUBBARD, ELISHA BLAIR

1890

Tiffin,

Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Colonel Luke Perkins,


who died from wound received in the battle of
Fort Griswold, Connecticut
Great-grandson of Obadiah Perkins, who was a
Lieutenant of Connecticut Militia; wounded at
Groton Heights, September 6, 1781.
N. 11064.
1898 HURIN,

S. 424.

SILAS

E.

Findlay, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Cornelius Ludlow, who
was Major of the "Eastern Battalion," Morris
County, New Jersey, Militia, January 13, 1776;
Major, Colonel Martin's Battalion, Heard's Brigade, June 14, 1776; Lieutenant-Colonel, "Eastern Battalion," Morris County, New Jersey, Militia, May 23, 1777; resigned November 13, 1777,
on account of disability; was in numerous battles; the "Eastern Battalion," Colonel Jacob
Ford then commanding with Lieutenant-Colonel
Cornelius Ludlow, was detached to cover Washington's retreat across New Jersey, after the
evacuation of New York in 1776, a service performed with success and honor.
Great-grandson of Daniel Halsey, who was a Private in the Essex County, New Jersey, Militia.

2245.

1893

W.

R 26.

S. 45.

HURLBUT, WILLIAM LYMAN


Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Captain Samuel Hurlbut, who
was a Private in the Lexington alarm, April,
1775; Ensign 7th Connecticut, July 6 to December 6, 1775; First Lieutenant, 19th Continental
Infantry, January 1 to December 31, 1776; Captain of 5th Company, 7th Regiment, Colonel
64

Webb, Connecticut; was

in

battles of

White

Plains and Trenton; at Princeton; also served


at Ticonderoga, three months in 1776.
of Abiram Hurlbut,
in the Revolutionary War;

Grandson
of

New

who was a
was

soldier

at evacuation

York; a pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Amasa Sheldon, who


served at Ticonderoga in 1776; Private in Captain Stebbin's Company, Colonel David Wells'
Massachusetts Regiment of Militia, 1777; Captain in Colonel Porter's Regiment, August 12,
1777; Captain 4th Company, 5th Regiment,

Hampshire.
Great-grandson of Obadiah Bass, who was a Second Lieutenant in Captain Carson's Company,
7th Regiment, Colonel How; was at the battle
of Bunker Hill; was promoted there for bravery;
made a Captain before the close of service.

N. 2302.
1890 JAMIESON,

S. 102.

CHARLES TITUS
Urbana, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of John Jameson, who was


a Private in the 3d Pennsylvania Regiment, Continental Line, January 1, 1777; wounded and
discharged, 1783.

Great-grandson of Samuel Jamieson, who was a


Private in the 9th Pennsylvania Battalion.
During his service in the war, he restored the
spelling of his surname to the original Scotch
form since continued by his descendants.
Great-great-grandson of Joseph Perrine, who was
a Private in the State Troops and Militia of New
Jersey.

Great-great-great-grandson of Peter Wikoff, who


was a Captain in the 2d Regiment of New Jersey;
also Captain of State Troops.
65

W. R. 159.
S. 433.
N. 11073.
1898 JENKS, BENJAMIN LANE
227 Oakdale St., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Jeremiah Jenks, who was a
Lieutenant of Newport, New Hampshire, volunteers, and took part in the capture of Ticonderoga; member of Committee of Public Safety.
W.

N. 11971.

1898

JENKS, JOHN

K. 157.

S. 431.

HENRY

227 Oakdale St, Cleveland, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his brother, Benjamin Lane


Jenks.

W. R. 160.
N. 11066.
T.
1898 JENKS,
143 Alanson St., Cleveland, Ohio

S. 426.

OWEN

Same

ancestry
Jenks.

as his

brother,

Benjamin Lane

W. E. 158.
N. 11072.
1898 JENKS, ROBERT H.
900 Case Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Same

ancestry as
Jenks.

his

brother,

S. 432.

Benjamin Lane

A. W. 5.
N. 7399.
1896 JEWELL, WINFIELD SCOTT
Traction Company, Toledo, Ohio

S. 334.

Great-grandson of Joseph Jewell, who was a Private in Colonel Frey's New Hampshire Regiment, entering service from Southampton, New
Hampshire; at Cambridge, Mass., October 6,
1775.

S. 353.
A. W. 6.
N. 9543.
1897 JOHNSON, ALBERT L.
646 Oakwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio
Great-grandson of Noah Fuller, who was a Private
in Captain Ebenezer Washburn's Company, Massachusetts, two months in 1776; in Captain Seth
Drew's Company, Colonel Bailey's Regiment,
Massachusetts troops, one year from May, 1777;
his widow, Lucy Wilson Fuller, drew a pension.

John Wilson, who


of
Killingly, Conn., for the relief of

Great-great-grandson

marched from

Boston in the Lexington alarm, April, 1775; was


also a Private in Colonel Seth Warner's Regiment from December 23, 1779, to 1781.
S. 368.
W. R. 120.
N. 9933.
1897 JOHNSON, MERRICK ELY
1274 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Lewis Ely, who was a Private
on the Lexington Alarm Roll of Captain Enoch
Chapin's Company, which inarched April 20, on
the alarm of April 19, 1775, from West Springfield, Mass., and served 8 days; Private in Captain Enoch Chapin's Company, Colonel Timothy
Danielson's Regiment, April 28, 1775, three
months and ten days; Private, same command,
October 6, 1775; his signature appears upon an
order for Bounty Coat, or its equivalent in
money, due for the eight months' service, in
1775, in Captain Enoch Chapin's Company, Colonel Timothy Danielson's Regiment, dated Roxbury, October 25, 1775, payable to Lieutenant
Luke Day.
Great-grandson of Elisha Stevens, who was a Private in Captain Aaron Rowley's Company, Colonel John Brown's Regiment, from June 30 to
July 26, 1777, for service at Fort Ann; Private
in Lieutenant Ezekiel Crocker's Company, Colonel John Brown's Berkshire County Regiment,

August 16 to 20, 1777 (ordered to march to Bennington by Major Hyde).


Great-grandson of Elisha Farnum, who was a Private in Captain Rowley's Company, Colonel
David Moseley's Regiment, Massachusetts Militia, three months in the year 1776, at and about
White Plains, New York; in 1777, served in volunteer company at Saratoga, and was in battle
there; in 1778, in Captain Joseph Merrick's Company, served at and near New London, Connecticut; in 1779-'S0,

was

in

Company commanded

by Captain Levi Ely, Lieutenant Stiles and Ensign Martin Smith, in Colonel Brown's Regiment, Massachusetts troops, served in New York
and was in battle with Tories and Indians where
Colonel Brown and Captain Ely and seventeen
privates were killed, on the Mohawk; also at
Fort Plain, German Flats and SnelFs Bush, in
New York; served twenty-one months; a pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Timothy Day, who was a


"minute man" at Lexington alarm, April 20,
1775, in Captain Enoch Chapin's Company.

N. 7387.
B. F.
S. 322.
1896 JOHNSTON, JOHN ORSON
51 Jefferson Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Noah Amsden, who was in
Captain Boydell's Company, Colonel Bruer's
Regiment, General Dandeson's Brigade; served
eight months in Captain Monger's Company,
Colonel Woodbridge's Regiment, General Bricket's Brigade; also three years in Captain Barnes'
Company, Colonel Mikeson's Regiment.

W.

N. 9945.

1897

E. 129.

S. 380.

JOHNSTON, SAMUEL NEWTON


Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of Benajah Bill, who was a Private
in Captain Lothom's Company (from New London), Colonel Ledyard's Eegiment, Connecticut
troops; served twenty-two months; a pensioner.

N. 2498.
1896 KEARSLEY,

S. 298.

Major

EDMUND ROBERTS

Bucyrus, Ohio
Grandson of Samuel Kearsley, who was a Captain
under General Washington; at Valley Forge in
winter of 1777-'78, General Washington presented him "for meritorious services" a sword
a French rapier, worn by him at Braddock's de-

feat

which

is

in possession of

Edmund

R.

Kearsley.
N. 2242.
1893 KELLEY,

W.

R. 23.

S. 42.

HERMON ALFRED

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Elihu Stow, who was a
Private in Captain Alden's Company, Colonel
Webb's Connecticut Regiment, 1777; taken prisoner; exchanged, 1778; Corporal, 1780; Sergeant, 1781.

N. 2409.
1895 KENDALL,

N. G.

S. 209.

GEORGE WILSON

Xenia, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Galloway, who was a
Private in Captain Hatton's Company, Colonel
Watt's Regiment, Pennsylvania; Private in
Captain Thomson's Company, Colonel Buchanan's Regiment, Pennsylvania; Private in Captain Holliday's Company, Pennsylvania; also
served frequently in Kentucky, during and after
1780, in expeditions against Indians; a pensioner.

Great-grandson of Joseph Galloway, who was a


Private in Captain Taylor's Company, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania.
Great-great-grandson of David Jackson, who was
a Private in Washington's Army; was in the
battle of Trenton, where a cannon ball took away
his hand and broke his gun.

W.
KENDIG, KARL

N. 9948.

1S97

K. 126.

S. 383.

Akron, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of John Creigh, who was
commissioned Second Lieutenant of a Company
of foot in the First Battalion of Associators, in
the County of Cumberland, Pennsylvania, April
29, 1776; June 18, 1776, he went to Philadelphia
as a delegate from Cumberland County to attend
a meeting of the Provisional Conferees, and
on June 24, a Committee, previously appointed,
presented a Declaration of Independence for the
Colony of Pennsylvania from the Crown of Great
Britain, which was unanimously adopted; June
26, 1776, having returned from the Provincial
Conference, marched with his Company from
Carlisle to join Continental forces at Perth Amboy, and returned in September, 1776; November 28, 1776, was Lieutenant-Colonel.
N. 11362.

1898

A.

KENYON, JOHN

W.

23.

S. 447.

M.

224 Twelfth St., Toledo, Ohio


Great-grandson of Alexander Comins, who served
as a Private in Pennsylvania troops as follows:
August, 1776, two months, in Captain James
McKinley's Company; October, 1776, three
months, in Captain John Leard's Company, Colonel McAllister's Regiment; September, 1777,
two months, same command; May, 1778, two
months in Captain Jolley's Company, Colonel
70

August, 1782, two


Regiment;
months, in Major Barley's command. Was in
battles of Trenton and Brandywine.

McComas's

N. 7384.
1896 KIBLER,

G.

W.

S. 319.

EDWARD
Newark, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Benjamin Wilson, who


was Colonel commanding Virginia troops; also
Colonel on Staff of Lord Dunmore, and in command of the troops of Northwestern Virginia;
he equipped his own regiment, and for services
rendered received a grant of four thousand
acres of land in Licking County, Ohio; Delegate
to the Virginia Convention that ratified the
Constitution of the United States; brother of
James Wilson, signer of Declaration of Independence.

Great-great-grandson of William Brice, who was


an Ensign in Colonel Evans' 4th Battalion, Chester County, Pennsylvania, Associators, October
21, 1775; Lieutenant under Colonel Sterling;
subsequently Captain; in battles of Long Island
and Trenton; at Valley Forge winter of 1777-'78.

W. R. 36.
N. 2333.
1893 KIMBALL, GEORGE HENRY
87 Adelbert Ave., Cleveland, Ohio

S. 133.

Great-grandson of Joshua Kimball, who was a


Private, in 1777, in Captain Johnson's Company,
Colonel Titcomb's Regiment; in 1778, in Captain
Bodwell's Company, Colonel Gerrish's Regiment;
in 1780, in Captain Ayre's Company, Colonel
Wade's Regiment; in 1781, in Captain Mallon's
Company, Colonel Putnam's Regiment.

N. 9937.
1897 KIMBALL,

W.

R. 124.

S. 372.

HOMER NASH

Madison, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Richard Kimball, who was
a member of the Committee of Safety of Ringe,
Colony of New Hampshire; on Town Committee
to examine Bill of Rights and Constitution, 17S1
was known as Lieutenant when he came to
Ringe; was too old for military service.
Great-great-grandson of Solomon Cutler, who was
a Captain in Colonel Enoch Hale's Regiment;
marched at requisition of Major General Gates
from counties of Cheshire and Hillsborough,
New Hampshire, to reinforce the army at Ticonderoga, engaged October 22, 1776; furnished
eight horses to carry baggage for regiment; January 29, 1777, marched with part of Colonel
Enoch Hale's Regiment to reinforce the garrison
at Ticonderoga; was also on the Committee of
Safety, and held various civil official positions.

S. 417.
W. R. 150.
N. 11057
1897 KIMBALL, LAFAYETTE
91 Adelbert Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Joshua Kimball, who was a Private
in Captain S. Johnson's Company, Colonel Titcomb's Regiment, two months and ten days, from
April 27, 1777; in Captain John Bodwell's Company, Colonel Gerrish's Regiment, two months
and sixteen days, from April 2, 1778; same Company, ten days, from July 2, 1778; in Captain
John Ayre's Company, Colonel Wade's Regiment, three months and seven days, from July
15, 1780; in Captain James Mallon's Company,
Colonel Putnam's Regiment, two months and
fourteen days, from August IS, 1781; was lfi
years old when he enlisted, and was over six feet

in height.

Great-grandson of Joseph Philbrick, who was a


Private in Captain Moses Leavitt's Company,
Colonel Thomas Bartlett's Regiment, July 8,
1780; marched from New Hampshire and joined
Continental Army at West Point, August, 1TS0.
N. 2309.
1890 KINSEY,

S. 109.

C.

GEORGE
Wyoming, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Samuel Kinsey, who was


a Lieutenant in Dean's Company, 7th Regiment,
Maryland Line, from 1776 to close of war; was
in

Commissary Department;

his oldest son,

fif-

teen years of age, hauled supplies to Valley


Forge.
Great-great-great-grandson of Jonathan Ingham,
who was a Private in the Solebury Company of
Associators, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Captain John Coryell, August 21, 1775; in active
service.

N. 2996.

1896

C.

S. 306.

KINSEY, BOYDEN
Wyoming, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his father, George Kinsey.

S. 223.
C.
N. 2423.
1895 KINSEY, SAMUEL
276 Clark St., Cincinnati, Ohio
Same ancestry as his brother, George Kinsey.
S. 16.
W. R. 15.
N. 2216.
1892 KNIGHT, THOMAS SPENCER
1370 Cedar St., Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Phinehas Knight, who was a Private
in the 3d Company of General Israel Putnam's
3d Connecticut Regiment, Continental Line; Private under Colonel Benedict Arnold; Private in
Captain Riley's Company, Colonel Webb's 3d

Regiment, Continental Line, for two and a half


Private in Captain Leffingw ell's Company, under Colonel Enos, Connecticut troops;
at Bunker Hill, siege of Boston, New York, Long
Island, etc.; taken prisoner at Long Island; a

years;

pensioner.

W. R, 72.
LEAVITT, PERCY WARD

N. 2467.

1896

S. 267.

Akron, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Benjamin Leavitt, who
was a Private in Captain Arnold's Company, Colonel Wingate's Regiment, New Hampshire; Private in Captain Parsons' Company, Colonel Gilman's Regiment, New Hampshire; Private in
Captain Leavitt's Company, Colonel Nichols'
Regiment; Private in Colonel Baldwin's Massachusetts Regiment; Private in Captain Jewell's
Company, Colonel Bartlett's Regiment, New
Hampshire Militia; also a Selectman of North
Hampton, 1781; supposed to have been in battle of

Bunker

Hill.

W. R. 128.
LLNDSEY, THEODORE STACY

N. 9946.

1897

11 Granger

S. 381.

Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Habakuk Lindsey, who was a Private
in Captain Samuel Epes' Company, Colonel Pickering's Regiment, which marched on the Lexington alarm from Danvers, Mass., April 19, 1775;
service, two days; was also at battle of Stillwater, New York, October 7, 1777.

N. 2992.
1896 LLOYD,

St.,

C.

S. 302.

JOHN URI
Cincinnati, Ohio

Grandson of Josiah Gates, a Captain


Chapman's Regiment, Connecticut.

in Colonel

Great-grandson of Daniel Ashley, a First Lieutenant in Baldwin's Regiment, New Hampshire


Militia.
74

W.

7391.
)6

R. 94.

S. 326.

LOCKWOOD, JOHN SEYMOUR


Painesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Major Moses Seymour, who was
Captain of a Troop attached to 17th Regiment,
Connecticut Militia; Captain in 5th Regiment
Cavalry; also Commissary of Supplies at Litchfield; served through the war; was in the Danbury Alarm and the battle of Saratoga.

N. 2227.

1892

S. 27.

LOGAN, Lieutenant GEORGE WOOD,

U.

S.

Navy
Navy Department, Washington, D.

C.

Great-great-great-grandson of Dr. Matthew Thornton, who was a Signer of the Declaration of Independence; Colonel of New Hampshire Militia;
President of New Hampshire Provincial Convention; member of Continental Congress; Chief
Justice of Hillsborough County; Judge New
Hampshire Supreme Court; member of New
Hampshire Legislature and Governor's Council.

N. 2369.
1894 LOGAN,

S. 169.

Major

JOHN

A., Jr., U. S. V.

Youngstown, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Becket de Roche Fontaine, who was a Captain of Engineers, French
Contingent, May 15, 1778.

Great-great-grandson of John Cunningham, who


was an Ensign in the 7th Virginia, May 8, 1776.
Great-great-great-grandson of Isaac Hicks, who
was a Captain in the 3d Georgia, July, 1776;
taken prisoner at Briar Creek, March 3, 1779.

N. 2252.
1893 LONGSTRETH,

B. F.

S. 52.

THADDEUS

(Life

Member)

Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Colonel Benjamin Dennis, who
after peace had been declared, was assassinated
by Tories; his friends avenged his murder; his
wife was subjected to most cruel treatment during the war, being hanged three times by the
British and as many times cut down by her
neighbors.

S. 142.
N. 2342.
1893 LYBAKGER, CAPTAIN EDWIN LEWIS
Spring Mountain, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Thompson, who was a
Private in Captain Holmes' Company, Second
Regiment New Jersey Infantry; served seven

years.

W. R. 132.
McBRIDE, JOHN HARRIS

N. 9942.

1897

S. 377.

1357 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of George Harris, who was a Sergeant in the 2d Regiment of New Jersey troops;
also in Lee's Legion of Cavalry, commanded by
Colonel Henry Lee, commonly called "Light
Horse Harry."

W. R. 131.
McBRIDE, LEANDER

N. 9943.

1897

S. 378.

1351 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his brother, John Harris Mc-

Bride.

B. F.

N. 9541.

1897

S. 351.

McCONNELL, ALEXANDER
86 Latta Ave., Columbus, Ohio
of Captain James McConnell, who commanded one of the thirteen Companies, that went
from Franklin County, Pennsylvania, to the seat
of war August 16, 1776; was at the "Crossing
of the Delaware" with Washington.

Grandson

N. 10046.
S. 406.
1897 McDOUGALL, TAYLOR
2133 Alpine Place, Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of William Taylor, who was
a Private in Captain Bateman Lloyd's Company,
2d Regiment, New Jersey Continental Line, also
acting as Wagon Master, from 1778 to 1783.

N. 10047.
1897 McDOUGALL, THOMAS LAIDLAW
2133 Alpine Place, Cincinnati, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his brother, Taylor McDougall.

W.

N. 7377.

1896

S. 407.

R. 88.

S. 312.

McKELVEY, JOHN
Sandusky, Ohio
of William McKelvey, who was a Private
in Pennsylvania troops; lost a leg in the service; for his disability and service, he was
granted land in Ohio and a pension.

Grandson

Great-grandson of Joel Adams, who was Ensign


in 2d Company of First Connecticut Battalion,
June, 1776; Lieutenant, same Company and
Regiment, January, 1778; he not only served
himself in the Revolution, but freed all his able
bodied slaves so they could also become soldiers;
was wounded at Lake George.
77

S. 206.

N. 240G.

1S95

Mckinley, Hon. william, president of the


United States
Washington, D. C.
Great-grandson of David McKinley, of Chanceford,
Pennsylvania, who served as a Private as follows: In 1776, seven months under Captain
McCaskey, Colonel MeCollester; in 1777, two
months under Captain Ross, Colonel Smith; two
months under Captain Laird, and two months
under Captain Reed, General Potter; in 1778,
two months under Captain Holderbaum, Colonel
Elder, two months under Captain Sloymaker,
Colonel Boyd, two months under Captain Robe,
Colonel Barr, and two months under Captain
Harnahan; in battles of Paulus Hook, Amboj
and Chestnut Hill; a pensioner; after the war
lived in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania,
fifteen years, then removed to Mercer County,
and in i814 settled in Columbiana County, Ohio.

W.

N. 9950.

1S97

R. 134.

S. 385.

MACKEY, JOHN
Sandusky, Ohio

Grandson
vate in

McDonald Campbell, who was a PriCaptain Forman's Company, 4th Battalof

ion, Second Establishment, New Jersey; as a


Fifer in the Militia; also Fifer in Captain Corey's
Company, 1st Battalion, Somerset County, New
Jersey; in battle of Monmouth; a pensioner.

N. 2224.

1892

W.

R. 13.

S. 24.

MANCHESTER, DANIEL WILBERT


Cleveland, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Benjamin Mills, who was


a Sergeant in a Company from New Hartford,
Connecticut; at the battle of Lexington; First
Lieutenant Fifth Company, New Hartford Continental Regiment; Captain, Colonel Burr's Reg78

iment, General Wadsworth's Brigade; served


during the war, but never received any pay for

such services.

Great-grandson of John Manchester, who was a


Private in the Artillery service on the Rhode
Island coast; a pensioner.

Great-grandson of Abner Case, who was a Private


in Captain Brown's Company, Colonel Pettibone's Regiment, General Wolcott; in battles
about New York, 1776.

W.

N. 2457.

1895

R. 70.

S. 257.

MARLATT, WILLIAM HENRY


13 Granger

St.,

Cleveland, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Henry Monfort, who was


a Private in the New Jersey Militia, Somerset
County.
Great-great-grandson of Jacob Wager, who was an
Ensign, afterwards First Lieutenant, New York
Militia, Albany County, 6th Regiment, Rensselaernyck Battalion.

Great-great-grandson of Peter Marlatt, who enlisted at Readington, New Jersey, and at various
times served in militia, state troops and Continental Line New Jersey troops; a pensioner.

S. 292.

N. 2492.

1896

MARSHALL, ALLEN

L.

Piqua, Ohio
Great-grandson of Charles Cracraft, who was a
Captain at sundry times and Major in General
George Rogers Clark's expedition against western Indians in 1781; captured by Indians and
confined a year at Detroit, his health being impaired thereby; he refused a grant of land in
Ohio.

N. 2456.
1895 MARSHALL,

S. 256.

ALVA ORE

Sidney, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Charles Cracraft, mentioned in ancestry of Allen L. Marshall.

N. 10029.
1897 MARTIN, Rev.

W.

R. 140.

S. 389.

CLEMENT GRAHAM

Sandusky, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Conrad Burghdorf (sometimes spelled Burghdo and Burdjah), who was
a Private in Captain John Drake's Company,
Colonel Samuel Drake's 3d Westchester County

Regiment of New York Militia, in June, 1779,


and June, 1781; the regiment was in active service in Revolutionary War.
S. 376.

N. 9941.

1897

MARTIN, JAMES

(Son)
Mt. Vernon, Ohio

of Adam Martin, who was First Lieutenant on


Lexington Alarm Roll of Captain Parker's Company, Colonel Warner's Regiment, April 19,
1775; his name appears among a list of officers
in Colonel Ebenezer Learned's Regiment in camp
at Roxbury, Mass., May 19, 1775; received his

Son

discharge, January

2,

1780.

N. 2463.
B. F.
1895 MARTIN, Lieutenant JOHN

S. 263.

THOMAS,

U.

S.

Army
Fort Pickens, Florida

Great-grandson of Simeon Moore, Jr., who was a


"minute man" in Captain Barber's 8th Company,
Connecticut; an enlisted man in the Line for
"
three years; also a volunteer in the Privateer
service for one year; was in battles of Bunker
Hill and Monmouth; also at Valley Forge.

W.

N. 7378.

1896

E. 90.

S. 313.

MARVIN, RICHARD PRATT


Akron, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Jabez Stowe, who was
Second Lieutenant in a Company of Matrosses
at Fort Trumbull; taken prisoner, September 6,
1781, during Arnold's attack on New London;
confined on prison ship "Jersey" in New York
Harbor.

W.

N. 9534.

1897

MASON, FRANK

R. 105.

S. 344.

H.

Akron, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Richard Peabody who
was a Lieutenant; was at the battle of Lexington, and performed other service.
,

N.

1890

S. 97.

MAYER, WALTER

S.,

Post-Office Inspector

Chicago, Illinois
Great-great-grandson of James Pettigrew,
a Captain in a Connecticut Regiment.
N. 10039.

1897

W.

R. 143.

who was

S. 399.

MEANS, WILLIAM ALFRED


133^ South Maple St., Akron, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of John Means, who was a
Private in Captain Joseph Sherer's Company,
Colonel James Burd's Battalion of the organized Associators of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, which Company was in active service during the whole spring and summer campaign of
1776; Private in Captain John Murray's Com-

pany, Lieutenant-Colonel Daniel Broadhead's


2d Battalion of the "Pennsylvania Rifle Regiment," which was in the battle of Long Island,
August 27, 1776; was in battles of Trenton,
Princeton, Brandy wine and Germantown; in
1778, was at home and took oath of allegiance

to the State of Pennsylvania, prescribed by act


of Assembly of June 13, 1777; subsequently in

Captain Samuel Cochran's Company, Colonel


Bobert Elder's Tenth Battalion of Lancaster
County Militia; in 1781, in Captain Campbell's
Company of the Pennsylvania Line and formed
part of Colonel Thomas Craig's detachment
which marched in the autumn of 1781 for Yorktown, Virginia, and thence Southward, taking
part in General Green's Georgia and South Carolina campaign of 1782 and returning to Pennsylvania by sea in 1783.
Great-great-grandson of Samuel Cochran, who was
Captain of one of the Companies of Colonel
Bobert Elder's Tenth Battalion of Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania, Militia.

Great-great-great-grandson of Joseph Sherer, who


was Captain of one of the Companies of Colonel
James Burd's Battalion of the Organized Associators of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania; was
in active service during the spring and summer

campaign

1896

of 177G.

W.

N.

B. 85.

S. 295.

MELLEN, LUCIUS FBEEMAN


Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Patrick Mellen, who was a pensioner for military service in the Bevolution.

N. 7398.
1896 MELVIN,

A.

W.

7.

S. 333.

JAMES

Toledo, Ohio
Grandson of Amos Melvin, who was a "minute
man" at Concord; was the guard who, at the
Court House, fired his gun and rang the bell on
the approach of the British; was one of the first
guard at Cambridge; served also in Captain

Wheeler's Concord Company; also Corporal in


Captain Hunt's Company, Colonel Brook's Eegiruent.
82

N. 2460.
1895 MOORE, Rev.

B. F.

S. 260.

WILLIAM EVES,

D. D., LL. D.,

Chaplain

O. N. G., (Retired)
976 East Long St., Columbus, Ohio
Grandson of Jacob Fearis, who was Captain of a

Company of Delaware Militia in General Maxwell's Corps, in the active operations leading up
to the battle of Brandywine.
Great-grandson of Jacob Moore, who was a Private
in Captain Jacob Fearis' Company of Delaware
Militia.

B. F.

N. 2461.

1895

S. 261.

MOORE, Major HENRY McINTIRE WORTHLNGTON, Surgeon

O. V. A.

976 East Long St., Columbus, Ohio


ancestry as his father, Rev. William Eves
Moore.

Same
N. 9528.

1897

B. F.

S. 338.

MOOREHEAD, WARREN KING


30 Jefferson Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-great-grandson of Elihu Kent, who
was Captain of the Suffield, Connecticut, Company of "minute men" who marched on the Lexington alarm, April 20, 1775, the first body of
armed troops that passed through Springfield,
Massachusetts; May, 1777, Major of the First
Connecticut Militia; served during the war, to
1783. He was an officer in the French War.

N. 10027.
1897 MORRIS,

A.

W.

18.

S. 387.

FRANCIS DUNLAVY

Toledo, Ohio
Great-grandson of Francis Dunlavy,

who was

Private, in 1776, two months and fifteen days;


in 1777, fourteen days; in 1778, two months and
twenty-three days; was a Sergeant, in 1779,
thirty-five days; in 1782, forty-two days; a pensioner; residence, before service, Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

N. 11357.

1898

W.

R, 165.

S. 442.

MORRISON,

Captain IRA I.
Akron, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Josiak Smitk, who was
Second Lieutenant of Captain Freedom Chamberlain's Company, Massackusetts troops, Marck
5, 1776; marcked on tke alarm at tke taking of
Dorckester Heigkts.

N. 2222.
S. 22.
W. R. 16.
1892 MORTON, JOHN TRENMOR
23 Hawtkorne Ave., Cleveland, Okio
Great-great-grandson of Jokn Morton, wko was a
member of tke Stamp Act Congress at New York,
1765; member of Continental Congress, 17741776; signer of tke Declaration of Independence;
wken on kis way to cast kis vote for Independence ke was mobbed and stoned by Tories witb
suck effect tkat kis korse dropped dead, and kis
kealtk was so impaired as to kasten kis deatk.

Great-grandson of Aaron Morton, wko, wkile too


young to bear arms, many times drove a team
witk supplies for tke army.
N. 2340.
1893 MOULTON,

W.

R. 41.

S. 140.

WILLIAM JAMES
Cleveland, Okio

of Stepken Moulton, wko was a Lieutenant-Colonel, Connecticut Militia; went from


town of Stafford, in tke Lexington alarm for tke
relief of Boston, serving seven days; Fifer in

Grandson

Captain Hezekiak Parsons' Company, Colonel


Sage, of Middletown, General Wadswortk commanding 3d Brigade; Lieutenant-Colonel in
Twenty-second Regiment, Colonel Samuel Ckapman; taken prisoner at Fort AVashington and
confined tkere; was a member of tke celebrated
band of Musicians of tke Revolutionary Army

under Timothy Olmstead taken prisoner at New


York, September 15, 1776; exchanged, March,
;

1777.

N. 2380.
1894 MOULTON, Colonel

S. 180.

BENJAMIN M.
Lima, Ohio
Great-grandson of Stephen Moulton, mentioned
the ancestry of William James Moulton.

N. 2352.
1893 MOULTON,

in

S. 152.

CHANDLER JULIUS

Lucasville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Amariah Ainsworth, who was
a Private in Colonel Wyman's Regiment, New
Hampshire, 1776; Private in Colonel Bellow's
Regiment, 1777, which went to reinforce General
Gates at Saratoga.

N. 2358.
1893 MUNSON, Colonel

P.

GILBERT

S.

D. (Life

158.

Member)

Zanesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Asa Gilbert, who enlisted at
New Hartford, Litchfield County, Connecticut,
1775, and served under Captains Shubal Griswold, Thomas Bidwell, Noah Kellogg and Joseph
Walker, and Colonels Jonathan Pettibone and
S. B. Webb; on an alarm, in 1775, was accidentally wounded; a pensioner.

N. 9526.

1896

S. 336.

NEWTON, CHARLES HUMPHREYS


Marietta, Ohio
Great-grandson of Elias Newton, who was Fifer
in Captain Solomon Willis' Company, 2d Connecticut
Continental Regiment,
General
Spencer; Fifer, Captain Clark's Company, 3d
Battalion, Wadsworth's Brigade, Connecticut
State Troops; his widow drew a pension.

N. 2383.
1894 NORMS,

S. 183.

MYRON AUGUSTINE
Youngstown, Ohio

Grandson

of Eliphalet Norris,

who was

a Private

Captain James Morris' Company, Colonel


New Hampshire Regiment; Sergeant in
1st Company, 2d Regiment, commanded by Colonel Reed; served throughout the war.

in

Poor's

S. 96.
N. 2296.
C.
1890 NORTON, Professor THOMAS
Ph. D., Sc. D. (Life Member)
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Colonel Ebenezer Norton,
of Goshen, Connecticut, who was LieutenantColonel of the 17th Regiment, Connecticut Militia, to December, 1776; Representative in the
Colonial Legislature for 22 terms, to 1779; Agent
of the Colony for collecting military supplies
during the Revolution.
Great-grandson of Hon. Ebenezer Norton, of
Goshen, Connecticut, who was a Private in Cap-

HERBERT,

Medad Hill's Company of "minute men,"


December, 1776; manufacturer of muskets for
the Colony during the Revolution.
Great-great-grandson of Captain Benjamin Mills,
tain

of Simsbury, Connecticut, who was a Sergeant


in the Lexington alarm, April, 1775; First Lieu-

tenant 4th Connecticut Regiment, 1775; Captain


in Bradley's Battalion, Wadsworth's Brigade,
1776; Captain in Colonel Beebe's Regiment,
1779.

W.
NYE, CLARK H.

N. 11065.

1897

R. 108.

S. 425.

Painesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Nathaniel Clark, of Windsor,

Connecticut, who served as a Private about


three years, in various Connecticut Regiments,
in the Revolutionary War; a pensioner.

W.

N. 2218.

1892

K.

S. 18.

9.

OLNEY, Professor CHARLES FAYETTE


137 Jennings Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Ezekiel Olney, who was a Captain in
the Ehode Island Militia.

N. 2993.

189G

S. 303.

C.

OWENS, ALFRED DECKER,

Jr.
Cincinnati, Ohio

438 West Court St.,


Great-great-grandson of Othniel Looker, who
served in New Jersey troops, under Colonel Martin and Colonel Ogden; in battles of Long Island

and White Plains.

W. R. 66.
PAINE, JAMES HILL

N. 2440.

1895

S. 240.

260 East Prospect St, Cleveland, Ohio


Great-grandson of Brinton Paine, who was, October 17, 1775, Captain in the 6th Regiment New

York Levies and Militia, Charlotte Precinct;


September 10, 1776, First Captain in Colonel
Graham's Regiment of Foot, under command of
Brigadier-General

February

Clinton

at

King's

Bridge;

Second Major in 6th Regiment New York Levies and Militia; July 1, 1780,
Lieutenant-Colonel in Charlotte County Militia,
Dorset Regiment; 1781, Lieutenant-Colonel of
Colonel Du Bois' Regiment of Levies; suffered
about a year's imprisonment in the same British
Provost Jail, New York, where Colonel Ethan
18,

1779,

Allen was confined.


N. 2489.
S. 289.
1896 PARSONS, Captain
DARIUS
Pacific Coast Steamship "Queen"
3421 Nineteenth St., San Francisco,

EDWARD

Same

California
ancestry as Rev. Wilson Riley Parsons, his

uncle.
87

S. 26.
W. R. 19.
PARSONS, Colonel KICHAKD CHAPPELL

N. 2226.

1892

594 Prospect

St.,

Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of Ezekiel Williams, who was Commissary of Prisoners for the State of Connecticut, with rank of Deputy Commissary General;
member of Committee to pay the towns of Connecticut for service in the Lexington alarm; one
of eleven, who gave their individual notes for
funds with which to carry out the plan for the
capture of Ticonderoga; member of Committee
to issue Bills of Credit for the State of Connecticut; brother of William Williams, signer of
the Declaration of Independence.

N. 2201.

1889

B. F.

PARSONS,

Rev.

WILSON RILEY

S. 1.

(Life)

Worthington, Ohio
Sr., who was a
Revolutionary Army; died from
wounds received in the battle of White Plains;
was a brother of Major-General Samuel Holden

Grandson

of
Private in

Benjamin Parsons,

Parsons.

Great-grandson of Stephen Clark, who was a Private in Captain Bunnell's Company, Colonel
Douglass' 5th Battalion, Wadsworth's Brigade,
Connecticut troops; served five years.

Grandson of Elisha Shepard, who was Captain and


owner of a six gun vessel; severely wounded and
taken prisoner in an engagement with a twenty
gun British ship.
Great-grandson of General Shepard, who was an
officer in the Revolutionary Army; commanded
troops at Springfield in the suppression of Shay's
Rebellion, 1796.

N. 2256.
1893 PEASE, A.

S. 56.

PER LEE,

M. D.

Massillon, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Elijah Blackman, who


was a Captain and afterwards Major during the
Revolutionary War; at the evacuation of Long
Island and in battle of White Plains; his Company was the last to leave Long Island.

Great-grandson of Abner Pease, who was a Private, 5th Company, 2d Regiment, General Spencer's Connecticut Militia; at Bunker Hill and
siege of Boston; was in Arnold's expedition to
Quebec.

Edmond Per Lee, who was a


soldier in the battle of Bennington; afterwards
Paymaster in Colonel Roswell Hopkins' Regi-

Great-grandson of

ment, Dutchess County,

went

New

W. R. 111.
PECHIN, JOHN SHELLEY

N. 9550.

1897

York,

Miiltia,

which

into service October 10, 1779.

S. 360.

587 Prospect St., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of John Russell, who received a pension for service in the war of the
Revolution.
N. 2353.
1893 PEEBLES,

Portsmouth, Ohio
William Peebles, who was a Captain
the 2d Battalion of Miles' Pennsylvania Rifle

Grandson
in

S. 153.

JOHN GEDDES

of

Regiment, March

taken prisoner at
9, 1776;
Island, August 27, 1776; died while prisoner of war October, 1776; he spent four hundred pounds of his own means to raise and equip
his Company, which was repaid to him in Continental Scrip only.

Long

N. 2244.
1893 PEEKINS,

W.

R. 24.

S. 44.

DOUGLAS

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Simon Perkins, who was Second Lieutenant in Captain Wheeler's Company,
Colonel Chapman's Regiment, Connecticut Militia; subsequently a Captain; died in service,
1778.

N. 11055.
W. E. 147.
S. 421.
1898 PEEEY, STEPHEN WARNER, M. D.
62 Dorchester Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of James Dickey, who was
a Private in Captain Morrill's Company, Colonel
Cilley's 1st New Hampshire Regiment, from
April, 1777, to June, 1783; a pensioner.

W. E. 135.
PHINNEY, ARTHUR

S. 384.

N. 9949.

1897

Sandusky, Ohio
Great-grandson of Colonel John Phinney, who was
Colonel of a Massachusetts Regiment in 1775;
Colonel of the 18th Continental Infantry from
January 1 to December 31, 1776; in May, 1775,
he marched his regiment to Cambridge, and
when the British troops evacuated Boston, the
next year, his regiment was the first to enter;
in the autumn of 1776, he marched with his regiment to Ticonderoga and took part in the military movements in that and the following year.
N. 9545.

1896

B. F.

PILCHER, Captain JAMES

S. 355.

E.,

Assistant Sub-

geon U. S. Army
Fort Crook, Nebraska
Great-great-grandson of Captain Peleg Ransom,
who commanded a Company in 3d Ulster County
Regiment, New York Militia; in active service
from 1778 to close of war.
90

Great-great-grandson of Hon. James Woodbury,


who was a member of a Committee "for Raising
Troops for the Army" at Amherst, New Hampshire, in 1776; had been a Subaltern in Colonel
Eogers' Eegiment of Bangers, under command
of General Wolfe, at storming of Quebec, 1759.

R. P.

N. 2431.

1895

S. 231.

PINKERTON, SHERWOOD MORTLEY


Zanesville, Ohio

Great-great-great-grandson of Elias Conklin, who


was a Private in Captain Van Bunschoten's
Company, Colonel Brinkerhoff's 2d Regiment,
Dutchess County, New York, Militia; Private,

Captain Tyler's Company; Private, Captain


Company; Private, Captain Chambers' Company; served four years on Indian frontier.

A. W. 19.
PRAY, JOHN LANSING

N. 10045.

1897

S. 405.

Whitehouse, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Pray, who was Ensign of
the Third Military Company of Glacester, Rhode
Island, 1780; Lieutenant of same Company,
1781.

2211.

1892

S. 11.

PRICE, Captain

SAMUEL MORRISON

Coshocton, Ohio
Great-grandson of Thomas Butler, on whose farm
was built Butler's Fort, in 1773, which was used
as a defense until 1789; was a Justice, and Sheriff

of

Monongalia County

Virginia,

Great-grandson of John Carpenter, who was a


dier in the Revolutionary Army.

sol-

N. 11361.
1898 QUAYLE,

W.

E. 166.

S. 446.

CHARLES TOD

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-great-grandson of Divan Berry, Jr.,
who was commissioned Ensign of the 6th Company or Trainband of the 10th Eegiment of Connecticut Colony, June, 1776; Second Lieutenant
in the 6th Company in the First Battalion; in
early summer and fall was at Bergin Heights
and Paulus Hook; in October was moved up the
river to vicinity of Fort Lee, then under General
Green's command, and in November most of the
regiment was sent across to assist in defending

Fort Washington.
N. 2204.

1892

S. 4.

RAMBO,

Rev.

WILLIAM EDWARD
Brownsville, Pennsylvania

Great-great-grandson of Samuel Giles, who enlisted in 1776; was with Washington at the
Crossing of the Delaware in battle of Trenton,
December 25, 1776; a Corporal in Captain Page's
Company, Colonel Francis' 11th Massachusetts
Regiment; at Ticonderoga, the surrender of
Burgoyne, and Valley Forge; in battle of Monmouth; served five years.
Great-great-great-grandson of Thomas Giles, who
was a soldier in the Lexington alarm; at battle
of Bunker Hill, the day after which he died from
fatigue and exhaustion.

N. 2374.

1894

B. F.

RANDALL,

Hon.

EMILIUS OVIATT,

S. 174.

Ph.

B.,

LL. M.

Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Randall; enlisted from
New London, Connecticut, July 13, 1775, in Colonel Huntington's Regiment, General Spencer's
Brigade; after siege of Boston was in Colonel
92

Parson's Regiment and marched under Washington to the defense of New York ; in battle of
Long Island, August 27, 1776; later served in
General Green's command, Wadsworth's Brigade, Captain Simeon Smith's Company; taken
prisoner at Fort Washington, November 16, 1776
served through the entire Revolutionary War.
Great-grandson of Patrick Grant Pemberton; enlisted in the Connecticut Militia, General Andrew
Ward's command, Lieutenant Colonel Gallup's
Regiment, Captain Williams' Company; stationed at Fort Griswold, Groton, July 11, 1779.
Great-grandson of Benjamin Oviatt; enlisted December 23, 1776, as "minute man" and volunteer
from Winchester, Connecticut, in the Connecticut troops.

N. 1810.

1897

RATHBONE,

C.

Hon.

S. 154.

ESTES GEORGE

(Transferred from District of Columbia Society)

Hamilton, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Rev. John Rathbone, of
Stonington, Connecticut, who, in 1775, was a
signer of a memorial to the General Assembly
of Connecticut, praying that cannon be furnished
for the protection of that town against another
attack by the British.
Great-grandson of John Rathbone, Jr., who signed
the above named memorial with his father.
N. 2348.

1893

W.

R. 47.

S. 148.

RAYMOND, FITCH
Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Paul Raymond, who was Major
of a command that marched through Concord
to Cambridge at the Lexington alarm, April 19,
1775; February 2, 1776, commissioned Major in
Colonel Denney's First Worcester County Regiment; June, 1776, commissioned LieutenantColonel in Colonel Holman's Regiment, for service in Canada and New York.

W.

N. 9535.

1897

R. 106.

REYNOLDS, ARLINGTON

S. 345.

G.

Painesville, Ohio

Great-grandson of John Reynolds, who enlisted in


the war of the Revolution from Norwich, Connecticut; was in the Lexington alarm; in Bigelow's
Artillery
sician in

Company; March

7, 1777, was a MuFourth Regiment, Connecticut Line;


in Captain Horton's

March 25, 1777, Sergeant


Company; a pensioner.
N. 2488.
1896 RHODES,

C.

S.

288.

THOMAS DANIEL

Woodlawn, Hamilton County, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of William Wheatley, who
was a Private in Captain Talbot's Company, Colonel Irvine's 7th Regiment, Pennsylvania Line;
in battles of Brandywine, Paoli and Germantown.

W.R.

N. 2223.

1892

14.

S. 23.

RICHARDSON, Hon. JAMES McELROY


Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Aaron Richardson, who was an
Ensign in Captain Cook's Company, Colonel
Gardner's Massachusetts Regiment; promoted
to Second Lieutenant and Captain; Selectman

Newton, Mass., 1778-1779-1780; died, 1786,


from effects of wounds and exposure during the

of

war.
N. 2249.

1893

W.

R.

8.

S. 49.

RICHARDSON, WILLIAM
Wichita, Kansas
Great-grandson of Benjamin Richardson, who was
First Lieutenant in Captain Newhall's Massachusetts Company, Lexington alarm; April 4,
1776, Captain 1st Company, 1st Regiment of
Militia,
Worcester County, Colonel Samuel

Denny; August, 1776, Captain of Company iB


Colonel Dyke's Eegiment; member of Committee of Correspondence in Leicester in 1776 and
1777; Eepresentative from Sterling in May,
1787.

A.

N. 2453.

1895

W.

11.

S. 253.

EICKENBAUGH, FEANK WESLEY


Toledo, Ohio
Great-grandson of Amherst Dyer, who was a Private in Ehode Island troops, in both Infantry and
Artillery; served under following officers: Captain Clark, Colonel Dyer, Captain James Parker,
Colonel Cook, Captain Wright, Captain Carlisle,
Colonel Elliott, Captain Parker (of Colonel Jackson's Continental Eegiment) and Captain Samuel
Dyer; he also served on an American Privateer
vessel, and was twice taken prisoner; was for
three months bound in irons and suffered almost
death.

A. W. 12.
N. 2452.
1895 EICKENBAUGH, EALPH ELMEE
Toledo, Ohio

Same

S. 252.

ancestry as his brother, Frank Wesley Eick-

enbaugh.

N. 2215.

1892

EITCHIE,

C.

S. 15.

EDWAEDS
Wyoming, Ohio
Eobert Gray, who was a

soldier
Great-grandson of
under Captains Turbett and Eobinson, in the
forces of Generals Putnam and Watts of the
Militia; temporarily attached to Eegular troops
to attack the British landing at Sandy Hook;
served under Captain Boal against Indians on
the Juniata Eiver.

N. 11351.
B.F.
1898 ROBERTS, Lieutenant
U. S. Army

S. 436.

CHARLES DU VAL,

Columbus Barracks, Ohio


ancestry as his father, Major Cyrus Swan
Roberts, U. S. Army, also:
Great-great-grandson of Willoughby Tibbs, who
was Ensign in Grayson's additional Continental
Regiment (Virginia) March 5, 1777; Second Lieutenant, June 8, 1777; Regimental Quartermaster, July 1, 1778.

Same

Great-great-great-grandson of Samuel Du Val, who


was a member of the Committee of Safety of
Henrico County, Virginia, and of the Committee
of Correspondence, November 17, 1774; member
of the Virginia Convention of 1775; supplied
the troops of General La Fayette with shoes,
blankets and provisions, in 1781, at his individual expense.
Great-great-grandson of William Du Val, who was
an active young patriot; went with the earliest
troops to Williamsburg, Virginia, in 1775; was
among the officers of the Independent Companies
there who wrote to the Committee of Norfolk,
Virginia, July 19, 1775; Captain and Officer of
the Day March 3, 1776, in the orderly book of

Captain George Stubblefield; was in command


of the Camp Guard, etc.; was subsequently a
lawyer of eminence; was the personal friend of
Patrick Henry, and was associate counsel with
him in the celebrated "British Debt Cases."
N. 2396.
1895 ROBERTS,

B. F.

S. 196.

Major CYRUS SWAN,

U. S. Armt
Columbus Barracks, Ohio

Great-grandson of Lemuel Roberts, who was a


Captain of the 9th Company, or Train Band, of
the town of Sinisbury in the 18th Regiment of
Connecticut; served in Lexington alarm; in
96

Long Island campaign; mortgaged and sacrificed his land to raise money for provisions for
troops; was a Judge after the war and was
found dead, presumably murdered by Tories.
Great-grandson of Thomas Swan, who served as
Ensign in Captain Thomas Wheeler's Company,
8th Regiment Connecticut Militia; in Long
Island campaign in 1776.
The regiment belonged to the brigade of Connecticut troops unSalstonstall.
command
of
Brigadier-General
der
N. 11353.
1898 ROBERTS,

B. F.

S. 438.

CYRUS SWAN,

Jr.

Columbus Barracks, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his brother, Lieutenant Charles


Roberts.

Du Val

A.

N. 2384.

1894

ROBISON, DAVID,

W.

S. 184.

13.

Jr.
Toledo, Ohio

of John McConnell, who was a Lieutenant in Captain James McConnell's Company of


the 5th Battalion of Cumberland County, Penn-

Grandson

sylvania, Associators,

commanded by

Joseph Armstrong, December

8,

Colonel
1776; Captain,

8th Company, 6th Battalion Cumberland County


Militia, July 31, 1777; Captain of same, May 14,
1778.

N. 2386.
1894 ROBISON,

Same

A.

JAMES

W.

14.

S. 186.

J.

Toledo, Ohio
ancestry as his father, David Robison, Jr.

N. 2385.
1894 ROBISON,

A.

W.

WILLARD

15.

S. 185.

F.

Toledo, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his father, David Robison, Jr.


97

9f.

2298.

1890

C.

KOE,

S. 98.

GEOKGE MOKTIMER
Cincinnati, Ohio

Great-grandson of Daniel Roe, who was a Captain


in the 2d New York Troops, Colonel James Clinton.

Great-great-grandson of Nathaniel Seelye, who


was a Captain of Washington County, New York;
his home was burned by Burgoyne.
N. 2418.
1895 ROMANS,

B. F.

S.

21&

JOHN HANNUM BRADLEY

Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Colonel John Hannum, who was
a Committee-man, Magistrate, Militia Officer,
and Delegate from Chester County, Pennsylvania, to State Convention for ratifying the Constitution of the United States; was captured
three times during the war, escaping each time.
N. 2991.
1896 RUGGLES,

S.

C.

30L

WILLIAM BURROUGHS
Delhi, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Nathaniel Fillmore, who


was a soldier in the Vermont Militia; Lieutenant in Captain Hutchins' Company, Colonel Herrick's Regiment; Lieutenant in Captain Tichenor's Company, Colonel Walbridge's Regiment;
in battle of Bennington;
Committee of Safety.

N. 2357.
1893 RUNKLE, Captain

member

of

Vermont

S. 157.

HUGH

L.

Kenton, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Jacob Piatt, who was an
Ensign in 1st New Jersey, December 16, 1775;
Second Lieutenant, November 29, 1776; First
Lieutenant, January 10, 1777; Captain-Lieutenant, February 2, 1779; Captain, October 26, 1779;
98

resigned March 11, 1780; was in the first expedition against Quebec, and in the battles of Germantown, Brandywine, Short Hills and Mon-

mouth,

in

which battle he was wounded.

W. R. 75.
RUSSELL, GEORGE SHELLEY

N. 2470.

1896

S. 270.

770 Case Ave., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-grandson of John Russell, who was a Revolutionary pensioner; his engraved powder horn
is now in the possession of George Shelley Russell.

W.

N. 2363.

1893

51.

S. 163.

SANDERS, WILLIAM BROWNELL


Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Moses Chapin, who was a
Sergeant in Captain Nelson Gershon's Mendon,
Massachusetts, Company; in battle of Lexington.

N. 2401.
1895 SCHULTZ,

R. P.

8.

20L

WILLIAM DARLINGTON

Zanesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Isaac Van Home, who was Ensign, 5th Pennsylvania Battalion, January 8,
1776; Second Lieutenant, October 12, 1776
taken prisoner at Fort Washington, November
16, 1776; First Lieutenant 6th Pennsylvania
February 15, 1777; transferred to 2d Pennsyl
vania, January 17, 1781; Captain, June 10, 1781
retired, January 1, 1783; member of the "Cin
cinnati"; Adjutant-General of Ohio, 1810 to
1818.

Great-grandson of John Schultz, who was a Private


in a Company of Virginia Riflemen; in Arnold's
campaign against Canada; taken prisoner at
Quebec in 1775 and confined there about two
years; after his release, he and his five companions, known as "The Dutch Mess," walked
from Quebec to Winchester, Virginia.
99

N. 10031.
1897 SCOFIELD,

W.

R. 139.

S. 391.

LEVI TUCKER

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Jeremiah Coon, who was a Private in Captain Hezekiah Dunham's Company,
Colonel John McCrea's Albany County Regiment

New York

24, 1781,

and

Van

of

Militia, until

W.

N. 9938.

1897

March

afterwards of Lieutenant-Colonel Cornelius


Vechtin.

SCOTT,

S. 373.

R. 125.

CHALMER JACKSON

Painesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of Asa Case, who was a Private in
Captain Zacheus Case's Company, Colonel Noadiah Hooker's Regiment, from April 12, 1777,

to

May

27, 1777.

N. 10935.

1897

SCOTT,

S. 395.

CHARLES

F.

Piqua, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of William Scott, who was


a Sergeant of the Virginia Continental Line,
served upwards of three years, and was discharged May 9, 1783; was given a warrant for

two hundred acres

N. 9540.

1897

of land,

May

AW. 18.

SCRIBNER, Hon.

9,

1783.

S. 350.

HARVEY
Toledo, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Asa Scribner, who was a


Private in Company 5, of Waterbury's 5th Regiment, in 1775; enlisted in 1776 at Ridgefield,
Connecticut; was a Sergeant in Hait's Company,
5th Regiment, March 1, 1777, for three years and
served until February 20, 1780.
100

S. 190.

N. 2390.

1894

SCROGGS, CHARLES JACOB


Bucyrus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Jacob Shawke, who was a Private and Spy in several Pennsylvania Companies
under Captains Patton, Oldenbrook and Grove,

and Colonels Grubb and McCunningham.


B. F.

N. 2402.

1895

S. 202.

SHARP, Captain THOMAS,

U. S. Army
Columbus Barracks, Ohio

Great-grandson of William Harkness, who was an


Ensign in Captain Mateer's Company (1st) of Colonel Chambers' Regiment, 3d Battalion of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, Associators;
served in campaign of 1777 in General Potter's
Brigade; commanded Company at Brandy wine,
Germantown, Chestnut Hill and Gulph Creek;
served on Indian frontier in campaign in 1778.
Great-grandson of Thomas Sharp, who was a soldier in Captain Church's Company, Colonel
Wayne's Battalion; received Depreciation Pay
for service to

N. 2391.

1894

January

1,

1781.
S. 191.

N. G.

SHEARER, Judge CHARLES CLINTON


Xenia, Ohio
Great-grandson of Benjamin Fuller, who was a
Private in Sherwood's Company, Graham's Regiment; taken prisoner at Fort Ann, October 10,
1780; exchanged October 18, 1782.

N. 2382.

1894

S. 182.

B. F.

SHEDD, FREDERICK
347 East

Town

St.,

Columbus, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Oliver Shed, who was a


"minute man" of Groton, Massachusetts; Private in Massachusetts troops under command of
Colonel James Prescott and Colonel Jonathan
Reed.
101

Great-great-great-grandson

of Daniel Shed," of
Boby, New Hampshire, who was a Private in
Captain Lawrence's Company, Colonel Prescott's
Regiment.

Great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Ebenezer Farley, who was a "minute man" of Hollis, New
Hampshire, who with his father and two brothers
were members of the famous Company of Captain
Eeub Dow; also served under Captain Walker,
in Colonel David Gilman's Begiment.
Great-great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Benjamin Farley, who served at the Lexington alarm,
being over 60 years of age. He had gained his
title from service in the French and Indian War.
Seven members of this Farley family served in
the Eevolution from Hollis, New Hampshire.

Great-great-grandson of Henry Hazel, who enlisted


April 16, 1777, as a Matross for three years, in
Company 7, as it stood at Valley Forge June 3,
1778, John Champe Carter, Captain; in Colonel
Charles Harrison's Virginia and Maryland Eegiment of Artillery as it stood 1776 to 1782.

Great-great-grandson of James McMullin, one of


the men of the Continental frigate "Confederacy," sent out "against the enemies of America."
She sailed from Philadelphia October 20, 1779,
carrying thirty-six guns and having on board
the French Minister, Gerard, and the newly appointed American Minister to Spain, the Hon.
John Jany, as passengers. On the 7th of November, the vessel encountered a great storm, lost
all her masts and sails and was obliged to make
her way to Martinico, reaching that port December 18. Being refitted, the "Confederacy" put
to sea, but was subsequently (March- April, 1781)
captured off the Capes of Virginia by a British
Seventy-four and taken to Charleston, South
Carolina, then in the enemy's possession.

N. 9532.

1897

W.

R. 102.

SHELDON, CHARLES

S. 342.

E.

Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Pratt, who enlisted January 27, 1781, in Massachusetts troops, and is
credited by Pension Department with two years'
service, a part of the time under Captain Baile
and Colonel Sproat; a pensioner.

G. W.
SHINNICK, GEORGE SEARLE

N. 2998.

1896

S. 308.

Newark, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Constant Searle, a defender of Wyoming Valley, Penn., against Tories
and Indians; killed in the massacre of July 3,
1778.
He was "the most aged man who went
to the field."

Great-great-grandson of Nahum Goodnow, who


was, May 6, 1775, in Captain Jacob Hind's Company, Colonel James Reed's Regiment, which
was at the battle of Bunker Hill; was a Drummer in Captain Waitstill Scott's Company of a
militia regiment which marched to Ticonderoga
on the alarm of May 8, 1777; also in Captain
John Cole's Company, Colonel Ashley's Regiment, June 28, 1777; discharged July 11, 1777.

N. 9940.
1897 SILCOTT,

S. 375.

CHARLES EDWARD

Washington C. H., Ohio


Great-great-grandson of William Taylor, who was
a Private in Captain Bateman Lloyd's Company,
2d Regiment New Jersey Continental Line;
served from 1778 to 1783.

N. 7400.
1896 SILCOTT,

S. 335.

JAMES,

D. D. S.

Washington

Same ancestry

C,

as his brother, Charles

H.,

Ohio

Edward

Sil-

cott.

N. 2441.
1895 SLOANE,

W.
Judge

K. 67.

RUSH

S. 241.

R.

Sandusky, Ohio

Grandson of William Sloane, who was a Sergeant


in Captain Nelson's Company, New Hampshire
troops, in 1781;

Sergeant in Captain Allen's

Company, Colonel Herriek's Vermont Regiment,


1777; was wounded at the battle of Bennington;
Judge Sloane has in his possession a pocketbook
which was on the person of William Sloane when
he was wounded, and which contained several
six dollar bills of Continental currency, which
yet show the blood stains.

W. R. 81.
SMALL, Rev. CHARLES HERBERT

N. 2395.

1895

S. 195.

Hudson, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of David Snow, who, in 1775,
while fishing in his boat off Truro coast, Cape
Cod, was captured by a British Privateer and
taken to Halifax, and from there to Old Mill
Prison.
He planned and executed his escape with
thirty-four fellow prisoners; they marched to
Plymouth Harbor, captured a scow in which they
put to sea, and finally a small vessel, on which
they sailed to France, returning to their native
land seven years after the capture.

W. R. 122.
SMITH, STILES CURTISS

N. 9935.

1897

S. 370.

690 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio

Grandson of Samuel Smith, who enlisted in Colonel Hinman's 4th Connecticut Regiment, May,
1775; pensioner.
104

B. F.

N.

1889

S. 91.

SMYTHE, ARTHUR HARRIS


242 East Gay St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Captain Israel Harris, who, in
May, 1775, volunteered under Colonel Ethan
Allen to go with a party and seize the Fort of
Ticonderoga; last of May, 1775, was Orderly
Sergeant in Captain Lemuel Steward's Company, Colonel James Eason's Massachusetts
Regiment; October, 1776, Orderly Sergeant in
Captain N. Smedley's Company, Colonel Simons'
Massachusetts Regiment; May, 1778, Lieutenant
in Colonel Wood's Massachusetts Regiment;
May, 1779, Captain in Colonel Simonds' Regiment; was in battle of Bennington; a pensioner.

W.

2468.

1896

R. 73.

S. 268.

SNOW, JUSTIN
Cleveland, Ohio
of Solomon Snow, who was a Sergeant
Massachusetts Continental Line; a pen-

Grandson
in the
sioner.

W.

N. 7396.

L896

R. 98.

S. 331.

SNYDER, THOMAS CRUM


Canton, Ohio
Great-grandson of David Lusk, who was a Private,
Lieutenant and Captain.
Great-great-grandson of Major Peter Curtis, who
was an officer of various ranks; from Farmington, Connecticut.

2407.

L895

R. P.

S. 207.

SPANGLER, Colonel TILESTON FRACKER


Zanesville, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Lemuel Wyatt, who was


a ship-owner and merchant of Newport, R. I.;
of his property was burned or destroyed
by the British or stolen by the Tories; member

much

105

of Committee of Relief appointed by Legislature


of Rhode Island in 1778 to provide homes and
assistance for distressed patriots.

Great-great-grandson of Josiah Blake, who was a


Private in Captain Bishop's Rehoboth, Massachusetts, Company, in Lexington alarm; Private
under Captains Perry, Lincoln and White, in
Regiments of Colonel Walker, Lieutenant-Colonel Flagg and Colonel Gushing, respectively.

W.

N. 11359.

1898

SQUIRE,

R. 168.

S. 444.

ANDREW

933 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio


Great-grandson of Ezekiel Squire, who served in
the Lexington alarm, and later in the army at
the siege of Boston, in 1775.

W. R. 38.
STALEY, Professor CADY,

N. 2338.

1893

N. 2314.

1893

S. 138.

Ph. D., LL. D.


63 Adelbert St., Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Daniel Darrow, who was a Private
in New York troops; served at Dobbs' Ferry,
Fort Herkimer and Fort Plain, New York.

C.

S. 114.

STANAGE, WILLIAM HENRY


Cincinnati, Ohio

Grandson

of

Thomas Stanage, who was

a Private

in Virginia troops under General Lincoln, of Massachusetts; in the siege of Charlestown, he and
two brothers, after much suffering from wounds,
etc., were captured by the British and sent to
the prison ship in that port; his brothers died
from smallpox; he was imprisoned until near
the close of the war.
io

W. E. 118.
STEELE, GEOEGE PALMEE

N. 9931.

1897

S. 366.

Painesville, Ohio

Great-grandson of Benjamin Palmer, who enlisted,


April, 1782, in Captain Francis' Company, Colonel Tupper's Eegiment, at Grafton, Massachusetts, and was discharged June 30, 1784, at West
Point,

New

N. 2303.
1890 STEELE,

York; a pensioner.

S. 103.

MABSHFIELD
Springfield, Ohio

of Josiah Steele, who was a Sergeant in


the First Connecticut Eegiment, commanded by
Colonel Zebulon Butler.

Grandson

N. 2335.
1893 STEESE,

S. 135.

CHAELES

Massillon, Ohio
Great-grandson of Amos Johnson, who was a Sergeant in Captain Nathaniel Turtle's Company,
Colonel Charles Webb's 7th Connecticut Eegiment, July 12, 1775, to December 20, 1775; on
the reorganization of the regiment, in 1775, he
became an Ensign; Private in Captain Smith's
Company, Colonel Bradley's Battalion, General
Wadsworth's Brigade, May, 1776; taken prisoner at the capture of Fort Washington, November 16, 1776; died soon after from the effects
of his prison

life.

N. 2351.

S.

15L

Brookline, Massachusetts

1893

STEESE, EDWAED
Same ancestry as his brother,
107

Charles Steese.

N. 11061.
1898 STEPHENSON,

S. 421.

ANDERSON LEE

Findlay, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Patrick Anderson,

was a Captain

who

a Pennsylvania Regiment of
Infantry, during the Revolution; was a member
in

of the Society of the Cincinnati.

Great-grandson of James Anderson, who was a


Lieutenant in Colonel Stephen Moylan's Regiment, 4th Pennsylvania Light Dragoons.
N. 11062.
1898 STEPHENSON,

S. 422.

WILLIAM ELMER
Findlay, Ohio

Same

ancestry
Stephenson.

as

his

brother,

N. 2238.
W. R. 5.
1889 STEWART, Hon. GIDEON

Anderson Lee

S. 38.

TABOR

Norwalk, Ohio
of Rev. Nicholas Hill, Sr., who was a
Sergeant in Captain Hick's Company, Colonel

Grandson

Schaick's 1st Regiment New York Continental Infantry, 1777; Musician, same, 1778;
honorably discharged, June, 1783; received a
badge of merit, with certificate signed by Gen-

Van

eral

Washington.

N. 10033.

1897

S. 393.

C.

STEWART, THOMAS MILTON,

M. D.

Cincinnati, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Dr. Alexander Stewart,


who was a Surgeon's Mate in Continental Army,
August, 1776; in 10th Pennsylvania Regiment,
October 10, 1776; transferred to 3d Pennsylvania
Regiment and retired from service with rank of

Surgeon in 1783.

B. F.
N. 2283.
S. 83.
1889 STILES, Captain ALBERT
Delaware, Ohio
Great-grandson of Moses Warren, Sr., who was a
Private in a Massachusetts Regiment; a pen-

WARREN

sioner.

i. 2344.
1893 STIVERS,

S. 144.

FRANK

A.

Ripley, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Stivers, who was a Private
in the Virginia Militia; a pensioner.

N. 7379.
1896 STREATOR,

W.

R, 91.

S. 314.

HAROLD ARTHUR
Cleveland, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of John Streator, who was a


Private in Captain Porter's Company, Colonel
Simond's Regiment, Berkshire County; Private,
Captain Strong's Company, Colonel Brown's
Regiment, Berkshire County; also served nine
months in Captain Means' Company, 12th Regiment.

Great-grandson of Charles Plumb, who was a


Marine on the Man-of-War "Oliver Cromwell."

N. 2284.
B. F.
S.84.
1889 STREEPER, JACOB D.
295 North High St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Colonel John Hannum, who was
a Committeeman, Magistrate, Militia Officer,
Delegate for Chester County, Pennsylvania, to
State Convention for ratifying the Constitution
of the United States; captured three times during the war, escaping each time.

N. 10038.

1897

STRONG,

W.

HENRY

K. 142.

S. 398.

C.

335 Washington St., Sandusky, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of General Jedediah Elderkin, who was Colonel of 5th Connecticut Militia;
Brevet Brigadier-General; member of Council
of Safety, 1775 and after; member of General
Assembly, 1774, 1775, 1776, 1779, 1780, 1783;
member of Convention which ratified the Constitution of the United States; with Nathaniel
Wales, erected a powder mill at Willimantic,
probably the first in Connecticut.

N. 11355.
1898 SUTTON,

A.

W.

CHARLES

21.

S. 440.

E.
Toledo, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Stephen Wakeman, who


was a Lieutenant of Connecticut troops, October
5, 1777, to October 30, 1777; was later Captain.

N. 10934.
1897 SWASEY,

C.

S.

394.

JOHN

Cincinnati, Ohio
Great-grandson of Silas Rice, who was a Private
in Captain Samuel Sawyer's Company, Colonel
John Whitcomb's Regiment, which marched on
the Lexington alarm, April 19, 1775, from Lancaster to Cambridge, and served nineteen days;
Private in Captain John Boynton's Company,
Colonel Nathan Sparhawk's Regiment, commanded by Colonel Job Cushing, in expedition
to Bennington, July 27, 1777, to August 29, 1777;
in Captain Fortunatus Eagers' Company, Colonel Ephraim Sawyer's Regiment, to reinforce
the Northern Army, October 2, 1777, to October
18, 1777.

LEE.
Richard Lee
Came Va. 1641-63. Sec. State Burg. 1649-51
King's Council under Sir Wm. Berkeley
Col.

Hancock 1 Lee
1653-09
"Ditchley"
(Mary Kendall) Justice '99-U2
Nav. Officer Speaker Burg.

Richard* Lee
1647-14

(LetitiaCorbin)

Henry 8 Lee

Richard 3 Lee

1691-47

(1691-1740)

(Mary Bland)

(Judith Steptoei
I

Phil. Lud.<

Lee

Elizabeth* Lee
1764
i

Peter* Conway
Lettice* Lee
sister Eliz.
(Col. Jas. Ball)

Henrys Lee
Gen. Rev.
Light Horse Harry
Robert* E. Lee

Our immediate ancestors in black face letters.


Lee) daughter of Philip Kendall, Burgess, Speakf*
Sarah Fleete (Edwinz Conway) daught. Lt. Col. Henry Fleete, Burg. 1652. (I
J as.* Ball, Burg. Lane. Co., Dele. 1788 Mem. Va. Convention that ratified Fed

Notes Mary Kendall (H;incoek !

References Hayden's

Virginia (Jeneal's; Lee Family, by E. Jennings Lee; Hai>J


Bishop Meade's Virginia Families. Foote's Sketches of Va., etc.

W.
142.
N. 10038.
S. 398.
1897 STEONG,
C.
335 Washington St., Sandusky, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of General Jedediah Elderkin, who was Colonel of 5th Connecticut Militia;
Brevet Brigadier-General; member of Council
of Safety, 1775 and after; member of General
Assembly, 1774, 1775, 1776, 1779, 1780, 1783;
member of Convention which ratified the Constitution of the United States; with Nathaniel
Wales, erected a powder mill at Willimantic,
probably the first in Connecticut.

HENRY

A. W. 21.
SUTTON, CHAELES E.

N. 11355.

1898

S. 440.

Toledo, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Stephen Wakeman, who


was a Lieutenant of Connecticut troops, October
5, 1777, to October 30, 1777; was later Captain.

N. 10934.
1897 SWASEY,

C.

S.

394.

JOHN
Cincinnati, Ohio

Great-grandson of Silas Bice, who was a Private


in Captain Samuel Sawyer's Company, Colonel
John Whitcomb's Begiment, which marched on
the Lexington alarm, April 19, 1775, from Lancaster to Cambridge, and served nineteen days;
Private in Captain John Boynton's Company,
Colonel Nathan Sparhawk's Begiment, commanded by Colonel Job Cushing, in expedition
to Bennington, July 27, 1777, to August 29, 1777;
in Captain Fortunatus Eagers' Company, Colonel Ephraim Sawyer's Begiment, to reinforce
the Northern Army, October 2, 1777, to October
18, 1777.

no

Genealogical {Table
BALL.

LEE.

Wm.i

Col. Elcbl

SMi.^ llun:.

Ball

Ii.il;,-:il

Edwin' Conway

pt.Wm.'B

Josepl'I

si.-.tk.

i_(The Connaellor)

(Cath. Munford.

(SarahPleete,
Nni. mticer

King's Council

1699-04,

Borg.

Ilurg.

Edw. Conway

Joa.^Tayli

lonwfty

Hatnaiiiel _Harrison
3

Harrison

Hannah'

Lson

Hannah'

Ladwell

(Brandon)
Vide Harrison
Henry* Lee

Lt-L'ol.
'!

Phil. Lud.'

Lee

Couneil'lo succeed father

GEORGE WASHIHGTOH

Elizabeth* Lee

BIch.H.Lee

Wm.< Taylor

Mai. Pet.' Conwa:

ArtburU-e

l-i, ,1.1,

.I....-J

I7M
V|,hr..i,itny
Lettice'Lee

Fr^n.'i- Liu'hlf

Jno.< Taylor
Judge N. V.i

Key. soldier)

James Gordon
171'MiH.

(Mary Harrison)

1714-18M

TAYLOR

Sand,

Agatha' Conway

I.,:-,-

.!.->-:.-

Light Horse Harry

Agatha

JAMES MADISON

Jno.

M. C. 20 yre.
Twice Speaker

Magistrate.

',,11

House

1770-1830

tlchard' Taylor
'"(Jeff.

Davbj"

JolinGordon
J

i7&>42
Eliz. Lee" Ball

Sheriff

<

iJa>.

Wn.Md

Janetta W'add
iA.Alexan.de:

Edw.' Taylor

Vf. C.

Alexanc

Anna Van Derveer)


Van Derveer3 Taylor
i

ii,-;.

Uun-oi:

BIHJ

Notes Balls and Co

ace letters.

daugbt. Lt
al'a;

'

ol.

Kendall, Burgess, Speaker 1666.


Fleet.'. Bur- lt2. (Hayrten.Va. I
that rail tied Federal Const ti

Henry

Mem. Va.ronventlr.n

feep's.

Conways,
irs

Lee Family, by E. Jennings Lee; Harrison Genea

-k

ay.- Inteiiiiarried

tlnv Mines

in i.iir line.

Among

our inimei

ng: Jos. and Wm. Ball, gr-f. and gr. gr-f. of Geo. WashingtonTwo Edwin
gi
r-f. and gr. gr. gr-f. of President James Madison- Two Benj. Harrisons,
of two President Harrisons and tw. Mayor Harrisons, 'hicngo-Klehard and
Lee, gr. gr. gr-f. and gr. gr-f. of President Zaeliary Tay lor-Ulehard Lee, also

a- ..f

L.-e

Genealogical {Table

Henry

Lee, (Sinner! Fran.-is Linhtlool Lee, iSjgm-n Arthur Lee, Gen.


(.'en. Koherl E. Lee-IIaiicoel; Lee also ancestor of two Gen.

Mayor

of Chicago

Mayor Chicago

ana
of our ancestors were members of the House ot Bnrfesses
J
Hairdo
ng's or Governor's Counei I. and leading patriots. Benj.'
Nathaniel' brotlu'.
s son Nathaniel,' were ot King's Council, and
Privy Coon."
v., was elected by HouaaOi Burgesses member of
1

liielianl

T
UTs."

Archibald Gordon Taylor


Lncy Monson Taylor

.1788

Vide

Ixch. Alex.

l.iugliter of Philip

ITbos.' Leei

Ootdoi

,175iM3i

Edw. Taylor, M. d. Malvh.aTaylor Penelope Gordon


IMl-iiS
(Dr. Edw. Taylor iEdw." Taylori
(Penelope Gordon)
1809-36
2d wife)

EUz.Lee"!

1731211-71
iJa*. ,.,.,r,l,.,u

Man [

W.6 Taylor

Benj*. Harrison

(AnneCarter)

Jos. 6 Taylor
(Thiue Irwin)

Hall

Mary'Harrlso

1748

Robert' E. Lee

Col.

Some

of

Our Hmerican

ancestry,

.Revolution, and

a. a. e. xragiot
Columbug, hlo.

S. H.

GORDON.

HARRISON.
Ben).' Harrison (The Clerk)
Ifi3t-Clprk King' ni

Burg. IS

The Counsellor)

Benj.'-

1645-1712
1699-04

King's Council

Nathaniel 3 Harrison

Brandon)
(Mary Cary) Gov's
(

Council to succeed lathe


-"Col. James Gordon
Mary* Harrison
1

1712-66.

173(2) 1-71

'(Mary Harrison:

(Jas.

Gordon)

Mary' Gordon

John Gordon
1765-42

I'.em. Hiirris,,n
1673-1710.

(Berkeley)
Burg. Spkr, etc.

(Jas.

Waddell)

annah* Ludwell

Benj.' Harrison

Cartel* Harrison

(Thos. Lee)

Vide Lee

1740-91

Gov. Va. Signer

WM H--5^ RIS0If

Penelope Gordon
(Edw? Taylor)

Hannah^ Harrison
(Philip Ludwell)

Benj*. Harrison
dl774
Sheriff
(Anne Carter)

(1752-13)

Eliz. Lee's Ball

Burg.

Roberl Car er* Harrison

1SOH-36

W.
J.
J.

C.

Alexander

W. Alexander
A. Alexander

Mayor

1804-78

BEKJ. HARRIS01?

"of

Chicago

Carter H. Harrison

NoTE.s-.Many of our ancestors were members of the House


of Burgesses

Jtrp.

s.

a.

the King's or Governor's Council, and leading patriots.


Benj. 2 Hal
and his son Nathaniel," were of King's Council, and NathanielVbr
of Mary4| was elected by House of Burgesses
member of Privy
with Patrick Henry, 1777. .Burke Hist. Va

ir.

N. 2994.
1896 TANGEMANN,

S. 304.

C.

WILLIAM ATHEARON

Wyoming, Ohio
Great-grandson of Dr. Valentine Peyton, who was
a Second Lieutenant, First Lieutenant and Captain, Third Virginia; was also Surgeon in Continental Line; received land for service as a Captain for service of three years.

LN.

W.

9932.

1897

E. 119.

S. 367.

TAYLOR, ALEXANDER SACKETT


Cleveland, Ohio
Virgil Corydon Taylor.

Same ancestry as his father,


N. 2381.
1894 TAYLOR,

B. F.

Rev.

S. 181.

ARCHIBALD ALEXANDER

EDWARD,

D. D., LL. D.
1331 East Long St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of William Taylor, who was
a Private and Trainmaster in Captain Lloyd's
Company, Second New Jersey Continental Line.

Great-great-grandson of Colonel James Ball, who


was a Delegate to the House of Burgesses, Virginia, and in 1778 a member of the Virginia Convention that adopted the Federal Constitution.
Great-great-grandson of Nathaniel Harrison, who
succeeded his father, was a member of Privy
Council of Virginia; also member of the House
of Burgesses of Virginia.

N. 2272.
B. F.
S. 72.
1889 TAYLOR, AUBREY CLARENCE
617 Franklin Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Same ancestry as his father, William Alexander
Taylor.

in

N. 10036.
1897 TAYLOR,

B. F.

S. 396.

EDWARD MUNSON

Columbus, Ohio
ancestry as his father, Rev. Archibald Alexander Edward Taylor, also:
Great-great-grandson of Timothy Munson, who was
a Private (afterwards Sergeant) in Captain
Josiah Smith's Company, Colonel Waterbury's
5th Continental Regiment, May 9 to October 13,
1775; marched under General Wooster to New
York and under General Schuyler to frontier of
Canada; Private 6th Regiment Connecticut
Line, Colonel William Douglass; served eleven

Same

months
discharged December 31, 1778;
White Plains under General Washington.
N. 10037.
1897 TAYLOR,

Same

at

S. 397.

VAN DERVEER,

Ph. M., M. D.
Cincinnati, Ohio

ancestry as his brother,

W.

N. 2398.
1895 TAYLOR,

Edward Munson

R. 53

Taylor.

S. 198.

VIRGIL CORYDON
Cleveland, Ohio

Grandson

William Taylor, Jr., who was a PriCompany from Simsbury, Connecticut;

of

vate in a

at battles of Lexington

and Monmouth.

N. 2259.
B. F.
S. 59.
1889 TAYLOR, WILLIAM ALEXANDER
617 Franklin Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Grandson of Thomas Taylor, who served one year
in Massachusetts troops and was subsequently
Private and non-commissioned officer in the Virginia Line; was present at the capitulation of

Yorktown.

Grandson

of Joshua Owens,
of Engineers in Virginia;
struction of some of the

who was
was

a Lieutenant

in charge of conin the siege of

works

Yorktown.
k. 3000.
1896 THAYER, Rev.

C.

S.

310.

GEORGE AUGUSTINE
Cincinnati, Ohio

Grandson of Calvin Thayer, who was a Private in


the Companies of Captains Wild, Penniman,
Thayer and Tower; present at Burgoyne's surrender.

Great-grandson of Stephen Penniman, who was a


Captain and later Major; served at five different
times.

W.

N. 2349.

1893

R. 48.

S. 149.

THOMAS, JOHN
122 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Grandson of Henry Livingston, of Poughkeepsie,
New York, who was a Major in the Revolutionary
Army; was in the expedition into Canada in
1775.

Grandson of Dr. John Thomas, who was Surgeon's


Mate of Cotton's Massachusetts Regiment, May
to December, 1775; Surgeon's Mate of 23d Continental Infantry, January 1 to December 31,
1776; Surgeon 9th Massachusetts, January 1,
1777; transferred to 8th Massachusetts, January
1, 1781, and served to June, 1783.
Great-grandson of Dr. William Thomas, who was
Surgeon of Cotton's Massachusetts Regiment,
May to December, 1775. His four sons were all
in service.

W. R. 60.
N. 2422.
S. 222.
1895 THOMPSON, GEORGE
Ticket Office P. & L. E. R. R., Pittsburg,

HENRY

Pennsylvania

Same ancestry

as his father,

Henry

Orville

Thomp-

&

W.

242L

1895

E. 59.

S. 221.

THOMPSON, HENEY OKVILLE


67 Cornell

St.,

Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of Stephen Thompson, who was a


Private in Captain Brackett's Company, Colonel
Douglass' Eegiment, Wadsworth's Brigade,
Connecticut; Private Munson's Company, 8th
Connecticut Eegiment; Private, Captain Douglass' Company, 5th Eegiment, Connecticut Line;
served from June, 1776, to close of war; in battles of Long Island, retreat to New York, White
Plains, Germantown, Monmouth, Stony Point,
siege of Yorktown; was at Valley Forge, and
witnessed the surrender of Cornwallis.
Grandson of Stephen Thompson, Jr., who was a
Private in 1st Eegiment Connecticut Line;
served in Hudson Eiver Campaign, 1780.
N. 2399.
1895 THOMPSON,

W.

E. 43.

S. 199.

JOHN ANDEEW

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Isaac Thompson, who was a
Lieutenant of Pennsylvania Continentals; member of Washington's Body Guard; wounded at
battle of Brandywine; a pensioner.

N. 11058.
W. E. 148.
S. 418.
1898 THOMSON, GEOEGE ANDEOS
1020 Wilson Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-great-grandson of Jonathan Stone,
who was a Private in Captain Timothy Bigelow's
Company, Colonel Artenias Ward's Eegiment,
which marched at the Lexington alarm, April 19,
1775, from Worcester, served five days; Corporal, Captain Hubbard's Company, Colonel
Ward's Eegiment, April 24, 1775, three months
and fifteen days; Corporal, same command, October 7, 1775; Lieutenant of Captain David
Chadwick's Company, five days, dates not given.

N. 2219.
1892 THWING, Eev.

W.

E. 17.

S. 19.

CHAELES FEANKLIN, President Adelbert College, Cleveland, Ohio


Great-great-grandson of Nathaniel Thwing, who
was Councilor, 1780; Justice of Superior Court
of Lincoln County, Province of Maine, 1781; JusEepresentative, 1782.

tice of the Peace, 1781;

W.E. 153.
TOLLES, SHELDON HITCHCOCK

N. 11068.

1898

S. 428.

1867 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio.


Great-great-grandson of Peter Walker, who was a
Private in Captain Williams' Company, Colonel
Johnson's Eegiment; was in Providence, Ehode
Island,

two months; received invalid pension.

N. 11062.

1898

S. 423.

C.

TOWNLEY, EDWAED

E.

W yoming,
T

Ohio

of Edward Townley, who was a Private


in Captain Christopher Marsh's Company of
Light Horse, Essex County, New Jersey.

Grandson

N. 2445.
1895 TUENEE,

W.

E. 62.

S. 245.

EEUBEN

Milan, Ohio
Grandson of Jabez Parsons, who was a Private in
Lexington alarm, April, 1775; Sergeant in Wolcott's Connecticut Eegiment, December, 1775, to
March, 1776; Quartermaster-Sergeant, 2d Connecticut, September 1, 1777; Eegimental Quartermaster, June 1, 177S; transferred to 3d Connecticut, January 1, 1781; resigned May 4, 1781.
N. 2484.
1896 TUENEY, Eev.

W. E. 84.
ELI ALVIN

S. 284.

(Son)

North Amherst, Ohio


of Asa Turney, who was a soldier under General Arnold; in the battle of Danbury, Connecticut, when that town was burned by the British;
served to close of war; a pensioner.

Son

39.
W.
S. 166.
N. 2366.
ASA
1893 TURNEY,
494 North Third Ave., Phoenix, Arizona
Great-grandson of Asa Turney, mentioned in ancestry of Eev. Eli Tnrney.
Great-grandson of John Bulford, who was a Private
in Captain Granger's Company, Colonel Webb's
2d Regiment, Connecticut Line; was made pris-

OMAR

oner, July, 1777.

Great-great-grandson of Amos Hitchcock, who was


a Corporal in Captain Stanley's Company, Colonel Gay's Regiment, June, 1776.

N. 2301.
1890 TRUE,

S.

10L

HENRY,
Marion, Ohio

Amos

who was a "minConcord; was at battle


of Bunker Hill and surrender of Burgoyne.
Great-grandson of Rev. Henry True, of Hampstead,
New Hampshire, who was Chaplain of the New
Great-grandson of
ute

man"

Barrett,

in the battle of

Hampshire Regiment at Lake George in 1759;


was a staunch Whig; would drink none but
"home made" tea; published a poem on "Liberty Tea," and was influential in the Revolutionary cause.

Great-grandson of Benjamin Reed, who served at


Boston and in Rhode Island; was called "Captain Smooth" from his genial manners.
Great-grandson of Amasa Smith, who served as a
Private at Bennington, when "he shot away the
family pewter."
N. 11060.

1898

TWISS,

B. F.

S. 420.

GEORGE HENRY

Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Major Andrew Nichols, who was
a Private in Captain David Howlet's Company,
Colonel Ashley's Regiment, June 29, 1777, to
116

Army at Ticonderoga;
Private in Captain Samuel Wright's Company,
Colonel Nichols' Regiment, General Stark's Brigade, at Bennington and Stillwater, July 23,
1777; Private in Captain Nicholas Gilman's
reinforce the Continental

Company, 3d New Hampshire Kegiment, from


July 12, 1779, to January 1, 1780; at the time of
his death, September 8, 1812, he held a commission as Major in the Massachusetts Militia.
Great-great-grandson of John Nichols, who as
a Private in Captain Edmund Putnam's Company at the Lexington alarm.

W. R. 152.
N. 11067.
S. 427.
1898 UPSON, OLIVER WELTON,
2641 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of David Lyman, who was
Lieutenant of the troop of Light Horse in the
First Regiment of Connecticut Militia; was honorably discharged to run a grist mill to supply
flour to the Revolutionary troops.
N. 2434.
R. P.
1895 VANDENBARK, CLARENCE

S. 234.

SUMNER

Zanesville, Ohio
Great-grandson of William Baker, who was a Private in Captain Joseph Howell, Jr.'s, Company,
Colonel Samuel J. Atler's Pennsylvania Mus-

ketry Battalion.

W. R. 154.
N. 11368.
S. 453.
1898 WAGAR, MARS EDWARD
174 Franklin Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Ezra Tucker, who was a
Second Lieutenant in Colonel Thomas Stickney's
New Hampshire Regiment; at battle of White
Plains, October 28, 1776.
117

N. 2458.
1895 WAIN,

W.R.

LEWIS

S. 258.

71.

H.

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-great-grandson of Joseph Jennings,
who was a Private in the Lexington alarm; in
Colonel Swift's 7th Regiment, Continental Line,
from April 18, 1777, to April 10, 1780; his diary,
kept during part of 1777-8, is now in possession
of Mr. Lewis H. Wain.

N. 11360.

1898

A.

W.

S. 445.

22.

WAITE, Captain HENRY DE HART,

O. V. C.

Toledo, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Jacobus
was commissioned Ensign, June

De
2,

who

Hart,

1778, in Sec-

ond Regiment Pennsylvania Line, commanded


by Colonel John Philip De Haas, and subsequently by Colonel Walter Stewart; promoted
to First Lieutenant,
1780.

W.

N. 11069.

1898

same regiment, May

16,

S. 429.

R. 155.

WALTON, JOHN WHITTLESEY


2659 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Whittlesey, who, in 1776,
was called out in Captain Tibbett's Company,
October 28, marched to Stamford under Captain
Moseley; November 6, joined the Regiment at

Horse Neck; November 12, marched to Rye;


December 2, was at Saw Pitts under General
Wooster; March 21, 1777, was commissioned an
Ensign by Governor Jonathan Trumbull.
N. 2230.
1892 WARD,

B.F.

Major HARRY PARKER,

M. A.

S. 30.

O. N. G. (Retired),

(Life)

Columbus, Ohio
Great- great-grandson of Joseph Parker, Jr., who
was a Private in a Coventry, Connecticut, Com118

pany in the Lexington alarm; Private in Captain


Storrs' Company, General Israel Putnam's 3d
Connecticut Eegiment, Continental Line; a pensioner.

Great-great-great-grandson of Joseph Parker, Sr.,


who was a Private in a Coventry, Connecticut,
Company in the Lexington alarm.

Great-great-grandson of Elam Jewett, who was a


Private in Captain Herrick's Company, Colonel
Brown's Eegiment; Private in Captain Lankton's Company, Colonel Ashley's Eegiment; Private in Captain-Lieutenant Jackson's Company,
Colonel Ashley's Eegiment, Massachusetts Militia.

Great-grandson of Captain Martin Dewey Follett,


who, a boy, was at Forty Fort at the time of the
Wyoming Massacre, in which his father was
killed; Private in Lieutenant Scott's Company,
Colonel Herrick's Vermont Eegiment; Private
in Captain Sawyer's Company, and Captain Joseph Safford's Company, Colonel Walbridge's
Vermont Eegiment; Captain in War of 1812.
Great-great-grandson of Eliphalet Follett, who was
an enlisted man (probably in Captain Buck's
Kingston Company) in the local militia force defending the Wyoming Valley settlement, Pennsylvania, against the invasion of Indians and
Tories; was shot and killed in the massacre of
July 3, 1778, near Forty Fort; his widow suffered the loss of all his possessions, and, with
six children, endured the hardships of a horseback journey back to Vermont.
Great-great-great-grandson of Lieutenant Benjamin Follett, a Lieutenant in French and Indian
War, in 1756, who was one of the old men who
assisted in the defense of the Wyoming Valley
settlement, Pennsylvania, in 1778.
Great-great-grandson of John Fassett, Jr., who
was a First Lieutenant in Captain Hopkins' Com119

Lieutenant-Colonel Warner's 1st Beginient, Green Mountain Boys, Vermont, in the


expedition to Montreal in fall and winter of
1775; Captain, Lieutenant-Colonel Warner's 2d
Regiment, in expedition to Quebec, February,
1776; First Lieutenant and Captain in Warner's
Additional Eegiment, Continental Line; cash-

pany,

iered and reinstated; promoted Commissary to


Hospital at Bennington after battle of Bennington; Commissioner of Sequestration of Property of Tories; member of Vermont Board of
War, Legislature, Governor's Council and Committee for Secret Negotiations in the Haldimand
Affair; Judge Supreme Court of Vermont, 1778
to 1786.

Great-great-great-grandson of Captain John Fassett, Sr., who was a member of Vermont Legislature in 177S and a recognized patriot of Bennington, Vermont; his six sons all served the
Colonies in military and civil capacities.
Great-great-great-grandson of Joseph Safford, who
was a recognized patriot of Bennington, Vermont; his five sons were all in the military service.

W.

N. 2365.

1893

E. 52.

S. 165.

WAED, HUBEET HEEEICK


Same

89 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio


ancestry as his brother, Harry Parker Ward.

N. 2479.
1896 WAED,

S. 279.

LEVI BAENS

(Son)

Mt. Vernon, Ohio


Son of Eufus Ward, who was a Private in Captain
Woodbury's Company, Colonel Holman's Massachusetts Eegiment; Private in Captain Wilson's

Massachusetts Company; present at Burgoyne's


surrender.

If.

S. 309.

2299.

1896

WEBSTER, JAMES EEED


244 High St., Hamilton, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Reuben Fitz Randolph,
who was a Captain in the Monmouth County,

New
N. 2995.
1896 WEIR,

Jersey, Militia.
S. 305.

C.

FREDERIC CANDEE
Cincinnati, Ohio

of Samuel Weir, who was a Private in


Captain Stanton's Company, Colonel Sheldon's
Regiment of Connecticut Light Dragoons; served

Grandson

nearly two and one-half years.


N. 10044.

1897

WHALLON,

S. 404.

C.

Rev.

EDWARD

P.,

D. D.

422 Elm St., Cincinnati, Ohio


Great-grandson of James Whallon, who was a
Lieutenant in the First Battalion Somerset
County, New Jersey, Militia, during the Revolutionary War.
S. 409.

N. 10049.

1897

WHEELER, HENRY HERBERT


Ohio
Great-grandson of Thaddeus Wheeler, who was a
Private in Captain Reuben Dow's Company of
"minute men" who marched from Hollis, New
Hampshire, April 19, 1775; enlisted for eight
months, at Cambridge, in Captain Dow's Company, Colonel William Prescott's Massachusetts
Regiment; in battle of Bunker Hill.
Great-grandson of Ebenezer Farley, who was a
Private in Captain Reuben Dow's Company of
"minute men" who marched from Hollis, New
Hampshire, April 19, 1775, to Cambridge, on the
Lexington alarm; was in a Company of men
Tiffin,

321

from the 5th Regiment


sent December
nental Army in
this

Company

New Hampshire

Militia,

1776, to reinforce the Contiuntil March 1, 1777;


was in Colonel David Gilman's Reg7,

New York

iment.

Great-great-grandson of Benjamin Farley, who


was a Lieutenant in Colonel Prescott's Regiment
N. 2493.
1896 WHITE, Hox.

S. 293.

ALVIN

C, M.S., LL. B.

Jefferson, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Abraham Pinney, who


was a Lieutenant in Captain Roberts' Company
in the Lexington alarm; also Lieutenant in Captain Roberts' Company, 18th Regiment, Connecticut Militia; at New York, 1776.
N. 2466.
1896

A.

W.

17.

S. 266.

WHITTELSEY, THOMAS FREDERICK


Toledo, Ohio
Great-grandson of Roger Newton Whittelsey, who
enlisted as a Private in Captain Bezaleel Beebe's
Company, Colonel Andrew Ward, Jr.'s, Regiment, under command of Major General Charles
Lee, for the defense of New York.

Great-great-grandson of John Sprague, who was


a Sergeant in Colonel Bellows' Regiment of New
Hampshire Militia; First Lieutenant 4th Company, 16th Regiment, New Hampshire Militia;
in battle of Bennington.
Great-great-grandson of Judah Moore, who was a
Fifer in Captain Munn's Company, Colonel Dike's
Massachusetts Regiment; Drummer, Captain
Caldwell's Company, Colonel Robinson's Massachusetts Regiment; Fifer in Captain-Lieutenant Shaw's Company, Colonel Porter's Massachusetts Regiment; served at Ticonderoga under
General Gates; member of Committee of Safety
of Palmer, Massachusetts.
122

A.

7393.

1896

W.

16.

S. 332.

WHITTLESEY, FREDERICK WOODFORD


Toledo, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Ezra Whittlesey, who was
a First Lieutenant in the 19th Company, 2d Berkshire County, Massachusetts, Regiment; also a

Captain commanding Berkshire County Companies in five terms of service.


N. 2443.
1895 WHITTEMORE,

W.

R. 63.

S. 243.

LAWRENCE JOHNSON

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Daniel Eells, who was a
"minute man" in the Revolution, and served as
follows January, 1776, Private in Captain Jared
Shepard's Company, Colonel Wadsworth's Regiment, three months; August, 1776, same Captain, Colonel Talcott's Regiment, two months;
July, 1779, in Captain Amos Wetmore's Company, Colonel Talcott's Regiment, two months;
September, 1780, in Captain Shepard's Company,
Colonel Talcott's Regiment, seven days; assisted
in throwing up breast works on Breed's Hill, and
was in the battle of Bunker Hill; was in battle
:

of Long Island, and with Washington when he


evacuated New York; was afterwards captured
by an English privateer and taken to Bermuda,
where he was kept a prisoner for a long time,

Great-great-grandson of Gideon Savage, who was


a Private in Captain Jared Shepard's Company,
Colonel Talcott's Connecticut Regiment, July,
1776, served three months; February 10, 1777,
Corporal and Sergeant in Captain William Mills'
Company, Colonel Baldwin's Regiment of Artificers and Artillery, Continental Line, until May
1, 1778; wintered at Valley Forge; at battle of

Germantown; a

pensioner.

Great-great-great-grandson of Thomas Hobby, Sr.,


who was Major of the 5th Connecticut, May 1 to
123

December

13, 1775; Lieutenant-Colonel of BradRegiment, Connecticut Militia, May, 1776;


was wounded near St. Johns, Canada, September
taken prisoner at Fort Washington,
6, 1775;

ley's

November

16, 1776.

Great-great-grandson of Thomas Hobby, Jr., who


was a Private in his father's Company in the
Lexington alarm; afterwards Sergeant; also in
1st Company, Colonel Tilliman's 1st Battalion,
Wadsworth's Brigade; served as Ensign under
Captain Abraham Mead.

N. 9546.
W. R. 115.
S. 356.
1897 WILLIAMS, Rev. CHARLES DAVID
564 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Rice, who was a Private
in Captain John Polhemus' Company, Colonel
William Alexander's 1st Regiment New Jersey
Line, 1776; Private, same Company, Colonel
Silas Newcomb; Corporal, same, Colonel Matthias Ogden; Sergeant, same, January 1, 1780;
Sergeant, Captain John Holman's Company,
same regiment; served to the end of the war.
N. 2485.

1896

W.

R. 83.

S. 285.

WILLIAMS, GEORGE WASHINGTON


464 Bolton Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Colonel Ebenezer Williams, an
officer at sundry times, continuing in service
until compelled to retire on account of declining
health; was frequently member of the Legislature of Connecticut

N. 2202.
1889 WILLIAMS,

B. F.

HENRY

S. 2.

A.
Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-great-grandson of Paul Langdon, who
was a Captain in Colonel Danielson's Regiment,
124

Massachusetts, in Lexington and Concord alarm


at siege of Boston.
Great-great-grandson of John Langdon, who was a
Sergeant in Captain Paul Langdon's Company'.
Great-grandson of John Hamilton, who was a soldier in the Kevolution; at battle of King's Mountain.

|. 2367.
1893 WILLIAMS, Captain

S. 167.

LEWIS VERNON,

U.

S.

V.

Ripley, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Samuel Pickerell, who


was a Drummer Boy and soldier; entered the
Army from Virginia at the age of sixteen and
served eight years.
B. F.
S. 126.
N. 2326.
1893 WILLSON, OSCAR FITZ ALLYN
103 Miller Ave., Columbus, Ohio
Grandson of Aaron Willson, who was a Private in
Captain Samuel Weatherbe's Company of Keene,
New Hampshire, Colonel Isaac Wyman's Regiment; later in Captain David Howlet's Company, of Keene.
B. F.
S. 437.
N. 11352.
1898 WILSON, EDWIN FRAZER, M. D.
208 East State St., Columbus, Ohio
Great-grandson of Robert Frazer, who was a Sailor
on the Frigate "Confederacy"; a pensioner.
Great-grandson of Rev. Jacob Johnson, who was
the first minister to the Indians and the Connecticut settlers in the Wyoming Valley; was
Chaplain to the forces under Colonel Zebulon
Butler, at Forty Fort, and drew up the articles
of capitulation between the British and Indians
and the Americans after the massacre at Wyoming.
125

N. 2499.

1896

C.

WILSON, GIDEON

S.299.

C.

287 McGregor Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio


of Benjamin Wilson, who was a Colonel
commanding Virginia troops; also Colonel on
staff of Lord Dunmore and in command of the

Grandson

troops in Northwestern Virginia; equipped his


own Regiment, and for services rendered received
a grant of four thousand acres of land in Licking
County, Ohio; Delegate to Virginia Convention
that ratified the Constitution of the United
States; brother of James Wilson, signer of the
Declaration of Independence.
S. 259.
N. 2459.
W. K. 69.
HENRY
1895 WILSON,
1166 East Madison Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Wilson, who was a Private in Captain McGowan's Company, Colonel
Butler's Pennsylvania Regiment, in spring of
1777; made Ensign, and served as such to close
of war; wintered at Valley Forge; in battles of
Trenton, Princeton, Brandywine, Germantown,
and Monmouth; wounded in the battle of the
"White Dorse"; a pensioner.

MYRON

N. 10028.
1897 WILSON,

W.

R. 141.

S. 388.

WILLIAM GARRICK

Cleveland, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of William Wilson, who was
a Private in Captain Talbot's Company, Colonel
Irving's Pennsylvania Regiment;

a pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Ashbel Eaton, who was a


Private in Captain Benjamin Pollard's Company,
April 21, 1777; in Captain Thomas Patten's Company, Corps of Artificers, Continental troops,
August 5, 17S2; the regiment was at Brandywine, Germantown, Monmouth, and other fields;
a pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Elijah Porter, who was a


Drummer in Captain George Pitkin's Company,
Colonel Benjamin Hinman's Eegiment, May 22
to December 20, 1775; Drum Major of Captain
J. Witt's Company, Hartford, Connecticut, Regiment, at Boston, January to March, 1776; was
in one of the three regiments from Connecticut,
which guarded the lines at various points, commanded by Colonel Erastus Wolcott; in Colonel
Samuel Wylly's Regiment, 3d Connecticut Line,
from May 12, 1777, to May 12, 1780; June 1,
1780, to December 31, 1781, in Captain Joseph
Walker's Company, Colonel Samuel B. Webb's

Regiment; a pensioner.

N. 9939.
1897 WING,

G.

W.

S. 274.

CHARLES MAYHEW
Newark, Ohio

Same

ancestry as his father, Hon. Lucius Bliss

Wing;

also,

Great-grandson of Freeborn Mayhew, who was in


Captain Daniel Kellogg's Company, Colonel R.
Woodbridge's Regiment, August 17, 1777, on
alarm at Bennington, Vermont; Corporal in
Captain Benjamin Bonney's Company, Colonel
Elisha Porter's Hampshire County Regiment,
served at New London, Connecticut, discharged
August 27, 1779; Private in Captain Joseph
Clapp's Company, Colonel Israel Chapin's Regiment, October 16, 1779, to November 21, 1779,
served at Claverack, New York; July 10, 1780,
detached from
Captain Fairchild's Company
Colonel Israel Chapin's Regiment; in Captain
Ebenezer Sheldon's Company, Colonel Seth Murray's Regiment, from August 12, 1780, to October 10, 1780.

W. K. 29.
N. 2250.
1893 WING, FEANCIS JOSEPH
30 Granger St., Cleveland, Ohio

S. 50.

Grandson

of Bani Wing, mentioned in ancestry of


Hon. Lucius Bliss Wing; also,
Great-great-grandson of Hezekiah Huntington,
who was a Major in the first troops raised in
subsequently manufacturer of
Connecticut;
arms for Continental forces, thereby exhausting
his own means and receiving in payment $74,000
in Continental currency, which became worth-

G.

N. 2207.

1891

W.

S. 7.

WING, Hon. LUCIUS BLISS

(Son)

Newark, Ohio
of Bani Wing, who enlisted 1779 (at the age
of seventeen), from Conway, Hampshire County,
Massachusetts, in Captain Bice's Company, Col-

Son

served under Colonel


Hudson Kiver; was
present at the execution of Major Andrei; a
pensioner.
onel Chapin's Kegiment;

Weston

Grandson

in the defense of

of

Benjamin

Flint,

who was a

soldier in

the Bevolution, from North Beading, Massachusetts; at battle of Bunker Hill; wintered at
Valley Forge.

N. 2310.
1893 WIBT,

W.

E, 32.

WILLIAM EDGAB,

S. 110.

M.

D., A. M.,

PelD.

Cleveland, Ohio

Great-grandson of John Harris, who was a Private


in Captain Bond's Company, 4th Battalion, 2d
Establishment, New Jersey Continental Line;
also served in Captain D'Hart's Company, 2d
Eegiment, New Jersey Continental Line; was
in battles of Brandywine, Germantown, Monmouth and Yorktown.
128

S. 357.
W. R. 114.
N. 9547.
1897 WOOD, FRANK
578 East Prospect St., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of James Wood, who was a Private
in Captain John Joslyn's Company, Colonel John
Whitcomb's Regiment, which marched on alarm
of April 19, 1775, from Lexington to Cambridge,
served eleven days; Private in Captain David
Wilder's Company, Colonel Asa Whitcomb's
Regiment, April 26, 1775, served three months
and thirteen days; served at Ticonderoga, Saratoga and Bennington.

WARREN

B. F.

N. 2437.

1895

WOOD, KENNETH DODGE,

S.

237.

A. B.

Columbus, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Thomas Wood, who was
a Private for nine months in Captain Marshall's
Company, Colonel Cross' Massachusetts Regiment. His house in Charlestown, at the foot of
Bunker Hill, was burned during the battle,

June

17, 1775.

Great great grandson of Nathaniel Hubbard


Dodge, who was a Delegate from Hampton Falls
to a Constitutional Convention, which met at
Concord, New Hampshire, June 10, 1778; was
also a Delegate to the Second Constitutional Con-

vention held at Concord, June

1,

1781.

Great-great-grandson of John Brown, Jr., who


was a Private in Captain Seth Washburn's Company, Colonel Ward's Regiment, on the Lexingafterwards Sergeant in same
ton alarm;

Company; was severely wounded in battle of


Bunker Hill, and was carried from the field by
his brother Perley.

Great-great-great-grandson of John Brown, Sr.,


who was a recognized patriot of Leicester, Massachusetts, prior to and during the Revolution;
129

had four sons in the service; Captain in French


and Indian War, and was at Louisburg in 1745.
Great-great-grandson of Rodham Kenner, who was
a member of the House of Burgesses from Northumberland County, Virginia, 1774, 1775 and
1776; to Virginia Conventions, 1775 and 1776;
a signer of the Address and Resolutions of the
Patriots of the Northern Neck of Virginia, protesting against the Stamp Act. in 1765.

Great-great-grandson of Daniel Devol, who was


Ensign of the 2d Company of Tiverton, Rhode
Island, Militia, in 1776; Lieutenant in same
Company, 1779; probably the Daniel Devol who
was chosen Captain of Major Munro's Company
of Rhode Island troops in 1777.

N. 7381.
1896 WOOD,

W.

R. 89.

S. 316.

LEWIS JOHN
Painesville, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of Tracey Cleveland, who


was a Private in Captain Bacon's Company, Colonel Chester's 6th Battalion, Wadsworth's Brigade, Connecticut troops; in battles of Flatbush

and White

N.
1896

Plains.

B. F.

WREN,

Captain

WILLIAM CULLEN,

S.

U.

S.

Army
Columbus Barracks, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of Brigham Eaton, who enlisted from Killingly, Connecticut, on the Lexington alarm and served eighteen days; according to family tradition, he saw other service and
attained the rank of Lieutenant.

W.

9936.

1897

S. 371.

R. 123.

WEIGHT, DARWIN ERASMUS


749 Logan Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Wright, who was a Private
in Captain Edward Shipman's Company, Colonel
Charles Webb's 7th Connecticut Regiment, from
July 15, 1775, to December 18, 1775; Private in
Captain Robert Warner's Company, Colonel
Samuel Wyllys' 3d Regiment Connecticut Line,
from October 14, 1777, to November 4, 1781; Private in Captain Robert Warner's Company, Colonel John Durkee's 1st Regiment Connecticut
Line,

January

1,

1781, to

December

31, 1781.

B. F.
h. 2419.
1895 WRIGHT, Genekal GEORGE
43 Cleveland Ave., Columbus, Ohio

S. 219.

BOHAN

of William Cooley, who was


the 9th Company, Colonel Masley's
Hampshire County, Massachusetts.
Grandson of Eliphaz Wright, who was
in Captain Allen's Company in the
alarm; also served as Sergeant.

Grandson

N. 2329.
1893 WRIGHT,

W.

R. 49.

Lieutenant

Captain of
Regiment,
a Corporal
Lexington

S. 129.

GEORGE MITCHELL,

U. S. V.

Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of John Wright, of Winchester
(Winsted), Connecticut, who was a Private in
Captain Shipman's 6th Company, Colonel Webb's
7th Connecticut Regiment, 1775; also in Captain
Warner's Company, Colonel Wyllys' 3d Regiment, Connecticut Line, 1777-1781; also in Captain Warner's Company, Colonel Durkee's 1st
Regiment, Connecticut Line, 1781; was Captain
of Connecticut Militia after the war of the Revolution; was one of five brothers (sons of Lieutenant John Wright, of the French and Indian

War being all the sons he then had), who,


with a brother-in-law, all served in the war of
the Revolution. In the War of 1812 this record
was repeated: Captain John Wright's four sons
(being all he then had), and a son-in-law, all
served in the army in the War of 1812.
Great-grandson of Jacob Foster, of Lincoln, Massachusetts, who was a Private in Captain Smith's
(Lincoln) Company, Colonel Pierce's Massachusetts Eegiment, called into service on the Lexington alarm; was in the fight at Concord Bridge
and the running fight between Concord and
Charlestown, April 19, 1775, where his hat was
pierced by a British bullet; served subsequently
in Captain Farrar's Company, Colonel Brooks'
Massachusetts Eegiment, and also in Captain
Hartwell's Company, Colonel Brooks' Massachusetts Eegiment; was at the fortifying of Dorchester Heights and the bombardment of Boston, March, 1776, and served afterwards.
Great-grandson of Asa Whitney, of Preston and
Salisbury, Connecticut, who was an Armorer in
the Northern Department, 1775.
Great-grandson of George Mitchell, who was a Private in Captain Webb's Company, Colonel Durgee's 4th Eegiment, Connecticut Line; died In
twenty-two days
service, October 26, 1777
after the battle of Germantown, where his regiment was engaged and suffered loss; family
tradition is that he was killed in battle.

S. 343.
W. B, 103.
N. 9533.
1897 WEIGHT, HEEBEET AUGUSTUS
94 Ingleside Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
Great-grandson of Stephen Wright, who was in
the Major's Company, 12th Massachusetts Eegiment, Lieutenant-Colonel Ebenezer Sproat; enlisted July 11, 1780, at the age of sixteen, for
six months; a pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Ephraim Wright, who was


a Private in Captain Oliver Bates' Company,
Colonel James Prescott's Regiment, which
marched on the Lexington alarm, April 19, 1775,
from Westford; served three days.
Great-great-grandson of Timothy Prescott, who
was a Private in above command, at same time,
and served four days.

IN.

W.

9548.

1897

R. 113.

S. 358.

WRIGHT, JOHN BAKER


Akron, Ohio
Great-grandson of Charles Wright, who was a Private in Captain Seth Smith's Company from the
town of New Hartford for the relief of Boston in
the Lexington alarm, April, 1775; Private in
Captain John Sedgwick's Company, Colonel Benjamin Hinman's 4th Connecticut Continental
Regiment, in 1775; Sergeant in same Company,
and served at Crown Point, Ticonderoga, St.
John's, Chamblee, and other places; was one of
five brothers who served in the Revolution after
the Revolution, was a Captain of Connecticut
;

Militia.

Great-grandson of Thomas Marshall Baker, who


was a Sergeant in Captain Benjamin Farrar's
Company, Lieutenant-Colonel Nathan Tyler's 3d
Worcester County Regiment, from December 8,
1776, to January 1, 1777; Lieutenant in Captain
Robert Taft's Company, August 21, 1777; Captain of 10th Company, 3d Worcester County
Regiment Massachusetts Militia, January 30,
1778; Captain of a Company in Colonel Hawes'
Regiment, detached for service in Rhode Island
in 1778 and served six weeks, from first of July;
Captain of a Company in Colonel Samuel Denny's
Regiment, ordered to Claverack, on Hudson
River, from October 18 to November 23, 1779;
Captain in Colonel Nathan Tyler's Regiment,
133

served in Rhode Island from Julv 26 to August


8,

1780.

Great-great-grandson of William Adrian Hawkins,


who was a Sergeant in Captain William Walker's Company, Colonel James Eeed's Regiment,
April 23, 1775, served three months; records of
5th Regiment New Hampshire Militia, in 1777,
show that he was enlisted for three years; commissioned First Lieutenant in Colonell's Regiment, November 8, 1776; resigned, as Captain,
July 5, 1780.

Great-grandson of Moses Sherman, who was a Private in Captain Luke Drury's Company, General
Ward's Regiment, on Lexington alarm, April
19, 1775, served seven days; Private in Captain
Luke Drury's Company, Colonel Jonathan
Ward's Regiment, April 26, 1775, served three
months and thirteen days; Corporal, Captain
Joseph Warren's Company, under command of
Lieutenant-Colonel Wheelock, August 21, 1777,
five days, on Bennington alarm.

N. 2469.
1896 WYMAN,

W.

R. 74.

S. 269.

VAUGHN ELY
Painesville, Ohio

Great-great-grandson of William Wyman, who was


a Private in Captain Fish's Company, Colonel
Fletcher's Battalion, which served in Vermont;
Private in Captain Whitney's Company, Ver-

mont

Militia.

Great-grandson of William Wyman, Jr., who was


also a Private in Captain Fish's Company, Colonel Fletcher's Battalion, in the service of Vermont; also a Private in Captain Whitney's
Company, Vermont Militia; also a Private in
Captain Hutchins' Company, Vermont troops;
was stationed at Fort Castleton, where he was
wounded in a skirmish with Tories and Indians;
134

entered the service as an

when a mere youth; a

officers'

attendant,

pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Nathan Eaton, who was a


Private in Captain Marcy's Company, Colonel
Chester's Connecticut Eegiment; served in New
Jersey; in battles of Trenton and Stony Point;
a pensioner.

Great-great-grandson of Silas Antizell, who was a


Private in Captain Heath's Wellington, Connecticut, Company; in Lexington alarm.
Great-great-great-grandson of John Gill, who
served three years in Captain Blackman's Company, Colonel Sherburne's Regiment, Connecticut troops.

Great-great-grandson of Colonel Benjamin Ely,


who was a Major of the 3d Hampshire County,
Massachusetts, Regiment; also Colonel of Militia
a Representative in the Legislature of Mas;

sachusetts.

Great-great-grandson of James Parker, who was


a Private in Captain Dana's Company, General
Waterbury's Connecticut Brigade; under General

Washington at Phillipsburg.

N. 9930.
1897 YOUNG,

W.

ALFRED

R. 117.

S. 365.

E.

Akron, Ohio
Great-great-grandson of John Young, who served
as Private and Sergeant in New York troops, a
part of the time in Captain Collins' Company,
Colonel White's Regiment; a pensioner.
Great-great-great-grandson of Colonel Jeremiah
Jackson, who, with three sons, enlisted in the
war of the Revolution; held a Captain's commission, and was promoted to the rank of Colonel ; served during the greater part of the war.

ANCESTORS OF MEMBERS.
Names

of Ancestors in

CAPITALS.

ABBOTT, NATHAN

Charles H. Cory

ADAMS, ASAHEL

BAILEY, SETH
Edmund Cone Brush

Adams

Henry Robbins Baldwin

Frank Spencer Brush

BAKER, JONATHAN

ADAMS, JOEL
John McKelvey

Albert Rufus Baker

AINSWORTH, AMARIAH
Chandler Julius Moulton

ALDEN, NATHAN,

of Descendants in small letters.

AXTELL, HENRY

Willard Abbott
Whittlesey

Names

JR.

Isaac Carey Alden

ALLEN, PHINEAS
Horatio Fiske Allen

AMSDEN, NOAH
John Orson Johnston

ANDERSON, JAMES
ANDERSON, PATRICK
Anderson Lee Stephenson
William Elmer Stephenson

ANDERSON, THOMAS
James House Anderson

ANGELL, ESECK
Elgin Adelbert Angell

BAKER, THOS. MARSHALL


John Baker Wright

BAKER, WILLIAM
Clarence

Sumner Vandenbark

BALDWIN, SIMEON
Henry Robbins Baldwin

BALL, JAMES
Archibald Alex. Edw. Taylor
Edward Munson Taylor
Van Derveer Taylor

BARNUM, ELIPHALET
Frederick Carlos Bryan

BARRETT, AMOS
Henry True

BARRETT, JAMES,
BARRETT, JAMES,

SR.
JR.

Robert Barrett Dakin

ANTIZELL, SILAS
Vaughn Ely Wyman

ASHLEY, DANIEL
John Uri Lloyd

AVERY, ABRAHAM
Elroy McKendree Avery

AVERY, NATHAN
Frederick Burt

Henry Whiting Avery

BASS,

OBADIAH

William

Lyman Hurlbut

BAS6ETT, LOT
Horace Bassett Corner

BATCHELDER, ELIJAH
James Loring Cheney

BECKWITH, DAVID
David Herrick Beckwith

BEEBE, BEEZALEEL
Robert Case Beebee

BELKNAP, CALVIN
Ralph

S.

BENEDICT,

Belknap

THOMAS

Frederick Carlos Bryan

BERRY, DIVAN,

JR.
Charles Tod Quayle

BETTS,

HEZEKIAH

John Edward Betts

BILL,

BENJAMIN

Samuel Newton Johnston

BLACKMAN, ELIJAH
A. Per Lee Pease

BLACKMAN, ELISHA
Walter N. P. Darrow

BLAKE, JOSEPH
Tileston Fracker Spangler

BLAKSLEY, JAMES
Edward Everett Cole

BOOTH, CALEB
John Gaius Fraser

BOWER, JOHN
Buckland Palmer Bower

BOWLER, CHARLES
Noadiah Potter Bowler
William Bowler

BRADFORD, GAMALIEL
Edward Chynoweth

BRADFORD, SAMUEL
James Loring Cheney

BRASHER, HENRY
BRASHER, JOHN
Lawrence L. Brasher

BRICE,

WILLIAM

BROOKS, DAVID
Herbert Brooks

Thomas

BROWN, JACOB
Edward

BRINKERHOFF, ROELIFF
Roeliff Brinkerhoff

S.

Grant

BROWN, J'OHN, SR.


BROWN, JOHN, JR.
Wood

Kenneth Dodge

BRUSH, ISRAEL
Edmund Cone Brush
Frank Spencer Brush
Murray Peabody Brush

BRYAN, ELIJAH
Frederick Carlos Bryan

BUCKLAND, STEPHEN
Horace Stephen Buckland

BUNCE, JOHN
Charles Carroll

Dawson

BUNN, JOHN
Winchester Fitch

BURGHDORF, COENRAD
Clement Graham Martin

BURKE, SYLVANUS
Clarence Elisha Burke

BURKHARDT, JOHN
Harlan Fessenden Burket
Jacob F. Burket
John F. Burket

BURNS, ROBERT
William Leontes Curry

BURWELL, JEREMIAH
Harry Hayes

BUSHNELL, ALEXANDER
Martin Baldwin Bushnell

BUSS,
Henry Rowan Brinkerhoff

Brooks

Oliver Kingsley Brooks

Edward Kibler

BRINKERHOFF, JAMES

S.

BROOKS, JOSHUA

OBADIAH

William

Lyman Hurlbut

BUTLER, THOMAS
Joseph Marion Butler
Samuel Morrison Price

CALKINS, JONATHAN
CALKINS, WILLIAM

P.

CLEVELAND, TRACEY

CAMPBELL, McDONALD
CAMPBELL, THOMAS, SR
Charles Davidson Campbell

Samuel Morrison Price

CARPENTER, NATHAN
Willard Bryant Carpenter

Chalmer Jackson Scott

CASS, JONATHAN
Edward M. Cass

CHANDLER, JAMES,
CHANDLER, JAMES,

Alonzo B. Coit

ALEXANDER

John M. Kenyon

W.

Edmund Cone Brush


Frank Spencer Brush

CONKLIN, ELIAS
Sherwood Mortley Pinkerton
SR.
JR.

Chandler

CHAPIN, MOSES
William Brownell Sanders

CHAPLINE, MOSES
Sherman Moorhead Granger

CHAPPELL, AMOS
Tracy Waldo Guthrie

CHASE, JOSIAH
Walter H. Chase

CHENERY, ISAAC
Charles Cyrus Davis

CHARLES'

Charles M. Cist
Cist

CLARK, JEROME
James Barnett
Jerome Clark

CLARK, NATHANIEL
Clark H.

COIT, BENJAMIN
COIT, ISAAC

CONE, JOSEPH

CASE, ASA

Henry M.

COCHRAN, SAMUEL

COMINS,

ABNER

Daniel Wilbert Manchester

CIST,

Wood

Edward M. Ayres
William Alfred Means

CARPENTER, JOHN

Charles

John Lewis

COBURN, ASA

John Mackey

CASE,

CLEVELAND, AARON
Henry Robbins Baldwin

Winchester Fitch

Nye

CLARK, STEPHEN
Edward Darius Parsons
Wilson Ryley Parsons

CONVERSE, ISRAEL
Marcus A. Hanna

CONVERSE, JOSIAH
Moulton Houk

COOLEY, WILLIAM
George Bohan Wright
Theodore F. Wright

COON, JEREMIAH
Levi Tucker Scofield

COOPER, JOHN MARTIN


Edmund Cone Brush
Frank Spencer Brush

COPELAND, ELIJAH
Foster Copeland

COWLES, SAMUEL
John Guiteau Welch Cowles

CRACRAFT, CHARLES
William F. Conley
Allen L. Marshall
Alva Orr Marshall

CKEIGH, JOHN
Karl Kendig

CUNNINGHAM, JOHN
John A. Logan,

Jr.

CULBERTSON. SAMUEL

DEVOL, DANIEL
Kenneth Dodge

Lewis Rogers Culbertson

Wood

DE WITT, CHARLES

CURRY, JAMES

Thomas May De Witt

William Leontes Curry

CURTIS, PETER
Thomas Crum Snyder

DICKEY, JAMES

CUSICK, NICHOLAS

DODGE, NATH. HUBBARD


Kenneth Dodge Wood
DREW, ISAAC

Cornelius Charles Cusick

CUTLER,

SOLOMON

Homer Nash

DUNLAVY, FRANCIS
Francis Dunlavy Morris

Robert Barrett Dakin

DALE, EBENEZER
Charles Robert Hamilton

DARROW, DANIEL
Cady Staley
Walter N. P. Darrow

DAVIS, JOHN
DAVIS, JOSHUA, SR.
Perry D. Gath

WILLIAM

William Luther David

DAWSON, TIMOTHY
Charles Carroll

Dawson

NOAH

Robert Henry Day

DAY,

DURFEY, EBENEZER
Lucius Loyd Durfee

DU
DU

VAL, SAMUEL
VAL, WILLIAM
Du Val Roberts

Charles

DARROW, TITUS

DAY,

James Loring Cheney

Kimball

DAKIN, JOSEPH
DAKIN, SAMUEL

DAVIS,

Stephen Warner Perry

TIMOTHY

Merrick Ely Johnson

Cyrus Swan Roberts,

Frank Wesley Rickenbaugh


Ralph Elmer Rickenbaugh

EATON, ASHBEL
William Garrick Wilson

EATON, BRIGHAM
William Cullen

Henry De Hart Waite

DENNIS, BENJAMIN
Thaddeus Longstreth

DENSLOW, MARTIN
William Fell Brown

DENT, JOHN
Arthur Melville Dent

DEVENY, JOHN
Abram Thomas Frye

Wren

EATON, NATHAN
Vaughn Ely Wyman

EDWARDS, OLIVER
William Edwards

ELDERKIN, JEDEDIAH
Henry

DE HART, JACOBUS

Jr.

DYER, AMHERST

C. Strong

ELY, BENJAMIN
Vaughn Ely Wyman

ELY. LEWIS
Merrick Ely Johnson

ENSIGN,

JOHN

John Edward Engn

EVANS,

EDWARD

Nelson Wiley Evans

EVANS, JOHN
Arthur Melville Dent

EWING, GEORGE
John

Ewing

Gillespie

FAIRBANK, JOSHUA
George Lorenze Fairbank

FARLEY, BENJAMIN
FARLEY, EBENEZER
Frederick Shedd
Henry Herbert Wheeler

FARNUM, ELISHA
Merrick Ely Johnson

FARRAND, JARED
Addison John Farrand

FASSETT, JOHN, SR.


FASSETT, JOHN, JR.
James Follett
John Dawson Follett
John Fassett Follett
Martin

Dewey

Follett

Harry Parker Ward


Hubert Herrick Ward

James Follett
John Dawson Follett
John Fassett Follett
Martin Dewey Follett

Harry Parker Ward


Hubert Herrick Ward

FOLLETT, FREDERICK
Flamen

Ball, Jr.

FONTAINE, BECKET DE
John A. Logan,

Jr.

FORCE, WILLIAM
Manning Ferguson

FORD,

ALEXANDER

Collin

Ford

FOSTER, JACOB
George Mitchell Wright

FRANKLIN, ASAHEL

FEARIS, JACOB
Henry Mclntire W. Moore
William Eves Moore

FERRIS.

FOLLETT, ELIPHALET
FOLLETT, MARTIN DEWEY

REUBEN

David E. Cole

Orlando W. Aldrich

FRAZER, ROBERT
Edwin Frazer Wilson

FRISBIE,

FESSENDEN, NATHAN

JACOB

Charles H. Bigelow

Levi G. Fessenden

FILLMORE, NATHANIEL
Williams Burroughs Ruggles

FITCH,

ABRAHAM

Winchester Fitch

FLETCHER, SAMUEL
Elbert Hall Baker

FLINT,

BENJAMIN

Charles

Mayhew Wing
Wing

Lucius Bliss

FOGG, PHINEAS
Arthur Lloyd Fogg

FOLLETT, BENJAMIN
Flamen Ball, Jr.
James Follett
John Dawson Follett
John Fassett Follett
Martin

Dewey

FULLER, BENJAMIN
Charles Clinton Shearer

FULLER,

NOAH

Moulton Houk

GAGE, ABNER
GAGE, DANIEL
Daniel

Hosmer Gard

Irving Gard
Wordsworth Gard

GALE, DANIEL
Charles

Hanson

GALLOWAY, JAMES
Clark Madison Galloway
James Edmund Galloway
William Albert Galloway
George Wilson Kendall

Follett

Harry Parker Ward


Hubert Herrick Ward

GALLOWAY, JOHN

Tod Buchanan Galloway

R.

GALLOWAY, JOSEPH
Clark Madison Galloway
William Albert Galloway
George Wilson Kendall

GATES, JOSIAH
John Uri Lloyd
Gilbert D.

Arthur Harris Smythe

Munson

SAMUEL
THOMAS

William Edward

Rambo

GILL, JOHN
Vaughn Ely Wyman

GILLESPIE,

WILLIAM

Clayton L. Dickey

GOODNO, NAHUM
George Searle Shinnick

GRANGER, OLIVER
Sherman Moorhead Granger

GRAY, ROBERT
Edwards Ritchie

GREEN, JOSEPH
Joseph Marion Butler

GUILD,
GUILD,

SAMUEL
NATHANIEL

Foster Copeland

HALL, BENJAMIN
John Philo Cowing

HALSEY, DANIEL
Silas E.

Hurin

HAMILTON, JOHN
Henry A. Williams

HAMMOND, DANIEL
HAMMOND, PHINEAS
George

F.

Hammond

HANNUM, JOHN
John H. B. Romans
Jacob D. Streeper

HARBISON, ROBERT
Clinton Crane

HARKNESS, WILLIAM
Thomas Sharp

John Harris McBride


Leander McBride

HARRIS, ISRAEL

GILBERT, ASA
GILES,
GILES,

HARPER, WILLIAM
John W. Harper
HARRIS, GEORGE

HARRIS, JOHN
William Finley Carr
Stephen R. Harris
William Edgar Wirt

HARRISON, NATHANIEL
Archibald A. E. Taylor

Edward Munson Taylor


Van Derveer Taylor

HART, REUBEN
Henry

C.

Holt

HAWKINS, WM. ADRIAN


John Baker Wright

HAYWARD, ELEAZER
Albert

HAZEL,

W. Hayward

HENRY

Frederick Shedd

HERKIMER, GEORGE
Allan Wadsworth Carpenter

HERRICK, STEPHEN
Lucius Carroll Herrick

HEYWARD, THOMAS
James Heyward Bradford

HICKS, ISAAC
John A. Logan,

Jr.

HIESTER, DANIEL
Cyrus W. Hiester
HILL, NICHOLAS, SR.
Gideon Tabor Stewart

HOBBY, THOMAS,
HOBBY, THOMAS,
Lawrence

J.

SR.
JR.

Whittemore

HODGE, BENJAMIN
Orlando John Hodge

HOLD EN, JOHN


Liberty

Emery Holden

JEWETT, ELAM

HOLLIDAY, SAMUEL

Harry Parker Ward


Hubert Herrick Ward

Charles Hempsted

HOPKINS, EBENEZER

JOHNSON, AMOS

Lucius Loyd Durfee

Charles Steese
Edward Steese

HOWARD, ELIJAH
Foster Copeland

HOYT,

JOHNSON, JACOB

NOAH

Edwin Frazer Wilson

James Humphrey Hoyt

JOHNSON, JOHN

HUBBARD, ISAAC
Thomas H.

JOHNSON, RUFUS
Samuel Hiram Crowl

Carruthers

KEARSLEY, SAMUEL

HUNTINGTON, HEZEKIAH
Francis Joseph

Edmund

Wing

Kenneth Dodge

Warren King Moorehead

HUTCHINSON, ELEAZER

KIMBALL, JOSHUA

John Philo Cowing

George Henry Kimball


Lafayette Kimball

INGHAM, JONATHAN
Boyden Kinsey
George Kinsey

KIMBALL, RICHARD
Homer Nash Kimball

JACKSON, DAVID

KING,

Clark Madison Galloway


William Albert Galloway
George Wilson Kendall

KINSEY,

JOHN
Jr.

KIRKPATRICK, DAVID

JAMESON. JOHN
JAMIESON, SAMUEL

Frank Hutchinson Galloway

KLEIBER, GEORGE

Charles Titus Jamieson

Edward

JENKS, JEREMIAH

Grant

Thomas Spencer Knight

Owen

T. Jenks
Robert H. Jenks

LANGDON, JOHN
LANGDON, PAUL

JENNINGS. JOSEPH

Henry A. Williams

Lewis H. Wain
Winfield Scott Jewell

S.

KNIGHT, PHINEHAS

Benjamin Lane Jenks


John Henry Jenks

JEWELL, JOSEPH

SAMUEL

Boyden Kinsey
George Kinsey
Samuel Kinsey

Young

Joseph Benson Foraker,

JOHN

George Andrew Backus


Lafayette Backus

JACKSON, JEREMIAH
JAMES,

Wood

KENT, ELIHU

Lyman Hurlbut

Alfred E.

Roberts Kearsley

KLNNER, RODHAM

HURLBUT, ABIRAM
HURLBUT, SAMUEL
William

Houk

xuoulton

Winchester Fitch

HUBLEY, BERNARD

LEAVENS, JOHN
Howard Cole Fulton

LEAVITT, BENJAMIN
Percy Ward Leavitt

MARSHALL, JOHN

LEONARD, ELIPHALET

MARTIN,

Albert

MATHIOT, GEORGE

HABAKUK

Theodore Stacy Lindsey

LIVINGSTON,

HENRY

Robert Mason Davidson

MATTHEWS, DANIEL,

MAYHEW, FREEBORN

LOOKER, OTHNIEL
Alfred Decker Owens,

Jr.

LUDLOW, CORNELIUS

Charles

Mayhew Wing

MEANS, JOHN
William Alfred Means

Hurin

LUSK, DAVID
Thomas Crum Snyder

MELLEN, PATRICK

LYMAN, DAVID

MELVIN, AMOS

Oliver Welton

Mc< ABE,

JR.

Howard Cole Fulton

John Thomas

Silas E.

ADAM

James Martin

Foster Copeland

LINDSEY,

W. Hayward

Upson

MICHAEL

Joel Parker Baker

McCONNELL, JAMES
Alexander McConnell

McCONNELL, JOHN
David Robison, Jr.
James J. Robison
Willard F. Robison

Lucius Freeman Mellin

James Melvin

MILLS, BENJAMIN
Daniel Wilbert Manchester

MITCHELL, GEORGE
George Mitchell Wright

MOORE, JACOB
Henry Mclntire W. Moore
William Eves Moore

MOORE, JUDAH
Thomas Frederick Whittelsey

McKELVEY, WILLIAM
John McKelvey

McKINLEY, DAVID
William McKinley

McMULLIN, JAMES
Frederick Shedd

MOORE, SIMEON, JR.


John Thomas Martin

MONFORT, HENRY
William Henry Marlatt

MORGAN, THOMAS
Clinton Crane

MANCHESTER, JOHN
Daniel Wilbert Manchester

MANSON, DAVID
John C. Geyer
William H. Geyer

MARLATT, PETER
William Henry Marlatt

MARSHALL, CHRISTOPHER
Harris Holland Baxter

MORTON, JOHN
John Trenmor Morton

MOULTON, STEPHEN
Moulton Houk
Benjamin M. Moulton
William James Moulton

MOWRY, CHRISTIAN
Alexander Cowley Bates

Mowry

Bates

MYGATT, ELI
Whittlesey

PARSONS, JABEZ

Adams

Reuben Turner

PATTON, JOHN

NEWTON, ELIAS
Charles

Humphreys Newton

Frank H. Mason

George Henry Twiss

PEASE,

NORRIS, ELIPHALET
Myron Augustine

ABNER

A. Per Lee Pease

Norris

NORTON, EBENEZER, SR.


NOR ION, EBENEZER, JR.
Thomas Herbert Norton

OLNEY, EZEKIEL
Cnarles Fayette Olney

WILLIAM

PEEBLES,

John Geddes Peebles

PENDLETON, AMOS
Noadiah Potter Bowler
William Bowler

PENNIMAN, STEPHEN

ORWIG, GOTTFRIED

George Augustine Thayer

Joseph Marion Butler

PERKINS. LUKE
PERKINS, OBADIAH

OWENS, JOSHUA
Aubrey Clarence Taylor

Elisha Blair

William Alexander Taylor

PACKARD, ABEL

Hubbard

PERKINS, SIMON
Douglass Perkins
Jacob Bishop Perkins

Theodore M. Bates

PER LEE, EDMUND

PACKARD, JACOB

A. Per Lee Pease

Edmund Cone Brush


Frank Spencer Brush

PERRINE, JOSEPH

PACKER, ICHABOD

Charles Titus Jamieson

Elroy McKendree Avery

PAINE,

Nelson Wiley Evans

PEABODY, RICHARD

NICHOLAS, ANDREW
NICHOLAS, JOHN

BRINTON

PERRY, JAMES
Willis

Adams

Bailey

James McConnell Bailey

James Hill Paine

PETTIGREW, JAMES

PAINE, PHILIP
Walter N. P. Darrow

Walter

S.

Mayer

PEYTON, VALENTINE

PALMER, BENJAMIN

William Athearon Tangeman

George Palmer Steele

PARKER, JAMES
Vaughn Ely Wyman

PHILBRICK, JOSEPH

PARKER, JOSEPH,
PARKER, JOSEPH,

PHINNtY. JOHN

Lafayette Kimball

SR.
JR.

Arthur Phinney

Harry Parker Ward


Hubert Herrick Ward

PIATT,

JACOB

Hugh

PARSONS, BENJAMIN,
Edward Darius Parsons
Wilson Ryley Parsons

SR.

L.

Runkle

PICKERELL, SAMUEL
Lewis Vernon Williams

PINNEY,

ABRAHAM

RICHARDSON, BENJAMIN

Harold Arthur Streator

PORTER, ELIJAH
William Garrick Wilson

PRATT,

JOHN

Charles E. Sheldon

PRAY,

JOHN

John Lansing Pray

PRESCOTT, TIMOTHY
Herbert Augustus Wright

PUTNAM, ISRAEL
PUTNAM, ISRAEL,
PUTNAM, RUFUS

Edwin M. P. Brister
William Dudley Browning

RANDALL, JOHN
Emilius Oviatt Randall

RANDOLPH, REUBEN FITZ


James Reed Weoster

RANSOM, PELEG
James E. Pilcher

RATHBONE, JOHN,
RATHBONE, JOHN,

SR.
JR.
Estes George Rathbone

RAYMOND, PAUL
Fitch

Raymond

GEORGE
THADDEUS

Irving Gard
Wordsworth Gard

REED, BENJAMIN
Henry True

REYNOLDS, JOHN
Arlington G. Reynolds

RICE,

JAMES

Charles David Williams

RICE, SILAS
John Swasey

William Richardson

RICHARDSON, WILLIAM
John Philo Cowing

ROBERTS, LEMUEL
Charles Du Val Roberts
Cyrus Swan Roberts,
Cyrus Swan Roberts,

Sr.
Jr.

ROBERTS, OLIVER
Charles Carroll

Dawson

ROBINSON, JOSEPH
JR.

Lee Stow Devol


William Stow Devol

READ,
READ,

RICHARDSON, AARON
James McElroy Richardson

Alvin C. White

PLUMB, CHARLES

Elroy McKendree Avery

ROE, DANIEL
George Mortimer Roe

RUSSELL, JOHN
Charles Chester Bolton

John Shelley Pechin


George Shelley Russell

SAFFORD, JOSEPH
James Follett
John Dawson Follett
John Fassett Follett
Martin Dewey Follett
Harry Parker Ward
Hubert Herrick Ward

SALISBURY,

EDWARD

Robert Mason Davidson

SCHULTZ, JOHN
William Darlington Schultz

SCOTT, WILLIAM
Charles F. Scott

SCRIBNER, ASA
Harvey Scribner

SEARLE, CONSTANT
Charles Searle Elder

George Searle Shinnick

SEYMOUR, MOSES
John Seymour Lockwood

SHARP,

THOMAS

Thomas Sharp

SHAWKE, JACOB
Charles Jacob Scroggs

SHED, DANIEL
SHED, OLIVER
Frederick Shedd

SHELDON, AMASA
William

Lyman Hurlbut

SHEPARD, ELISHA
SHEPARD, WILLIAM
Edward Darius Parsons
Wilson Ryley Parsons

SHERER, JOSEPH
William Alfred Means

SHERMAN, DANIEL
Sherman Moorhead Granger

SHERMAN, MOSES
John Baker Wright

SHUBRICK, THOMAS
James Heyward Bradford
Thomas Herbert Norton

SLOANE, WILLIAM
Rush R. Sloane

SMITH,

Tod Buchanan Galloway


Isaac Carey Alden

Morrison

SAMUEL
Smith

SNOW, DAVID
Charles H. Small

SNOW, PRINCE
James Loring Cheney

SNOW, SOLOMON
Justin

Thomas Frederick

Whittelsey

SQUIRE, EZEKIEL
Andrew Squire

SQUIER, JAMES
James Jay Erwin

STANAGE, THOMAS
William Henry Stanage

STARR, DANIEL
Frederick Burt Avery
Henry Whiting Avery

STARR, ELIHU
Hermon

Alfred Kelley

STEELE, JOSIAH
Marshfield Steele

STEVENS, ELISHA
Merrick El

Johnson
Stewart

JOHN

Frank A.

Stivers

STONE, JONATHAN
George Andros Thomson

STREATOR, JOHN

SMITH, JOSIAH

Stiles Curtiss

Roy Hebble

SPRAGUE, JOHN

STIVERS,

SMITH, JOSEPH

I.

SAMUEL

Charles

Thomas Milton

Henry True

Ira

Harley Barnes

SPICER,

STEWART, ALEXANDER

AMASA

SMITH, JAMES

SMITH,

SPERRY, ELIJAH

Snow

SPENCER, JOSEPH
Edmund Cone Brush
Frank Spencer Brush

Harold Arthur Streator

SUDDOTH, WILLIAM
Charles

Thompson

Atwell

SWAN, THOMAS
Charles

Du

Val Roberts

Cyrus Swan Roberts,


Cyrus Swan Roberts,

Sr.
Jr.

SYPHER, PETER
William Barnabas Doyle

TAYLOR, THOMAS
Aubrey Clarence Taylor
William Alexander Taylor

VREELAND, ABRAHAM

TAYLOR, WILLIAM
Taylor McDougall
Thomas Laidlaw McDougall
Charles

James

Edward

Silcott

William Pitcher

Silcott

Archibald A. E. Taylor
Edward Munson Taylor
Van Derveer Taylor

William Henry Marlatt

JR.
Alexander Sackett Taylor
Virgil Corydon Taylor

George Augustine Thayer

WARD, RUFUS
Ward

WARREN, MOSES,

John Thomas

SR.

Albert Warren Stiles

WATERS, ASA

THOMPSON, ISAAC
John Andrew Thompson

THOMPSON, JAMES

Herbert Richmond

WEIR,

Edwin Lewis Lybarger

Gill

SAMUEL

Frederic Candee

TUCKER, EZRA

Weir

WHALLON, JAMES

Mars Edward Wagar

THOMPSON, STEPHEN,
THOMPSON, STEPHEN,

Edward
SR.
JR.

George Henry Thompson

Thompson.

THORNTON, MATTHEW
Wood Logan

THWING, NATHANIEL
Charles Franklin

TIBBS,

Charles E. Sutton

WALKER, PETER
Levi Barns

THOMAS, JOHN
THOMAS, WILLIAM

George

WAKEMAN, STEPHEN
Sheldon Hitchcock Tolles

THAYER, CALVIN

Orville

Bowman

WAGNER, JACOB

TAYLOR, WILLIAM,

Henry

Brown

Francis P.

WADSWORTH, ELIJAH

Thwing

WILLOUGHBY

Charles Du Val Roberts


Cyrus Swan Roberts, Jr.

TOWNLEY, EDWARD
Edward E. Townley

TURNEY, ASA
Turney
Omar Asa Turney
Eli Alvin

UNDERWOOD, ALPHEUS
Mark Roys Hayne

VAN HORNE, ISAAC


Walter Van Hamm Black
William Darlington Schultz

Whallon

P.

WHEATLEY, WILLIAM
Thomas Daniel Rhodes

WHEELER, THADDEUS,
Henry Herbert Wheeler

WHITE, JOSEPH
Herbert Brooks

Thomas

Brooks

S.

WHITING, ELKANAH
James Austin,

Jr.

WHITING, FREDK. JONES


Frederick Burt

WHITNEY, ASA
George Mitchell Wright

WHITTELSEY. ROGER
Thomas

N.
Frederick Whittelsey

WHITTLESEY, EZRA
Frederick

W.

Whittlesey

WHITTLESEY, JOHN
John Whittlesey Walton

WIKOFF, PETER
Charles Titus Jamieson

WILLEY,

ABRAHAM

Marcus Canfield Gowey

WILLIAMS, EBENEZER
George Washington Williams

WILLIAMS, EZEKIEL
Richard Chappell Parsons

WILLSON. AARON
Willis Ebenezer Carpenter

WILSON, ARCHIBALD
Albert Cooper

WILSON, BENJAMIN
Frederic Morton Black
Edward Kibler

Gideon C. Wilson

WILSON, JAMES
James Alpheus Collins

WILSON, JAMES
Muron Henry Wilson

WILSON, JOHN
Moulton Houk
Albert L. Johnson

WILSON, WILLIAM
William Garrick Wilson

WINCHESTER, HENRY
Winchester Fitch

WING, BANI
Charles Mayhew Wing
Francis Joseph Wing
Lucius Bliss Wing

WING, MOSES
WING, SAMUEL
William Fell Brown

WISWALL, NOAH, SR.


WISWALL, NOAH, JR.
William Thomas Wiswall

WOOD, JAMES
Frank Warren

Wood

WOOD, THOMAS
Kenneth Dodge

Wood

WOODBURY, JAMES
James

E. Pilcher

WRIGHT, CHARLES
John Baker Wright

WRIGHT, ELIPHAZ
George Bohan Wright
Theodore F. Wright

WRIGHT, EPHRAIM
WRIGHT, STEPHEN
Herbert Augustus Wright

WRIGHT, JOHN
Darwin Erasmus Wright
George Mitchell Wright

WYATT, LEMUEL
Tileston Fracker Spangler

WYMAN, WILLIAM,
WYMAN, WILLIAM,

SR.
JR.

Vaughn Ely Wyman

YORK, STEPHEN
Orlando W. Aldrich

YOUNG, JOHN
Alfred E.

Young

LIVING SONS OF REVOLUTIONARY


SOLDIERS.
Captain LAWRENCE L. BRASHER, of Cincinnati, Ohio,
was born at Mt. Pleasant, Hamilton County, Ohio, July
9, 1819, and has always resided in the immediate vicinity

He is now in charge of Station "A"


of his birth-place.
of the Cincinnati Post Office, which position he has held
Captain Brasher has been a
for some thirteen years.
great worker in and for the public schools, and has held
many

of the minor offices within the gift of the people.


has been a member of the Masons, Odd Fellows and
Sons of Temperance nearly all Of his useful and active

He

life.

Mr.

JAMES MARTIN,

of Mt.
Pa.,

Washington County,

Vernon, Ohio, was


February 9, 1807.

born

in

He came

to Mt. Vernon June 18, 1818, being then an orphan seven


years of age.
was raised on a farm and has followed
that occupation all his life, embarking in the thorough-

He

bred stock business in 1860.


a son and a daughter, both of

He was

married and had

whom died in 1869. His


resides one mile from the city
of Mt. Vernon, and is now quite feeble.
He is now finishing the journey of life alone, his family all having preceded him to the other side of the river. His father was
a First Lieutenant and Captain and served most of the
time during the Revolution; was born in Ireland, and
died in Washington County, Pa., October 6, 1816.
wife died in 1875.

Rev.

He

ELI ALVIN TURNEY,

of North Amherst, Lorain


County, Ohio, was born in Madison, Lake County, Ohio,

March 23, 1815. He learned the ship-building trade and


worked in Lake Erie ports. In 1833 he settled in Amherst,

He

Lorain County, which has since been his home.


first, Minerva Seeley, who died in 1868, and

married,

149

second, Mrs. Arvilla Branch. In 1850 Mr. Turney


licensed to preach in the Free Will Baptist Church,
was ordained in 1856.

was
and

BARNS WARD, of 304 East Gambier Street, Mt.


Vernon, Ohio, was born in Brandon, Vermont, April 10,
In 1814 he came with his father's family to Ohio,
1808.
and in 1816 settled on a small farm in the wilderness,
near Mt. Vernon. For twenty-five years he remained
on the farm and then engaged in mercantile business,
which he has since followed. Although nearly eightynine years of age, Mr. Ward enjoys the ability to attend to business. At the meeting of the Ohio Society,
S. A. R., in 1896, Mr. Ward made a short speech which
was thoroughly enjoyed by all present.

Mr. LEVI

Hon.

LUCIUS BLISS WING,

of Newark, Ohio, was born at


He was
Wilmington, Vermont, November 15, 1822.

educated at Williston Seminary, near Northampton, and


for five years was a teacher in the public schools of Western Massachusetts. He married Mary M. Mayhew, of
revolutionary ancestry, who is also descended from Governor Thomas Mayhew, of Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts.
Mr. Wing was President of the Ohio State
Board of Agriculture in 1880, and has been a Trustee of
He was, in 1896,
the Ohio State University since 1881.
Republican Presidential Elector for the Seventeenth
Congressional District of Ohio. By occupation Mr.
Wing is a banker, being President of the Franklin Bank
Company of Newark, Ohio. During the year 1895 and
for nearly two months in 1896 he was President of the
Ohio Society, S. A. R., and has several times served as
Delegate to the National Society, S. A. R., in which
capacities his well-known enthusiasm and ability have
been of great value to the Ohio Society.

DECEASED MEMBERS

WHO WERE

REVOLUTIONARY

DUDLEY BALDWIN,
Dr.

of Cleveland, Ohio.

ELIJAH FOWLER BRYAN,

JAMES FOLLETT,

HENRY ROGERS,

SONS OF

SOLDIERS.

of Lima, Ohio.

of Hartford, Licking County, Ohio.

of

Mount Healthy, Hamilton County,

Ohio.

STACY TAYLOR,
Colonel
field,

of Columbus, Ohio.

JOSEPH KNOWLES WING,

of

North Bloom-

Ohio.

ACTION REGARDING SONS OF REVOLUTIONARY


SOLDIERS.

At a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Ohio


Society, S. A. R., held December 13, 1895, the following
resolution was adopted:
"That the Secretary be directed to request members to
report the names of any living sons of revolutionary fathers in this state, whom they know, with a view to admitting such men to our Society, without fees or dues, in order that the records of the services of their fathers may be
preserved in the archives of this Society."
151

OFFICERS NATIONAL SOCIETY,


S.

A. R. 1898.

President-General,

EDWIN SHEPARD BARRETT,


Concord, Mass.
Vice-Presidents-General,

COL.

THOMAS M. ANDERSON,

U. S. A.,

Vancouver Barracks, Wash.

JOHN WHITEHEAD,
Morristown, N.

J.

JAMES M. RICHARDSON,
Cleveland, O.

CAPT.

SAMUEL EBERLY GROSS,


Chicago, HI.

GENERAL J.

C.

BRECKENRIDGE,

U. S. A.,

Washington, D. C.
Secretary-General,

FRANKLIN MURPHY,
143 Chestnut Street, Newark, N.

J.

Treasurer-General,
C.

W. HASKINS,

30 Broad Street,

New York

City.

Registrar-General,

A.

HOWARD CLARK,

Smithsonian Institution, Washington D. C.


Historian-General,

HENRY HALL,
Tribune Building,

New York

City.

Chaplain-General,

RT. REV.

CHARLES EDWARD CHENEY,


Chicago,
152

111.

D. D.

.11

F'K'KKS, Dlllo

SMC1KTY.

..

1M>N

OFFICERS OHIO SOCIETY,


S.

A. R., 1898.
President,

HON. JAMES M. RICHARDSON,


Cleveland.
Vice-Presidents,

HON. JOHN W. HARPER,


Cincinnati.

GEN. GEO.

B.

WRIGHT,

Columbus.

DR.

CLARK

M.

GALLOWAY,

Xenia.

GEN. JAMES BARNETT,


Cleveland.

MR. ROBERT

DAKIN,

B.

Toledo.
Secretary,

MAJOR ROBERT MASON DAVIDSON,


Newark.
Treasurer,

MR.

KENNETH DODGE WOOD,


Columbus.
Registrar,

COL.

WILLIAM LEONTES CURRY,


Columbus.

BOARD OF MANAGERS.
MR.

T.

SPENCER KNIGHT,
Cleveland.

DR.

ORLANDO W. ALDRICH,
Columbus.

COL.

WALTER H. CHASE,
Toledo.

MR. GIDEON

C.

WILSON,

Cincinnati.

153

MR. JOHN McKELVEY,


Sandusky,

HON. LUCIUS

WING,

B.

Newark.

SHERMAN M. GRANGER,

MR.

Zanesville.

DELEGATES TO NATIONAL CONGRESS.


JUDGE J. H. ANDERSON,
Columbus.

DR.

M.

C.

GALLOWAY,

Xenia.

MR.

T.

SPENCER KNIGHT,
Cleveland.

DR.

ORLANDO W. ALDRICH,
Columbus.

JUDGE

E.

M.

P.

BRISTER,

Newark.

MR. THOMAS

RHODES,

D.

Cincinnati.

ALTERNATES.
MAJOR ROBERT M. DAVIDSON,
Newark.

COL.

WALTER H. CHASE,
Toledo.

MAJOR CYRUS S. ROBERTS,

U. S. A.,

Columbus Barracks.

CAPT. W.

C WREN,

U. S.

Columbus Barracks.

MR. HUBERT H. WARD,


Cleveland.

MR.

HARLEY BURKET,
Findlay.

COMMITTEE ON

1898

YEAR BOOK.

REV. ARCHIBALD A. E. TAYLOR,


MR. KENNETH D. WOOD.

MAJOR HARRY
DR. LUCIUS

C.

P.

HERRICK,
154

D. D.

WARD.
Sec'y.

,*m

w<

fit

MK.

HOARD OK MANAGERS OK OHIO SOCIETY,

.11.1

S.

A.

UN
R..

I'

\\'l

OFFICERS,

lSHS,

WESTERN RESERVE SOCIETY

U|

WESTERN RESERVE
CLEVELAND,

O.

Organized December

23,

SOCIETY,

OFFICERS.

LIBERTY EMERY HOLDEN

President

JOHN THOMAS
FREDERICK CARLOS BRYAN
WILLIAM HENRY MARLATT

First Vice-President

Second Vice-President
Secretary,

302 Society for Savings Building.

THOMAS SPENCER KNIGHT

Treasurer
261

The Arcade.

DANIEL WILBERT MANCHESTER

Registrar

204 Superior Street.

CHARLES FAYETTE OLNEY

Historian

BOARD OF MANAGERS.
The

Officers

and

GENERAL JAMES BARNETT


JAMES M. RICHARDSON.

HUBERT HERRICK WARD.


COLONEL CLARENCE E. BURKE.
GEORGE SHELLEY RUSSELL.
HON. RUSH R. SLOANE,
Sandusky.

VAUGHN ELY WYMAN,


Painesville.

JOSEPH MARION BUTLER,


Youngstovm.

CINCINNATI CHAPTER NO.

4.

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Organized March

14, 1896.

OFFICERS.

GEORGE EINSEY
JOHN URI LLOYD

President
First Vice-President

GEORGE A. THAYER
THOMAS D. RHODES
JOHN DAWSON FOLLETT

REV.

Second Vice-President
Secretary

Treasurer

BOARD OF MANAGERS.
HON. JOHN

F.

FOLLETT.

GEORGE MORTIMER ROE.


JAMES
PROF.

A.

COLLDXS.

THOMAS H. NORTON.

HON. JOHN W. HARPER.

Mr. Harvey Scribxf.r

OFFICERS.

1898,

ANTHONY WAYNE CHAPTB1

ANTHONY WAYNE CHAPTER.


TOLEDO,

O.

OFFICERS.

MOULTON HOUR

President

COL. W. H.

Vice President

CHASE

Treasurer

JAMES MELVIN
FREDERICR W. WHITTLESEY
HARVEY SCRIBNER
THOMAS F. WHITTELSEY

Historian

CHARLES C. DAWSON

Vice-President
Registrar

Secretary

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.

THOMAS

F.

WHITTELSEY.

CHARLES C. DAWSON.
JOHN L. PRAY.
RALPH E. RICKENBAUGH.

WALTER

H. CHASE.

ALBERT L. JOHNSON.
JAMES MELVIN.

DELEGATES TO OHIO SOCIETY.


COL. W. H. CHASE.

THOMAS

F.

WHITTELSEY.

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CHAPTER,


COLUMBUS,

No. 5

O.

Instituted October 5, 1896.

OFFICERS.
President

Vice-President
Registrar

GEN.

GEORGE

B.

WRIGHT

LIEUT. COL. JAMES H. BRADFORD,

U. S. A.

MAJOR CYRUS S. ROBERTS,

U. S. A.

Columbus Barracks.
Secretary

CAPT. W.

C.

WREN, U. S.

A.

Columbus Barracks.
Treasurer
Historian

HERBERT R. GILL
PERRY D. GATH
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
JUDGE TOD B. GALLOWAY.
MAJOR HARRY P. WARD.
FREDERICK SHEDD.

Vice- President

/%

UFMCKKS,

IS!IS,

1!1-;XJAXIIN

l'KANKI,IX CHAPTER, No.

;;

MOUNT VERNON.
By W.

I.

Curry.

The following poem was read before the Benjamin Franklin Chapter,
A. R., at their meeting held at the Chittenden Hotel, Columbus, Ohio,
Jecember, 1897.
>.

ripple of Potomac's stream, break gently where the tread


Of thousands press the hallowed sod about our greatest dead
dearest shrine, guard well thy sacred trust
Locked in thy royal heart of hearts we keep the patriot's dust.
;

Mount Vernon, Freedom's

him glide among the huts that dot a cheerless gorge,


The Joshua of a struggling band, the man of Valley Forge

1 see

Where'er he goes, his smile illumes the shades that thickly lie
And all who hear his words resolve with him " to do or die."

The pilgrim comes from lands enslaved beyond the restless sea,
To meditate where sleeps the man who taught men to be free
The glitter of the blade he drew makes bright the world to-day,

And hands unborn

will

crown

its hilt

with laurel and with bay.

He needs no granite shaft to tell of glorious actions done


His monument ? the fairest land that lies beneath the sun
To-night with swelling pride we seek the banquet board once more
And drink to him whose fame goes far beyond Virginia's shore.
;

And now

another noble son, has

filled

the Chair of State,

So grandly filled by Washington, in fame forever great


With laurels fair we crowned his brow, Ohio's gifted son,
Then quaff again to the hero who the conquering host led

on.

Thus back to Washington to-night our thoughts, like eagles, fly.


'T was he who gave our flag the stars that shine in glory's sky
Wrapped in his cloak he calmly sleeps upon Mount Vernon's breast
Of Liberty's immortal sons the greatest and the best.
;

NATHANIEL GREENE CHAPTER.


XENIA,0.

OFFICERS.

JUDGE CHARLES

President

HON. J AMES

Vice-President

Corresponding Secretary

HON. WILLIAM
PROF. LEVI

Treasurer

Historian

C.

SHEARER

GALLOWAY

MR. CHARLES WHEELER CHANDLER

Recording Secretary

Registrar

E.

MR.
DR.

A.

G.

GALLOWAY
FESSENDEN

GEORGE WILSON KENDALL

CLARK MADISON GALLOWAY

ii mi
DGE Chari.es

C.

Corresponding Secretary

GEORGE WASHINGTON CHAPTER.


NEWARK,

O.

OFFICERS.

HON. LUCIUS

President

Secretary

Treasurer
Registrar.

B.

WING

JUDGE E. M. P. BRISTER
MR. GEORGE SEARLE SHINNICK
CAPT. CHARLES M. WING
HON. EDWARD KIBLER
MR. CHARLES HEMPSTED

Vice-President

Historian

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.

MAJOR

R. M.

MR.
MR.
MR.
The
February

last

DAVIDSON.

M. BLOCK.

HAMLIN.
THOMPSON.

P. D.

M.

Chapter to enter the Ohio Society was organized

22, 1898, at

Newark, Ohio, commemorating the anniversary

by naming the chapter

The Chapter
officers

C.

F.

is

after the country's

most

illustrious leader.

in a flourishing condition.

were elected for the ensuing year.

The above named

REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS BURIED

IN

OHIO.

In compliance with the action of the society at its last


annual meeting in regard to locating and reporting the
graves of Revolutionary soldiers in Ohio, the Committee
on the 1898 Year Book embodied in the circular which was
sent to all the members a request to report all graves of
Revolutionary soldiers in their respective neighborhoods.
goodly number of responses have been received, for
which due credit is given in the reports; a number of
deaths of Revolutionary soldiers occurring in this state

have also been found

in the applications of

members

society, but the greater portion of the following

been copied

Record

in a considerably

condensed form

of this

list

from

has
the

Hamilton
county, Ohio, compiled by General Samuel F. Cary, and a
of Revolutionary

Soldiers

buried

in

list of Revolutionary Soldiers buried in Adams county,


furnished by Mary Stevenson, of Adams county, published
in the Register of the Ohio Society of the Sons of the
Revolution for 1895. Those from the former list are designated by the letter "C," and from the latter by the letter
"S." The Committee hopes that our members will profit
by the elegant style in which General Cary has set forth
the facts, and will try to make as creditable a showing, in
our next Year Book, for the other counties of Ohio as he
has done for Hamilton in the publication of the kindred

society.

There are many graves of Revolutionary soldiers within


the bounds of our state. By a little work members can
add many names to this already valuable list and thereby
greatly assist in the general work of the society, the object
of whose existence is, as stated in the Constitution and ByLaws, "to perpetuate the memory and the spirit of the men
who achieved American Independence."
162

ASAHEL ADAMS.
Asahel Adams, born in Canterbury, Connecticut, September 13, 1754; died in Liberty, Trumbull county, May
25, 1821, and buried in the cemetery at Girard, same counWas a soldier in the Seventh Regiment Connecticut
ty.
Continental Line. Grandfather of Whittlesey Adams and
great-great-grandfather of Henry Robbins Baldwin and
Whittlesey Adams. Reported by Whittlesey Adams.

ISAAC ANDERSON.
Isaac Anderson, born in the North of Ireland in 1758
came to America in 1774; joined Colonel Morgan's Rifle
Regiment at the commencement, and served through the
Revolutionary war. He came to Cincinnati with his famremoved to Butler county in
ily in the winter of 1795-6
Place of burial
1812, and died there December 18, 1839.
not stated. C.
;

RICHARD ARNOLD.
Richard Arnold, born

in Ireland in 1745; emigrated to


Jersey before Revolution. Enlisted in patriot army
of hostilities and served through the
war.
Came to Hamilton county about 1800, and died
there in 1845. Was buried in what is now the park in the
village of Harrison, but was removed to "Glen Haven
Cemetery," near the village. C.

New

at

commencement

THOMAS AUTEN.
Thomas Auten, born in New Jersey in 1750; served
through the war removed to Hamilton county about 1800,
and settled on a farm near Pleasant Ridge, where he died
in 1847; was buried in the Presbyterian churchyard at
;

Pleasant Ridge.

C.

EBENEZER BALLENTINE.
Ebenezer Ballentine, a Revolutionary soldier, died and
was first buried in the old cemetery, but was removed to
new one beyond Gospel Hill, in Marion county. Reported by Henry True.

the

OBIL BEACH.
Obil Beach, born in Litchfield, Connecticut, December
27, 1758 served in Connecticut Militia through the war
removed to Poultney, Vermont, about 1784, and to New
Haven, Vermont, about 1790, and came to Canaan township, Madison county, in 1817, and died there October 5,
1846.
Grandfather of Dr. John Noble Beach, deceased.
;

JACOB BEAM.
Beam, entered service from Somerset county,
Pennsylvania; was at Valley Forge. Buried in the old
Jacob

cemetery at Findlay.

W.

Reported by Colonel

L. Curry.

CALVIN BELKNAP.
Calvin Belknap, born in Dummerston, Vermont, January 31, 1767; served in Captain James Blakeslee's Company, Colonel Fletcher's Battalion, in 1781; died in AusPlace of burial not stated.
tinsburg, March 17, 1848.
Great-grandfather of Ralph Stratton Belknap.

CAPTAIN DAVID BLACK.


David Black, born in New Jersey in 1758 served in Second New Jersey Regiment to end of war. Moved with his
family to Kentucky in 1T89, and thence to Columbia township, Hamilton county, in 1802 died October 18, 1832, and
was buried in a private family burying ground in that township, but his remains were removed in 1863 to Laurel
Cemetery in Madisonville. C.
;

AARON BONNEL.
enlisted in Revolutionary army in New
Jersey early in the war and participated in many battles.
Settled in Harrison township, Hamilton county, where he
died at the age of ninety-six years and was buried in a
graveyard which is now the village park of Harrison, and

Aaron Bonnel,

bones were left there to prevent the reversion


ground to the donor's heirs. C.

his

of

the

JOHN BRASHER.
John Brasher, born in New York City, May 15, 1764;
was waiter to his father, Captain Henry Brasher, three
months in 1776 one month in 1776, as a drummer boy irj
a Connecticut regiment in 1780, three months as a private
in Captain Arthur Smith's Company, Colonel Hasbrook's
New York Regiment. He came to Springfield township,
Hamilton county, in 1790; died December 31, 1840, in
Mount Healthy, and was buried in the Presbyterian Cemetery at Springdale.
(Father of Lawrence L. Brasher.)
;

C.

WILLIAM BREWSTER.
William Brewster, born in Westchester county, New
York, in 1762; enlisted at Peekskill, New York, in 1776, in
Colonel
Regiment.
Swartout's
Settled in Hamilton
county in 1816; died April 19, 1834; place of burial not
ascertained.

C.

JACOB BROADWELL.
Jacob Broadwell, born in New Jersey in 1764; enlisted
in Third New Jersey Regiment, Colonel Barber, in 1780.
He was an early emigrant to Hamilton county, and settled
on a farm of 400 acres in Anderson township died in 1840,
and was buried on his farm. C.

JOHN BROWN.
John Brown, was a private on Lexington alarm roll of
Captain Seth Washburn's Company, Colonel Ward's
Regiment, April 19, 1775; Sergeant in same, August 1,
1775 wounded at battle of Bunker Hill. He came to
Ohio at an early day, where he died and was buried in a
burial lot on the farm of John Frye, on the right bank of
Muskingum river, about two miles above Lowell, Wash:

The monumental inscription is: "Sacred


memory of John Brown, a Revolutionary veteran,
who departed this life September 28, 1821, in the 87th year

ington county.
to the

of his age,

He was

great-great-grandfather of Kenneth

Dodge Wood.
165

WILLIAM BROWN.
William Brown, born in Connecticut

in

1759; enlisted

army; was in the campaign to


Quebec with Benedict Arnold. He settled at Columbia,
Hamilton county, where he died and was buried in the old
graveyard there, but no stone marks his grave. C.
early in the Continental

WILLIAM BROWN.
11, 1737, in New Jersey;
enlisted in the First New Jersey, Colonel Martin's Regiment, in 1775, and served until close of war. In 1819 he
emigrated to Franklin county, Indiana, but, in 1829, came
The
to Hamilton county, Ohio, to live with his children.
records of the war department show that he died December 14, 1831, at the age of 94 years, but the place of his
burial has not been ascertained.
C.

William Brown, born August

ELIJAH BRYAN.
Elijah Bryan, born in Milford, Connecticut, September
3,

1760; served in Captain Pond's Company, Third Con-

necticut Regiment.
He died in Granville, Ohio, January
Grandfather of Major Frederick Carlos Bryan.
12, 1844.

SYLVANUS BURK.
Sylvanus Burk, born in Massachusetts in 1763 enlisted
March 15, 1781, in Colonel Vose's Regiment, for three
He died in Newburgh, Ohio. Date of death and
years.
Great-grandfather of Colonel
place of burial not reported.
Clarence Elisha Burk.
;

JOHN BURKHARDT.
John Burkhardt, born

in Switzerland,

August

21, 1753,

emigrated to America, enlisted at Reading, Pennsylvania,


November 1, 1778, in Von Heer's Light Dragoons, which
was General Washington's Life Guard, and served to the
end of the war. He came to Sandusky county, Ohio, after
the war, where he died and was buried near Hessville, the
monumental inscription being as follows
"John Burkhardt, Sr., died Jan. 2, 1847, aged 93 y's, 4 m's and 12 d's.
:

166

A soldier of the

Revolution and a member of Washington's


Grandfather of Judge Jacob F. Burket and
Life Guard."
great-grandfather of Harlan Fessenden and John F. Burket.

JEREMIAH BURROUGHS.
Jeremiah Burroughs, born in Queen Ann county, Maryland, January, 1752; enlisted under Colonel Kennedy in
Maryland in 1778 and ordered to Delaware Bay, serving
as patrol, capturing Tories and repulsing marauding parties; wounded in shoulder, causing permanent disability of
He removed to Millcreek township, Hamilton
left arm.
county, in 1829, and died there at 80 years of age location
C.
of grave not ascertained.

ALEXANDER BUSHNELL.
Alexander Bushnell, born in Guilford, Connecticut,
June 2, 1737 was a Sergeant in Captain Benjamin Hutchen's Company, Eighteenth Connecticut Militia; Ensign of
Captain Benjamin Mills' Company, Colonel Beach's Regiment of "minute men," 1780. Died at Hartford, Ohio,
Great-grandfather of Martin Baldwin
March 18, 1818.
;

Bushnell.

JASON BUSHNELL.
Jason Bushnell, born in Lisbon, Connecticut, 1763; enlisted at sixteen years of age and served through the war.

New

York in 1811, and came to Cinto Central


cinnati in 1845, to live with his son, Rev. Horace Bushnell,
where he died in 1847, and was buried in Spring Grove

Removed

Cemetery.

C.

CHARLES CARTER.
Charles Carter, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Dover,
Union county. Reported by Colonel W. L. Curry.

CHRISTOPHER CARY.
Christopher Cary, born in East Windsor, Connecticut,
in 1763 enlisted when 16 years old, at Lyme, New Hampshire, in Colonel Wheeler's Regiment
re-enlisted several
times, saw much hard service, was taken prisoner in Canada and escaped. He came to Cincinnati in 1778 died in
Millcreek township, February 6, 1837, and was buried in
Labyteaux burying ground, near Mt. Pleasant. The "Cary
Sisters," Alice and Phoebe, were his granddaughters.
C.
;

JOHN CAMPBELL.
in Augusta county, Virginia, October 15, 1750; enlisted in 1780, and served to close of war.
Came to Hamilton county in 1892, and resided in Fulton,
where he died November 6, 1839, in his ninetieth year.
Place of burial not known. C.

John Campbell, born

Mcdonald campbell
McDonald Campbell, born
February

in the State of

New

12, 1754; served as Private in Captain

Jersey,

Forman's

Battalion, Second Establishment New


Jersey Line; also as Fifer in Militia. Died in Ohio, but
Grandfadate of death and place of burial not reported.
ther of John Mackay.

Company, Fourth

JOHN CARLE.
Carle, born in Hunterdon county, New Jersey, in
1760; enlisted in 1775 under Colonel Maxwell; at siege of
Quebec. Came to Hamilton county in 1823, and died in
Place of burial unknown. C.
Cincinnati, April 6, 1833.

John

NATHAN CARPENTER.
Nathan Carpenter, born

in Rehoboth, Massachusetts,
April 12, 1757; entered service in Revolutionary war in
1775 and served during most of the war. He died in Liberty township, Delaware county, in 1814.
Great-grandfather of Dr. William Bryant Carpenter.

MAJOR JONATHAN

CASS.

New Hampshire, in
Lexington, and fought at
through the war, participating in many of the most important battles.
Was
commissioned Major by President Washington, and served
Wayne.
the
command
of
General
In
1801
he
settled
in
on
the Muskingum river, in Ohio, and died in Dresden, August 12, 1830. Grandfather of Dr. Edward Cass.
Jonathan Cass, born

in

1753; entered the service

Bunker

Hill,

and remained

Exeter,

at

in service

JOHN CHARLTON.
in Monmouth county, New Jersey,
enlisted under Colonel Forman in
22, 1759
1778; was in battle of Monmouth, and in several skirmishes; came to Ohio in 1814, and settled in Anderson
township, Hamilton county, where he died September
and was buried in the old Methodist cemetery at Newtown.

John Charlton, born

December

JONATHAN CILLEY.
Jonathan Cilley, born in New Hampshire, March 18,
His father, Joseph Cilley, was a Colonel on Gen1763.
eral Washington's staff, and Jonathan served under his
father during the war.
He came to Hamilton county in
1803 with his wife and eight children, and settled in Colerain township, where he died in 1807, and was buried in the
graveyard near the old station at the village of Colerain.

C.

DENNIS CLARK.
Dennis Clark, born in Frederick county, Maryland, in
1756 enlisted under Colonel Piper in 1775 at Princeton,
New Jersey; in battle of Princeton, January 3. 1777; in
service through war and was at the surrender of Cornwallis.
Came to Hamilton countv with early settlers, went
to Indiana, where he lived nineteen years and returned to
Hamilton county where he died August 20, 1832. Place
;

of burial

unknown.

C.

169

ISRAEL CLARK.
Israel Clark, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at

Marion,

Reported by Henry True.

Ohio.

NATHANIEL CLARK.
Nathaniel Clark, born in Hanover, Massachusetts, April
volunteered in 1775 was with the army which be6, 1757
seiged Boston, in Colonel Bailey's command when the
city was evacuated, March 17, 1776
in 1778 was in Gen;

eral Sullivan's

campaign

in

Rhode

Island.

Lived a num-

ber of years in the State of New York, and came to Cincinnati in 1827, and died there October 14, 1832. C.

TRACY CLEVELAND.
in Canterbury, Connecticut, May
a Private in Captain Bacon's Company, Colonel
John Chester's Battalion, General Wadsworth's Brigade.
He died in Kirtland, Ohio, February 27, 1836.
Greatgreat-grandfather of Lewis John Wood.

Tracy Cleveland, born


1751

8,

CAPTAIN ASA COBURN.


Asa Coburn, born

in Dudley, Massachusetts, September


1741 Ensign, Lieutenant and Captain, and served from
April 19, 1775, to June, 1783. He died in Washington
county, Ohio, in the spring of 1789. Place of burial not
reported.
Great-great-grandfather of Edward M. Ayres.

14,

PHILIP COKE (OR CAKE).


Coke (or Cake), born in Philadelphia in 1753 en1776 in Captain Proctor's Artillery Company and
saw much service during the war a field piece ran over his
body, which resulted in permanent disability later in life.
He came to Cincinnati in 1819. Was recognized by General Lafayette, on his visit to Cincinnati in 1825, as being
Philip

listed in

at the battle of

Monmouth.

Place of burial unknown.


J.

He

C.

died in Cincinnati in 1826.

COLEMAN.

Coleman, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Watkins,


Union county. Reported by Colonel W. L. Curry.
J.

170

NENIAD COLEMAN.
Neniad Coleman, born in Loudon county, Virginia, in
1746; in Third Virginia Regiment, Colonel Heath, three
years, and was disabled in 1779.
He came to Ohio in 1790,
and resided in Hamilton county in 1818 died September,
1823 place of burial not known. C.
;

JACOB COOK.
Jacob Cook, a Revolutionary
Mansfield (Ohio), Cemetery.
by General Roeliff Brinkerhoff.

ANDREW

soldier, buried in

No

inscription.

Lot 107,
Reported

COX.

Andrew Cox, born

in Hampshire county, Virginia, in


enlisted in Colonel Enoch's Regiment in 1776 served
principally as scout and Indian spy.
Moved to Kentucky

1761

and to Hamilton county, Ohio, in 1799. Died at


the age of 91 near Cumminsville, and was buried in the
Wesleyan Cemetery. C.
in 1790,

JOHN CRARY.
John Crary, born in Connecticut; joined the army in
Vermont, and served during the war. Came to Hamilton
county in 1809 and bought a small farm, which now forms
a part of Spring Grove Cemetery.
Died at the age of 91
years, and was buried in the Finney burying ground in
Millcreek township; grave unmarked. C.

COLONEL JAMES CURRY.


James Curry, born near Belfast, Ireland, January 29,
1752 served in Dunmore's Indian war and was wounded at
Point Pleasant, Virginia, October 10, 1774; Second Lieu;

tenant Eigth Virginia Infantry Continental Line, December, 1776 First Lieutenant, June 24, 1777 Captain Fourth
Virginia Infantry, September 14, 1778; discharged, 1783.
He settled in Union county, Ohio, died in Jerome township, July 5, 1834, and was buried in Oak Dale Cemetery,
Marysville.
Grandfather of Colonel William L. Curry.
;

171

DANIEL DANA.
Daniel Dana, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in the
Reported by Whittlesey
cemetery at Warren, Ohio.

Adams.

"BUCKEYE" DAVIS.
"Buckeye" Davis, known to have been a Revolutionary
soldier, was buried in the Mount graveyard, near Prospect,
Marion county. Reported by Henry True.

JOSHUA DAVIS,

Sr.

Joshua Davis, Sr., born in Middlesex county, New Jersey, September 15, 1760 enlisted in New Jersey troops in
June, 1776, and served in short terms until the year 1783,
rendering about two years actual service. He came to
Hamilton county early in the century, where he died October 23, 1839, and was buried in the graveyard near Bur"Sacred to the
The monumental inscription is
lington.
memory of Joshua Davis, who departed this life October
He was a soldier of the Revolu23, 1839, aged 79 years.
tion, and fought at the battle of Monmouth." Great-grandfather of Perry D. Gath.
;

JEHIAL DAY.
Day, born in Morris county, New Jersey, in 1758
belonged to the militia under Colonel Frelinghuysen was
in manv skirmishes and in engagement at Springfield, New
Settled in Springfield township, Hamilton
Jersey, in 1777.
county, in 1814, where he died of cholera in 1834, and was
Jehial

buried in Reading.

C.

HENRY
Henry Deats, born
March, 1758

in

DEATS.
New

Jersey,

who were

obliged

Hunterdon county,

served in classified militia,

to turn out on alternate months in service three years. He


came to Hamilton county in 1814, located at Mt. Pleasant,
died there in 1843, and was buried in Laboiteaux burying
ground.
slab with suitable inscription marks his grave.
;

C.

172

WILLIAM DELZELL.
William Delzell, born in Berks county, Pennsylvania, in
1755; enlisted in 1775 under Colonel Atlee; in battle of
Long Island taken prisoner at Ft. Washington, November
He died in Cin16, 1776, and paroled in February, 1777.
cinnati in 1837, having previously lived many years in the
;

county.

C.

RANDALL DOUGLASS.
Randall Douglass, born in Orangeburg county, South
Carolina, in 1763; enlisted February, 1779; was at siege of
Savannah, and in Charleston, South Carolina, where General Lincoln surrendered, May 12, 1780, and was a prisoner
He came to Hamilton county about
for sixteen months.
1820, and died June 29, 1844, but no record of his grave has
found.
been
C.

JESSE DOWNS.
Downs, born

in Norfolk county, Massachusetts, in


1764 enlisted June, 1781, in the Ninth Massachusetts Regiment, Colonel Jackson transferred to Seventh Regiment,
Colcnel Brooks, and then to the Fourth; discharged De-

Jesse
;

cember 31, 1783.


Oclober 12, 1826.

Came

to Cincinnati in 1822, and died


C.

Grave unknown.

ISAAC DRAKE.
born in New Jersey in 1756

served through
Isaac Drake,
Settled on a large farm near Mayslick, Kentucky,
the war.
in 1778.
Came to Cincinnati in 1798, died there in 1832,
and was buried in what is now known as Washington Park,
on Twelfth street, and subsequently removed to Spring
Grove, where a suitably inscribed stone marks his grave.
He was father of the celebrated Dr. Daniel Drake. C.
;

HENRY DUGAN.
Henry Dugan, born in Maryland in 1736 in May, 1775,
joined an independent company for siege of Boston, and in
1776 joined Colonel Malcolm's Regiment of Rangers in
New York City; afterwards enlisted in Colonel Nichols'
Regiment, Bedford County Pennsylvania, to serve against
;

173

Indians; taken prisoner in June, 1781, and after eighteen


in Canada was paroled.
He came to Hamilton

months

county at an early day and died in Miami township in 1833,


and was buried at North Bend. C.

FRANCIS DUNLAVY.
Francis Dunlavy, was born in Winchester, Virginia,
31, 1761 served as a Private and Sergeant in Pennsylvania troops.
Died in Lebanon, Ohio. Date of death
and place of burial not reported. Great-grandfather of
Francis Dunlavy Morris.

January

DUNCAN DUNN.
Duncan Dunn, born

in

Berkshire county, Massachusetts,

was in army three years at siege


Boston under Colonel Patterson Colonel Seth Warner's
Green Mountain Boys surrender of Burgoyne, 1777. Settled in Bonne county, Kentucky, in 1812, and in 1831 came
to Cincinnati to live with his children, where he died in 1834.
in 1753, enlisted in 1775,

of

Burial place not ascertained.

C.

GRANTHAM EARL.
Grantham

Earl, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in

bert's Cemetery, Pleasant township, Seneca county.


ported by Henry H. Wheeler.

EgRe-

WILLIAM EDGAR.
William Edgar, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Raymond, Union county, Ohio. Reported by Colonel W. L.
Curry.

LEWIS ELY.
Lewis Ely, born in West Springfield, Massachusetts, December 9, 1756 Private in Captain Enoch Chapin's Company, Colonel Timothy Danielson's Regiment, in service at
various times from April 19, 1775, to October 6, 1775. Died
Great-grandfather
at Dearfield, Ohio, September 5, 1826.
of Merrick Ely Johnson.
;

174

BENJAMIN ENGART.
in Middlesex county, New Jerenlisted in 1778 ; at Valley Forge, and battle of
Monmouth. Came to Hamilton county, Ohio, in 1798, and
lived and died in Springfield township in 1824.
C.

Benjamin Engart, born

sey, in

1759

EDWARD
Edward Evans, born
1776

was

at battle of

died in Ohio.

in

EVANS.

Pennsylvania in 1760

enlisted in

Brandywine and Germantown.

He

Great-grandfather of Nelson Wiley Evans.

THOMAS EWING.
Thomas Ewing, born

in

New

Jersey in 1743;

came

to

North Bend, Ohio, with early settlers, and bought a farm


Whitewater township; died in 1823, and was buried on
his farm.
A small wooden board at his grave bears this inscription "Here rest the remains of Thomas Ewing. Born
He was a soldier in
in 1743, died in 1823, aged 80 years.
the Revolutionary War."
C.
in

ELISHA FARNUM.
Elisha Farnum, born in Lyme, Connecticut, September 2,
1756 enlisted in 1776, at West Springfield, Massachusetts,
David Mosely's Regiment; was in a volunteer
company at Saratoga 1779-80, in Captain Levi Ely's Company, Colonel Brown's Massachusetts Regiment. Died in
Deerfield, Ohio, August 16, 1735.
Great-grandfather of
Merrick Ely Johnson.
;

in Colonel

WILLIAM FAULKNER.
William Faulkner, born in Ireland; was Captain in the
Revolutionary army. Came to Ohio and bought land at
the mouth of Brush Creek.
He was buried under an apple
His grave can be found. S.
tree in the orchard.

WILLIAM FINCH.
William Finch, born in Greenfield, Connecticut, in 1759
joined Colonel Webb's Connecticut Regiment in 1776.
After the war he followed the sea for seventeen years and
came to Hamilton county in 1819 died April 6, 1849, and
was buried at Armstrong Chapel, East Indian Hill. C.
;

175


ENOCH

FISHER.

Enoch Fisher, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Milford


Center, Union county, Ohio. Reported by Colonel W. L.
Curry.

MAJOR JOSEPH LEWIS FINLEY.


Joseph Lewis Finley, born in Westmoreland county,
Pennsylvania, February 20, 1753 enlisted April 6, 1776, and
retired from the army November, 1783.
(For account of
his service see biographical sketch of Hon. Joseph P.
Smith.) After the war he settled in Ohio, where he died
and was buried in the "old graveyard" at West Union,
;

Adams

county.

Monunmental

inscription

"Sacred to the memory of


Major Joseph L. Finley,

who
Aged

died

May

23, 1839.

96 years 3 months and 3 days."

He was

great-grandfather of
deceased.

Hon. Joseph Patterson Smith,

BENJAMIN FLINN.
Benjamin Flinn, born in Middlesex county, _New Jersey,
February 11, 1763; when an apprentice boy, ran away and
enlisted in the militia and did scout duty.
He served under
General St. Clair in the Northwest in 1792. Was in the
war of 1812. He came to Hamilton county in 1790. Settled at North Bend, then in Colerain township, where he
died in 1837, and was buried in an old graveyard on Taylor's

Creek.

Was

never married.

C.

HEZEKIAH FORD.
Was
Hezekiah Ford, born in Abington, Massachusetts.
at battle of Bennington, and also in Connecticut repelling
attacks of General Benedict Arnold after his treachery. He
died in Cleveland, Ohio, December, 1848. Great-grandfather
of

Frank L. Ford, deceased.

ASA FOSTER.
Asa

Foster, born in Litchfield, Connecticut. October 23,


in Colonel Drake's command in 1776, and

1758; enlisted

176

from early

in 1777 served

for three years.

Came

under Colonels Bradley and Meigs


Hamilton county at Springdale

to

died December 15, 1827, and buried on Foster farm, near


railroad south of Glendale.
C.

EPHRAIM FOSTER.
Ephraim

Foster, born about 1753

; enlisted April 20, 1775,


in Captain Heald's Company of New Ipswich, New Hampshire ; was disabled by sunstroke at battle of Monmouth, was
furloughed in fall of 1778 and never able to return to duty.
Came to Ohio in 1800 or 1801, and died in Washington
county in 1824. Place of burial not reported. Great-grand-

father of

Van H. Bukey.

JACOB FOX.
Jacob Fox, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in the Rawson
Cemetery (about two miles from Rawson on Tawa Creek),
Hancock county, Ohio. Died August 16, 1849, aged 86.
Reported by Colonel W. L. Curry.

JONAS FRAZEE.
Jonas Frazee, born of French parents in New Jersey, August 24, 1759 served throughout the war he came to Cincinnati before it was even a village, and helped build the
first block-house there.
He died near Miamitown, September 9, 1859, and was buried in the Berea chuch yard.
He was probably the last survivor of Revolutionary soldiers
;

in

Hamilton county.

C.

BENJAMIN FULLER.
Benjamin Fuller, born in New York; Private in Sherwood's Company, Graham's Regiment taken prisoner at
Fort Ann, October 10, 1780 exchanged October 18, 1782.
He died in Wilmington, Ohio, in 1854 place of burial not
reported.
Great-grandfather of Judge Charles Clinton
;

Shearer.

REUBEN GAGE.
Reuben Gage, born in Massachusetts in 1766; enlisted
when fourteen years of age in Colonel Jackson's Massachusetts Regiment at West Point.
Came to Hamilton county,
Ohio, where he died February
known. C.

6,

1849.

Place of burial not

JAMES GALLOWAY.
in Pennsylvania, May 1, 1750.
July, 1776, three months' Private, Captain John W. Hatton, Colonel Watts; December, 1776, three months' Private, Captain Thomas Thompson, Colonel Arthur Buchanan February, 1778, three months' Private, Captain
Samuel Holliday.
He died in Xenia, Ohio, August 6,
1838, and was buried in the Stevenson graveyard.
Greatgrandfather of Dr. Clark M. Galloway. Grandfather of
Hon. James Edmund Galloway, and great-grandfather of

James Galloway, born

Dr. William Albert Galloway and George Wilson Kendall.

GERSHOM GARD.
in New Jersey, in 1753 served in
Settled in Springfield township,
the classified militia.
Hamilton county, where he died in 1805, and was buried
on his own farm in what is known as "Gard Graveyard."
C.

Gershom Gard, born

JOSEPH GILLET.
Joseph Gillet, born in 1754; served in Connecticut
"Light Horse" died in 1836, and was buried in the Wyatt
Reported by
Cemetery, near Waldo, Marion county.
;

Colonel Henry True.

ASA GLOYD.
Asa Gloyd, born

Bridgewater, Massachusetts, in 1757


enlisted in 1777, in Colonel Wigglesworth's Thirteenth
Massachusetts Regiment, for three years. Came to HamNo record of
ilton county in 1820, and died there in 1833.
burial place.

in

C.

178

;;

WILLIAM GRANT.
William Grant, born in Prince William county, Virginia,
in 1751; joined the Eleventh Virginia Regiment, Colonel
Morgan's, in November, 1776, but when Colonel Morgan
formed his rifle organization, mostly from the Eleventh
Regiment, he remained in it under Colonel Febinger until
November, 1779. Came to Hamilton county early in the
century, and died in Cincinnati in 1827,
of the abandoned graveyards there.

and was buried

C.

one

in

FRAZER GRAY.
Frazer Gray, buried in the Union graveyard at Scott
Town, Marion county, Ohio. On his tombstone is inscribed

"A

soldier of the Revolution,

from the State

of Delaware,
Frazer Gray,

Died October th, 1849,

Aged
After a

life

89 years.

of integrity

and honor

he quietly passes from earth,


without a murmur or struggle,
content alike with life or death."
Reported by Colonel Henry True.

JOEL GREEN.
Joel Green, born in West Haddam, Connecticut, in 1757
enlisted at beginning of war in Captain John Wiley's Com-

pany, Colonel Joseph Spencer's Regiment; taken prisoner


at battle of Long Island, and taken to Dartmouth prison
in England, from which he escaped in a French vessel to
Spain, thence to France.
Came back to this country with
some French exiles; came to Cincinnati on a flatboat in
1809 died in old age and was buried in graveyard at corner of Vine and Liberty streets, on present site of St. Francis Teraphinus Church.
C.
;

GEORGE GRINNUP.
George Grinnup, born in New Jersey in 1754; enlisted
1778 in Second New Jersey Regiment, Colonel Threave
was an Orderly Sergeant and served until 1783. Removed
in

179

to Columbia or Sycamore township, Hamilton county, in


1805, where he died in old age, and was probably buried in
the graveyard near Reading.
C.

HENRY GUNSALUS.
in Ulster county, New York, De8, 1759 ; enlisted in 1776 ; was at Trenton, and participated in the capture of 900 Hessians at Bound Brook,
June 17, 1777 came to Hamilton county at an early period,

Henry Gunsalus, born

cember

and died in Cincinnati in 1839, and was probably buried


one of the devastated graveyards of the city. C.

in

ISRAEL HALE.
Israel Hale, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Milford

Center, Union county, Ohio.


Curry.

P.

Reported by Colonel

W.

L.

HALE.

P. Hale, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Milford Center,

Union county, Ohio.

Reported by Colonel

W.

L.

Curry.

LUTHER HALSEY.
Luther Halsey, born in Morristown, New Jersey, May
10, 1758 was a student in Princeton College when the war
broke out, when he and his whole class, with President
Witherspoon, entered the service and remained till close of
war; wintered at Valley Forge; was a member of the So;

ciety of Cincinnati.
Came to Ohio in 1825 died in 1830,
and was buried in Presbyterian graveyard, now Washington Park; remains were removed to Spring Grove Ceme;

tery.

C.

JOHN HALSTEAD.
John Halstead, born July 12, 1754, at Elizabethtown,
New Jersey was in battle of Staten Island, at Connecticut
Farries, etc.
He came to White Water township, Hamilton county, in 1818, where he died March 17, 1841. C.
;

WILLIAM HAMMITT.
William Hammitt, born in Burlington county, New Jersey, November 23, 1758; enlisted in army at Mt. Holly;
was in battles of White Plains, Long Island and Princeton.
He settled at North Bend, Ohio, in 1790, and kept the ferry
there across the Ohio removed in 1815 and settled on Taylor's Creek in Colerain township, where he died December
26, 1841, and was buried in the family cemetery, near his
;

old residence.

C.

RICHARD HANKINS.
Richard Hankins, born in North Carolina about 1752,
and served during the war under General Marion.
In
1797 he settled in Millecreek township, Hamilton county,
and died there in 1823, and was buried in the Gard burying
ground a few rods north of his residence. C.

ROBERT HARBISON.
Robert Harbison, born in Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, in 1758; was allowed
pension for seventeen
months' actual service in Pennsylvania troops. He died
in Preble county, Ohio, in 1837.
Great-grandfather of
Clinton Crane.

JAMES HARMON.
in New Jersey in 1754 in spring of
1781 enlisted in Colonel Ogden's Regiment and was at the
siege of Yorktown, Virginia, and surrender of Lord Cornwallis, October 19, 1781.
He emigrated to Campbell
county, Kentucky, and thence to Cincinnati, where he was
living in 1812, and died in 1837. Place of burial not known.

James Harmon, born

C.

WILLIAM HARRIS.
William Harris, a Revolutionary soldier, was buried in a
private burial ground in Section 29, Pleasant township,
Seneca county, Ohio, near Fort Seneca. No headstone or
monument marks his grave.
Reported by Henry H.
Wheeler.
181

ABNER HATCH.
Abner Hatch, born

in Tolland county Connecticut, in


joined the First Cavalry Company, under General
Washington, at Cambridge, Massachusetts, and served
during the war, retiring as Major. He settled in Delhi
township, Hamilton county, in 1804, and died September
26, 1819, and was buried in Presbyterian church lot, corner
of Fourth and Main streets, and removed to Spring Grove
in 1850. C.

1753

JAMES HATHORN.
James Hathorn, born in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania.
Second Lieutenant, Fifth Battalion, August 7,
in 1739
1775, and marched to New York, but did not reach there
in time to participate in battles returned to Princeton and
was discharged at Morristown subsequently was ordered
He
to New Brunswick on a six months' tour of duty.
moved to Virginia, thence to North Carolina, thence back
to Virginia, and in 1827 came to College Hill in Hamilton
county, Ohio, and died there March 23, 1835, at 96 years
of age, and was buried in his garden, on the spot now occupied by John W. Wilson, Esq. removed to Lane Seminary
graveyard, and thence to Spring Grove in September,
1878. C.
;

EBENEZER RICE HAWLEY.


in Hartford county, ConMay, 1776, in Colonel
Douglass' Connecticut Regiment, and was in the battle of
Long Island, and in the retreat to Harlem, where he was in
another battle, also at White Plains, where he was wounded.
In 1777 was in Quartermaster's Department, and for two
years afterward was an express rider. He went to MisIn 1829 he was
souri in 1810, and to Cincinnati in 1821.
boarding with Dr. Barrs, and in 1831 had charge of pesthouse, and no trace of him afterwards. C.

Ebenezer Rice Hawley, born

necticut, April 11, 1760; enlisted

CAPTAIN JOSEPH HAYES.


Joseph Hayes, born in Chester county, Pennsylvania, in
1725 at commencement of war, raised and equipped at his
own expense a cavalry company, of which he was Captain,
;

182

and served during the war in a Pennsylvania regiment. In


1791 removed west with his family, and in 1793, with

Thomas Miller leased a large tract of land at the mouth of


Died in 1807 and was buried in a family
the "Big Miami."
cemetery near the state line. C.

HENRY HAZEL.
Henry Hazel; enlisted April 16, 1777, as a Matross for
three years. In Captain John Champe Carter's Company, as
stood at Valley Forge, June 3, 1778 in Colonel Charles
Harrison's Virginia and Maryland Regiment of Artillery
Died in Champaign county, and
it stood, 1776 to 1782.
was buried at Mechanicsburg. Great-great-grandfather of
Frederick Shedd.
it

as

O.

HIBBARD.

O. Hibbard, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Milford


Center, Union county, Ohio. Reported by Colonel W. L.
Curry.

JAMES HILLYER.
James

Hillyer,

born on Staten Island,

served under Colonel

Hyer

New

York, and

several times in guarding the

lines; also in Colonel Nelson's expedition to capture


field

Gen-

Tory at Valley Forge. Settled in Springtownship, Hamilton county, in 1806, and died there in

eral Skinner, a

1846. C.

RICHARD

S.

HOLDEN.

Holden, born in Massachusetts in 1762; enlisted in 1777, and served three years under Colonel Bigelow; was in battle? of Stillwater, Whitemarsh and Monmouth spent winter of 1777-8 at Vallev Forge. Came to
Cincinnati about 1820, and died there December 31, 1821.
Richard

S.

C.

EBENEZER HOPKINS.
Ebenezer Hopkins, born

in Pittsford,

Vermont,

in

1763

served three years in the Revolution, a part of the three being in Captain Sawyer's Companv, Colonel Cooley's Regiment. Removed to Ohio, in 1831, and died at Welshfield,
July 18, 1838. Great-grandfather of Lucius Loyd Durfee.
183

FREDERICK HORN.
Frederick Horn, born in 1756, and in 1776 joined the
Second Regiment, Colonel St. Clair, which was ordered to
Ticonderoga, then to Canada, down the St. Lawrence river
to Sorrel, where they were attacked by the enemy, being
continually annoyed by bands of Indians.
Cincinnati in 1832, and died there in 1838.

Was

C.

living in

SOLOMON HOWARD.
Solomon Howard, born
had several tours

in

Hebron, Connecticut, in 1761


and was one

of service in the Revolution,

He moved
of the guards at the execution of Major Andre.
to Cincinnati in 1806, and in 1822 came to College Hill,
where he died October, 1834, and was buried in a private
cemetery on the farm of the late William Cary, now abandoned and remains removed to Wesleyan Cemetery, Cumminsville, in 1891.

C.

GERSHOM HUBBELL.
Gershom Hubbell, born
cut,

July

4,

1766

York Regiment

in Fairfield countv, Connecti-

New

in 1782, joined Colonel Weis'enfelt's


months, but was soon after trans-

for nine

Came to Hamilton
ferred to Colonel Lamb's Artillery.
county in 1816, and lived in Millcreek township in 1834.
Was probably buried in the Ludlow graveyard, now Ivorvdale. C.

JOHN HUDSON.
John Hudson, born in State of New York in 1768; enlisted at Saratoga, May, 1781, under Colonel Van Schaick,
and served until close of war. Came to Hamilton countv
in 1831 died July 24, 1S47. C.
;

ANDREW HYDE,

Jr.

Andrew Hyde, Jr., born in 1757; enlisted


ary army from Lenox, Berkshire county,

He

in

Revolution-

Massachusetts.
died in Marion county in 1845, and was buried in the

Claridon Cemetery.

Reported by Colonel Henry True.


184

JOHN
John Irey was born

IREY.

January 28, 1757, and


served under Lafayette, and was present at the surrender
in Virginia,

He came to Marion county in


of Cornwallis at Yorktown.
1830, and died in Clarin township, December 20, 1837. Reported by Colonel

Henry True.

MATTHEW
Matthew Jackson, born

JACKSON.

Massachusetts in 1764; enlisted


in Colonel Shepherd's Massachusetts Regiment, October
in
Colonel Webb's Connecticut
for
three
years
7, 1777,
Regiment in 1782, and was transferred to Colonel Hall's
Regiment.
Came
Light Infantry
to Hamilton county in
Place of burial unknown.
1820, and died there in 1823.
in

-C.

JOHN JACOBS.
John Jacobs, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in Catholic
ground in Mansfield Cemetery (buried sixty-six years ago in
Reported by General R.
old graveyard) no inscription.
;

Brinkerhoff.

ABNER JOHNSON.
Abner Johnson, born in Somerset county, New Jersey a
wagon master in General Washington's army in New Jersey.
Came to Colerain township, Hamilton county, in
1813 died January 14, 1832, and was buried in the graveyard at Dunlap Station. C.
;

THOMAS KEELER.
Thomas Keeler, born in New Jersey, February 16, 1764;
entered service when a boy was at Valley Forge, the Crossing of the Delaware, and was one of the guards at the execution of Major Andre.
Came to Hamilton county in
1814, and died in Cincinnati, May 8, 1851, and was buried
in the Weslevan Cemeterv at Cumminsville.
C.
;

OLIVER KELLEY.
Oliver Kelley, born in
ary, 1776

was

New Jersey

in

1756

enlisted JanuShort Hills,

in battles of Trenton, Princeton,

Brandywine,

Monmouth and Germantown.

Settled in Mill-

creek township, Hamilton county, and died there September 30, 1827, and probably buried in the Roll burying
ground on the west fork of Millcreek. C.

FRANCIS KELSIMERE.
Francis Kelsimere, born in Maryland in 1744; enlisted
Baltimore in 1775, under Colonel Smallwood, and was in
Came to Crosby township, Hamilton
service four years.
county, and died there December 18, 1826. Place of burial

at

unknown.

C.

JAMES KENNISTON.
in Rye, New Hampshire, in 1756
served five years in the army. Settled on a small farm in
Springfield township, Hamilton county, about one mile
southwest of Mt. Pleasant, in 1807, and died there in 1837
buried in Laboyteaux graveyard, on the Cincinnati and

James Kenniston, born

Hamilton turnpike.

C.

SAMUEL KITCHELL.
Samuel Kitchell, born in Pennsylvania, about 1755. and
served in the army several years was in the battle of Brandywine, under the command of General Lafayette. Came
to Hamilton county at an early day and lived upon a farm
in Sycamore township, near the line of Columbia, and died
C.
in 1839 probably buried at Armstrong Chapel.
;

JOHN LABOITEAUX.
John Laboiteaux, born

in

classified militia of that state.

New Jersey, and was in the


He came to Hamilton county

and settled at Mt. Pleasant, in Springtownship, where he died. It is believed that he was
buried in the graveyard at the junction of the Hamilton
turnpike and Groesbeck, but his grave cannot now be identified. C.
in the last century,
field

JOHN LAFLER.
John Lafler, born in New York, in 1750, and
Rockland county, that state, in September, 1775,

enlisted in
in

Colonel

Clinton's First New York Regiment, but before his time


expired was assigned to other duty in 1776 was Ensign in
Captain Wolkard's Company, Colonel Seth Warner's Regiment in service to end of war. Came to Hamilton county
early in the century and lived some years with General William Henry Harrison, at North Bend, and died October 30,
;

1822. C.

John

JOHN W. LANGDON.
W. Langdon, born in Wilbraham,

Massachusetts,

March 11, 1759 served several years under various commands. After the war, moved to Vermont, and is said to
have been the first Methodist minister in that state. Came
to Cincinnati in 1806, and settled in Columbia township,
near "Redbanks," where he died February 13, 1842, and
was buried in a small graveyard in that vicinity. C.
;

ABRAHAM LAREW.
Abraham Larew, born

in Virginia in 1755,

and

enlisted

for three years, under Colonel Febinger.


to Springfield township, Hamilton county, early in
the century, and died there in 1840 is supposed to have

November, 1776,

Came

been buried near Liberty school house, Winton road, two


C.
miles east of Mt. Pleasant.

CAPTAIN JOHN LEAVENS.


John Leavens, born in Killingly, Connecticut, September
23, 1734 went into service as a Private at the time of the
Lexington alarm, for a few days, and served through the
;

remainder of the war as a Captain.


(six miles

father of

died in Newbury
Great-great-grand-

Fulton.

GEORGE

LEIBY.

Berks county, Pennsylvania, Noin classified militia under Colonel


He came to Cincinnati in 1804, and died there in
Grave not identified. C.

George Leiby, born


vember 17, 1753; was
Carr.
1834.

He

below Belpre), July, 1797.

Howard Cole

in

ALEX. LEMMON.
Alex.

Lemmon, born

ster county,

go

to

New

Canada

much

York,

in the

in Ireland in

1749 enlisted at Ulunder Colonel Clinton, to


General Montgomery saw
to Hamilton county at an

in 1775,

command of
that.
Came

service after
early day.
Died in 1824,

C.

and burial place unknown.

WILLIAM LEMOND.
William Lemond, born in Pennsylvania

in

1754; enlisted

in Cumberland county, that state, in Colonel William


Thompson's First Rifle Regiment. He came to Cincinnati
at an early day and owned a brick house on corner of Front
and Elm streets. Died September 20, 1827 grave not iden;

tified. C.

ISAAC LEWIS.
Isaac Lewis, born in Connecticut in 1755 volunteered at
Ashfield, Massachusetts, in April, 1775, and was at battle of
Bunker Hill in Arnold's expedition to Quebec at battles
of Bennington and Stillwater was present at the execution
of Major Andre.
Came to Hamilton county in 1816, and
died there August 27, 1837 place of burial unknown.
C.
;

DAVID LIVINGSTON.
David Livingston, born

in

Pennsylvania in 1737

en-

in Westmoreland county. August, 1776, for three


years, in Colonel Broadhead's Eighth Pennsylvania Regiment; in battle of Bound Brook. June 26, 1777; mustered
out at Fort Pitt. Removed to Harrison township. Hamillisted

ton county, from Franklin county. Indiana, and died there


January 27, 1831, aged 94 years buried in what is now the
park at Harrison. C.
;

HENRY LOAR.
Maryland in 1758 enlisted in May,
the
1777, for the war, in the Third Maryland Regiment
larger part of his service in the South, under Generals Gates
and Greene.
Settled in Colerain township, Hamilton
county, about 1814; died in 1820, and was buried in the
graveyard on the blue rock road, in the Barnes neighborhood. C.

Henry Loar, born

in

JOHN LYNCH.
New

in Essex county,
Jersey, in 1755
enlisted in July, 1777, for three years as an artificer, under
Colonel Baldwin; was in no battles. Settled in Millcreek

John Lynch, born

township, Hamilton county, at an early day, where he died


C.
in 1841, and was buried at Lane Seminary.

PETER LYNCH.
Peter Lynch, born in Pennsylvania in 1754, and served in
the Fifth Pennsylvania Regiment, Colonel Magaw; with it
at Fort Washington, November 16, 1776, when he surren-

dered with 2,700 men, but

Lynch

escaped.

He

joined Col-

Regiment; promoted to Sergeant and


Brandywine, Germantown and Stony
Point; served with General Wayne after the Revolution.
Came to Hamilton county and died there in 1829. C.

onel Butler's Ninth

was

in

battles

of

REV. FRANCIS McCORMICK.


Francis McCormick, born in Virginia, June 3, 1764 entered the army at the age of 17, served through two campaigns, and was present at the surrender of Lord CornwalCame to Northwest Territory in 1795, built a cabin at
lis.
Milford, on the Little Miami; in 1807 bought a farm in Anderson township, where he died July 26, 1836, and was
buried in the old Salem Church burying ground in that
;

township.

C.

ROBERT McCULLOUGH.
Robert McCullough, born in New Jersey; enlisted March.
1776, in Captain Neally's Artillery Company; in battle of
Princeton; afterwards in Colonel Elisha Sheldon's Second
Connecticut Regiment of Light Dragoons, and served to
He served under General Wayne after the
June, 1783.
Revolution, and was discharged at Ft. Washington, CincinIt is
nati, in consequence of disability and advanced age.
C.
believed he died in Columbia township in 1820.

WILLIAM McKELVEY.
William McKelvey, born in 1758 was a Pennsylvania
Continental soldier in the Revolution, and lost a leg in the
which he drew a pension. He died in Plymouth
;

service, for

;;

township, Richland county, in 1839.

Grandfather of John

McKelvey.

MOSES MADDOCK.
in Pennsylvania, March 13, 1752
enlisted for one year, June, 1775, in Colonel Thompson's
Rifle Regiment; served nine months in 1777-8 in the Second Regiment, Colonel Shreve. In 1818, lived in Crosby

Moses Maddock, born

township, Hamilton county, and died there in 1826.

C.

DAVID MANSON.
David Manson, born
1753

enlisted in

York

in County Antrim, Ireland, October,


county, Pennsylvania, July, 1776, for

two months, as Private, in Captain Savage's Company of


Colonel Smith's Regiment; in September, 1776, for three
and one-half months, as Private, in Captain Crosby's Company, Colonel McAllister's Regiment; in 1778, in Captain
Rippey's Company, same regiment.
He died in Miami
county, Ohio, prior to August, 1836.
William H. Geyer.

Great-grandfather of

ALEX. MARTIN.
Alex. Martin, born in Morris county, New Jersey, in
1762; served one year as artificer with Captain Debail at
Morristown then under Colonel Martin for three years
also served on the gunboat "Hornet,"' and on the privateer
"Jolly Tar," Captain Harrison, and was captured by a British frigate and confined in the prison ship "Jersey," in 1781
for five months.
Came to Hamilton county at an early day,
and located in Sycamore township died April 29, 1846, and
was buried in Presbyterian churchyard at Pleasant Ridge.
;

C.

JOHN MATSON.

John Matson, born in Maryland, and participated actively


Settled in North
in the war and had the rank of Captain.
Bend in 1790. He afterwards removed to what is known as
the "Matson Farm," in Delhi township, where he died and
was buried in the small graveyard at Delhi. C.

190

JOHN MEEKER.
John Meeker, born in Essex county, New Jersey, in 1759
enlisted in 1776, and worked as a carpenter on fortifications
at Elizabethtown, New Jersey sent to Fishkill, New York,
;

an artificer in 1777, stationed at Elizabeth in 1777-8 in


classified militia.
Came to Hamilton county at an early
period and lived in Sycamore township died there in 1835,
and was buried in the Hopewell graveyard, near Sharon.
as

C.

JACOB MILLER.
Jacob Miller, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in Egbert's
Cemetery, Pleasant township, Seneca county. Reported by
Henry H. Wheeler.

JACOB MORGAN.
Jacob Morgan, born

in Massachusetts in 1760 enlisted in


Hampden county, that state, in 1779, in Colonel Greaton's
Third Massachusetts Regiment, and served in the Highlands on the North River, and under Colonel Sprout, of
Settled in Miami
Second Regiment, until close of war.
township, Hamilton county, where he died in 1836. C.
;

THOMAS MORGAN.
Thomas Morgan, born

enin South Carolina in 1749


from Cumberland county, Pennsylvania was at ValDied in Preble county date of death and place
ley Forge.
;

listed

of burial not reported. Great-grandfather of Clinton Crane.

SIMEON MOORE,

Jr.

Simeon Moore, Jr., born in Windsor, Connecticut, March


25, 1761 was in the battle of Bunker Hill as a "minute man"
;

Captain Barber's Company; in April, 1777, he enlisted


In 1807 he moved to
the regular service for three years.
Elendon township, Franklin county, where he died June 28,

in

in

1825.
tin.

Great-grandfather of Lieutenant John

Thomas Mar-

DANIEL MOSS.
Daniel Moss, born in Connecticut in 1747 enlisted in 1776
in Colonel Wylly's Regiment at New Haven January. 1778,
served under Colonels Meigs and Webb until close of war.
Came to Hamilton county in 1830 and died there in 1843.
;

Burial place

unknown.

C.

REV.
John Mott, an

JOHN MOTT.

officer in the

Revolutionary army and a

pensioner, died about 1835, and was buried six miles from

Mt. Vernon. The inscription on his monument cannot be


read an evidence of shameful neglect. Reported by Levi
Barns Ward.

HENRY

NAIL,

Sr.

Henry

Nail, Sr., a Revolutionary soldier, buried in Lot


Reported
12, B. 8, Mansfield Cemetery; no inscription.

by General R. Brinkerhoff.

WILLIAM NEVES.
William Neves, born in Rockland county, Virginia, in
1751 enlisted in Goochland county, Virginia, when Williamsburg was threatened by the British; then to Richmond under Colonel Norris at the time the public buildings and stores were burned (1781), and afterwards was a
guard to prisoners at Albemarle Barracks. He came to
Hamilton county, and died December 24, 1838. C.
;

CAPTAIN ROBERT NEWELL.


Robert Newell, a pensioner, died about 1836, and was
buried in a cemetery inside the corporation of Mt. Vernon,
which was long ago abandoned, and has been built upon,
and not a monument or sign of a grave remains. (A disgrace to the city). Reported by Levi Barns Ward.

ELIAS NEWTON.
Newton, born in Connecticut in 1755 served as a
musician for seven months and ten days, a part of the time
being in Captain Hinckley's Company, Colonel Webb's
Connecticut Regiment. He died in Washington county,
Ohio, September 17, 1811. Great-grandfather of Charles
Humphreys Newton.
Elias

192

REV. SETH NOBLE.


Seth Noble, born in Westfield, Massachusetts, April 15,
1743; served two months and five days in Massachusetts
Militia

which went to Halifax, Nova Scotia, from whence

he had fled and abandoned his property at the breaking out


of the Revolution.
Died September 15, 1807, and was
buried in the old burying ground at Franklinton (now Columbus). Grandfather of Dr. John Noble Beach, deceased.

ANDREW

NORRIS.

Norris, born in Pembroke, New Hampshire, in


1762; served through the Revolution and afterwards
moved with his family to Lower Canada, near the New
Hampshire border. When the war of 1812 was declared,
having sons old enough to bear arms, who were about to
be impressed into British service, he removed to Hamilton
county and settled on a farm in Springfield township,
where he died in 1855. He was buried in the New Light
graveyard, one mile west of New Burlington. C.

Andrew

BETHUEL NORRIS.
Bethuel Norris, born in 1757, in Morristown, New Jersey enlisted in 1776, under Colonel Ford, in the classified
militia, going to Bergin county, thence to Elizabethtown,
building earthworks and doing patrol duty, after which he
joined the main army. He came to Hamilton county in
1795 and lived on a farm in Sycamore township, on the
Butler county line, where he died, August 8, 1841, and
was buried in the Pisgah graveyard on the edge of Butler
;

county.

C.

HENRY OLDRIDGE.
Henry Oldridge, born in Virginia was the second man
who enlisted under Morgan. He came to Ohio in early
;

on Brush Creek, Adams county. Died


and was buried in the Beach Cemetery on Brush
No stone marks his grave. S.

times and
in 1835,

Creek.

settled

193

;;

JOHN PARKER.
in Somerset county, New Jersey, in
1761; enlisted in 1776, under Colonel Quick, and afterwards under Colonel Vroom; wounded in the leg in the

John Parker, born

fight with the British at Elizabethtown.


He came to
Springfield township, Hamilton county, in 1807, and died
there June 29, 1844. C.

JABEZ PARSONS.
Jabez Parsons, born in Enfield, Connecticut, in 1753
Private in Lexington alarm, April, 1775 Sergeant in Wolcott's Connecticut Regiment, December, 1775, to March,
1776; Quartermaster Sergeant, Second Connecticut, September 1, 1777; Regimental Quartermaster, June 1, 1778;
First Lieutenant, August 1, 1779
transferred to Third
Connecticut, January 1, 1781 resigned, May 4, 1781. He
died in Huron, December 24, 1836, and was buried in the
township of Milan, Ohio. The inscription upon his tombstone is
"A native of Enfield, Conn., and an officer of
the Revolution, departed this life," etc.
Grandfather of
Reuben Turner.
;

OSBORN PARSONS.
Osborn Parsons, born

in Connecticut, in 1763 enlisted


1777 in Colonel Bradley's Connecticut Regiment. In
1781 he was ordered to Virginia, under General Lafayette,
and after the surrender of Cornwallis, October 19, 1781, he
returned north and joined the Connecticut Regiment from
which he had been detached. Went to Cincinnati in 1824,
;

in

and died there

in

1827. C.

ABIJAH PHELPS.
Abijah Phelps, born in Connecticut, in February, 1762;
enlisted in 1778 to guard prisoners from Burgoyne's army
in 1779 was under Colonel Mead at Horse Neck, Connecticut, and in 1780 marched under Colonel Hoyt to West
Point, and was in large scouting parties near the British
lines.

at

He

settled in

Sycamore township, Hamilton county,

an early day, and died there


194

in 1833.

C.

BENJAMIN PIATT.
Benjamin Piatt, born in Virginia in 1763 enlisted from
Virginia, and was First Lieutenant under McCullough.
Came to Ohio in 1810, and bought land upon which he
His grave
died in 1851. Was buried near West Union.
can be found, but no stone marks the place. S.
;

SAMUEL PICKERILL.
Samuel Pickerill, born in Virginia in 1759 ; entered service as a Drummer boy when 16 years of age and served
Died in Ohio in 1847. Place of burial not
eight years.
Great-great-grandfather of Lewis Vernon Wilreported.
liams.

SAMUEL

PIERCE.

Samuel Pierce, born in Connecticut, September, 1759


joined the army in 1777, at Middletown, Connecticut, under Colonel Wyllys in 1781, was detailed to Colonel Du;

mont's Regiment opposing General Benedict Arnold in


Virginia, and was at the siege of Yorktown and surrender
Came to Millcreek township, Hamilton
of Cornwallis.
county, in 1814; died there June 12, 1828, and was buried
C.
in the Roll burying ground, west fork of Mill Creek.

SAMUEL PIERSON.
Samuel Pierson, born in Pennsylvania in 1753 enlisted
June, 1776, in Colonel Broadhead's Eighth Pennsylvania
Regiment badly wounded at the battle of Monmouth, and
was discharged at Valley Forge in December, 1777, on account of disability. Settled in Sycamore township, Hamilton county, in 1790, and died near Silverton in November, 1839, and was buried in Pleasant Ridge Cemetery,
Columbia township. C.
;

ZEPHANIAH POSEY.
Zephaniah Posey, born

in Virginia in 1758 enlisted for


thee years in the fall of 1776, in Colonel Morgan's Eleventh
Regiment, and joined Washington's main army at Bound
Brook, New Jersey, in the spring of 1777. He came to
Hamilton county early and died there October 21, 1826.
C.
;

195

ELIJAH PORTER.
Elijah Porter, born in East Hartford, Connecticut, in

1756 served as Musician and Drum Major in Connecticut


troops for six years. He died in Medina county, Ohio,
Great-great-grandfather of William
November, 1821.
Garrick Wilson.
;

JAMES PRENTISS.
James Prentiss, born in Ackworth, New Hampshire;
was a "minute man" at Lexington, and was also at Concord and Bunker Hill at the close of the war was Aide on
General Washington's staff. He came to Ohio in 1817,
and died in 1821, and was buried in a corner of an old
orchard on the Gibbs farm in Warrensville, within three
miles of the boundary line of Cleveland. No monument
marks the grave. From Cleveland Leader, January 28,
;

1898.

GENERAL RUFUS PUTNAM.


Rufus Putnam, born in Sutton, Massachusetts, April 20,
1738; entered service as Lieutenant-Colonel of a Massachusetts regiment; was appointed Chief Engineer of the
Continental Army, with the rank of Colonel in January
was commissioned Brigadier-General came with the first
settlers to Marietta, Ohio, April 7, 1788 in 1792, was appointed Judge of the Supreme Court of the Northwest TerDied at
ritory, and held various other important offices.
Marietta, May 4, 1824. Ancestor of Edwin M. P. Bris;

ter

and William Dudley Browning.

JOAB REED.
Joab Reed, a Revolutionary soldier, died at Decatur,
Ohio, May 16, 1857, nearly 100 years old. There is nothing to identify his grave but a rough piece of stone. S.

JOHN REYNOLDS.
John Reynolds, born
1760; enlisted from

16,

in

Norwich, Connecticut, March

that place in Bigelow's Artillery

Company, Lexington alarm Musician in Fourth Regiment Connecticut Line, March 7, 1777; Sergeant in CapDied in Mentain Horton's Company, March 25, 1777.
Great-grandfather of Arlington
tor, Ohio, March 3, 1840.
;

G. Reynolds.
196

JOHN RICHARDSON.
John Richardson, born

in Pennsylvania, 1756; enlisted


January, 1776, in Fifth Pennsylvania Regiment, Colonel
in
Magaw;
battle of Long Island; captured with the garrison at Ft. Washington, November 16, 1776, and paroled

December, 1776.

in

C.

Died

in Cincinnati,

BETHUEL

August

20, 1823.

RIGGS.

Bethuel Riggs, born in Morris county, New Jersey, in


1757; was drafted in 1776, under Colonel Ford, to guard
military stores sent to North Carolina and was in battle
of Ramsour Mills, June 20, 1780, where he acted as Lieutenant in Captain Cleveland's Company; at battle of Catawba Captain Cleveland was wounded and he took command of the Company was Captain in 1780, and in battle
After the war became a Baptist
of King's Mountain.
preacher.
Died in 1835 in Anderson township, Hamilton
;

county.

C.

JOHN RILEY.
Riley, born in Chester county, Pennsylvania, April
1763; joined the army at 17 years of age, and served
eighteen months in the South under General Greene. He

John

10,

came

to

Hamilton county in 1789, and remained there until


and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery.

his death, in 1850,

C.

JOHN ROBINSON.
John Robinson,

First Lieutenant,

born

in Virginia in

1756 entered service in Loudon county in 1776, for three


years, under Colonel Morgan of the Eleventh Regiment,
;

and when Morgan organized

his rifle

regiment Robinson

joined it. He came to Springfield township, Hamilton


county, at an early day, and died in 1842. C.

OLIVER ROBINSON.
Oliver Robinson, buried in Rock Creek Cemetery, Eden
township, Seneca county. The monumental inscription is
197

"Oliver Robinson,
Died,
July 26th, 1830,
In the 65th year of his age.
A soldier of the Revolutionary war with Great Britain."
Reported by Henry H. Wheeler.

HENRY ROGERS.
Henry Rogers, born in Middlesex county, New Jersey,
December 21, 1752 entered the service in 1775, under
Lord Sterling, and served one year. He came to Hamilton
;

county early in the century, and died July 17, 1840, and was
buried in the Roll graveyard, on the west fork of Millcreek,
Cumminsville. Henry Rogers, deceased, a member of this
Society, was his only son, and he had six daughters.

JOSEPH ROSS.
in Essex county, New Jersey, in 1750
and from 1776 served several
tours of duty under Colonels Martin, Barber and Potter.
Moved to Columbia township, Hamilton county, in 1831
died in 1834, and was buried in the Methodist graveyard at
Madisonville.
C.

Joseph Ross, born

was

in the classified militia,

JOHN SCHOOLY.
in Middlebrook, New Jersey, in
enlisted in 1779 for one year, and was stationed on
the lines patrolling the country from Hackensack to Araboy. Came to Hamilton county in the last century and

John Schooly, born

1761

settled at Springdale,

was buried

C.

where he died September 4, 1834, and


churchyard of that place.

in the Presbyterian

THOMAS SHAW.
Thomas Shaw, came from
tled in

the north of Ireland and setNorth Carolina previous to the Revolutionary war.

He is buried in the southeast corner of the old cemetery


back of the Presbyterian Church in Sidney the grave is in
bad shape, as it is liable to cave down in a gravel pit. The
;

inscription is
ber 29th, 1835.
:

"Thomas Shaw departed this life DecemAged 82 years 2 months and 14 days."

Reported by Alva Orr Marshall.


198

FREDEDICK SHAWHAN.
Frederick Shawhan, buried in Green

The monumental

Tiffin.

inscription

Lawn

Cemetery,

is

"In memory of
Frederick Shawhan,
soldier of the Revolution of 1776.

Born August

12, 1760.

Died August 8, 1840."


Reported by Henry H. Wheeler.

JACOB SHAWKE.
Jacob Shawke, born in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, November 15, 1758 enlisted five times for short terms from two
in Pennsylvania regiments.
to seven months
Came to
New Lisbon, Ohio, in 1804, and died there May 5, 1844.
Great-great-grandfather of Charles Jacob Scroggs.
;

JACOB SHAYLOR.
Jacob Shaylor was one of twenty men of Colonel Wadsworth's Connecticut Regiment who marched on April 24,
1775, on hearing of the battle of Lexington
Ensign in
Douglass' Fifth Connecticut, and also in the Sixth Connecticut, known as the "Leather Caps," and commanded by
Colonel Return Jonathan Meigs. He attained the rank of
Major. He came to the Northwest Territory, and was for
some time Commandant at Ft. Washington. He finally
purchased what he called a plantation on the East Fork of
the Little Miami, sixteen miles from Ft. Washington, and
here he was finally buried. C.
;

ELISHA SHEPARD.
Elisha Shepard. born in 1750 in Somerset county, New
Jersey was Captain in Colonel Breese's Militia Regiment,
which was sent to guard the coast, and was driven in bv the
enemy and his company dispersed joined Colonel Holmes'
Reeiment, as Orderly Sersreant, to guard the shore from
Middletown Point to S?ndy Hook; was captured in 1781
and taken to New York City and confined until the end of
the war.
Came to Springfield township, Hamilton county,
in 1812, where he died August 11, 1834. C.
;

JOHN SHIPMAN.
in Sussex county, New Jersey, in
1760; enlisted in 1779, under Colonel Bond; served several
tours of duty under Colonel Heartley.
Came to Hamilton
county in 1833, and died there September 23, 1834. C.

John Shipman, born

HENRY SHOVER.
Henry Shover, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in Woods
Reported by Colonel W. L.
Cemetery, Union county.
Curry.

NATHANIEL SKINNER.
Nathaniel Skinner, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in
"NaMassillon, Ohio. The monumental inscription is:
thaniel Skinner.
Aged 84." Reported by Dr. A. Per Lee
Pease.

WILLIAM SLAYBACK.
William Slayback, born in Middlesex, New Jersey, in
belonged to the classified militia, and from 1776
1759
served alternate tours of duty under Colonels Hyer and
Nelson. Emigated to Kentucky at an early day, and in
1790 settled in Springfield township. Hamilton county,
where he died October 31, 1836. C.
;

ABRAHAM
in

1761

enlisted for

SMITH.

Cumberland county, New Jersey,


the war in 1780 in Colonel Dayton's

Abraham Smith, born

in

Came
Second New Jersey Regiment.
1820, and died there June 2, 1824. C.

HENRY

to Cincinnati

in

SMITH.

Henry Smith, born in Connecticut in 1759. Came to


Ohio after the war and bought three hundred acres of land
on Beasley's Fork. Died in 1802, and was buried in an
open field. A stone marks his grave, placed there by his
son.

S.

REV.

JOHN SMITH.

John Smith, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Cloy


Cemetery (three miles north of Mt. Blanchard), Hancock
county. Reported by Colonel W. L. Curry.

PHILIP

D.

SMITH.

Philip D. Smith, born in Maryland in 1759 enlisted August, 1776, for three years in Colonel Weltner's German
Regiment; was in battles of Princeton. Brandywine, Ger-<
mantown and Monmouth. Settled in Switzerland county,
Indiana, and came to Hamilton county in 1828, and died
there January 25, 1837. C.
;

WILLIAM SMITH.
William Smith, born in Donegal, Ireland enlisted at Dover, Delaware, in 1776, in Captain Joseph Steadmen's ComHe died in
pany of Colonel John Haslet's Regiment.
Licking county, Ohio, July, 1825.
;

WILLIAM SMITH.
William Smith, enlisted at Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, in 1777 was in Second Virginia Regiment, Col;

onel John Gibson, until July, 1783,


to Hamilton county about 1824,
Cincinnati, August 28, 1841.
C.

when

discharged.

Came

and (probably) died

in

ROBERT SNODGRASS.
Robert Snodgrass, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in
Woods Cemetery, Union county. Reported by Colonel

W.

L. Curry.

ABEL SPALDING.
Abel Spalding, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in Marion
county location of grave not stated. Reported by Colonel
;

Henry True.
201

COLONEL OLIVER SPENCER.


Oliver Spencer, born in New Jersey in 1736 was Colonel
of one of the New Jersey Regiments, served through the
war and was severely wounded at the battle of Brandywine.
Settled at Columbia, Hamilton county, in 1790, where he
died January 11, 1811, and was buried in the lot now occupied by Wesley Chapel, on Fifth street, between Sycamore
and Broadway, Cincinnati. Henry E. Spencer, a grandson, removed his remains to a family lot in Spring Grove
Cemetery. C.
;

THOMAS STANAGE.
Thomas

Stanage, born in Ireland in 1760; was in Virginia forces that were sent to South Carolina, in the command of General Lincoln was taken prisoner and confined
in a British prison ship at Charleston, South Carolina.
He
came to Ohio about 1790, and settled near Springfield.
Was buried at West Liberty, Logan county. Grandfather
of William H. Stanage.
;

RICHARD STARR.
Richard Starr, born

in Virginia in 1757; enlisted January,


1776, in the Thirteenth Virginia Regiment, for or during
the war at battle of Brandywine, after which he was transferred to the Eighth Virginia, Colonel Campbell then to
the Seventh, Colonel Gibson, where he continued till the
close of the war.
Settled in Fulton, Hamilton countv, in
1832, where he died in 1836. C.
;

NICHOLAS STEPHENS.
Nicholas Stephens, born in Monmouth county. New Jersey, in 1761; enlisted March, 1777, for three years under
Colonel Spencer; was in the battle of Monmouth, and spent
the winter at Valley Forge; September, 1779, was badly
wounded and discharged. Came early to Hamilton county,
and in 1833 was in Cincinnati with his children. Died May
28,

1838. C.
202

ROBERT STEVENSON.
Robert Stevenson, born March 25, 1759, in the Path Valin the battle of Brandyley, near Hagerstown, Maryland
Came to Decatur, Ohio, where he died July 23,
wine.
;

1833.

very good stone marks his grave.

S.

JOHN STEWART.
John Stewart, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Raymond, Union county. Reported by Colonel W. L. Curry.

HEZEKIAH

STITES.

born in Essex county, New Jersey, August 13, 1761 was a "minute man" early in 1778 he enlisted as Sergeant in Captain Moss's Company, Colonel
Jaques' Regiment, to guard the lines, and watch the movements of the Tories and British. Settled in Columbia, Hamilton county, in 1790 died there in 1843, and was buried in
the old graveyard there.
C.
Hezekiah

Stites,
;

JOHN
John

Stivers,

born

STIVERS.
1764 served in the Vir-

in Virginia in

ginia Militia before he had attained his majority; was a


pensioner.
He came to Adams county, Ohio, early in the
present century, and was buried about fifteen miles from
Great-grandfather of Frank A. Stivers.
Ripley.

BARABAS STRONG.
Barabas Strong, born in Connecticut in 1759 enlisted in
February, 1776, in Lieutenant-Colonel Bedel's New Hampshire Regiment; went to Ticonderoga, thence to Canada,
and was taken prisoner by Indians afterwards released and
joined his regiment at St. Johns in March, 1777, enlisted
for three years in the Connecticut Regiment of Colonel
Starr was in battle of Ridgefield wintered at Valley Forge,
and was in battle of Monmouth. Settled in Colerain township, Hamilton county, where he died May 26, 1821, and
was buried near the Big Miami River at the mouth of
;

Riedesell

Run. C.

JEDEDIAH STURGIS.
Jedediah Sturgis, born May 12, 1758, in Essex county,
New Jersey; enlisted June, 1775, under Colonel Richmond,
going to Ticonderoga and thence to Canada in the latter
part of 1776 marched to Wyoming against the Indians in
battles of Monmouth, Connecticut Farms and Springfield,
New Jersey, where he was wounded. Came to Columbia,
Hamilton county in 1817, and died May 12, 1838, and was
buried in the old graveyard there. C.
;

PATRICK SULLIVAN.
Patrick Sullivan, born in Pennsylvania in 1747 in 1775,
enlisted for one year in Colonel Thompson's First Regiment
of Rifles in 1776, enlisted in Colonel Stewart's Second
;

Pennsylvania Regiment was in battles of Trenton and


Brandywine, and at the siege of Yorktown and surrender
Hamilton county, and died March
;

of Comwallis. Settled in
31,

1821. C.

JAMES SWINNERTON.
in Salem, Massachusetts, August 13, 1757 enlisted at the age of eighteen, but date of
discharge is not known. He died in Marion county, December 6, 1824, and was buried in Grand Prairie township.
Reported by Colonel Henry True.

James Swinnerton, born


;

JOHN CLEVES SYMMES.


John Cleves Symmes, born on Long Island, July 10,
1742 was a Colonel in the army was at the battle of Monmouth. He purchased two millions of acres of land between the two Miami Rivers, embracing what is now Cincinnati.
Settled at North Bend, where he died February
26, 1814, and is buried near the tomb of President William
;

Henry Harrison, who married

C.

his daughter.

He

died poor.

THOMAS TAYLOR.
Thomas Taylor, was buried in a private burial plot on
Wighton farm, one mile southwest of Roseville, in Hirrison
township. Perry county.
pears this inscription

Upon
204

heavy sandstone slab ap-

"Thomas Taylor,
Born December 13, 1750.
Died November

11, 1822.

Revolutionary soldier."

Grandfather of William A. Taylor, and great-grandfather


of Aubrey Clarance Taylor.

WILLIAM TAYLOR.
William Taylor, born in Upper Freehold, New Jersey,
December 27, 1744 served as Private and Train Master in
Captain Bateman Lloyd's Company, Second New Jersey
Continental Line. He settled on a farm near Bainbridge,
Ross county, about the year 1800, where he died, and was
buried in the cemetery there. A handsome Scotch granite
monument has been erected to his memory, inscribed
;

"William Taylor,
Died April 24, 1830, aged 84

years.
soldier of the Revolution.

He

was the ancestor of Taylor McDougall, Thomas


Laidlaw McDougall, Charles Edward Silcott, James SilRev. Archibald A. E. Taylor, Edward Munson Taylor
and Van Derveer Taylor.
cott,

ISAAC TEATSWORTH.
Isaac Teatsworth, died in 1834, at the age of 90 years and
more was a volunteer in the Revolutionary army. Buried
Reported by Colonel
in Maple Grove Cemeterv, Findlay.
W. L. Curry.
;

CHRISTOPHER TERFLINGER.
Terflinger, a Revolutionary soldier, died
March 28, 1866, aged 100 years, and was buried in the
Lutheran graveyard at McCutcheonville, Wyandot county.
A few years after his death, his son went East and found by
church records where he had lived that his father was 104
years old when he died. Reported by Henry H. Wheeler.

Christopher

BARTHOLOMEW THAYER.
"Bartholomew Thayer, died April 11, 1826, aged 70 years.
He was a soldier during the Revolutionary war. Afterwards lived a peaceable life and died in the faith of his country and his God." Epitaph on tombstone on farm of George
W. Norman, Keene, Coshocton county, Ohio. Reported
by Major H. P. Ward.

LIEUTENANT ISAAC THOMPSON.


Isaac Thompson was a Lieutenant in the Pennsylvania
Continentals connected with Washington's Body Guard;
wounded at the battle of Brandywine, for which he was pensioned.
He came to Middlefield. Geauga county, in 1799.
where he died April 25, 1823. Great-great-grandfather of
,

John Andrew Thompson.

JAMES THOMPSON.
James Thompson, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at Watkins, Union county.
Reported by Colonel W. L. Curry.

PRICE THOMPSON.
Price Thompson, born in New Jersey in 1752 served six
years and seven months, and was in many important battles.
Came to Hamilton county at an early day, purchased land
in Sycamore township, and died there in 1842, and was
buried in "Blue Ash Cemetery," in that township. C.
;

STEPHEN THOMPSON,

Sr.

Stephen Thompson, Sr., born in Connecticut, about 1733


enlisted in June, 1776, in Captain Brackett's Company, Colonel Douglass' Regiment, Wadsworth's Brigade; May 27,
1777, in Company "Munson," Eighth Regiment Connecticut Line, for eight months, and then enlisted for the war.
He died in Hudson, Ohio, about 1823. Ancestor of George
Henry and Henry Orville Thompson.
;

STEPHEN THOMPSON, Jr.


Stephen Thompson, Jr., born in Goshen, Connecticut,
1764 or '66 served a few months near the close of the war.
;

being a lad of but fourteen or sixteen years old was with


the army along the Hudson during the summer and autumn of 1780. He died at Hudson, Ohio, about 1842. Ancestor of George Henry and Henry Orville Thompson.
;

ISAAC TIBBETTS.
Isaac Tibbetts, born in the State of New York in 1759
enlisted September, 1776, in Colonel Alden's Massachusetts

Regiment ; was in battle of Bemis Heights also in General


Sullivan's expedition, in 1779, which marched up the Susquehanna River from the Wyoming Valley to Central and
Western New York, desolating the Indian towns and de;

stroying their crops.

Clermont county

He came

in 1820,

to Hamilton county from


and died there in 1825. C.

BENJAMIN TIKEL.
Benjamin Tikel, a Revolutionary soldier,
Marion county, but location of grave not stated.
by Colonel Henry True.

buried in

Reported

HENRY TUCKER.
in New Jersey in 1760, and served
through the war. Came to Hamilton county in 1796 and
settled on a farm about half a mile south of Glendale, where
he died in 1844, and was buried on the farm in what was
known as the old "Tucker burying ground," near the line of
the C, H. & D. Railroad. C.

Henry Tucker, born

GENERAL BENJAMIN TUPPER.


Benjamin Tupper, born in Stoughton, Massachusetts,
March 11, 1738 was a Lieutenant of Militia at the breaking
out of the Revolution, and was soon made a Major of Colonel Fellows' Regiment; served through the war and was
;

brevetted Brigadier-General at its close. He came to Marietta with General Putnam in the Ohio Company, and died
there June 7, 1792.
207

JOHN

B.

TURNER.

John B. Turner, born March 1, 1760, at Morristown, New


Jersey; was a "minute man"; enlisted in April, 1779, under
Colonel Ford, who died and was succeeded by Colonel
Hathaway. Came to Cincinnati at an early day, and died
of cholera, October 26, 1832. C.

ASA TURNEY.
Asa Turney, born in Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1759 enlisted when 18 years of age and served through the war. He
died in Madison, Lake county, September 5, 1833. Ancestor of Eli Alvin Turney and Omar Asa Turney.
;

JACOB ULRICH.
Jacob Ulrich, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in Lot 268,
Mansfield (O.), Cemetery. No inscription. Reported by
General R. Brinkerhoff.

CORNELIUS VANDERHOOF.
Cornelius Vanderhoof, born near Freehold, New Jersey
enlisted when sixteen years old was taken prisoner and
confined in the Sugar House Prison till the close of the war.
He came to Ohio about 1820, and died there, and was buried
in Athens county.
S.
;

JOSHUA VAN FLEET.


Joshua Van Fleet, emigrated from Holland to America
when twelve years of age. He served during the last three
years of the Revolution, enlisting when fourteen years of

He died in Marion county, January 8,


and was buried in the cemetery north
Reported by Colonel Henry True.

age.
years,

aged 84
Big Island.

18-48,

of

CAPTAIN ISAAC VAN HORNE.


Isaac Van Home, born in Bucks county. Pennsylvania,
January 13, 1754 entered service as an Ensign early in the
war and became Captain in 1781 retired January 1, 1783.
Came to Ohio in 1805, and was Receiver of the Land Office
Belonged to the "Cincinnati." Died Febat Zanesville.
ruary 2, 1834. Great-grandfather of William Darlington
;

Schultz.

DAVID

E.

WADE.

in Elizabeth, New Jersey, February


22, 1763 joined the army quite young; was a prisoner in the
prison ship "Jersey." Came to Cincinnati in 1791, and died
there in 1846. C.

David E. Wade, born


;

CAPTAIN ELIJAH WADSWORTH.


Wadsworth, born in Hartford, Connecticut, No12, 1747 served as Lieutenant and Captain in Colonel Sheldon's Light Horse Regiment.
He died December 30, 1817, in Canfield, Ohio, and the following is part of
the inscription on the headstone
"Here lies the body of
Major General Elijah Wadsworth. He served his country
during the American Revolution, and removed from Litchfield, Conn., to Canfield, O., October, 1802," etc.
Greatgreat-grandfather of William Pitcher Bowman.
Elijah

vember

AMOS WARD.
in Morris county, New Jersey, Febserved several tours of duty in the classified
Settled in Columbia township, Hamilton county, in
1814, lived and died at Madisonville, and was buried there
in 1837. C.

Amos Ward,

ruary

1761

8,

born

militia.

RUFUS WARD.
Rufus Ward, born

in Worcester, Massachusetts, January


1759 enlisted as Private, June, 1776, for six months, in
Captain Bartholomew's Company of Colonel Holman's
Massachusetts Regiment; August, 1777, same regiment, four
months July, 1778, served two months in Captain Wilson's
Massachusetts Company; was present at General Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga. He died in Knox county,
Ohio, and the inscription on his monument is
"Rufus
Ward, a Veteran of the American Revolution. Died September 8th, 1834, aged 76 vears." Father of Levi Barns
6,

Ward.

JONATHAN WARING.
Jonathan Waring, born in Fairfield county, Connecticut,
in 1764 enlisted for one year under Colonel Preston. Moved
to Kentucky in the last century, then to Columbia township,
Hamilton county, at Indian Hill. Died January 13, 1836,
and was buried at Armstrong Chapel, East Indian Hill. C.
;

THOMAS WATERS.
Thomas Waters, born in Virginia. Enlisted
under Morgan. Came to Ohio in early times

in Virginia

lived to a

and was buried in the Beach Cemetery on


Brush Creek. No stone marks his grave. S.

good

old age,

JEHIAL WILCOX.
Wilcox was a Colonel, and subsequently brevetted
Brigadier-General, on General Washington's staff. He was
Jehial

buried in the cemetery at Norton, just across the line


Delaware county. Monumental inscription

in

"Jehial Wilcox,

A Revolutionary soldier,
Died
September 17, 1848.
87 years 6 months."

Aged

Reported by Colonel Henry True.

SAMUEL WILEY.
Samuel Wiley, buried at Keene, Coshocton county, the
monumental inscription being: "In memory of Samuel
Wiley, who served his country faithfully in the RevoluReported by
tionary war, and died in the year 1846."
Major H. P. Ward.

BENJAMIN WILLIAMS.
Benjamin Williams, born in Maryland in 1758 enlisted
under Colonel Adams, and marched to Yorktown, Vir;

ginia, to participate in the siege of that place; discharged


in November, 1783.
He came to Hamilton county at an
early day, and died there February 19, 1839.
C.

COLONEL CHARLES WILLIAMS.


Colonel Charles Williams, who served in the Revolution
was the first white settler in Coshocton county; buried in
the public cemetery of the village of Coshocton grave unmarked. Reported by Dr. Arthur M. Dent.
;

210

JEREMIAH WILLIAMS.
Jeremiah Williams, a Revolutionary soldier, buried in
Sugar Creek Cemetery, Seneca county.
Reported by
Henry H. Wheeler.

JOHN WILLIAMS.
John Williams, born
for the war in 1776, as

in Pennsylvania in 1754; enlisted


Fifer, in the Second Pennsylvania
Regiment, Colonel Stewart; was at battles of Brandywine
and Germantown and at the Paoli massacre; at the siege
of Yorktown and surrender of Cornwallis.
Came to Cincinnati at an early day, and died there December 25, 1823.

C.

MILES WILLIAMS.
Miles Williams, born January 6, 1762, in Essex county,
Jersey; from 1778, was in classified militia; in 1782,
while detached from his regiment on scouting to Staten
Island, he was taken prisoner while disabled by a broadsword wound on his head, which nearly deprived him of

New

and was conveyed to New York City. He came to


Cincinnati in 1797 and settled in Millcreek township, near
Carthage, where he died January 19, 1837, and was buried
near Reading. C.
life,

THOMAS WILLIAMS.
Thomas

Williams, born in Pennsylvania in 1754; enlisted in May, 1777, under Colonel McCoy of the Eighth
Pennsylvania Regiment; was wounded at the battle of
Bound Brook, for which he was discharged. Came early
to Cincinnati, and died there January 25, 1826.
C.

HENRY WILLYARD.
Henry Willyard, born

in

Westmoreland county, Penn-

sylvania, in 1749 joined the


in the spring of 1777, and
;

ment

service.

Came

Eighth Pennsylvania Regi-

was in the battle of BrandyPittsburg at the end of three years'


down the river to Cincinnati in 1801, and

wine discharged

at

died there January 20,

1830. C.
211

JAMES WILSON.
James Wilson, born about 1747

enlisted as Private at

Oxford, Pennsylvania, in June, 1776, in Captain John McGowan's Company, Colonel William Butler's Pennsylvania
Regiment; in spring of 1777, promoted to Ensign and
served as such to the close of the war. Died at Briar Hill,
Ohio, November 30, 1835.
Henry Wilson.

Great-grandfather of

Myron

WILLIAM WILSON.
William Wilson, born at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, in
1757; enlisted early in the war with Pennsylvania troops,
and served until the close. Came early to Hamilton county
and settled near Carthage. Longview Asylum is on his
old farm.
In 1826 he removed to Montgomery, Sycamore
township, where he died in 1838, and was buried in the
Presbyterian Church lot at Pleasant Ridge.

C.

WILLIAM WILSON.
William Wilson, born

in Ireland in

1752

enlisted at Car-

Pennsylvania, and served as a Private in Pennsylvania


troops, a part of the time under Captain Talbot and Colonel
Irving.
He died in Bristolville, Trumbull county, March
Great-great-grandfather of William Garrick
27, 1824.
lisle,

Wilson.

BENJAMIN WOOD.
Benjamin Wood, born

in

Norwich, Connecticut,

in

1763

enlisted in January, 1781, for one year, in Colonel Grosvenor's First Connecticut Regiment, and served during the

He came to Cincinnati in 1829, and died July 1, 1834,


and was buried in the Methodist burying ground on the
Reading road. C.

war.

ISRAEL WOOD.
Israel
4,

Wood, born

1763; was

in

Morris county,

necticut Farms and Springfield,


Settled in 1811 at Madisonville,
he died and was buried. C.

212

New

Jersey,

May

was in battles of Conand in many skirmishes.


Hamilton county, where

in the classified militia;

LEVI WOOD.
Levi Wood, born in Norwich, Connecticut, in 1757 volunteered at Bennington, Vermont, in 1775, going to Ticonderoga; in 1776 was in Colonel Swift's Connecticut Regiment at Mt. Independence and Lake Champlain, building
fortifications; in 1777, served eight months in Colonel HerAt
rick's Rangers, and was at the battle of Bennington.
an early day he settled in Adams township, Hamilton
county, where he died August 13, 1835. C.
;

DAVIS WOORLEY.
Davis Woorley, a Revolutionary soldier, buried at DoReported by Colonel W. L. Curry.
ver, Union county.

ELI WRIGHT.
Eli Wright, a Revolutionary soldier, was buried in the
cemetery at McCutcheonville, Wyandot county, the in"Eli Wright, Died September 11, 1841.
scription being:

Aged 74

years and two months."

Reported by Henry H.

Wheeler.

ELIPHAS WRIGHT.
Eliphas Wright, born August 18, 1749 a Revolutionary
soldier from Connecticut died in Granville, Ohio, December 10, 1813, aged 63 years and 4 months. A small monument is at the head of his grave. Grandfather of General
George B. Wright; great-grandfather of Capt. T. F. Wright.
;

JOHN WRIGHT.
John Wright, born in Goshen, Connecticut, January or
February 22, 1743 served the greater part of the time during the Revolutionary war, from July 15, 1775, to 1783.
He left Winsted, Connecticut, for Ohio, June 1, 1802, and
settled at Morgan, Ashtabula county, July 22, 1802 moved
to Tallmadge (now in Summit county), in 1809, where he
died July 29, 1825, and was buried in the Tallmadge Cemetery.
Great-grandfather of Darwin Erasmus Wright.
;

NATHANIEL WYATT.
Nathaniel Wyatt, enlisted at the age of fifteen, and served
five years.
He died August 18, 1824, and was buried in
the graveyard on his homestead, near Waldo, Marion
county, which bears his name. Reported by Colonel Henry
True.

WILLIAM WYMAN,

Jr.

William Wyman, Jr., born in 1765 served as a Private


in Captain Josiah Fish's Company, in the service of the
State of Vermont, from the beginning of the campaign in
1781 to November 25, 1781 also in Captain Benjamin
Whitney's Company from November 10, 1783, to March 1,
1784.
His body is interred in the cemetery at Perry, Ohio,
"In memory of
and his tombstone has this inscription
William Wyman, who died March 6, 1842, in the 77th year
of his age.
Deceased was a soldier in the Revolutionary
war." Great-grandfather of Vaughn Ely Wyman.
;

MAJOR DAVID ZIEGLER.


David

Ziegler,

was born

Pennsylvania before the war.

in

Saxony and emigrated

On

to

breaking out of the war

active in raising recruits and was appointed Captain in


the First Regiment of Continental Infantry and Brigade
Inspector; was in active service through the war, retiring
with the rank of Major.
He was an early emigrant to
Hamilton county, and took part in organizing the council
of the village of Cincinnati, of which he was elected Presi-

was

dent, performing the function of

1811. C.

Mayor.

He

died about

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ANNUAL


MEETING, 1897.
Columbus, Ohio, January 12, 1897.
The annual meeting of the Ohio Society Sons of the
American Revolution was held at the Park Hotel, Columbus, Ohio, on the above date, at 2 p. m.
In the absence of the President, Vice-President James M.
Richardson was in the chair. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved.
Congratulatory letters and telegrams, and telegrams and
letters of regret were received from the following members
Hon. William McKinley, Canton; Hon. John F. Follett,
Cincinnati Colonel Walter H. Chase, Toledo Hon. R. B.
Dakin, Toledo; Lieutenant George M. Wright, Akron;
Hon. Geo. E. Pomeroy, Toledo Prof. T. H. Norton, Cincinnati Mr. S. A. Trowbridge, Toledo Major Frederick C.
Bryan, Akron Hon. John G. Peebles, Portsmouth Captain Hugh L. Runkle, Kenton
Mr. Vaughn E. Wyman,
Painesville, and others.
The report of the Secretary, Major R. M. Davidson, was
read and accepted, and on motion was placed on file.
The report of the Treasurer, Mr. Kenneth D. Wood, was
received and an auditing committee, consisting of Hon.
John McKelvey and Judge Tod B. Galloway, was appointed to audit the books of the same.
;

The report of the Registrar, Colonel William L. Curry,


was read, and, on motion, was adopted and ordered placed
on file.
A resolution was offered authorizing the Registrar to
purchase three historical reference books for use in his
office, and on motion he was instructed to procure the same,
and payment for the same to be made out of funds of the
treasury.
resolution

was

the 1896 Year

Book

also read placing twenty (20) copies of


at the disposal of the Registrar, to be

exchanged for Year Books


was adopted.

of other State Societies,


215

which

A
two

report of the meeting of the Boards of Managers of the


Sons of the American Revolution and Sons

Societies,

Columbus on December 29, was


the resolutions passed by the two
Boards of Managers at that meeting were read, and after
discussion on the same by Messrs. Aldrich, Wood, Harper,
Moulton, Richardson, Sharp, Wright, Lybarger, Galloway.
Curry, Davidson and Roberts, were adopted.
The following resolution was offered by Mr. Aldrich
Resolved, That the Ohio Society Sons of the American
Revolution extend cordial and fraternal greeting to the
Ohio Society Sons of the Revolution, recognizing in each
Society an earnest desire that the two patriotic societies
should be one in organization as they are one in blood and
lineage, do hereby formally invite the Ohio Society Sons of
the Revolution to unite with this Society in forming the
Ohio Society of the American Revolution, the only test of
eligibility being membership in good standing in one or the
other of the two Societies uniting.
Resolved, That we favor the appointment by each Society of a proper committee who shall closely examine the
proofs of eligibility of all members of both Societies, and we
of the Revolution, held in

made by Mr. Wood, and

agree that the report of such committee, when certified to


the united Society, shall become the basis of eligibility to
membership in the Society of the American Revolution.
Resolved. That we approve the Resolution No. 2 of the
joint Boards of Management of December ?9.
calling for the appointment of a committee on constitution,
but that we recommend that said committee shall fix the
date or dates on which it may renort, and that special meet-

meeting of

ings of both Societies be convened to receive the same.

Resolved. That the Secretary be instructed to transmit a


copy of these resolutions to the Secretary of the Ohio SoSons of the Revolution.
The matter in regard to the claim of the former Secretary, Hon Joseph P. Smith, was referred to a special committee consisting of Messrs. Wood, Wrisdit and Davidson,
to be investigated and reported on at next meeting.
The auditing committee appointed to examine the books
of the Treasurer made the following report, which was received and adopted and the report of the Treasurer accepted, and, on motion, ordered placed on file.
ciety

216

We, the undersigned, committee to audit the accounts


and report of the Treasurer of this Society, beg leave to report that we have examined said accounts and report and
found them in all respects true and correct.
(Signed) John McKelvey,
(Signed) Tod B. Galloway.
The following

resolution

was

read

and, on motion,

adopted
Resolved, That this Society does most heartily approve
and commend the action of the National Officers in the
stand taken by them in the negotiations with the Sons of
the Revolution looking towards a union of the two organizations.

Resolved, That the Secretary transmit a copy of the foregoing resolutions to General Horace Porter, President of
the National Society Sons of the American Revolution.

An amendment to
Wood, changing the

the Constitution was offered by Mr.


date for the payment of annual dues
day of April in each year to the first day of

from the first


January of each year.

resolution was offered and carried that the Society hold


a banquet at Columbus during the coming year; the time
and arrangements for the same to be made by the Executive

Committee.

resolution was offered by Mr. Aldrich that in view of


the long and efficient services rendered this Society by Rev.
Wilson R. Parsons, Hon. Joseph P. Smith, Major Harry P.
Ward and Colonel William L. Curry, and in recognition of
their zeal and continued devotion to the same, that this
Society does hereby unanimously recognize and appreciate
their services and does honor them by making them regular
Honorary Life Members of this Society. Adopted.

A resolution was offered that such members as are behind in their dues to the Society be put on a suspended list,
and that the Secretary notify such members and if arrangements are not made promptly for the settlement of said dues
that they be suspended from the Society and their names
dropped from the rolls. Adopted.
A resolution was read and adopted that the thanks of the
Society be eiven to the retiring President and all other officers of the Society for 1896 for their services and interest
shown in the welfare and success of the Society during the
217

Also that greetings be sent from the Ohio SoNational Society Sons of the

past year.
ciety

now

in session to the

American Revolution.
Also that the Secretary be instructed to publish the proceedings of this meeting and to send a copy of the same to
every member of the Ohio Society.

The

following officers were then elected for the ensuing

year:

President Hon. James McElroy Richardson


Vice-President Col. John W. Harper
Vice-President Judge Jacob F. Burket
Vice-President Gen. George B. Wright
Secretary Major Robert Mason Davidson
Registrar Col. William Leontes Currv
Treasurer Mr. Kenneth Dodge Wood
Historian Dr. Lucius Carroll Herrick
Chaplain Rev. Archibald Alexander E. Taylor,

LL.

Cleveland
Cincinnati

Findlay

Columbus
Newark
Columbus
Columbus
Columbus
D. D.,
Columbus

BOARD OF MANAGERS.
General James Barnett
Colonel Benjamin M. Moulton
Hon. E. O. Randall
Hon. Lucius Bliss Wing
Colonel Arthur Lloyd Fogg
Dr. Orlando W. Aldrich

Cleveland

Lima
Columbus
Newark
Cincinnati

Columbus
Sandusky

Hon. John McKelvey


DELEGATES TO NATIONAL CONGRESS.

Toledo

Colonel Walter H. Chase


Judge Tod B. Galloway

Columbus

ALTERNATES.

Mr. John Uri Lloyd


Captain Edwin Lewis Lybarger
Hon. Lucius Bliss Win?
Dr. Orlando W. Aldrich

Cincinnati

Spring Mountain

Newark
Columbus

The Society then adjourned.


(Signed)

James M. Richardsox.
President.

(Signed)

Robert M. Davidson,
Secretary.
21*

At a meeting of the Board of Managers, held immediately


meeting of the Society, this day, the following were
elected as the Executive Committee for the ensuing year
after the

Hon. James M. Richardson


Major R. M. Davidson
Dr. O.

W.

Cleveland

Newark
Columbus
Columbus

Aldrich

Mr. Kenneth D.

Wood

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ANNUAL


MEETING, 1898.
Columbus, Ohio, January 11, 1898.
The annual meeting of the Ohio Society of the Sons of
the American Revolution was held at the Chittenden Hotel
parlors on the above date, at 2 p. m.
President James M. Richardson was in the chair. Chaplain Taylor not being present, Dr. Aldrich was requested
to open the meeting with prayer.
The minutes of the last annual meeting were read and

approved.
Secretary Robert

M. Davidson then read his report for


the past year, which on motion was accepted, and was as follows

REPORT OF THE SECRETARY.

Newark,
To the Officers and Members of
American Revolution:

Compatriots I herewith
nual report for the year 1897

Number

of

members January

Gained during the year

the

O., January 11, 1898.

Ohio Society Sons of the

respectfully submit
11,

1897

my

an-

340
75
415

Total membership to date


During the year I have collected from delinquent members to whom I was instructed to write the sum of $37.00.
The Ohio Society has been honored by the National Society during the year by having the National Congress
meet first, in Cleveland and in adjournment at Cincinnati,
where in conjunction with the National Society Sons of the
,

219

Revolution plans were adopted by which the two patriotic


may unite in one great body The Society of the
American Revolution.
I have received from several State Societies during the
year memorials of deceased members. I think this a very
appropriate custom and would suggest that the Ohio Society issue one to be sent to every member on the death of
any Compatriot.
Great interest has been taken not only by the members
but by the public, in the general workings and principles of
the Sociey and the new membership gained is certainly an
indication of the good results attained.
Something over
400 letters have been received and answered during the year
in connection with the Society and it is now in the most

societies

flourishing condition it has ever been, since its organization.


To the officers and members who have so kindly assisted me
during the year, I hereby return thanks. I remain, very

R. M. Davidson,

respectfully,

Secretary.

REPORT OF THE TREASURER.


Treasurer Kenneth D. Wood then read the report of the
Treasurer for the past year, as follows

Report of the Treasurer to the annual meeting of the


of the American Revolution

Ohio Society Sons

Amount on hand January

12,

$401 26

1897

RECEIPTS.

Dues and initiations


Year Books
Buttons
Total receipts

$584 09
411 15
15 83

$1,011 07
$1,412 33

...

DISBURSEMENTS.
Year Books, including postage, etc
.

Printing

Dues, Treasurer General


Salary Registrar,
1896
Salary Secretary
Salary Treasurer

including

part

of

Postage and expressage Registrar....


Postage and expressage, etc., Secretary

Postage and expressage Treasurer.

Books

for Registrar

125 00
100 00
50 00
7 90
18 54
7 55
9 00

Buttons

Cash returned

$572 03
72 35
67 00

to A. A. E. Taylor

15 00
1 00

Total disbursements

Balance on hand January

$1,045 37

$366 96

10, 1898.

Kenneth D. Wood,
Treasurer.

On

motion, the report was referred to an auditing committee, the President appointing Messrs. E. O. Randall

and V. E.

Wyman

as such committee.

The

Registrar, Colonel William L. Curry, then read his


report, which on motion was adopted, as follows:

REPORT OF THE REGISTRAR.


Columbus, Ohio, January 11, 1898.
There has been more interest manifested by our members during the past year than any year since our Society
was organized, and more inquiry for blanks and information as to the requirements for eligibility.
It seems that our membership, which has

been largely
increased during the past year, has grown without any
particular effort on the part of the old members.
Professional men, officers of the army and men of all the higher
walks of life are anxious to join our Society and our new

members have come

in great

numbers from that

class of

late.

There has been some weeding out during the year, and
a number of names have been dropped from the rolls, of
221

who have

those

not completed their records.

Two

have

dropped by transfer, four have died, leaving our


membership in good standing 347, with a number of apbeen

plications pending.
now have six Chapters in the State, and the organization of other Chapters should be encouraged in different
localities, as it will add largely to our membership.
As evidence of the general desire of our best citizens
to join some one of our patriotic societies, the Librarian of

We

the City Library of Washington reports that ninety per


books consulted during the past year were by
persons looking up the records of their ancestors for the
purpose of joining one of these Societies.
As instructed by the Society at the last annual meeting,
the Treasurer purchased for the use of the Registrar, Heitman's Register of the Continental Army, Hamersley's
Register of Officers from 1779 to 1879, and Saffell's Records of the Revolutionary war, all of which are of good
service in looking up the records of ancestors of applicent, of the

cants.

Having been instructed by the Society to exchange


year books with our Society of other states, I have made
exchanges with the States of California, Indiana, Washington, Connecticut, New York, and District of Columbia.
These books have already been of great benefit to applimembership to our Society, and a number of rec-

cants for

ords have been completed by referring to the records


members of the same families in other states.

We

are

on a firmer foundation to-day than ever

of

before,

and can assert our independence with as much confidence


There was a time when we
as any other patriotic society.
had a struggle for existence, when it took nerve, persistent
work and continuous effort to strengthen our little organiBut that
zation, and keep those of "little faith" in line.
day is past, and the patriotic citizen is anxious to join a
Society that is destined to do great good in our country,
handed down to us bv our patriotic sires, who fought, and
died

upon the

battlefields of the Revolution.

They left us a glorious heritage, and we will preserve in


our hearts the memory of their heroic deeds, and perpetuate the spirit of the men who achieved American Independ-

W.

ence.
222

L. Curry.
Registrar.

The report of the Historian was then called for, but Dr.
Herrick said that he had not prepared biographical
sketches of deceased members, because of lack of time to
do so ; but would promise to prepare them in time to be inserted in the Year Book.
The President made some remarks in reference to the
matter of union between this Society and the Society of the
Sons of the Revolution, and in order to bring the matter
before the Society Dr. Aldrich presented the following
resolutions
Resolved, That this Society ratify the plan of union and
constitution submitted for the formation of a society to be
composed of the Sons of the American Revolution and of
the Sons of the Revolution, as the said plan and constitution were adopted at the special congress held at Cincinnati on October 12, 1897, this ratification to take effect
when a majority of the state societies of the Sons of the
Revolution have ratified the same.
Resolved, That the Executive Committee to be selected
by the newly-elected Board of Management be a committee to take the necessary steps to complete the organization
of the new state society of the united organization, with
full power to act in the matter, if one is to be formed.
After a great deal of animated discussion by Dr. Aldrich,
President Richardson and Messrs. Chase and Brister, the
resolutions were adopted.
Mr. Randall, of the auditing committee, then obtained
permission to report, and reported that the committee, on
comparing the report of the Treasurer with his books and
"vouchers, found everything correct, and on motion the report was accepted.
Rev. Dr. Taylor moved that a committee be appointed
to superintend the publication of a Year Book, following
the plan of the previous Year Books. The motion was
seconded by Colonel Curry and was adopted.
The President then appointed Rev. Dr. Taylor

as Chair-

man, with Mr. Kenneth D. Wood and Major Ward. Major


Ward asked to withdraw and suggested that Dr. Herrick
be appointed in his place. The President, however, with
the consent of the Society without a motion, added Dr.
Herrick to that committee.
An amendment to the constitution, providing that the
date for payment of dues in this society be changed from

the

first

day of April to the

first

day

of

January each year,

was then called up.


Mr. Wood moved its adoption, and being duly seconded,
was put to a vote by the chair and declared adopted.
The President stated that his attention had been called
to an allowance of $100 which was made to the Treasurer
for incidental expenses by the Board of Management, and
which had not been ratified by the Society.
On motion of Dr. Aldrich, duly seconded, the above
named allowance was approved by the Society.
Colonel Chase made a motion that Anthony Wayne
Chapter, No. 3, be permitted to change its name to the
Northwestern Ohio Chapter, and to comprise twelve counties in the northwestern part of the state, which was seconded by Dr. Taylor.
After a good deal of discussion, the motion was amended
so as to read as follows:

"Resolved, That Anthony W^ayne Chapter, No. 3, be


permitted to take into its jurisdiction from counties immediately adjacent thereto, not exceeding twelve in all,
such counties as may desire to affiliate with it in membership."

The motion was seconded

as amended, and being put to


was declared lost.
Colonel Chase then asked that Anthony Wayne Chapter, No. 3, be allowed to drop the "No. 3" from its title;
which, by the unanimous consent of the convention, was
granted.
The Society then proceeded with the election of officers.
(See pages 153-4.)
On motion of Major Ward, duly seconded and carried,
it was decided to hold a banquet at the next annual meeting of the State Society.
General Brinkerhoff then offered the following resolu-

a vote by the President

tion

Resolved, That after 1898 the President of this Society


be eligible for re-election.
The President ruled that the resolution must lie over for
action until next year, as it changes the constitution.
On motion, the Society adjourned.
(Signed) James M. Richardson,
shall not

(Signed)

Robert M. Davidson,

President.
Secretary.

Dr.

JOHN NOBLE BEACH

REPORT OF THE HISTORIAN.


The following biographical sketches of deceased members of this Society were prepared principally from data
furnished by the families of the respective subjects, and we
trust this statement will sufficiently explain any apparent
Several of the sketches were prepartiality in treatment.
pared by the Registrar, Colonel W. L. Curry, and by him
read at the annual meeting, and the others are the work of
the Historian.

DR.

JOHN NOBLE BEACH.

John Noble Beach, M. D., a member of this Society, was


born in Amity, Madison county, Ohio, January 29, 1829,
and died at Chattanooga, Tennessee, July 17, 1897, where
he was visiting his daughters. He was a son of Uri and
Hannah (Noble) Beach; grandson of Obil and Elizabeth
(Kilbourn) Beach, and his maternal grandparents were
Rev. Seth Noble and Hannah Barker.
His father died when he was but three years old and left
his family with scant means of support; hence his educational privilges were confined to the common schools, with
the exception of a short time at the Ohio Wesleyan UniAt the age of fifteen he
versity, in Delaware, in 1846.
taught a winter school, and continued teaching for three
winters afterwards, spending the summer of 1846, as above
mentioned, at Delaware, and the two following summers
reading medicine with Dr. Charles McCloud, and for two
winters attending lectures at the Starling Medical College,
Columbus, Ohio, where he received the degree of M. D..
February 15, 1850. In the spring of 1849, after his first
course of lectures, he commenced practice in Unionville
Center, Union county, and returned there after graduating,
the next year.
In the fall of 1851, he went to New York,
where he remained six months prosecuting his studies in
one of the schools and in hospitals, returning to Unionville

again where he remained until 1853, when he removed to


Plain City, and from thence to West Jefferson, in 1858;
which latter place remained his residence during the re-

mainder

of his

life.

On April 14, 1862, he was commissioned Surgeon of the


Fortieth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and was on duty with
his regiment until the following September, when he was
assigned to staff duty, serving as Medical Director of various Brigades and Divisions until he was mustered out,
December 6, 1864. In addition to his staff duties, he was
one of the operating surgeons of a division hospital.
After completing his service, he returned to his practice.
In 1875, he was elected to a professorship in the Columbus
Medical College, but resigned the next year as it interfered
too much with his other engagements. He was elected a
member of the House of Representatives for the years
1875-6, and served during the two sessions of that Legislature.
In 1878, he was commissioned Surgeon of the Fourteenth Regiment Ohio Nations. Guard, being the first to
act in that capacity.
In 1880, he was appointed SurgeonGeneral on the staff of Governor Charles Foster, which position he held for four years.
He also held the position of
President of the Board of Pension Examiners for Madison
county for four years.
He was married June 1, 1858, to Eliza J. Snyder, who,
with two daughters, Mrs. Dr. J. R. Rathmill, of Chattanooga, and Mrs. Charles A. Shinn, of Lookout Mountain,
Tennessee, survive him.
His grandfather, Obil Beach, enlisted at an early period
of the war of the Revolution in the Connecticut Militia,
serving two or three terms of six months each, and later enlisting in the Continental army for three years.
He removed from Litchfield, Connecticut, to Poultney, Vermont,
in 1783 or 178-4 to New Haven, Vermont, about 1790, and
to Canaan township, Madison county, Ohio, in 1817, where
he died October 5, 1846.
His maternal grandfather, Rev. Seth Noble, was settled
in the ministry in Mangerville. Nova Scotia, in 1774, where
he was active in awakening a feeling for the Colonies. He
wrote, May 20, 1776
"We have unanimously signed a
paper to join New England in the national struggle, and
The fleet and
are making all possible preparations for war.
army that went from Boston to Halifax have sailed, we sup;

New England, though they pretended they were


going to Quebec." In 1777, so violent had been his opposition to the Crown that, on the approach of an armed British schooner, to avoid taking the oath of allegiance, he fled,
narrowly escaping with his life. Immediately after reaching New England he entered service, for his name appears
on the Massachusetts muster rolls among the non-commissioned officers in the companies of Captains Dyer and
West, who marched to St. John, Nova Scotia, in 1777. His
term of service was two months and five days. For his
sacrifice in leaving his home in Nova Scotia the government subsequently gave him a section of land in the Refugee tract on the east bank of the Scioto, where Columbus
is now situated, and
covered the land where the State
House now stands. An old letter mentions their cabin
near the large mound. Rev. Mr. Noble preached at Franklinton, Worthington, Granville and Darby (now Plain City),
in 1806 and 1807.
He died in 1808, and was first buried in
the old graveyard at Franklinton.
Compatriot Beach belonged to the Masonic Order and
to the Methodist Church, as well as to the Loyal Legion
and other military organizations, and various medical societies, local, state and national, and he became a member
of the Sons of the American Revolution in 1893, basing his
application upon the services of his two grandfathers above
pose for

mentioned.

HON. GEORGE LEROY CONVERSE.


George Leroy Converse, a member of this Society, was
born in Georgesville, Franklin county, Ohio, June -4, 182?,
and died in Columbus, March 30, 1897. He was the son
of Dr. George Washington and Cassandra (Cook) Converse; grandson of Sanford Converse, who was a soldier
in the war of 1812
great-grandson of Jeremiah Converse,
who was a Private in the war of the Revolution, and was
wounded by a musket ball in the left shoulder, which
troubled him during his long life, and great-great-grandson of Pain Converse, who was an officer in the Revolution.
The family descent is from the French Huguenots,
and the first of the American line came to the western continent with Winthrop.
After the death of Dr. Converse,
;

his wife, being a woman of more than ordinary attainments, supported herself and child by teaching. George,
guided and assisted by his mother, obtained the elements
of his education at the district school, afterwards attending the preparatory school called Central College, in
Franklin county, and then entering Denison University, at
Granville, Ohio, from which he graduated in 1849.
He
then went to Tiffin, Ohio, where he studied law with General J. W. Wilson, and removed to Columbus in January,
1852. In 1854, he was elected prosecuting attorney, serving one term and declining re-election. He immediately
took a leading position in the Franklin county bar, was
devoted to his profession, and did not court political preferment.
But he was not thus destined to remain in private
life, for in 1859 he was elected a member of the legislature
and again in 1861, serving two terms. In 1863, he was
elected to the state senate and became the recognized
leader of the Democratic party.
In 1873, he was again
elected to the lower house and made its speaker, when his
efficiency and resources as a parliamentarian attracted the
attention of the entire country.
He was re-elected in 1875
and was the leader of his party on the floor of the house.
In 1877 he was a prominent candidate for the gubernatorial nomination, but was distanced by the superior business

management

R. M. Bishop, who also seIn 1878 he was elected to congress,

of his competitor,

cured the election.


and continued in

for three successive terms, and


from congress he devoted the remainder of his life to the practice of his profession. In 1892,
he was appointed a delegate to the Nicaragua Canal Convention at St. Louis, of which he was made chairman, and
of a subsequent convention held at New Orleans, called by
him under authority of the former convention. In this he
took the broad view that the government should construct
the canal as a national safeguard, and in the interests of
commerce, his position being wise and patriotic, which he
eloquently portrayed in numerous addresses which he was
office

after his retirement

invited to deliver in different cities.

Mr. Converse was twice married: First on September


16, 1852, to Sarah E., daughter of Nathaniel and Mary
(Walker) Patterson, of Columbus, who died November 19,
1883, a woman highly respected for her many good qualities.
Four children of this marriage survive, Wade Converse, Mrs. Mary C. Follett, Captain George L. Converse,
all of Columbus, and H. P. Converse, of Boston, Mass. He
married second, in 1889, Elouise, daughter of Dr. Chauncey P. and Clara (Slaughter) Landon, of Columbus four
children having been born of this union, one of whom died
in infancy and three survive, namely, Helen, Samuel Randall and Elouise Converse.
Compatriot Converse became a member of this Society
in 1895, his application bearing date July 30, and being
based upon the service of his great-great-grandfather,
Lieutenant Pain Converse, of Captain Joseph Elliott's
Company of Colonel Putnam's Eleventh Regiment Connecticut Militia.
In April, 1776, he marched with his company, from Killingly, Connecticut, for the relief of Boston
in the Lexington alarm, and is believed to have been at the
;

battle of

Bunker

Hill in the

same

capacity.

He was

also

Lieutenant and acting Captain of a company of the same


regiment which marched to the relief of General Washington's army in what is known as the New York campaign.
The military records of Connecticut during the war of the
Revolution show about twenty-five names of the Converse
family, all of whom were kindred of our compatriot, and
there were others in the other New England colonies besides.
The patriotic spirit has been transmitted in the

family from the time of the Revolution, its members having


figured in nearly all the succeeding wars, and one son of
Compatriot Converse, Captain George L. Converse, has
maintained the military record of the family to the present
time, being a graduate of the United States Military Academy, a participant in the Indian wars since the Rebellion,
and was severely wounded in the action against Indians at
J5. c Dry Wasii, Arizona, July 17, 1SS2, on account of which
he was retired from service.
But on the breaking out of
the Cuban war he again offered his services to his country
and was given the position of Captain in the Ohio Cavalry.
He took an active interest in the Society, was a regular
attendant at its meetings, and labored assiduously in the
efforts to bring about a union of the two kindred societies.
In 1886, he was elected one of the delegates of the State
Society to the National Congress, and the proceedings of
that body attest the fact that he was faithful and energetic
in the execution of the trust.

HON.

EDWARD HUBBARD

Edward Hubbard

member

FITCH.

was
born in Ashtabula, Ohio, May 27, 1837, died at Conneaut,
Ohio, September 9, 1897, and was buried in Chestnut
Grove Cemetery, in the former city. He was a son of
Hon. Orramel Hinckley and Catharine Maria (Hubbard)
Fitch.
He descended from sturdy, patriotic New England
His educastock and inherited all their sterling qualities.
tion was commenced in the common schools of his native
town, supplemented by a preparatory course at St. Catharines, Canada, and completed at Williams College, which
he entered in 1854, graduated therefrom in 185S, and received the degree of A. M. in 1861. While in that old college, he formed the friendship of James A. Garfield, which
continued unabated until the death of the latter. Immediately after graduating from college he took up the study
of the law with his father and was admitted to the bar in
1860.
He was associated in practice with his father, and
later with Judge Horace Wilder, Judge L. S. Sherman and
with Hon. S. A. Northway. On the formation of the last
partnership, in 1878, he removed from Ashtabula to Jefferson, the county seat.
Fitch, a

230

of this Society,

'

i
Hon.

EDWARD HUBBARD FITCH

He married, October 27, 1863, Alta D., daughter of Philander and Elizabeth (Gilman) Winchester, of Columbus,
Ohio. Eight children were born of this marriage Catharine Hubbard, born February 15, 1865, died 1872; Winchester, born November 21, 1867; Annette, born January
31, 1870, married I. C. Brewer, Jr., of Sandusky, Ohio;
Elizabeth Gilman, born January, 1872, died 1880 Edward
Hubbard, born March 31, 1873 Alta, born July 25, 1876
Flora C, born August 6, 1879 Charles Gilman, born in
Jefferson, 1881, died March, 1886.
For twenty years he was recorder and member of the
Ashtabula council fifteen years a justice of the peace, and
forty years a notary public; was prosecuting attorney of
Ashtabula county in 1867-8, and was elected to represent
In 1892, he read bethe county in the legislature in 1870.
fore the Ohio State Bar Association an exhaustive paper
on the "Torrens System of Registration of Land Titles,"
and afterwards formulated a bill which was passed by the
Ohio Legislature, which, as had been a similar law in Illinois, was declared unconstitutional by the courts of Ohio
but notwithstanding the action of the courts, the Bar Association at a subsequent meeting gave the measure their
hearty approval.
He devoted considerable time to scientific research, and
from 1857 to the time of his death was a member of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, and
at the time he was stricken with the paroxysm of disease
which resulted in his death, was on his way to Detroit to
attend a meeting of that Society, and by great effort succeeded in returning to Conneaut, where he died a short
time after.
Compatriot Fitch became a member of the Ohio Society
of the Sons of the American Revolution in April, 1885,
basing his eligibility for membership upon the service of
his great-grandfather. Captain Abraham Fitch, who commanded a Company in the Second Regiment of Light
Horse Cavalry from Connecticut. He marched his Company to New London, when the town was burned by
Arnold, and reached there just as the last boats of the
British were leaving the wharf.
Captain Fitch was also a
soldier in the French and Indian war.
"He was remarkable for the equanimity of his temper, was very regular in
his habits, and was never confined to his bed by sickness a
:

231

in his life.
He walked out of doors an
death, April 21, 1821, aged 84 years. "*

day

hour before

his

JAMES FOLLETT.
Prepared by

Deacon James
and a

Harry Parker Ward, M.

member

A.

son of a Revolutionary soldier

Follett, a

Ohio

Sons of the American Revolution, died on Tuesday, August 23, 189S, after a
life

of the

Society,

home in Hartford, Licking county, Ohio.


born February 24, 1811, at Enosburgh, Vermont,
which town his father had been one of the founders in
1797.
His early life was spent on his father's farm in the
rocky hills of his native state, where he acquired ample
preparation, physical, mental and moral, for the hard work

brief illness, at his

He was

of

He came to Ohio early in the


thirties, when it required almost as many days as it now
takes hours, to make the trip, traveling as they did in those
days by lake boat and in wagons. He first cleared a farm
near Granville, and subsequently bought a farm near Hartford, which locality was his home for some forty-four years.
He returned to Vermont in 1837 to marry, which event
took place October 5, 1837, in East Berkshire, the township
adjacent to Enosburgh. His wife was Jane Comings (born
March 2, 1816, died' February 26, 1864), daughter of Andrew Comings, another one of the sturdy pioneers of northern Vermont, who had been Orderly Sereeant in the War
of 1812, and was subsequently a Captain of Militia and a
magistrate.
Mr. Follett's wife was also the grand-da"ghter
of a pioneer farmer in Ohio.

Benjamin Comings, a Revolutionary soldier who fought


Bennington. Of the eight children resulting from this
marriage, three only survive, Mrs. Sarah Lincoln and Mrs.
Ellen Wells, of Hartford, Ohio, and Mr. Fay Comings Follett, of Hastings, Nebraska.
Mr. Follett, though removed from the Revolution but one
generation, had six direct ancestors and nearly a score of
collateral ancestors who assisted in the achievement of
American Independence. In the War of 181? his father
was Captain and three brothers were Privates in the local
militia company, and all his numerous uncles and cousins
served in some capacity from Colonel in the regular army
down to Private in the militia, a relative being represented
of
at

the handwriting of the late Hon. Orramel

FRANK

I,.

FORD,

C. E.

grade mentioned but that of Lieutenant-Colonel.


remembered something of the great excitement
neighborhood occasioned by the battle of Pittsburgh, which was fought not many miles from his home.
Deacon Follett's father. Captain Martin Dewey Follett,
whose military record appears elsewhere in this volume, was
the first man to mark the trees through the dense forests
that lay between Enosburgh and the St. Lawrence. Montreal was some seventy miles distant and Mr. Follett sometimes accompanied his father on his journeys to that city
In
to exchange their produce and live stock for supplies.
winter a considerable part of the distance was traveled on
the ice of the St. Lawrence.
Captain Follett was for many
years a member of the Vermont Legislature and at one time
county judge. Of his ten children, but one now survives,
since the death of Deacon Tames Follett, Mrs. Hannah Folin every

Mr.

Follett

in the

lett

Clark, of Hartford, Ohio,

now

nearly 95 years of age.

She has been for several years a member of the Daughters


American Revolution.
His funeral was very largelv attended, he being one of
the oldest residents of the locality, and the oldest male member of the Hartford Congregational Church, of which he
had been deacon for many years.
of the

FRANK
Frank L. Ford,

L.

FORD,

member

C. E.

of this Society,

whose name

never before appeared in our Year-Book, was born in the


then village of East Cleveland, Ohio, on January 26, 1853,
and died in the city of Cleveland. September. 28. 1897,
His education commenced in the district school near his
birth-place, was continued at the Central High School of
Cleveland and was finished at the Renssplaer Polytechnic
Institute at Troy, New York, where he received the degree
of Civil Engineer in 1874.
He followed his profession for
several years in Ohio and Kentucky, but dearth of railroad construction consequent upon the panic of 1873 led
him to seek employment in other fields, and he spent several years in Colorado.
About 1883. he returned to Ohio
and engaged in the business of life insurance, and at the

time of his death was General Agent of the State Mutual


Life Assurance Company of Worcester, Massachusetts.

He married, October 3, 1876, Miss Eva M., daughter of


the late J. E. and Elizabeth R. Hurlbut, and two daughters, Florence and Elizabeth, and two sons, Hurlbut and
Dennison, are the fruits of that marriage.
Compatriot Ford filed his application for membership
Sons of the American Revolution with the Western
Reserve Society on January 16, 1897, and received National Number 9538 and State Number 348. basing his

in the

eligibility to membership upon the service of his greatgrandfather, Hezekiah Ford, who participated in the batBennington, serving as a Private in Captain William
Ward's (Hampshire county) Company of Colonel Ezra
May's Regiment, enlisting August 17, 1777, and serving
five days also enlisted July 21, 1779, as a Private in Captain Benjamin Bonney's Company of Colonel Elisha Porter's Hampshire County Regiment, and served in Connecticut in repelling the attacks of General Arnold after his
treachery.
The latter time he served one month and
twelve days. His ancestry contained much good fighting
stock, for his great-great-grandfather, Hezekiah Ford, Sr.,
was a Lieutenant in the French and Indian war. and his
grandfather, Cyrus Ford, was at the battle of Lake Champlain in the war of 1812.
tle of

He was for many years a member of the Euclid Avenue


Congregational Church, of Cleveland, and at the time of
its Sunday School Superintendent.
Of him it
"Mr. Ford was a
was said by one who knew him well
loyal representative of a noble ancestry, ever mindful of the
upright character and Christian purpose of his forefathers
wherever we found him we found the manly, helpful nature
a nature so useful in this needy world."
his death

HENRY ROGERS.
life member of this Society, was born
Greensburg, Fayette
county, Pennsylvania, May 31,
1806, and died at his home in Mt. Healthy, Hamilton
county, December 1, 1896. He was a son of Henry and
Phoebe (Burnett) Rogers.

Henry Rogers,

in

His

father,

Henry Rogers, was born

in

Middlesex

county, New Jersey, December 21, 1752, and died in


Springfield township, Hamilton county, July 17, 1840, and
was buried in the Roll graveyard on the west fork of Millcreek, Cumminsville.
He entered the Revolutionary service under Lord Sterling in 1775 and served for one year.
He was a weaver by trade, and came to Hamilton county
early in the century.

When

six

months

old, the subject

of

this sketch

was

brought to Cincinnati, where the family remained untd


1812, removing to Springfield township, where he continued to reside during the remainder of his life. At the
age of seventeen he was apprenticed to the cabinet-maker's
trade but after a few years he gave it up for farming, which
was afterwards his life work. He married the only daughter of Jedediah Hill, and the only child, Wilson T. Rogers,
is now living upon the old homestead at Mt. Healthy.
Compatriot Rogers was made a life member of this Society on February 1, 1896, on account of being a son of a
Revolutionary soldier.
;

HON. JOSEPH PATTERSON SMITH.


Joseph Patterson Smith, a member of this Society, was
born in West Union, Adams county, Ohio, August 7, 1856,
and died at Miami, Florida, February 5, 1898. He was
the seventh of eleven children of Judge John Mitchell and
Matilda Ann (Patterson) Smith. His grandfather, Judge
David Campbell Smith, graduated at Dartmouth College
in 1813, was admitted to the bar the year following, and in
1815 came from Francistown, New Hampshire, and settled
at Franklinton, now a part of the city of Columbus, before
the latter became the state capital was the first lawyer to
locate there, and was one of the first Associate Judges of
the Common Pleas Court of Franklin county. He was
subsequently a member of the legislature, and was by that
body elected State Printer. He established a weekly newspaper, called the Ohio Monitor, in 1816, which in 1836 he
sold to Jacob Medary, Jr., and it became the Ohio Statesman. His father, John M. Smith, was born in Columbus,
Ohio, June 29, 1819, and was educated at Blendon College,
Franklin county. In 1840, he went to Adams county and
the next year was elected County Recorder in 1819-'50 he
represented Adams and Pike counties in the legislature,
and during the 50's was Probate Judge of the former
county for three terms. For many years he published the
Adams County Democrat. Besides the above, he held
other important official positions. His ancestors were
Scotch-Irish, being among the colony of Scotch Presbyterians from Argyleshire which settled in the Province of
Ulster, Ireland, in 1612.
On the maternal side, the Pattersons were one of the oldest families of Virginia, originally
from England.
Joseph P. Smith had very meagre advantages in the earlier years of his life, and from his sixteenth year he earned
his own living, at which time he took employment in a
nail mill at Bellaire, Ohio.
Afterwards he went to Greencastle, Indiana, where he was connected with a newspaper,
working on the paper at night, and attending college in the
daytime.
He did not graduate, however, but afterwards
1

236

JOSEPH I'ATTEKSU."

became a teacher of country schools in Ohio and Illinois.


In 1876, he was a special correspondent of the Cincinnati
Commercial, making a specialty of the political news of the
was also for a time editor of the Clermont Courier
was message clerk of the Ohio House of Representatives,
in 1879-'80
from 1888 to 1890, was editor and one of the
state

proprietors of the Urbana (Ohio) Daily Citizen.


He
compiled the book entitled "Speeches and Addresses of
William McKinley."* In 1892 he was appointed State Librarian, which office he resigned in May, 1896, and was
thereafter with the McKinley campaign committee and
worked assiduously throughout the entire campaign at Canton, and remained there until after the election and accompanied the President to Washington before his inauguration.
On March 29, 1897, he was appointed Director of
the Bureau of American Republics, in which office he continued to work with the same unremitting energy which had
characterized his labor throughout the campaign until the
President insisted upon his taking rest and quiet. Mr.
Smith reluctantly consented, and repaired to Miami, Florida, only to yield up his life there in a short time.
Mr. Smith was married at Galveston, Texas, on April 14,
1886, to Miss Maryneal Hutches, who was born in that city
March 1, 1860. Seven children have been born to them:
Frank Hutches, born in Galveston; Virginia Patterson,
born in Batavia, Ohio; Antoinette Barker, Mary Stowe,
John Mitchell, William McKinlev and Joseph Patterson,
all born in Urbana, where the family now resides.
At the time of his death, the whole press of Ohio, regardless of party, spoke of him only in terms of praise.
Among
them all, we can find no more candid and truthful portrayal
of his life and character than the following, taken from the
Canton Repository of February 5, 1898

#***

"Supremely faithful and loving to his family, combined


with his beautiful qualities of heart and brightest of bright
intellects, his greatest virtue was his unfaltering loyalty to
the cause in which were enshrined his brightest earthly
hopes and ambitions.
"Had his physical body possessed the strength to support
his indomitable energy in the assiduous application of his
*For a time during the McKinley gubernatorial campaign he was

237

at

Canton.

remarkable

intellect,

few

men would have

equaled him

in possibilities of attainment.

"His

head was a veritable storehouse.


History,
ancient and modern, were constant and living pictures in
his always lively memory.
His brain seemed incandescent
with the knowledge almost of the world, when ripe occasion made its demand on his resourceful mind.
When
working in the cause he loved the most, he knew no night
fertile

*********

or day. Sleep could only come when utter physical exhaustion forced tired nature to assert herself.

He was firm in the faith of Everlasting Peace to come.


In Canton, in his tribute to a friend who had gone from
he wrote in paraphrase

earth,

" Tears for the living

Love

for the dead."

"And yet many's the heart that grieves, and myriad are
the eyes that glisten to-day upon receiving the news from
Florida at the taking away of an intellect so bright and a
character so lovely, just as fame and fortune were at his feet
in recognition of eminently patriotic service."
Compatriot Smith filed his application for membership in
this Society on December 7, 1802, by right of lineal descent from Major Joseph Lewis Finley, his maternal greatgrandfather, who was born in Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, February 20, 1753
graduated from Princeton
College, New Jersey; enlisted in the Revolutionary army
AprilG, 1776; was at the battle of Long Island, August 27;
in September following, at the battle of White Plains
in
September, 1777, at the battle of Brandywine October 4,
at the battle of Germantown
June, 1778, at the battle of
Monmouth. From thence he was sent with General Broadhead to Western Pennsylvania against the Indians. He
retired from the army in November. 1783.
He lost his
right eye by reason of sickness caused by severe service and
exposure; was badly wounded, and received a pension of
$40 per month in his old age. He came to Adams county.
Ohio, a few vears after the war, where he owned a farm in
the Virginia Military District, and died there Mav 23. 1R39.
His paternal great-grandfather, Deacon Tohn Smith, also
served in the Revolution, and was a Private in Captain
Isaac Farwell's Companv of Colonel Cilley's First New
Hampshire Regiment. He was wounded in the neck at
;

238

the battle of Bennington, by a bullet which was never removed. He first enlisted for a single campaign, and on
February 22, 1777, re-enlisted for "three years, or the war,"
continuing in service more than seven years. Another maternal great-grandfather, James Augustine Patterson, also

served in the Revolution.

Compatriot Smith was elected Corresponding Secretary


His predecessor, on acill health which culminated in his death, had left
the business of the office in a bad condition; but Compatriot Smith, with his characteristic energy and insight into
such complicated affairs, succeeded in bringing order out
of chaos.
But the next year, on account of the pressure of
his other duties, he positively declined a re-election to the
office; for he would undertake nothing to which he could
not devote sufficient time to do thoroughly well. The Soof this Society for the year 1893-4.

count of

ciety, in

recognition of his services,

made him a

life

mem-

ber.

STEPHEN ATWATER TROWBRIDGE.


The

late

Stephen Atwater Trowbridge,

of Toledo, Sec-

retary of the Anthony Wayne Chapter, No. 3, of the Ohio


Society, S. A. R., was born in New York, June 8, 1838, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Trowbridge of that city.
Graduating at Yale College, he returned to New York, where he
was the Worshipful Master of Kane Lodge, F.
A. M.,
and a highly respected member of the Lotus Club and
other social organizations. About the year 1863, he removed to Peoria, 111., where he was Treasurer of the Peoria,

&

Pekin

& Jacksonville

Railway. In 1864, he married at PeMiss Frances Sabilla Gill, and in 1880


to Toledo, where he had accepted a position as
paymaster of the Toledo
Ohio Central Railway. After
assisting in building and extending that road, he formed a
partnership with the late D. R. Locke ("Nasby") in the
lithographing business, which continued until the death of
the latter.
For the past few years he has been in the insurance business in Toledo. He was a charter member of the
Dranconian, now the Toledo Club was fond of the best of
literature, and possessed of very attractive social qualities.
He was especially interested in our patriotic organization,
kin, in that state,

they

moved

&

being Secretary of the Toledo Chapter, and was devoted to


genealogical and historical studies. He died suddenly at
his residence on the evening of September 3, 1897.
His
wife and two sons, Edwin Lucius and Nelson Gill, survive
him.
Mr. Trowbridge was a great-grandson of Stephen Atwater, who was a private in Captain Crouch's Company,
Bradley's Battalion, Wadsworth's Brigade, Colonel Phillips, May, 1776; in battles of Bergen Heights, Paulus
Hook, and Fort Washington, where he was taken prisoner.
He was a great-grandson of Rutherford Trowbridge,
who, at New Haven, Connecticut, manufactured saltpetre
for use in the Revolutionary war.
Great-great-grandson of Tilley Blakesley, who was First
Lieutenant of Captain Bradley's Fifth Company, Second
Battalion, Colonel Gays' Regiment, Wadsworth's Brigade;

was

in the battles of

Long

Island, etc.

Compatriot Trowbridge was admitted to our Society,


February 5, 1896.

COLONEL JOSEPH KNOWLES WING.


Joseph Knowles Wing, son of Bani and Lucy (Clary)
Wing, was born in Wilmington, Vermont, July 27, 1810,
and died at his home at Bloomfield, Trumbull county, January

1, 1898.
His was the seventh of the generations of his name and
lineage that had lived in this country. Together they span
the entire period of the material mastery of the continent
and the development of our national life.
His father fought in the war for Independence, enlisting
in 1779 (when seventeen years of age), from Conway,
Hampshire county, Massachusetts, in Captain Rice's Company of Colonel Chapin's Regiment. He also served under
Colonel Watson in the defense of Hudson River, and was
His own lengthpresent at the execution of Major Andre.
ened term of life brought with it the somewhat rare distinction of being a living son of a Revolutionary soldier, and
on that account he was made a life member of the Ohio Society of the Sons of the American Revolution in 1896.
When sixteen years old he left his father's home at Wilmington to meet such career as there might be for him in

240

the great inland region to the West.

The popular move-

ment

in this direction, which subsequently


vast proportions, was then in its infancy.

grew to such
The days of
steam were yet to come, and emigration was accordingly
limited to the water courses and the lines of least resistance.
The ultimate distribution of population, too, was expected
to be along and contiguous to these natural highways of
commerce, so that a district, such as the fertile valley of the
Mohawk, a river leading from the Hudson to the lakes, was
already the seat of numerous and prospering communities,
and their attendant opportunities for personal advancement.
Here, therefore, to Albany county, New York, he first went,
where he remained at Rensselserville, for the five years next
preceding his majority, in the employment of merchants of
the place. He was active and useful in his business, popular in the community, and rapidly acquired the just confidence of all. During this time he was appointed Quartermaster of the Twenty-fifth Regiment of the New York
State Infantry, and, for three years, until he resigned to go
to Ohio, he served under his commission as such, upon the
staff of General De Witt.
Upon reaching the age of twenty-one he accepted an advantageous offer to open a general mercantile business at
some favorable point in the far West, and, largely influenced
by considerations of the kind above indicated, Bloomfield,
in the County of Trumbull and State of Ohio, was selected
for the purpose.
He immediately repaired to New York
City to buy his stock of goods, and thereafter proceeded to
Ohio to what proved his permanent home. In 1842 he married Mary, a daughter of Ephraim Brown, the early proprieShe died
tor of the place, and Mary Huntington, his wife.
Mary HuntDecember 15, 1887. Their children were
ington, b. August 18, 1843 Elizabeth Brown, b. December
30, 1844; Virginia Passavant, b. November 17, 184G
George Clary, b. April 4, 1848 Francis Joseph, b. September 14, 1850 Julia King, b. May 7, 1853 Anna Margaret,
Of the seven children, two sons and
b. March 7, 1857.
three daughters survive him.
At the outbrealc of the Civil War President Lincoln appointed him to be Assistant Quartermaster with the rank
He was thereafter successively commissioned
of Captain.
Major, and Lieutenant Colonel, by brevet. From the first
his duty was with the advanced armies in Tennessee and
:

241

Mississippi.

When

General

Rosecrans concentrated his


in charge

army within and around Corinth, he was ordered

of the cavalry division of the Quartermaster's department at


that point and soon afterwards assigned as Chief Quartermaster of the district.
was in the battle of Corinth of

He

October 2 and 3, 1862, and the desperate hand to hand


struggle for the mastery, which marked the turning point
of the conflict, was enacted around headquarters where his
own tent and station were.
The following year General Rosecrans was relieved, but
Colonel Wing remained at Corinth on the same duty, attached to the staff of General Grenville M. Dodge.
In 1864 the post was reduced and the armies of the West,
including the Sixteenth Army Corps, withdrawn for the
Atlanta campaign.
As Chief Quartermaster of this Corps he participated in
until Atlanta was reached and taken.
all its movements
During that great campaign the command marched 500
miles and was engaged in thirteen distinct engagements.
In his official reIt was under fire almost the entire time.
port, and by letters to Secretary Stanton, General Dodge

commended Colonel Wing for his efficiency, and urged his


promotion with the brevet rank of Brigadier-General.
In November, 1864, he assumed charge of the Quartermaster's Department in the district of Beaufort, North
Carolina, where he remained until honorably mustered out
at the close of the war.

By

virtue of his service during the war of the Rebellion,


Wing was elected a member of the First Class
Order of the Loyal Legion of the United
States, through the Commandery of Ohio, March 3, 1897.
His energy, sagacity and public spirit were marked, and
constantly exerted to the public good.
He was twice
chosen by the people of Trumbull county as their represen-

Compatriot

of the Military

and served as such through


both terms, holding a position on several of the most important committees.
Otherwise than as above narrated his life was varied by
duties or interests that took him from home, from time to
time, and amid scenes and situations of more than ordinary
moment. His breadth of sympathies and tastes enabled
him to derive wholesome enjoyment from these changes,
but his family and the accustomed surroundings of home

tative to the State Legislature,

were the reliance for his chiefest contentment and happiness.


He was a wide reader, both for his own entertain-

ment and
surate,

instruction; his habit of reflection

and

his

was commen-

judgments were ever comprehensive and

just.

BANQUET OF THE OHIO SOCIETY, SONS


OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.
Chittenden Hotel Banquet Hall,
Columbus, Ohio, January 11, 1898.
The banquet was opened with prayer by Dr. A. A. E.
Taylor, of Columbus, Chaplain, and at the close
prayer, Toast-master Tod B. Galoway said

of

the

Judge Galloway I remember when I was in attendance


on an occasion similar to this, during the festivities, while
the speeches were going on, a young lady who was sitting
next to me touched my elbow and said, "Why do they
allow that man to keep jumping up and down and keep interrupting the speakers so? Every time any one has finished and before any one can speak he immediately pops
up and says something." I found out that she was referring to the toast-master. Bearing that in mind I beg to
assure you I will endeavor to interrupt as little as possible
What there is for a toast-master to do on an
this evening.
:

is very little.
In fact, a toast-master
sometimes supposed to be responsible for the toasters,
I am reminded of the consolation that was offered by
his little boy to the peddler of toy balloons who was bewailing the loss of his stock in trade, which had unfortunately slipped from his grasp and went sailing away, when
he said, "Father, never mind, if you kept them they would
have busted, and now they can bust altogether."
As far as my duties are concerned it seems to me the
prayer of the old Scotch minister comes well in place, when
he said, "Oh, Lord, I do not ask Thee to give me wealth
only show me where it is and I will do the rest."
Now I cannot welcome you to-night because if I started
in on that theme I would be jogged on my left by General

occasion of this sort


is

but

243

Wright and if I undertook to respond to that welcome 1


would be jogged by Mr. Richardson on my right, and I
cannot grow patriotic because there is a large line of brilliancy that will shine later on that score.
In fact, the only thing left for me to do is to drop an introduction in the slot and get a response.

We

will be pleased at this time to have the address of


of the Benjamin Franklin ChapCompatriot General Wright.
General George B. Wright, in making the address of
welcome, said:

welcome by the President


ter,

Brother Compatriots, Ladies and Friends, All.

give you a hearty welcome on this occasion. Late as it is,


and delayed as we have been, I trust you will all enjoy this
entertainment. It is certainly a great joy and pleasure to
me to meet you here once more.
You understand this is the regular meeting of the State
Society.
It is not an occasion for commemorating any
great battle of the Revolution or any great officers or soldiers of the Revolution or any other war, but it is an appropriate time and proper for you to think about those
things, those men and those times, and, if you chose to

speak about them

it will be in perfect order.


If, for instance, it happens to occur to you that this is
pretty near to the date of the battle of New Orleans, you
can say something about that, if you please. Nobody objects.
Or, if you should think of 120 years ago to-night,
you might remember that Washington, with his poor,
ragged, hungry, bare-footed soldiers, was camping at Valley Forge, and you might say something patriotic about
that and, at the same time, just 120 years ago, some young
gentlemen here, some gallant man, might tell the ladies
how that woman, that Quaker lady of Philadelphia, rode
five miles at the dead of night to notify General Washington that General Howe was about to make an attack that
night on his army and how that desperate attack resulted.
You might say something about that. It would be very
appropriate.
But this banquet, as you understand, is given under the
auspices of the Benjamin Franklin Chapter of this Society,
of which I have the honor, the great honor, of being President, and I think it very proper although one of our
worthy members thinks that we ought to change the name
;

244

of

our Chapter from Benjamin Franklin to Washington;

don't agree with him at all, because I think of all the men
this country,
that this country has produced, no
greater, no better, no more patriotic or more useful man
was ever produced in this country than Benjamin Franklin.
(Applause.)
If you will run over in your mind a little of his character
and his history you will see how great a man he was. He
commenced life in Boston; in 17U6 he was born. At the
age of 12 he was apprenticed to the printing mill there he
stood for five years faithfully, when he had a little controversy with his master and he ran away and went to Philadelphia and started printing on his own hook and was very
successful.
You may some of you have heard of that
almanac that he printed called "Poor Richard," which was
one of the most wonderful productions of that age. It was
so wonderful that there were four or five editions printed
immediately, one after another, and it was translated into
several different languages, French and German.
It was a
wonderful thing. It was in every household.
I

of

He was
member

elected at one time a Justice of the Peace and a


and also sent to the Legislature,
of Post-master in Philadelphia for

of the Council

and he held the office


sixteen years and was
and at an early time in

at one time Post-master General,


his life he was sent to England to
represent this country there and he spent six or seven years
there, laboring earnestly, faithfully and industriously for

government. He made many friends in England and


he was there for the purpose of defeating the tax against
the Colonies, and when he found that he could not accomplish that he returned to Philadelphia in time to become a
member of Congress and was associated with the other
members of the committee that prepared the Declaration
of Independence.
He was one of the members of that
committee.

this

He
was

participated in the

Union

of the States in 1778.

He

convention and labored very earnestly and


and did great service in that connection.
As
soon as the Congress was organized he was sent as a Commissioner to France and he spent nine years there laboring for this country, and one of the greatest acts of his
whole life was the treaty that he made with France to come
to the relief of this country, which they did, and sent an
in that

faithfully

245

army and a

fleet

here which

have no doubt saved

this

Re-

public.

was through

influence that those treaties were


made with France. While there he made other treaties,
but I will not longer dwell upon the good characteristics
of Benjamin Franklin.
I hope that you will all study his
life and his history, and you young men especially imitate
his habits of industry and faithful service to his country.
He lived to be 84 years old and some months, dying in
April, 1790.
The last act of his life, the last clerical act of
his life, was to write a petition to Congress to abolish
slavery in the United States, as the President, as he was at
that time, of the Abolition Society of the United States.
It

his

Compatriots and
tion,

and we

ladies, I

shall be

Toast-master.

happy

thank you for your kind attenfrom our worthy

to hear further

(Applause.)

Toast-master Galloway: I am sure there is no one in


Ohio Society from whom we would more gladly hear a
response than our Compatriot and Brother, J. M. Richardson, the President of the Ohio Society of the Sons of the
American Revolution. (Applause.)
the

Mr. Toast-master, Ladies and Gentlemen: As I


was looking upon this brilliant assembly, I thought of a
familiar line of a very familiar poem.
I remember a few
months ago standing in a room somewhat larger than this.
I visited it because it was a place of great interest.
It was
a carriage repository.
It was stored with carriages and
other vehicles. For many years it had been a ware-house
for a brewery, but the brewer had died.
Having lived so
long by his beer, he was laid on his bier and carried away
and he never came back. (Applause and laughter.) And
the beer vanished, as

suggested

that

the first beer.


did not think so
much of the carriages or the beer, strange as it may seem
(A Voice: Which beer, b-e-e-r or b-i-e-r?)
Mr. Richardson
That room had been honored by the
presence of the Duke of Wellington.
It was the room
where the Duchess of Richmond gave the famous ball before the battle of Waterloo, and that familiar line came to
me to-night, and I thought surely Ohio "Has gathered here
her beauty and her chivalry."
are inspired somewhat by the military trappings of
our friends who have surrounded us this evening.
are
It

was swallowed up

is

in oblivion.

But

is,

We

We

246

by the artillery of beautiful eyes that confront


You can not all see them, but I can. (Applause.) I
always thought I would like to be a soldier myself, espe(Laughter.) But I am not
cially on occasions like this.
inspired also

us.

I know of no military movement that the


a military man.
Sons of the Revolution can do or execute to-night as they
face this battery that I have mentioned, except to open
ranks and present arms. (Laughter.)
I am sure the Ohio Society
I am glad to be with you.
I am sure the Benjamin
is glad to be entertained here.
Franklin Chapter honors itself and honors us when it provides this splendid entertainment for us. The Sons of the

American Revolution is an order of which we may all be


proud, and, as your President has very happily remarked,
you may be proud here of the Benjamin Franklin Chapter.
Your Chapter bears one of the greatest names in the counnext to Washington I believe the greatest
try's history
name of the Revolutionary period Benjamin Franklin, a

stands colossal beside his fellows, a many sided


viewed from whichever standpoint you may view

man who
man;

him, he towers above them

all.

him

that he snatched the thunderbolt from


scepter from the hand of tyrants; the incorruptible patriot, the witty conversationalist, the shrewd
and skillful diplomat, the grave philosopher, beloved of the
people, honored of kings, lover of liberty, hater of tyrants,
all honor to Benjamin Franklin, after whom your Chapter
(Applause.)
is named.
I am glad your President has referred to it to-night. The
French Alliance was the turning; point of the Revolution.
It brought the declaration of war from Spain and France
against England and it diverted that ponderous military
and naval armament which would have crushed the life out
of the cause of freedom in America.
It inspired and crystallized a public sentiment in Europe which won us the victory, under the Providence of God.
Whatever may be said
of the Peace Treaty negotiated bv Franklin and Jav and
John Adams, no man at this day and age, no man will now
dare to question but that that <?reat Treatv of Alliance and
Commerce with France was due solely to the skill and the
patience and the indomitable pluck and the masterful
ability of Benjamin Franklin alone.
(Applause.)
You cannot say too much for Benjamin Franklin, but I
am not here to respond to a toast or make an address. I
It

was

said of

Heaven and the

247

am

simply responding to the address of welcome offered


Ohio Society by your President, and I am glad that
your venerable President is here with us to-night, and I
hope he may be with us on many other occasions. (Apto the

plause.)
I remember a story told by the celebrated divine, Dr.
Thomas, who was the Moderator of that great General
Assembly. He had entertained the night before a foreign

bishop and at the table in his home a dish on the table attracted the attention of the foreign clergyman and he asked
what it was. The doctor said, "It is kippered salmon."
Not understanding the colloquialism, he asked for an explanation and the doctor told him it was equivalent to preThe
served salmon. Nothing more was said about it.
foreign clergyman evidently enjoyed the dish. The next
day when Dr. Thomas called the General Assembly together, as its Moderator he called upon this foreign brother
to lead the Assembly in prayer, and he was astonished, and
I have no doubt the rest of the assembled clergymen were
astonished to hear the foreign clergyman with great unction there pray that "Their beloved Moderator might long
be kippered to the church," and I feel that I express your
sentiments when I express the wish that the honored President of the Benjamin Franklin Chapter may long be kip-

pered to the Society. (Applause.)


Several years ago I happened one day to be going up the
River Rhine on a steamboat and I was approached by a
gentleman whom I knew, from the violent plaids he had on.
was an Englishman. He came to me and said, "I beg your
pawdon, but I see you are from the States." I s?id I was.
He said, "You are from O-he-o." T said, "Yes, only we
call it Ohio."
He said, "I once had a foster brother who
was from O-he-o, who rose to great distinction. He became, I fancy. Lord Chancellor." No, I disagreed with
him on that point. I said he micrht have risen to sfreat distinction, but I doubted if he became Lord Chancellor of
Ohio. I asked his name, and he told me it was William
Rebb. I said, "My friend. T know very well who William
Bebb was: he somewhat 40 or 50 vears antedates me; he
was once Governor of Ohio." I found out by conversation with this gentleman that he was a stockholder in the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroid. He thought Baltimore was
a large seaport town and O-he-o was a large inland city
about 50 miles from Baltimore.
248

That reminds me also of an occasion on which a young


lady friend of mine was approached by an Englishman living out in Colorado on a sheep ranch. He said to her in
rather a supercilious tone, "What do you raise in Ohio?"
and my friend said, "Chiefly great men." Well, from recent events it seems that we raise great men and some very
small ones, too.
(Applause.)
Toast-master Galloway:

proud of

to be

what

its

origin,

We,
proud

as Ohioans, have a right


of its past and proud of

be its future. I take great pleasure in introducing


not introducing but presenting to you Compatriot
Hon. William A. Taylor, who will respond to the toast
"Ohio."
Colonel W. A. Taylor, in responding to the toast "Ohio,"

will

said

Mr. President, Ladies and Compatriots


Ohio is a
topic too vast to be disposed of in a brief after dinner
speech. Her career too great and glorious to be exhausted
:

even in a volume. Her sons and daughters may well, be


proud of her record, which forms an epic, grander than any
classic page
prouder than the annals of all preceding em-

pires.

Her founders came

fresh from the fields and fires of the


Revolution, imbued with lofty purposes and noble ambiinstinct with prophecy, and militant in the religion

tious

humanity.
Like tiny rivulets they came coursing through the gaps
of the Appalachian range from its northern extremity
southward to where its blue peaks smiled to the tepid
waters of the gulf stream a new Trojan pilgrimage,
charmed and inspired with the descriptions of daring
traders and men and women returning from barbarian captivity, of a new world more splendid than Plato's dream
of a Paradise that only awaited the pruning hand of civilization to make it the premier diamond in the matchless crown

of

'

young Republic.
As time passed these

of the

tiny streams grew into a mighty


on rushing humanity, before whose influence the
melted away and the log cabin, the farm house, the
hamlet the town and then the city, rose like genii responsive to the wand of the magician.
And what noble and heroic women, and strong patriotic
men they were
In their religion there were no creeds but
river of
foresfs

of liberty, and in the homes they


reared, fidelity, helpful love and filial piety and respect were
the guardian Cherubim of the never dying morality with
which the foundations of the state were cemented.
The herald roll of names that graced the four decades
following 1788 would take precedence over the Roster of
the Golden Age, or the Blue Book of the foremost kingdom of all time. To name one and not all, would be invidious, and to name all would be to declaim a census.
What Ohio is to-day she owes to the fathers and mothers,
who reared a race of men and taught them to put duty before convenience and write principle in a lexicon where no
such word as policy, the polite substitute for diplomacy,
chicane and mendacity, was to be found.
In 1803 Ohio had a population of 47,000 and stood
eighteenth in the order of the Sisterhood of States. In
1840 she stood third in population and all the elements of
greatness.
In 1890, through the genius of the census
taker, Illinois was temporarily given her station, but in
1900, when her original poulation will be multiplied by 100,
she proposes to take her place along side the Empire State
in all things except money grabbing, and outrank her elder
sister in all the finer graces.
Not only has she multiplied her population by 100 in

humanity and the love

less than a century, but her wealth by 250, and annually


spends for common school education more than 150 times
the total state revenues in 1803.
She was born a quarter of a century after the immortal
Declaration and rescript of our liberties, but in the Second
War of Independence, when a little miss of but 10 summers,
she furnished 20,000 heroic soldiers of all arms in the war of
1812, and the hostilities leading immediately thereto more
than one-fifth of all the soldiers of the Union, who made
Old Glory's title clear to the New World in that memorable
struggle.
She sent 5,500 men to hew the way from the Rio Grande
to the Halls of the Montezumas, in i84f>, and was ready to
multiply that number by 10, had there been a necessity.
In the great Civil War, when the Republic passed the
final fiery test, she sent her squadrons, numbering 340.000,
afield in the forefront of battle, one-seventh of all the
armies, one in seven of her population, one-half her sons
of the military age, and of these 1 in 14 died as the soldier
dies, on the battle field or in the groaning hospital.

250

Four
five

citizens of the state have been chosen President


Presidents born upon her fruitful soil. In camp and

military council she has been nobly represented by the foremost military chieftains of the century. In the Senate, in
Congress, in the Cabinet, on the Bench and in the Department of State, her statesmen, jurists and diplomats have
been second to none.
Her sons not only founded this great state, but, leading
the march of progress, founded colonies which grew into
states from the source of the Mississippi to its junction with

the Ohio, and thence west and northwest and southwest,


across the trackless, arid plains to and over the Sierras,
through the modulated foot hills and broad savannas to the
Golden Gate of the Pacific and the threshold of the Occident, until, from a score of mighty Commonwealths they sit
in the Nation's councils untutored in sycophancy and intrigue unlearned in the cold indifference of selfishness and
chicane, but robust in American manhood, and as frank
and open as the sunlight and the wind that ripen and sway
the harvests in fields as countless as the stars, and as beau;

tiful as

they.

We may well be proud of the fact that we are the Sons


and Daughters of the American Revolution, and our next
proudest boast should be that we are the children of Ohio.
After a selection by a quartette, composed of Messrs.
Chenoweth, Lauterbach, Davie and Frank, Toast-master
Galloway said
I regret that our friend, Rev. Parsons, will be unable to
be with us to respond to the toast of "Our Society."
"The Battle of Cowpens, the beginning of the end." It
seems to me that nothing more from the Toast-master is
needed than simply the title of that event, and I will leave
the treatment of it to our Compatriot, Brother Kibler, of
Newark. (Applause.)
Mr. Edward Kibler, of Newark, in responding to the
toast, "The Battle of Cowpens, the beginning of the end,"
said
I think, Mr. Toast-master, that I have discovered lurking
phraseology of this toast at least two paradoxes. I
imagine that such a pastoral scene as a grazing meadow, a
green or grassy plot, would make the highest type of perfect peace, and it seems to me that a bloody battle would

in the

mar

the artistic effect.


251


When I was assigned this toast I thought of a prayer that
had been offered by old Deacon Jones, a deacon in a Bapchurch in the old famous Welsh Hills around Granville.
Since all the stories thus far told have been about
preachers or prayers, I think I may be pardoned for mentist

tioning this.

Deacon Jones offered this prayer in all sincerity, believing that he was vouchsafing to the Deity some valuable information. His language perhaps as well as anything illustrated the pomposity of sesquipedalian bourgeois, and when
called upon to open the meeting with prayer, these were
his words:
"Paradoxical as it may seem, Oh, Lord, we
prostrate ourselves before Thee full of emptiness."
When this toast was assigned to me and I thought of this
occasion, I felt very much like emulating the humility of
Deacon Jones and prostrating myself before this audience
familiar with Revolutionary history, and confessing my inability to either enlighten you or amuse you upon this subject.
But, lest some of you may be misled by the name of
this battle, I wish to advise you that this interesting event
was not in any respect an agricultural affair. Indeed it was
in no sense an agricultural affair, because the weapons used
were neither pitchforks or milking stools, but the name signifies perhaps the greatest battle of Revolutionary times
the greatest certainly in military tactics and I believe the
greatest in every respect, because I believe that without
that battle as it was fought, we would not be enjoying today the liberties which we have.

Now the year 1781 opened with nothing but gloom for
the American Army. There was scarcely a ray of promise
to encourage the troops.
Congress lacked in gratitude, if
not in loyalty and patriotism. In mid-winter the armies
found themselves without food even or pay or clothing.
Treason, which is short lived but does thrive, seemed to
thrive in that neriod as it never thrived before.
The "British
were not satisfied with the ordinary weapons of warafre. but
thev used the most despicable weapon that was ever conceived by the depravity of man, the weapon of bribery.
Why, in the month of January of that year a whole New
Jersev Brigade revolted and it was necessarv for Washington to <rive an order to execute the two leaders and have the
work done by twelve of the principle mutineers. I hope
none of us are descended from the New Jersey Brigade.
252

On the first day of January in that year nearly 2000, the


whole Pennsylvania line, deserted, mutinied and started to
march towards Philadelphia, and they were met by two
British emissaries, who thought to take advantage of their
hunger and their destitute condition and their evident act
They promised them food, clothing, money
of disloyalty.
and immunity from military service if they would only deDid they do it? It seemed
sert the American standard.
that that hated offer restored them to their sense of duty
and they not only turned their faces right about face and
marched back to the cause of America but the two emissaries were executed as spies.
These are the circumstances under which this decisive
battle was fought.
It would not be interesting if it were
possible for me to detail the different maneuvers in that engagement, but I believe it is universally conceded to have
been the battle of the Revolution, so far as military tactics
are concerned.
It turned the tide in favor of freedom.
It
disheartened the British. It was the entering wedge that
produced the final result, and in that battle, just at the
proper moment, just at the right time, the cavalry, under
Colonel William Washington, charged on the right of the
And not only that,
British line, and the effect was decisive.
but during that engagement there was a magnificent handto-hand encounter between Colonel William Washington
and Colonel Tarlton of the British troops, and I think it
must be so that while that personal combat was going on,
at least some part of the fury of that battle must have been
arrested to see the magnificent sieht, and the result was itself a prophecy of the final end, that the Colonel of the
retired wounded in the hand by a saber
that engagement, fellow-citizens, ladies and
that made possible the reign of freedom in
and made impossible the domination of any for-

British

troops

thrust.

It

was

gentlemen,

America

eign power.
It was this sentiment that I heard exnressed in the most
patriotic prayer I ever heard uttered,
T am still on the line
of nraver, vou see.
It was at a soldiers' reunion and a min-

then a pastor in a Methodist church in the town of


Newark and now a Chaplain in the United States Army, I
think somewhere on the frontier and I am sure that prayer
had something to do with his nromotinn this minister was
asked to lead in prayer and T give you his words the italics
are mine, but the grammar is his:
"We thank Thee, Oh,
ister,

253

Lord, that the nostrils of


plause.)

no king

sniffs

our

air."

(Ap-

Toast-master Galloway: Men join societies for various


reasons, friendship, fellowship, brotherhood and some for
benevolent reasons, and I have heard it said, though I
doubt it, that some men become joiners for political purposes, but I think the statement is false, but there is another
class of societies to which noble men and women in this
country have given and are giving their allegiance simply
from pure love of country. It is for those societies that I
will call upon our Compatriot, Dr. Clark M. Galloway, of
Xenia, to respond.
Dr. C. M. Galloway, in responding to the toast "Patriotic
Societies," said

Presumably the first known Patriotic Society was


founded early in the world's history.
It was very select in its membership, being composed of
only two people Adam and his wife Eve.
The last recorded meeting of this society ended with a
banquet, since become famous in the history of the human
race, under the bending boughs of a rare old fruit tree in
the Garden of Eden.
By means of honied words and fair
promises, an individual of unsavory reputation stalked in
past the fair doorkeeper, since which time all patriotic societies have subjected to rigid tests the lineal and collateral
proofs of their membership.
In everv age. in every clime pre-eminent minds have existed.
Minds far above the planes of self-interest, who with
have infused into the minds of their countrymen the spirit
of patriotism, who have maintained unequal conflict against
the eve of the seer have pierced the mists of futurity, who
the blight of tyranny and oppression in their beloved lands.
Of such was Leonidas and his Spartan band of patriots at
the pass of Thermopvlse.
Of such was Arnold von Wilkenried, the leader of the
Swiss patriots who, Catherine to his heart the serried Austrian spear-points, cried. "Make way for Liberty." and died.
Of such was Oliver Cromwell, who gathered about him
his round-head compatriots. l^'d strong and deep th foundations of free thought and civil government in England.
Of such was our own beloved Washington, warrior,
statesman and patriot, who through the long years of the

American Revolution kept alive on liberty's altar the spirit


of 76, which a century and a quarter afterward, like the
spirit of old John Brown, keeps marching on.
Of such were multitudes, in the past, of whom the world
was not worthy.
Given an aggregation of such spirits, stirred by the noble
deeds of noble sires, and we are ushered into the companionship of the patriotic societies of to-day foremost of which
is the Sons of the American Revolution.
The presence in any community of a patriotic society eleIt keeps fresh in the
vates its social and moral status.
minds of the youth the sterling traits of character of its rugged ancestors, who with faces set sternly against tyranny,
civil and religious, left their old homes across the sea and
hopefully and joyfully set sail to found new homes in the

wilds of the new world.


Their exemplary lives, in their humble homes in the wilderness, their single-handed struggles with poverty, toil and
subsequent tyranny, their final glorious victory over obstacles that would have palsied feebler hands and appalled
less patriotic hearts, are fertile themes for the historian and
the poet, and have won the admiration of the world. These
are the traits of character we revere and these are ours by
privilege
ours who to-night sit down in this banquet hall
proudly wearing the insignia of the Sons and Daughters of
the American Revolution.
On the banks of the River Jordan, by command of that
grand old Jewish patriot, Joshua, a monument of twelve
large stones was erected. When coming generations inquired, " What mean ye by these stones?'' this was the answer
given
"The waters of Jordan were cut off from before
*
*
*
dan
and these stones shall be a memorial unto
the ark of the covenant of the Lord when it passed over Jorthe children of Israel forever."
In the coming centuries when the patriotic deeds of our
Revolutionary ancestors shall be dimmed by the lapse of
time, or overshadowed by the luster of more recent events,
or there shall arise a generation of iconoclasts who shall attempt to materialize all things noble, all things good, and all
things patriotic that shall have the semblance of antiquity
upon them, then shall patriotic societies, such as are here
represented to-nisrht, have lasting influence and vernal
memory, and shall be a memorial to the children of America
forever.

unknown

Toast-master Galloway: When the boy in the Sunday


School was asked by his teacher what miracle Joshua performed, he answered that he arrested the sun. Then the
teacher asked him what he arrested the sun for, and the boy,
being of a bicycle turn of mind, said he supposed he arrested
him tor scorching. Now there was another kind of scorcher
in the days of '16, that brave son of Pennsylvania, a man
who has been termed the Marshal Ney of the American
Revolution, Anthony Wayne.
In the absence of Colonel Chase, I have prevailed upon
our good friend Dr. Taylor to respond to this toast.

Dr. A. A. E. Taylor, in responding to the toast "Anthony

Wayne," said:
Ladies and Gentlemen

It is an imposition but I will


have to stand it. I always like to make extempore speeches
because I can wander around where I please and don't
have to confine myself to my notes. Just a short time before supper was announced I was requested to respond to
this toast and give a brief history in two volumes of the
life, doings and sayings of Anthony Wayne.
I don't think
it is fair, but they think ministers can stand everything and
that you can get anything from them.
I am going to get the story back on Deacon Kibler and
these other deacons. There was a church where they had
new hymn-books and there was a deacon in charge of
them. He was very deaf.
He told the minister to be
sure and give the notice about those hymn-books and
where they could be gotten and not to forget it. The minister said he would.
He went on giving his notices and
did not make much demonstration about it. The deacon
front
holding
his hand thus (hand behind his
sat down in
ear) as the minister went on giving his notices.
The minister said that "On next Sunday if any of you have children you would like to present for baptism, bring them to
the church." The deacon, eager about the hymn-books,
jumped up and said, "And if you ain't got any, you can get
them at the parsonage for 75 cents apiece; extra strong
backs for one dollar."
Well, now, when Judge Galloway told me about this. I
said I don't know anything about General Anthony Wayne
except one thing, he got mad, so they called him Mad
Anthony Wayne. I honor a man that gets mad. There
is a sympathetic bond between him and me.
My wife's
:

256

family used to get mad, and it comes according to the law


of descent.
Her father used to get mad and her mother
used to get mad. I like to see people mad. I once heard
a story of a woman who was walking along the street in a
heavy snow and suddenly she sat down on the pavement
very hard, and a man came along and said to her, "Oh,
madam, are you hurt? Did you fall down?" She said indignantly, "No, I just sat down to see if I could find a four-

She was mad. It was enough to make


anybody mad; and after standing around an hour and a
leafed clover."

half waiting to get to the table, I don't know but that it


ought to make a person mad to be called up suddenly to

make a speech, without having your name on the printed


programme and the honor of the thing, and then come in
as a substitute, not knowing anything about it.
General Washington was very mad at the battle of Monmouth and he expressed himself in emphatic terms to General Lee and Lee had a tendency the same way.
I believe
Patrick Henry was very mad and he made some unpleasant
remarks about a certain George of England, and the way
he lived. About the time of the battle of Yorktown our
George, our General George we have very good history
for it
got mad. So we have eminent authority for get-

ting mad.
The great characteristic of General Anthony Wayne was
His mother was very high tempered and
that he got mad.
I understand his father had a little temper, so by the law
of heredity this boy was the maddest baby that ever cried
in an old-fashioned sugar-trough before the time of modern cradles. I think the locality in which he was born,
his birthplace, had something to do with it.
You know
he was born in Chester county, Pennsylvania, where they
have so many mill races and falls.
He was a fine soldier, just one of these driving soldiers,
and he fought at the battle of Stony Brook I mean Stony
Point, up on the Hudson, and he licked those fellows. He

he just went in and won. He just got mad,


you know, and went in. And then there was another battle, called the Massacre of Puteoli
no that was Cicero's
country seat Paoli I mean. We are getting mixed. Well,
it was Paoli and the Indians had a great massacre. Wayne
was mad and went out to see the Indians. The Indians
cut up at that time you would have thought it was a session of the Kentucky Legislature electing a Senator
got so

mad

257

(Laughter.) They behaved


(laughter) last year I mean.
so badly he got mad and he just went in, and he didn't lick
them at that time, but I understand that he was very much
;

provoked and

lost his temper.


The next thing we find about him he was out here in
Ohio, up here in the northwestern part of the state, at a
place called Falling Timbers. He had a battle with the
Indians and how he did clean them out. There was something about the expression of his anger when he got mad
that made the limbs all fall down and that was the reason
they called it Falling Timbers. He got very mad this

time.

Then
there

after that

was a

he had a treaty at Granville. You know


Green-vilhan Indians up there that

lot of

thought they could get ahead of Mad Anthony Wayne and


he just got mad and before he got through he treated them
They called it a treaty. Well, he didn't
pretty roughly.
get all he wanted to but he wasn't half as mad as the InI can remember the year when this Wayne
dians were.
Treaty was it was in 1798, because that was the year my
;

great-grandfather,

who was

came from Kentucky

a soldier of the Revolution,

into this state.

He

fight Indians, so he said he would wait until


cleaned them out. That was about 1796.

didn't like

to

Mad Anthony

remember
hearing him tell the story, saying that if Mad Anthony
Wayne didn't clean them out pretty soon, he would come
over and clean them out himself, but, like a good soldier,
he waited

so

know

it

was the year 1798, a hundred years

ago.

Our
county

country

is

full

of gratitude, so they established a

in this state in his

vices of Mad Anthony.


and the second, which is

memory in view of the great serThe first county was Washington


known on account of the Cincin-

and the third county was


nati Chapter, was Hamilton
Wayne county, and that was the biggest county you ever
heard of. It started at the mouth of the Cu)'ahoga River,
ran down to the divide and jumped over and came down
and took in Zanesville, Newark, Columbus, and then
pushed out in Indiana and took in Ft. Wayne and went
into Illinois and took in Chicago, up north to the lakes.
above Milwaukee, and then came down through the lakes
and took in Detroit. Toledo and Sandusky and then came
home. That was Wayne county, the biggest county in all
;

the region around. It was as big as Rhode Island oh, a


great deal larger than Rhode Island one of the largest
Now all that is left of this
counties that could be found.
great county is just t his Wayne county, Ohio, where
Wooster is, where I lived 20 years, Wayne county, Indiana; Ft. Wayne, Indiana, and I believe a military fortress at Detroit is called Ft. Wayne, in Ft. Wayne county,
and that is all that is left, a little bit of county up here ten
miles square, another in Indiana ten miles square, another

Michigan, and two little fortifications.


General Wayne didn't know anything about this
if he had I think he would have been mad.
He would have been awful mad. But I must hurry on.
After a number of years he died; he died at Lower Sanduskythat is Fremont up here, I have heard, and was
buried there, but his friends I understand took his bones
ill
a one-horse sulky over the mountains to his native
county.
He sometimes lost his temper but he was never in
I don't think he knew about that
a sulky frame before.
and I don't believe any of us would care about having that
kind of a funeral not if we knew it and I think if he had
known about it he would have been awful mad, because
he was in the habit of getting mad, and they called him
in

Now

dividing up, but

Mad

Anthony.
I thought it was time to have some foolishness here and
have told you all I knew and more too about Anthony
Wayne. He was a great soldier and one of the greatest
Generals and a great diplomat too in his way, and he went
Indians
in and fought the Indians, fought them like the
themselves and finally the poet wrote about him that his
name shall endure "Till moons shall wax and wane no
more." (Applause.)
I

After a selection by the quartette, Toast-master Gallo-

way said
To have

member

of the Legislature with us to-night

brand snatched from the burning.


seemed to be located over the
Great Southern Hotel I began to be very much worried
for fear that Colonel Harper would be spirited away or
locked up in his room or something of that sort would happen to him, but I am happy to say he has escaped all those
dangers and he is here to respond to a toast that is dear to
the heart of the people, "The American Flag," and I know
seems

like

When

the storm-center

having a

259

of

no one that can more eloquently respond to that toast

than Bro. John


Colonel John

W. Harper, of Cincinnati.
W. Harper, of Cincinnati,

(Applause.)
in responding

to the toast "The American Flag," said:


Ladies and Gentlemen, Compatriots, All: The
theme allotted to me is far beyond my ability. It would be

indeed to worthily portray the reverence and affection which every true American feels for that symbol of our
greatness, and which stands among all civilized nations of
the earth and islands of the sea for freedom and liberty
an incentive to continue their struggles for self-government until victory is won, and it is our duty to give them
encouragement in every possible manner, remembering
that in the darkest hour of the Revolution, when our army
was bare-footed and in rags at Valley Forge, France entered into a treaty of alliance and commerce with the colonies, which gave an impetus to our cause and inspired our
brave soldiers to heroic efforts in the unequal struggle at
that period.
In this mercenary age there are those who
are unmindful and forgetful of the great sacrifices and
sufferings of our Revolutionary sires, and in heated political contests or in pursuit of money have used our glorious
symbol for selfish purposes. Our American flag is too
sacred for such ends and should never be desecrated by
difficult

mottoes or business advertisements. It belongs


whole people and not to any party or to any section
our country, and no name of any person, however conspicuous he may be, is worthy of being attached to that
sacred emblem. There is but one name that could be fitpolitical

to the
of

upon it Washington but it is already there


and stripe. Washington's name appears instamped in beauteous hues. The red, white and
blue are the colors of the American flag and should ever
remain so. No gold or purple stars, tassels or fringes
added through ignorance or pride should be allowed to
stain its pristine beauty.
It would be doing injustice to
our fair compatriots, the Daughters of the American
Revolution, if Betsy Ross should not be mentioned on this
occasion. She was present at the birth of the American
flag, June 14, 1776, and her honored name will ever be intimately and lovingly associated with that of the name of
Washington. Let us go forward in the good work of
building up this Society of the American Revolution, and
tingly placed

in every star

delibly

260

of the sufferings, privations and sacrifices of


sires, and in remembrance ot them, let us so
act that the star spangled banner in triumph may wave o'er
the land of the free and the home of the brave.

ever mindful
our honored

Toast-master Galloway: The story is told of that paGeneral Greene, during the dark days of the
Southern Campaign, that he drove one night into the town
of Salisbury, North Carolina, and alighted at a tavern and
his friend, Dr. Lee, met him there and asked him if he was
Greene replied, "Yes, alone, penniless, hungry,
alone.
Mrs. Steele, the wife of the proprietor, heard
helpless."
the General's remark, but made no reply. She placed before him a smoking breakfast and as he was eating his meal
she came into the room and closed the door behind her and
held out to him a little purse in each hand, containing sil"General, take these; you need them
ver, and she said:
and I can do without them." General Greene went to a
picture of George III. that was hanging on the wall, which
was placed there when Americans were proud to consider
George III. as their king, before the Revolution, and turning the picture to the wall, he wrote on the back of it:
"George, hide thy face and blush."
It was the deeds of such women as Mrs. Steele that
formed the crown of glory of the "Heroines of the American Revolution."
I have great pleasure in presenting to you Compatriot
Sherman M. Granger, of Zanesville, who will respond to
this toast, "The Heroines of the American Revolution."
Mr. Sherman M. Granger, in responding to this toast,

triotic leader,

said:

Mr. Toast-master, Ladies and Gentlemen


preciate

and

feel grateful for

I apthe privilege and honor of be:

ing with you to-night, and of paying my humble tribute to


the Heroines of the Revolution.
I am glad of this opportunity of voicing my admiration
of that noble band of women, and yet cannot help feeling
a regret that a more worthy and abler admirer was not
selected to speak to you of them.
The Daughters of the American Revolution are not the
first instance of lofty-minded women acting together for
patriotic purposes.
Over a century and a quarter ago, the
women of that time, banded together as Daughters of
Liberty, as did the men as Sons of Liberty. Those Daugh261

adopted the most effective measures at hand


express their disapprobation and abhorence of the
tyranny and injustice of England. They pledged themselves to drink no tea upon which the Colonies had to pay
a tax, for such or any other tax, without representation,
was an injustice and iniquitous measure in their estimation.
ters of Liberty

to

Women at no time have been loth to voice their opinions,


nor were they at that time. Let it be remembered, howwas then a universal beverage. It was considered almost a necessity.
It was not the accessory of
social functions alone, the name for afternoon gatherings,
but the daily drink of almost all.
They also agreed to wear no more fine linen, no silks
and satins and velvets, but to cloth themselves in garments
ever, that tea

homespun make

only.
I appeal to you, ladies, more
was this not true heroism?
are told that their Society at Newport, chapter I
presume we would call it now, embraced all the beautiful
and brilliant young girls of the place, celebrated then as
now for possessing many such.
These societies spread
over all New England and the Colonies. They were the
subject of toasts in Virginia.
They worked. They did
not meet together to talk and tell the men what they should
do and how they should act; to demand of the men recognition of their worth and merit, but to help and assist them
of

especially,

We

independence by sewing and making


for all.
I appeal to all, women and
men, were they not indeed heroic? The women of that
time did not confine themselves to such efforts. They did
and dared all that the men dared and did. At the time of
the battle of Lexington, a British officer, Captain Whiting,
accompanied by Tories, among whom was the Tory
brother of Prudence Cummings Wright, were on their way
from Canada to the British in Boston, carrying dispatches.
The American men were all away, so the women donned
their husbands', fathers' or brothers' clothes, armed themselves, chose Prudence Wright their leader, held the bridge
of Pepperell. and captured Captain Whiting and his dispatches.
Her brother, when he saw their leader, fled.
Another instance of woman's courage is the deed of Lydia
Darrah. When the British army held Philadelphia, General Howe's headquarters were in Second street, opposite
the home of the Quakers, William and Lydia Darrah. One
in their

efforts for

homespun clothing

262

of the British officers, supposed to be the Adjutant General, fixed upon a back room in their house as a suitable
place for a private conference. They met and conferred,
Lydia listening at the door, thus learning of their plan to
attack General Washington's army at White Marsh, two
evenings later, expecting to surprise Washington, take him
off his guard, and thus capture him and his army.
Lydia
returned to her room and when the officer knocked at her
door to inform her of their departure from her house, required him to knock three times before she answered, and
feigned by her voice her difficult awakening from a sound
sleep.
The next day, on pretense of going to Frankfort
for some flour, she obtained a pass from General Howe
through the British lines, met and informed an American
officer of the contemplated surprise, and returned to her
home. This bit of daring and mother's wit of the Quaker-

ess saved General Washington and his army.


The deeds
and exploits of Mrs. Kate Barry, who was present at the
memorable victory of the Americans at the battle of the
Cowpens, as scout and courier, would consume the evening in the telling. Woman's brain and resource saved Putnam's division after the battle of Long Island.
Washington had successfully transferred his army from
Brooklyn and Long Island to New York. The next day
the British sailed up East River to Harlem, and three
men-of-war swept by the American batteries on the Hudson.
The British effected a landing and Putnam was
ordered to fall back from the lower part of the island which
he was guarding, to Harlem Heights. Not a moment was
to be lost, else his retreat would be cut off, and Washington's army be thereby divided.
Putnam was anxious and
worried. The successful cutting off of his retreat seemed
inevitable.
He sent to Mrs. Murray, who then occupied
Murray Hill, entreating her to delay by any devise possible
the movements of Sir Henry Clinton.
She was equal to
the emergency.
Clinton and his staff passed her house.
She invited him to stop and with his staff have wine and
refreshments.
Her ch?rm. vivacitv, courtesy, wit and hospitality charmed and detained Sir Henry until she was informed by a sign from her negro servant, who had been
stationed to keep watch, that Putnam's army was safe.
What a tribute to woman's worth was this anpeal of Putnam. What a proof of it was the result of his appeal and

her action.
263

An example of self-sacrificing devotion to the American


Fort Motte, on the
is the story of Rebecca Motte.
Congaree River in South Carolina, was in the hands of the
British and attacked by the Americans.
A large colonial
mansion stood in the center of the trench. This was the
home of Rebecca Motte. To encompass the surrender of
the fort this mansion must be destroyed. This the Americans were reluctant to do. Lieutenant Colonel Lee communicated to her how unwilling they were to destroy her
property, and the importance of its destruction to the
American's cause. Her reply was that she "Was gratified
with the opportunity of contributing to the good of the
country, and should view the approaching scene with delight."
Not only this, but she proved the truth of her
words. The Americans being without missiles with which
to fire the house, Mrs. Mottee sent a quiver of arrows to
Lee with instructions to use them for setting fire to the
cause

roof.

As an

illustration of the wifely qualities of the

that time, allow

Adams.

me

to

tell

you

of

women

of

an incident of Abigail

Her husband. John Adams, had been away from

her much of the preceding year and was at the time representing his country in France, with Beniamin FrankIn one of his letters he tells her that his "Venerable
colleague enioys a privilege here much to be envied,"
speaking of the fondness of the brilliant French women for
the philosopher, "and that owing to his age they permitted
him to embrace them at will, and that they were continually embracing him."
Mrs. Adams replied
"You must
console me in your absence with a recital of all your adventures, though methinks. I would not have them similar in all respects to those related of your venerable colleague, whose Mentor-like appearance, age and philosophy
must certainlv lead the politico-scientific ladies of France
to suppose thev are embracing the trod of wisdom in human form but T. who never vet wished an an-e1 whom I
loved a man, shall be full as content if those divine honors
are omitted." What a picture of wifelv trust and confidence is this. Hanpy the man of to-dav whose wife possesses these qualities.
Let me add also, happv the woman
whose husband inspires and merits such confidence. The
tales of the soul-inspiring deeds, of the valiant and courageous doings of the women of Revolutionary times are
lin.

264

To my thinking, however, the truest and loftiest


heroism is that of the countless women whose lives are
never mentioned, whose acts are forgotten. Their lonely
vigils when the dear ones were away, their brave-hearted
waiting when the beloved ones were in danger, the suspense, and not a murmur, all this endured without flinching, alone, without the support of numbers, the encouragement of companions, this is where and how those women
proved themselves heroines indeed. As they did, so would
the women of our country to-day if there were the occasion and opportunity. As they were, so are our women
Let us one and all give all glory, honor and
of to-day.
legion.

tribute to-night to the

women

of the Revolution, to the

as

it

of that time, to the heroines

mothers of our country.

speech was made by Judge Anderson, but


has already appeared in print we omit it.)

(The

last

ELIGIBILITY

TO MEMBERSHIP

SONS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.

Any person may be eligible to membership in this Sowho is a male above the age of twenty-one years, and
is lineally descended
from an ancestor who assisted in
establishing American Independence during the War of

ciety

the Revolution, either as a military or naval officer, a soldier or a sailor, an official in the service of any of the thirteen original colonies of the United Colonies or States, or
of Vermont, a member of a Committee of Correspondence
or of Public Safety, etc., or a recognized patriot who rendered material service in the cause of American Independence.
Blank forms for application for membership will be furnished by the Secretary of the Ohio Society, S. A. R.,

Major Robert M. Davidson, Newark, Ohio.

The

appli-

cations are to be made out in duplicate, or, if the applicant


desire membership in a local chapter, in triplicate, and forwarded to the Secretary of the State Society, or to the Secretary of the local chapter, as the case may be, together
with the entrance fee, which is $5.00. The entrance fee
includes dues for the current year, after which the annual
dues are $2.00, payable in advance.
In the application is set forth the line of descent from
and the service rendered by the ancestor through whom
eligibility is claimed, together with a memorandum of the
authority for the statement of service and an affidavit as to
Supplemental application blanks
the line of descent, etc.
are furnished when it is desired to claim eligibility through
more than one ancestor, but no charge is made for filing
supplemental applications.

SUGGESTIONS TO PROSPECTIVE APPLICANTS.


Persons desiring to

membership

know

just

jority of

establish

claims to eligibility for

Society are frequently at a loss to


Family records and the mato proceed.
histories while of the greatest value to those

in this

how

town

interested in them, are not accepted by the officers of the


Society as authority for anything more than the line of deThe military or civil services of an ancestor must
scent.
invariably be certified to by the proper officials either of
the State in whose service the ancestor was, or of the general government, except in cases where the service can be
found in such publications as will hereafter be mentioned.
Occassionally original warrants for land granted for military service, commissions, discharges, muster-rolls, certificates of membership in the Order of the Cincinnati, etc.,
are available.
Such papers, or duly certified copies, are
accepted as proof of service.
In most instances the family records and traditions set
forth the revolutionary services of ancestors, but it is frequently found that the family records contain nothing
more than the names of ancestors and the intermediate
generations. To assist in the work of certifying family
records and to aid those who are investigating; to ascertain
whether or not their ancestors rendered service for the
cause of Independence, the following suggestions are
offered

PENSIONS.
the ancestor were supposed to be a pensioner, address "The Honorable Commissioner of Pensions, Washington, D. C," setting forth the facts or suppositions in
the case. He will reply, usually within two or three weeks,
and no charge is made for search or certificate. It must
be borne in mind, however, that most of the records of
pensions granted for the relief of those disabled in service,
together with the rosters of soldiers that were on file in the
War Department, were destroved by fire in 1800 or burned
by the British in 1814. The first laws were passed in 1818,
granting- pensions to those who had served not less than
nine months in the Continental Line or the Navv. This
did not reach the Militia or Minute-men.
In 1820, Congress restricted this law to those who would prove that
If

267

in needy circumstances, as eight thousand men


had applied for pensions. The "Alarm Act" of 1820, as it
was called, touched the pride of a great number of the pensioners to such an extent that they withdrew their names
from the rolls. In 1832 an act was passed granting pensions to all survivors, providing they had served at least
Thus those
six months, either in the Line or the Militia.
who had served less than six months were not entitled to

they were

the benefits of the act.

The widows of soldiers who had been married before


1853 were entitled to pensions, and through the papers of
widow on file in the Pension Office, many records can
be found.

the

OFFICERS OF THE CONTINENTAL LINE.


If

the ancestor were an officer in the Continental Line

(the regular army of the Revolution) consult "Heitman's


the Continental
Historical Register of the Officers of
Army," which contains the records of about nine-tenths
Militia
officers.
Line
and
a
few
of
the
of the officers

CIVIL OFFICERS.
the ancestor were a civil officer, Member of Legislature, Congress, State Council, Committees of Safety, Correspondence, Inspection, etc., during the War, consult authentic histories or address the Secretary of State of the
State in which the ancestor resided.
If

STATE RECORDS.
In some States it is an easy matter to secure official information in regard to services of revolutionary ancestors,
while in other States it is almost impossible to secure information of any description, owing to the failure to properly preserve the records or the loss of records bv fire or
other causes. The following is a list of States in which
troops or seamen were raised for the prosecution of the
war and some directions for securing information concerning their records

CONNECTICUT.

of nearly 28,000 names has been


printed by this State. The volume is entitled "Connecticut Men in the War of the Revolution," and is to be found
in many of the large libraries.

very complete

list

DELAWARE.

The records

of this State are scant.


Address the Secretary of State, Dover, Del., who charges two cents per
line for copies and $1.00 for certificate.

The Georgia Historical Society, of which William Harden, Savannah, Ga., is Secretary, owns many books and
manuscripts referring to the Revolution.
A small fee
is charged for search.
MAINE.

may be obtained, at typewriter


charges, of the Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics,
Copies of records on

file

Augusta, Me.

MARYLAND.

The Commissioner of the Land Office, Annapolis, Md.,


make a search in such records as are available, for 25
cents.
Where the name is found a certificate is furnished
for 75 cents.
The Scharf Library at Johns-Hopkins Uniwill

versity contains one

hundred muster

rolls, etc.

MASSACHUSETTS.
This State has a magnificent "card system" of index to
Revolutionary military service.
The Secretary of the
Commonwealth, Boston, Mass., charges $1.00 for certificate of service, but makes no charge if name is not found.

NEW HAMPSHIRE.
The Secretary

of State, Concord,

for certificate of service, but

charge

is

made

N. H., charees $3.00


where name is not found no

for the search.

NEW

JERSEY.

The Adjutant Genpral hapcompilpd and printed thp "New


Jptppv Rpffister of Mpn in the Revolution." The book may
be found in

many

of the lar^e libraries.

NEW YORK.
Volume

New

of the Archives of the State of


contains the names of some 40,000 officers and
is to be found in our large libraries.
I,

York,
men, and

NORTH CAROLINA.

All Revolutionary records appear

to be lost.
few
in such publications as
Revolution," "Heitman's Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army,"
"Hammersley's Hundred Year Register," etc., which are

names

may be found

of officers

Records

"Saffell's

to be found in

of the

many

libraries.

PENNSYLVANIA.

Hon. William H. Egle, M.

D., the venerable historian


State Librarian at Harrisburg,
and in case the
name is found, adds a fee of $1.00 for the certificate. The
Archives of Pennsylvania, available in many large libraries, contain many lists of Revolutionary soldiers.
of Pennsylvania,
Pa.,

who

makes a charge

is

of $2.00 for search,

RHODE ISLAND.
The Secretary

of State, Providence, R.

I.,

has charge of

the Revolutionary records, and makes a charge of $2.00


for search, and in case the name is found, adds a fee of
$1.00 for the certificate.

SOUTH CAROLINA.

Same

as

Cheraws"

North Carolina.
also contains the

"Gregg's History of the Old


of a few men from this

names

State.

The Adjutant

General, Montpelier.Vt., charges $2.00


but makes no charge for search

for certificate of service,

where name

is

not found.
VIRGINIA.

With the exception

of the records of land warrants,

and

a few rosters given in "Saffell's Records of the Revolusecure information of


it is a very hard matter to
Revolutionary service in this State. Mr. W. G. Stanard,

tion,"

270

of Richmond, Va., a professional geneaologist, charges


$1.00 for searching such records as are at hand in the Capiand in cases where he finds the record, he secures the
proper certificate for $1.50 extra.

tal;

WAR DEPARTMENT

RECORDS.

Through

the efforts of the Sons of the American Revolution, Congress passed a bill some time since providing
for the gathering and indexing of all available Revolutionary records by the War Department. This work has been
one of great magnitude, a large force of clerks having been
kept at work for many months. The War Records Office
in Washington now has a card index which is of inestiletter addressed to the
mable value to this nation.
"Chief of the Record and Pension Office, War Department, Washington, D. C, will always meet with a courteous reply. The following extracts from a letter written
by Colonel F. C. Ainsworth, U. S. Army, the present Chief
of the Record and Pension Office, will show clearly to
what extent inquiries should be limited:
"The Department is now prepared to answer all reasonable inquiries." * * * "Many of the requests that
are now being received, however, are based upon such indefinite data, or involve the search of the records for so
many different men, that it has been found impracticable
*
*
*
"The Department has
to comply with them."
therefore been compelled to limit its search in the case of
any one correspondent to the names of not more than two
ancestors, whose full names must be given, as well as the
States of which they are supposed to have been residents."

'

RECORDS IN THE OHIO STATE LIBRARY.


A surprisingly small per cent, of the citizens of Ohio
have any comprehension of the inestimable value of the
Its thousands of volumes of National,
State Library.
State, County and Town Histories, Genealogies and Public Records offer rare inducements to persons searching
for the military, civil or family records of their Revolutionary or Colonial ancestry. It is respectfully suggested
271

that those who are in search of such information exhaust


the resources of the btate Library, if 11 be accessible to
them, betore corresponding with the ofricials of Eastern
States.
Reference to any of the following books in the State Library will be accepted by the officers of the Sons of the
American Revolution, without further certificate, as authority for service:
Archives of the State of New York. Volume I contains the names of some 40,000 soldiers from New York
State.
Archives of Pennsylvania.
The two volumes of this
immense collection ot Pennsylvania history which contain
the lists of the Revolutionary soldiers of the State, have
been stolen from the library, but will be replaced upon the
completion of another edition, now in hand.
Census of Pensioners, 18-10.
Connecticut Men in the Revolution. Contains the names
and service of nearly 28,000 soldiers from Connecticut.
Hammersley's Hundred Year Register of the U. S.
Army. Contains names of many officers of the Conti-

nental Line.

Heitman's Historical Register of the Officers of the


Contains the names and service of
officers, mostly of the Continental Line, a few
names of officers of Militia and Minute-men, and the
names and service of many of the French Allies.
Continental Army.

about 10,000

New
piled

Jersey Register of

Saffell's

the

Men

in the Revolution.

Com-

by Adjutant General Stryker; a valuable roster

the officers and


Revolution.

names

men

of

New

Jersey

who

served

in

of

the

Records of the Revolutionary War. Contains


some 50,000 officers and soldiers of Virginia,
etc., arranged by regiment and

of

Maryland, Pennsylvania,

company, but not indexed.


ComUnited States Government Public Documents.
In these documents may be found all actions of
Congress regarding Revolutionary claims, Pension Roll
of 1835 (Volumes 12, 13, and 14, Senate Documents, 23d
Congress, First Session), Census of Revolutionary Pen-

plete set.

sioners of 1840,

etc., etc.

A
Whiteley's Revolutionary Soldiers of Delaware.
pamphlet, containing roster of Colonel Hall's Regiment,
1780, and several companies.
272

COLLECTIONS OF HISTORICAL SOCIETIES.


The various Historical Societies of the country have,
during the past hundred years, gathered and preserved in
print, a vast amount of history.
There is no descendant
of the Revolutionary or Colonial families of America who
his
could not extend
knowledge of his ancestors or the
localities in which they lived, by searching the Historical
Collections in the Ohio State Library.
Here may be
found a great number of volumes of such collections covering the following States:
Connecticut,

Delaware,
Georgia,
Maine,
Maryland,
Massachusetts,

New
New
New

Hampshire,
Jersey,

York,
North Carolina,

Pennsylvania,

Rhode

Island,

South Carolina,
Vermont,
Virginia,
in fact all of the older States are represented

and many

of

the other States of the Union.

REVOLUTIONARY BIBLIOGRAPHY.
The following works

are also accessible in the Ohio


State Library, which, while not strictly reference books,
contain the names of countless thousands of the soldiers of
the American Revolution

Abbott's Revolutionary Times.


Adams' Letters on the American Revolution.
Allen's History of the American Revolution.

American Annual Register, 1776.


Andrews' History of the Late War (1785).
Baker's Itinerary of General Washington, from June
1775, to

December

23, 1783.
273

15,

Bancroft's History of the United States.


Barclay's Personal .Recollections of the Revolution.
Barney's bongs of the American Revolution.
Behsle's History of Independence Hall.
Benson's V indication of tlie Captors of Major Andre.
Bloodgood's Reminiscences of the Revolution.
Botta's History of the War of Independence.
Boucher's Causes and Consequences of the Revolution.
Brotherhead's Book of the Signers.
Bunker Hill Monument Associations. Proceedings.

Burgoyne's Orderly Book.


Annotations
Butterrield's

of

Washington-Crawford

Letters.
Butterrield's Annotations of Washington-Irvine Corre-

spondence.

Against Sandusky.
Campbell's Orderly Book, Williamsburg, Va., 1776.
Campbell's Revolutionary Services of W. Hull.
Campbell's Annals of Tryon County, N. Y.
Carrington's Battles of the American Revolution.
Carrington's Battle Maps and Charts.
Caruther's Revolutionary Incidents in North Carolina.
Case's Revolutionary Memorials.
Centennial Anniversary of Battle of Bennington.
Centennial Celebration of Surrender of Yorktown.
Chalmers' Revolt of the American Colonies.
Butterrield's Expedition

Clark's Battle of Hubbardton.

Clement's Reminiscences of Camden County, N. J.


Clinton's Conspiracy of Arnold.
Clinton's Narrative of the Campaign of 17S1.
Clinton's Controversy Growing Out of the Campaign
in Virginia in 1781.
Clinton's War of the Revolution.
Coffin's

Boys

of '76.

Connor's History of the War Between the United States


and Great Britain.
Conspiracy of Arnold and Sir Henry Clinton.
Convention at Boston August 3-9, 1780.

Answer

Henry

Clinton's Narrative

Correspondence Between Governor

Sullivan and Col-

Cornwallis, Earl,
of the

Campaign

to

of 1781.

onel Pickering.

Coxe's View of the United States of America.


274

Dawson's Battles of the United States by Sea and Land.


Dawson's Sons of Liberty in New York.

De
De
De
De

Costa's History of Fort George.


Puyster's Affair at King's Mountain, 1780.
Peyster's Oriskany.
Puyster's The Burgoyne Campaign.

Deux-Ponts' My Campaigns in America.


Diary of David Howe, 1775.
Digby's British Invasion from the North.
Dodd's Revolutionary Memorials.
Drake's Battle of Bunker Hill.
Draper's Kings Mountain and Its Heroes.
Drayton's Memories of the Revolution.
Duane's Diary of Christopher Marshall 1774-1781.
Ellet's

Women

of the

American Revolution.

Sketches of Bunker Hill Battle and Monument.


English Officers in America.
Etting's Historical Account of Independence Hall.
Familiar Letters on Public Characters.
Fellows' Essay on Life of Israel Putnam.
Ellis'

Fiske's

The American Revolution.

2 vols.

Frothingham's History of the Siege of Boston and of


Concord and Bunker Hill.
Garden's Anecdotes of the American Revolution.
Gibbes' Documentary History of the Revolution.
Gordon's History of the Independence of the U. S.
Graydon's Memoirs of his own Time.

the Battles of Lexington,

Greene's Historical View of the Revolution.


Hale's One Hundred Years Ago. How the War Began.
Headley's Chaplains and Clergy of the Revolution.
Headley's Washington and His Generals.
Heath's Memoirs during the American War.
Henry's Arnold's Campaign against Quebec.
Hinman's Connecticut During the Revolution.
History of the American Revolution (English).
History of the War in America.
Hough, Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates, 1780.
Howe's (Sir William) Orderly Book, 1775-1776.
How's Journal, 1775.
Impartial History of the War in America.
Irving's Life of Washington.
James' Military Occurrences Between Great Britain and
the United States of America. 2 vols.
275

Johnston's Campaign of 1776 Around New York and


Brooklyn.
Johnston's Yale and Her Honor-Roll in the American
Revolution.
Johnston's Yorktown Campaign and Surrender of Cornwallis.

Jones' History of New York during the War.


Journal and Letters of Samuel Curwen.
Kidder's First New Hampshire Regiment in the Revolution.

of Occurrences during the Late War.


War in the Southern Department.
Lendrum's History of the American Revolution.
Lippard's Legends of the American Revolution.

Lamb's Journal
Lee's

Lossing's Pictorial Field Book of the Revolution.


Lossing's Washington and the American Republic.
Lowell's Hessians in the Revolutionary War.
Magoon's Eloquence of Revolutionary Times.
Marshall's Diary, Extracts from, 1774-1781.
Martyrs of the Revolution.
Melvin's Expedition to Quebec, 1775.
Moore's Diary of the American Revolution.
Moore's Songs and Ballads of the Revolution.
Moore's Treason of Major General Charles Lee.
Morris' Private Journal of the Revolutionary War.
Morse's Annals of the American Revolution.
Moultrie's Memoirs of the American Revolution.
Munsell's Siege of Charleston 1780.
Munsell's Siege of Savannah 1779.
Murray's History of the War in America.
Nell's Colored Patriots of the Revolution.
New York City during the Revolution.
Niles' Principles and Acts of the Revolution.
O'Callaghan's Orderly Book of Gen. Burgoyne.

Army at Williamsburg 1776.


Paine's Letter on Affairs in North America.
Papers Relating to Dispute between Great Britain and
America 1764-1775.
Orderly Book.

Pausch's Journal During Burgoyne Campaign.


Peterson's History of the War with the U. S.
Price's Nature of Civil Liberty and the Justice and
Policy of the War with America.
Price's Observations on the American Revolution.
276

Importance of the American Revolution.


Ramsay's History of the American Revolution.
Raynal's Revolution in America.
Reed and Cadwalader Pamphlets.
Review of Lord Mahon's History.
Riedesel's Letters and Memoirs of the War.
Rosengarten's German Allied Troops in the North
American War of Independence.
Ruttenber's Obstructions to Navigation of the Hudson.
Ryerson's Loyalists of America.
Sabine's American Loyalists.
Saft'ell's Records of the Revolutionary War.
Price's

Siege of Charleston.
Simcoe's Military Journal during the Revolution.
Sloane's French War and the Revolution.
Smith's American Historical and Literary Curiosities.
Smith's Nuts for Future Historians to Crack.
Sparks' Correspondence of the Revolution.
Sparks' Diplomatic Correspondence of the Revolution.
Stansbury's Loyal Verses Relating to the Revolution.
Stedman's History of the American War.
Stone's Campaign of Burgoyne and Expedition of St.
Leger.
Stone's Life of Brant and Border Wars.
Stone's Memoirs of Major-General Riedesel.
Sullivan's Journal of the Indian Expeditions, 1779.
Sullivan's Public Men of the Revolution.
Swett's History of Bunker Hill Battle.
Tales of the Revolution.
Tarleton's Campaigns in the Southern Provinces.
Taylor's Martyrs in British Prison Ships.
Thacher's Military Journal during the Revolution.
Thatcher's Traits of the Tea Party.
Thornton's Pulpit of the American Revolution.
Treaty of Peace 1783.
Trolle's Royalists and Republicans.
Trumbull's Life and Adventures of I. Potter.
Ward's Journal and Letters of S. Curwen.

Warren's Bunker Hill Monument Association.


Warren's History of the American Revolution.
Watson's Men and Times of the Revolution.
Wayne's Orderly Book at Ticonderoga.
Webb's Correspondence and Journals.

Wharton's Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution.


Wheilon's Sentry of Beacon Hill.
Whiting's Revolutionary Orders of Gen. Washington.
Wilkinson's Memoirs of My Own Time.
Williams' Biography of Revolutionary Heroes.
Windsor's Readers' Hand Book.
Woodman's Boys and Girls of the Revolution.

CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS


Ohio Society
Sons of the American Revolution.

CONSTITUTION.
ARTICLE
The name
of the

of this Society shall be

I.

The Ohio Society

of the

Sons

American Revolution.

ARTICLE

II.

OBJECTS.

The object of this Society shall be:


To perpetuate the memoiy and the spirit of the men who
achieved American Independence, by the encouragement of historical research in relation to the Revolution and the publication
of its results, the preservation of documents and relics, and of the
records of the individual services of Revolutionary soldiers and
patriots, and the
versaries.

To

promotion of celebrations of

all

patriotic anni-

carry out the injunction of Washington in his farewell address to the American people: "To promote, as an object of
primary importance, institutions for the general diffusion of
knowledge," thus developing an enlightened public opinion, and
affording to young and old such advantages as shall develope in
them the largest capacity for performing the duties of American

citizens.

To cherish, maintain and extend the institutions of American


freedom, to foster true patriotism and love of country, and to aid
in securing for mankind all the blessings of liberty.

ARTICLE

III.

MEMBERSHIP.

Any man is eligible for membership who is of the age of


I.
twenty-one years, and who is descended from an ancestor who.
with unfailing loyalty, rendered material aid to the cause of
American Independence as a soldier or seaman, or a civil officer
in one of the several Colonies or States, or of the United Colonies
or States, or as a recognized patriot, provided that the applicant
shall be acceptable to the Society.
For the purpose of perfecting the records of Revolutionary
II.
patriots and their descendants, any woman of Revolutionary ancestry may file with the Registrar a record, in duplicate, of her

ancestors' services and of her line of descent, one copy of which


shall be deposited among the archives of the National Society.
III.

Any

person

may

be an eligible for honorary membership,

subject to the limitations as to age and descent established in the


case of active members.
IV. All members of the National Society are our comrades
and brothers, and when within the borders of our jurisdiction will
be welcome to our meetings, and to assist in our celebrations and

work.

ARTICLE

IV.

OFFICERS AND MANAGERS.


I
The officers of the Society shall be a President, one or more
Vice Presidents, a Recording and Corresponding Secretary, a
Treasurer, a Registrar, and such others as may be deemed necessary, who shall be elected by a vote of the majority of the members present at the annual meeting of the Society, and who shall
hold office for one year, or until their successor shall be elected,
and who, with seven other members, shall constitute the Board of

Management.
II.
Delegates to the Congress of the Society shall be elected
each annual meeting, in accordance with the requirements of
the Constitution of the General Society.
An Executive Committee of five, of which the President
III.
of the Society shall be the Chaiiman, which may be elected by the
Board of Management from their number, shall, in the interim
between the meetings of the Board, transact such business as shall
be delegated to it by the Board cf Management.

at

ARTICLE

V.

FEES AND DUES.


I.
The initiation fee, including dues for the first year, shall be
five ($5) dollars; the annual dues two ($21 dollars; or the payment
at one time of twenty-five ($25) dollars shall constitute a life

member, with exemption from payment of dues


II.
The annual dues shall be payable on the

thereafter.
day of

first

Janu-

ary in each year.

Any member who

remain

arrears for dues


one year after notice of his indebtedness has been sent him,
be dropped from the rolls by the Board of Management.
III.

shall

in

for

may

IV. The initiation fees and all payment of dues and life memberships shall be used by the Board of Management for the purpose of paying the dues, of twenty-five cents for each active member, to the National Society, of publishing such documents as
they may deem advisable, of paying the running expenses, and for
such special purpose as may be ordered by a vote of two-thirds of
the Board of Management.
282

ARTICLE

VI.

MEETINGS AND ELECTIONS.

The annual meeting for the election of officers and transacI.


tion of business shall be held at two o'clock P. M., on the second
of January in each year.
II.
Special meetings may be called by the President or Board
of Management at any time for business purposes, or for the purpose of celebrating events of the Revolution or other patriotic
events, or devising means for the prosecution of patriotic work.
The President shall call a special meeting whenever requested, in
writing, so to do by five or more members.
III.
General business may be transacted at any special meetTuesday

ing.

IV. Seven members shall constitute a quorum at all meetings,


except that three members shall be a quorum of the Executive

Committee.
V. All nominations for officers shall be made from the floor
all elections to office shall be made by
The persons receiving the majority of all the votes cast
ballot.
shall be declared elected, and shall hold office for the ensuing term
and until their successors shall be elected.

and not by Committee, and

ARTICLE

VII.

AMENDMENTS.

Amendments to this Constitution may be offered at any meeting of the Society, but shall not be acted on until the next meetA copy of every proposed amendment shall be sent to each
member, with a notice of the meeting at which the same is to be
acted on, at least one week prior to said meeting.
vote of two-thirds of those present shall be necessary to the
adoption of any amendment.
ing.

BY=LAWS.
SECTION

I.

ELECTION OF MEMBERS.

Members shall be elected as follows:


Candidates may send
their applications, together with documents and other proofs of
qualification for membership* to the Secretary; and, upon a favorable report from the Executive Committee, and upon the payment
of the initiation fee shall become members of the Society.

SECTION

II.

THE PRESIDENT.

The President, or in his absence the Vice President, or in his


absence a Chairman pro tempore, shall preside at all meetings of
the Society and Board of Management, and have a casting vote.

He

shall exercise the usual functions of a presiding officer, and


shall enforce a strict observance of the Constitution and By-Laws,

and

of the regulations

and rules of the Society.

SECTION

III.

THE CORRESPONDING SECRETARY.

The Corresponding Secretary shall conduct the general correspondence of the Society, and such other matters as may be directed to the Society.

He

shall notify

all

members

of their election,

and

shall,

under

the direction of the President or Vice President, give due notice


of the time and place of all meetings of the Society, and attend the

same.
*It is required that all applications shall he made upon the standard form of
"Application for Membership issued by authority of the Executive Committee,
S. A. R.," which provides for:
A statement of the sen-ices of the ancestor of the applicant in aid of the es1.
tablishment of American Independence.
2.
A detailed statement of the intermediate generations of his pedigree, with
full names of paternal and maternal ancestors in each generation, and, if possible, dates and places of birth and death, and places of residence.
A recommendation of the candidate by a member of the Society.
3.
4.
An affidavit of the applicant in support of the statements contained in his

N. S

application.

SECTION

IV.

THE RECORDING SECRETARY.

The Recording Secretary shall have charge of the seal, certificate of incorporation, by-laws and records of the Society, and together with the presiding officer, shall certify all acts of the Society.

He

shall keep fair and accurate records of all the proceedings


of the Society; and shall give notice to the several
officers of all votes, orders, resolves, and proceedings of the Society affecting them, or appertaining to their respective duties.

and orders

SECTION

V.

THE TREASURER.
The Treasurer

shall collect and


of the Society, and shall pay out of

keep the funds and securities


such funds only such sums as
may be ordered by the Society, or by the Board of Management,
or the Executive Committee.
He shall keep a true account of his receipts and payments, and
at each annual meeting, render the same to the Society, when the
Executive Committee shall audit his accounts.
If, from the annual report of the Treasurer, there shall appear
to be a balance against the Treasurer, no appropriation of money
shall be made for any object but the necessary current expenses
of the Society until such balance shall be paid.

SECTION

VI.

THE REGISTRAR.
The Registrar shall keep a roll of members, and in his hands
be lodged all the proofs of membership qualification, and all
the historical and genealogical papers, manuscript or other, of
which the Society may become possessed; and, under the direction of the Board of Management, shall keep copies of such similar documents as the owners thereof may not be willing to leave
permanently in the keeping of the Society. He shall verify, as far
as possible, all statements of the Revolutionary services of ancestors that may be made in the applications for membership, and
make report to the Board of Managers.
The Registrar shall keep the records of the historical and commemorative meetings of the Society, and shall supervise the preparation and printing of all its historical publications, other than
those of the membership rolls.
He shall submit at each annual meeting a list of the members
who have died during the year, accompanied by biographical
shall

memoirs.

SECTION

VII.

THE BOARD OF MANAGEMENT.


The Board of Management shall consist of at least twelve members, namely, the President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer

and Registrar, ex-ofUcio, and seven others, elected as provided by


the Constitution.
They shall judge of the qualification of the candidates for admission to the Society, and elect the same.
They shall have
charge of all special meetings of the Society, and shall, through
the Secretary, call special meetings at any time, upon the written
request of five members of the Society, and at such other times as
they see fit. They shall recommend plans for promoting the objects of the Society, shall digest and prepare business, and shall
authorize the disbursement and expenditure of unappropriated
money in the treasury for the payment of current expenses of the
Society. They shall generally superintend the interests of the
Society, and execute all such duties as may be committed to them
by the ociety.
At each annual meeting of the Society the Board shall make a
general report.
At all meetings of the Board of Management, five or more shall
be sufficient for the transaction of business.
Ayes and nays shall be called at any meeting of the Society
upon the demand of five members.

SECTION

VIII.

AMENDMENTS.

No alterations of the By-Laws of the Society shall be made


unless such alteration shall have been openly proposed at a previous meeting and entered in the minutes, with the name of the
member proposing the same, and shall be adopted by a majority
of the members present at a meeting of the Society.

SECTION
(Adopted January

IX.
8,

1895.)

LOCAL CHAPTERS.

Whenever five or more members of the Society residing in any


one county or district, composed of not more than three counties
lying adjacent to each other, shall make application for a warrant
to organize a local chapter in such district, the President and Secretary may issue such a warrant authorizing the formation of such
chapter by such name as requested in the application. Such chapter may receive as active members any member of the State Society
who may reside within its district, and as honorary members any
member of the order, and no other person shall be permitted to
become members of any chapter. Any such chapter shall elect
a President and Secretary and such other officers as may be provided for by its rules, and make such rules and regulations as may
be deemed proper which do not conflict with the Constitution or
By-Laws of the State or National Society.

No application for membership in the State Society from any


person residing within the jurisdiction of any chapter shall be
acted upon by the officers of the State Society until it has been referred to the officers of the chapter and recommended by them, but
if they refuse to recommend the applicant, the Board of Management may approve the application if it sees proper so to do, but
the person shall not thereby become a member of the chapter.
With each application for membership recommended by any
chapter there shall be forwarded the sum of two dollars, and each
chapter shall, on or before the first day of January in each year,
send a report of its membership to the Corresponding Secretary
of this Society, giving the number of members who have paid the
annual dues the preceding year and the names of all delinquent
members, and shall send with such report one dollar and twentyfive cents for each member not delinquent, and a failure to send
such report or to send the amount of such dues before or at the
annual meeting of this Society shall be cause for a revocation of
the warrant by this Society at its annual meeting. This article
shall not be deemed to deprive any chapter already organized of
its jurisdiction over any part of its territory, but such chapter shall
in other respects be governed by the provisions of this article.

INSIGNIA.
Authority has been given by Congress to the officers and men of the
United States Army and Navy to wear the Insignia of the Society of
the Sons of the American Revolution," "Society of the Cincinnati,"
"Sons of the Revolution," "Society of the War of 1812," " Axtec
Society," " Loyal Legion," " Grand Army of the Republic," etc.
'

'

The

joint resolution of Congress

army and navy

by Military

War

is

as follows

Joint Resolution granting permission to officers

1.

of the

of the

Societies of

of 1812, the

and

enlisted

men

United States to wear the badges adopted

men who

served in the

Mexican War, and the War

War of

the Revolution,

of the Rebellion.

Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United


States of America, in Congress assembled. That the distinctive badges

adopted by Military Societies of

men who served in the armies and


War of the Revolution, the War of

navies of the United States, in the

Mexican War, and the War of the Rebellion, respectively,


may be worn upon all occasions of ceremony by officers and enlisted
men of the Army and Navy of the United States, who are members of
1812, the

said organizations in their

Approved, September

own

right.

25, 1890.

On November 18, 1890,


Army in General Orders,

the above was published to the United States


No. 133, and on April 25, 1891, the following

decision of the Acting Secretary of War was made public


" Officers of the Army who are members by inheritance of any of
the societies referred to in the act of September 25, 1890, published in
:

General Orders, No. 133, of November 18, 1890, from this office, are
wear the badges adopted by such societies on occasions of
ceremony."
Under paragraphs 491 and 494, Regulations for the Ohio National
Guard, 1897, the above Act of Congress is extended to the officers and
enlisted men of the Ohio National Guard.
The Insignia, suspended from a heavy blue and white watered silk
ribbon, is conceded to be the handsomest military badge in America.
It is made by Tiffany & Co., of gold, with blue and white enamel, of
one size only, and may be had for f 9.00 upon application to the Regisentitled to

trar.

The

lapel button costs 30 cents.

8/29/2008
143850

5 4 00

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