book:clinton10
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| //Note: This information was supplied by Paul Carleton Seymour.// | //Note: This information was supplied by Paul Carleton Seymour.// | ||
| - | CLINTON | + | HENRY Clinton (Clinton)< |
| // | // | ||
| // | // | ||
| Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
| | [[westley11|Westley Carleton]] | b. 1911 | | | [[westley11|Westley Carleton]] | b. 1911 | | ||
| | Clayton Lynwood | b. 1915; killed in a car accident 1939 | | | Clayton Lynwood | b. 1915; killed in a car accident 1939 | | ||
| + | |||
| + | History of Cannonsville, | ||
| + | Cuyle Seymour | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton001.jpg|}}Here' | ||
| + | around 1800, and where 4 later generations of our line of Seymours; Willet, | ||
| + | Gilbert, Clinton, and Westley were all born and raised as well. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Cannonsville, | ||
| + | in the early 1960's in order to construct a dam and create a reservoir which | ||
| + | provides drinking water for New York City. Luckily by this time Great | ||
| + | Grandpa Clinton had already died, and Grandpa Wes had left town anyway for | ||
| + | more economic opportunity since he was one of the youngest in his family. | ||
| + | don't have any information on how the State compensated those who were | ||
| + | living there at the time. I think that my Great Uncle Erford had taken over | ||
| + | Clinton' | ||
| + | He would have been in his 60's at the time. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Headline read:\\ " | ||
| + | Water and Silence" | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton002.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton003.jpg|}}After...... | ||
| + | |||
| + | A map of Cannonsville in 1856 showing Willet' | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton004.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | A later map in 1956 just a few years before its destruction: | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton005.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | It looks like by this time the Seymours had mostly moved on, although I do | ||
| + | see one building marked as Seymour on Main Street. | ||
| + | Clinton' | ||
| + | |||
| + | Following are some stories written by Cannonsville residents just prior to | ||
| + | its destruction. | ||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | "Miss Antoinette Owens remembers the store owned by her father, Milton W. | ||
| + | Owens and uncle, Edgar B. Owens, which stood on the river bank near the | ||
| + | bridge, later becoming the Frank Mapes undertaking establishment. Milton W. | ||
| + | Owens built a new store (now the B & V store) in 1880 and sold general | ||
| + | merchandise for many years. **In 1902 Tunis C. Judd purchased the store of | ||
| + | Mr Owens and conducted business there until 1916 when he sold to H. C. | ||
| + | Seymour. At present the store is owned and operated by Donald Bonker and | ||
| + | Harry Vanderlip.** | ||
| + | Jester' | ||
| + | street. | ||
| + | |||
| + | //Picture of Clinton Seymour' | ||
| + | the street looks like it's from the 1920's which would be about right:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton006.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | Picture of Westley Carleton Seymour in front of the store by the gas pumps, | ||
| + | I guess in the snow. This was taken about 1928 when he was around 17 years | ||
| + | old: | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton007.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | //Back to the stories from the historical website--//" | ||
| + | of Fred (Bubbie) Cuyle (related to Clinton' | ||
| + | Carrie Cuyle), the congenial barber and shoe repair man whose business was | ||
| + | in Abe Constables store - our present Post Office and Card's store." | ||
| + | |||
| + | Photo in newspaper of Bubby Cuyle: | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton008.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | //He looks like a rugged old character, doesn' | ||
| + | explaining the above:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton009.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | " | ||
| + | |||
| + | The Baptist Church | ||
| + | |||
| + | **About the year 1830 there was organized at Cannonsville a branch of the | ||
| + | Deposit Baptist Church** with fifteen members: Thomas Durfee, Alice Durfee, | ||
| + | John Randall, Ann Randall, Zebina Hancock, **Dorothy Seymour (William jr.'s | ||
| + | wife, gggg Grandma),** Jeannette Lowry, Affia Crawford, Electa Darrow, | ||
| + | Mahala Hathaway, Benjamin Hathaway, Lebbeus Teed, Electa Teed and Betsy Day. | ||
| + | The membership increased to fifty and on September 28, 1831, they were | ||
| + | recognized as an independent church, and thus the Cannonsville Baptist | ||
| + | Church came into existence. | ||
| + | |||
| + | The first deacons were Thomas Durfee and J. L. Babcock, and the first | ||
| + | regular pastor was the Reverend Mr Baldwin, commencing his ministry in | ||
| + | January 1832 and remaining about six months. In August of that year Deacon | ||
| + | Thomas Durfee was licensed and preached as the main supply for six years. | ||
| + | Then Stephen Stiles, E. L. Benedict and Elder Richmond were pastors until | ||
| + | 1850, and again Thomas Durfee in 1851. | ||
| + | |||
| + | The meetings were held in schoolhouses in Cannonsville, | ||
| + | Huyck neighborhood, | ||
| + | river, and in the " | ||
| + | |||
| + | Miss Antoinette Cannon writes: | ||
| + | |||
| + | " | ||
| + | as my home, and whenever I have been homesick the images that have come to | ||
| + | my mind have been in large part scenes of Cannonsville. There are several | ||
| + | reasons, but chiefly two: the gifts of nature which I began for the first | ||
| + | time to enjoy there, and the story of the early settlement of the valley in | ||
| + | which my fathers grandfather, | ||
| + | |||
| + | "I was ten years old and we had come to Deposit to live when Chestnut Point | ||
| + | came into my father, Robert Cannon' | ||
| + | to his old home. We must have spent five successive summers at Chestnut | ||
| + | Point and always afterward returned when we could with a sense of belonging | ||
| + | to Cannonsville. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "Our grandfather, | ||
| + | trees at Chestnut Point had died before we children were born, and he was | ||
| + | only a legend to us. He must have taken great pains to plan the "Queen | ||
| + | Anne's Cottage," | ||
| + | ornament. Some of his drawings for it still exist. A large chestnut tree | ||
| + | stood on the point of ground where Trout Creek comes into the Delaware River | ||
| + | and this was the origin of the name Chestnut Point. The story of the grounds | ||
| + | around the house was that when my grandfather was building the house a | ||
| + | traveling nurseryman came by with a varied stock of trees and my grandfather | ||
| + | bought the entire stock and set them out. The place when we lived there had | ||
| + | reverted almost to Natural woods, but with many trees unusual in the region. | ||
| + | Among them, and surrounded by old but still vigorous chestnut trees one came | ||
| + | upon an open flat oval which was a croquet ground designed and made by my | ||
| + | father when he was a boy. A huge swing with ropes perhaps twenty feet long | ||
| + | was suspended from the limb of one of these big trees to add to the fun of | ||
| + | the Sunday School picnics that were sometimes held there. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "Part of the family history went back to my great grandfather and the | ||
| + | farmhouse he had built on the left bank of the river. It stood, and still | ||
| + | stands, on the flat directly opposite Chestnut Point, and belongs now to the | ||
| + | Leland Boyd family. In our time it was the home of the Samuel Hathaways. | ||
| + | That big family of able farmers soon became an important part of our life, | ||
| + | as they were of the life of the community. I remember having dinner in the | ||
| + | old house with Bessie Hathaway and her parents and what seemed to me an army | ||
| + | of great strong brothers who came in hungry and jolly from the fields. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "My grandmother Cannon lived to be well over eighty. Many of her later years | ||
| + | were spent with or nearby my family and she was with us at Chestnut Point, | ||
| + | happy to be in her old home. As long as I can remember I see her as a white- | ||
| + | haired old lady dressed in black and wearing a lace cap. I cannot remember | ||
| + | ever seeing her without the cap. She was sparely built and straight, always | ||
| + | somewhat formal in speech and manner, and usually had a book in her hand. I | ||
| + | remember her interest in the "Merry Delvers" | ||
| + | member, but I do not know just what they did in those early times. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "Going to church and Sunday School and to weekday hymn-singing practice was | ||
| + | a major social activity in our lives. We would walk to the church and back, | ||
| + | across the creek bridge, often with the minister and his wife, grandmother | ||
| + | discussing the sermon with them. The Presbyterian parsonage was just across | ||
| + | the road from our house. My sisters and I went there to be taught the | ||
| + | " | ||
| + | book, then new, " | ||
| + | Mr Kirwan, was a strict man, but he said that it was perhaps not required of | ||
| + | the young to learn the questions in order, as well as the answers. However, | ||
| + | I decided to try it the hard way and did memorize a good part, but I am sure | ||
| + | not all of the 107 questions. Today I cannot get beyond the first one but | ||
| + | the experience made an impression. | ||
| + | |||
| + | " | ||
| + | where there were children of our age. Among them were the Durfees, the | ||
| + | Seymours, the Finches, the MacGibbons, the Owenses, the Spickermans, | ||
| + | Hulberts.** The Adams children were little then and as cunning children as | ||
| + | could be found anywhere. They were usually playing on the broad steps of | ||
| + | their father' | ||
| + | |||
| + | "**One exciting day during our childhood in Cannonsville stands out in my | ||
| + | memory: the day the old covered bridge across the Delaware collapsed and | ||
| + | went into the river. There had been a downpour of rain the day before and | ||
| + | the river was in flood. Rain was still coming down and we hurried into | ||
| + | raincoats and rubbers and ran to the river when news came that the bridge | ||
| + | was giving way. We were not in time to see the final crash and the tragedy | ||
| + | which occurred when a fine team of horses, Clinton Seymour, and his loaded | ||
| + | lumber wagon went down with the bridge. Mr. Seymour was unharmed but the | ||
| + | horses went down stream and were drowned.** | ||
| + | |||
| + | //This happened in 1900 when G Grandpa Clinton was about 25. Good thing he | ||
| + | was a decent swimmer. | ||
| + | (loaded with something) must have been a big financial loss. I'm no expert | ||
| + | on insurance practices in rural America in 1900, but I doubt that Clinton | ||
| + | was able to contact his local insurance agent and make a claim. | ||
| + | have taken a while for him to recover this loss.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | "The house at Chestnut Point was modern for its time, with every convenience | ||
| + | and many odd features which would appeal to children, such as the porch with | ||
| + | carriage landing, and the other little side porch off my bedroom, the small | ||
| + | fireplaces, the French windows in the parlour, the delightful woodshed, the | ||
| + | dwarf stairway and door to the attic, the pantry where we made bread and | ||
| + | cake, and the big stream of cold water running constantly through the | ||
| + | kitchen sink. My aunt Elizabeth Archibald and my Uncle Charles Cannon had a | ||
| + | persistent feeling for the place where their childhood had been spent and | ||
| + | came there to visit us, so that we children came to share some of their | ||
| + | sense of its being the old home. Aunt Elizabeth used to tell us of driving | ||
| + | to Deposit every day with her father to get the mail before Cannonsville had | ||
| + | a post office. When the roads were good they made the trip in forty-seven | ||
| + | minutes driving the pair of fast white ponies my grandfather took great | ||
| + | pride in. My father however remembered with less pleasure his daily task of | ||
| + | keeping the white ponies curried and washed. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "In our childhood the mail was brought from Deposit by stage and we were | ||
| + | often among the passengers on that long, slow, eight-mile drive with Mr. | ||
| + | Harvey Cogshell as stage driver. My uncle, for some years after his | ||
| + | retirement from business, lived in Cannonsville in the home of Mrs Owens and | ||
| + | her sister Miss Ellen Seymour. Ellen lived with us for some years and was a | ||
| + | valued member of our household. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "My parents first met in Cannonsville. My mother' | ||
| + | taught music and had some pupils in Cannonsville and so spent part of a year | ||
| + | there, boarding in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Ogden when my father' | ||
| + | family lived at Chestnut Point. A severe winter followed that year and my | ||
| + | father (to be) would skate down the river to Deposit to see her, a round | ||
| + | trip of about sixteen miles. They were married in the home of my maternal | ||
| + | grandfather, | ||
| + | |||
| + | //This is my personal favorite story. | ||
| + | been like skating 8 miles down the river back in those days. Even today, | ||
| + | it's a rural area. Back then I'm guessing that he didn't see another person | ||
| + | on the way, and certainly wouldn' | ||
| + | empty Bud can, or discarded pieces of plastic. | ||
| + | peaceful.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | "I think all who have lived here have a feeling of belonging to the valley | ||
| + | of the Delaware, and I for one find it hard to accept the change which is | ||
| + | about to be made. To me personally it can make but little difference, but | ||
| + | now the whole enterprise is to me as to all the people of our country, a | ||
| + | question of the best use to be made of natural resources, especially of | ||
| + | water. We must hope that the plan which our planners have made is in the | ||
| + | best interest of us all, and when we take leave of Cannonsville we must try | ||
| + | still to make good use of all which the valley had given to us and will give | ||
| + | to coming generations. But that is another story." | ||
| + | |||
| + | Miss Owens relates one of her early experiences riding on a raft from | ||
| + | Cannonsville to Deposit with a group of negro(sic) singers who had given a | ||
| + | concert in the village. Going over the dam was the big thrill. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "And another exciting time," writes Miss Owens, "was when William Henderson | ||
| + | later a merchant in Walton for many years shot a burglar in my father' | ||
| + | store. The mark of the bullet may still be on the old counter// | ||
| + | now the B & V store, which was also Great Grandpa Clinton Seymour' | ||
| + | store).// "After that my young brother kept a baseball bat at the head of | ||
| + | his bed t o be ready for any emergency. | ||
| + | |||
| + | "**In 1900 when the covered river bridge went down with horses, load and | ||
| + | driver, one of the boys rushed his row boat from the mill pond to help in | ||
| + | the rescue." | ||
| + | horses were drowned. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Miss Owens also remembers hearing that in the early 1860s a private school | ||
| + | was conducted in the Presbyterian parsonage opposite Chestnut Point. The | ||
| + | ministers wife Mrs Thomas Hempstead was her mother' | ||
| + | Mrs Hempstead' | ||
| + | "Miss Ada Hotchkins of Windsor was an able teacher," | ||
| + | what intrigued her pupils was the story that she had Indian blood in her | ||
| + | veins." | ||
| + | |||
| + | Albert M. Adams, who was born in 1888 in the old Maples homestead on the | ||
| + | site of the present schoolhouse, | ||
| + | in the early days: | ||
| + | |||
| + | His grandfather, | ||
| + | building near the river bridge (Joe Judd's hardware store) and next to that | ||
| + | was Sam Benjamin' | ||
| + | barbershop a few years ago) Charles Banks owned a shoe shop which later | ||
| + | became Wilbur Hulbert' | ||
| + | market**. Martha Owens operated a millinery shop near the market. She sold | ||
| + | her property to Newton Walley who had a meat market there. The old Pomeroy | ||
| + | drug store stood next and after Mr Pomeroy built his new store, **Arthur | ||
| + | Cook had a shoe shop in the old building and in later years Sanford Seymour | ||
| + | (**// | ||
| + | |||
| + | //The meat market must have preceded the general store.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | More websites on the life and death of Cannonsville. | ||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | Seymour' | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | but if you look closely you can see a Seymour building on main street, | ||
| + | probably the Store owned by my G grandfather Clinton, who had already died | ||
| + | 10 years earlier. | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | death of Cannonsville. | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | Now on to Clinton and Carrie. | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton010.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | Unfortunately this is the only photo I have of the two of them. I can't | ||
| + | imagine what possessed them to hide behind a bush for the photo, but that's | ||
| + | what we have. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Aside from the stories related above I only know what my Grandparents told | ||
| + | me about Clinton and Carrie. | ||
| + | businessman in Cannonsville, | ||
| + | then it looks like he graduated up to the primary general store in town. The | ||
| + | latter was the only one that I heard about and was pictured from the outside | ||
| + | above. | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{clinton011.jpg|}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | It was pretty extensive, selling clothes, farm supplies, food, etc. and had | ||
| + | the gas pumps out front. | ||
| + | small town for many of the goods. | ||
| + | that during the Great Depression, many people were suffering great | ||
| + | hardships, of course. | ||
| + | understanding. | ||
| + | in to the store, and picking out the necessary items for survival. | ||
| + | would then humbly tell Clinton that they didn't have any money at the | ||
| + | moment, but would pay as soon as they could. | ||
| + | knowing full well that that day would never come. To this day, I try to | ||
| + | carry on with that same sense of compassion here in Colombia. | ||
| + | fact, I gave a little money to a poor lady in the street of Venecia, who was | ||
| + | trying to do so shopping for the week. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Grandma had also mentioned something to the effect that ol' Clint was | ||
| + | something of a lady's man in his day, which also seems to hold true looking | ||
| + | back at the family line. Grandpa didn't put forth any denial when she said | ||
| + | this, so I assume it was true. | ||
| + | |||
| + | They also made several trips to Sidney to visit my Grandparents late in | ||
| + | their lives, including when my Dad, Westley Francis, was born. They both | ||
| + | proudly said that Clinton was very taken with young " | ||
| + | nicknamed early on. I guess they made a few visits in his last year, or | ||
| + | so, and he died before Dad turned two, so he never really knew his | ||
| + | Grandfather. | ||
| + | |||
| + | I guess, fortunately for him, Clinton died without ever knowing that soon | ||
| + | his beloved Cannonsville would be destroyed in order to build a dam for | ||
| + | drinking water for NYC. It had been partly founded by William Jr., then | ||
| + | further grew during Willet' | ||
| + | Philadelphia and was the first Seymour to open up a store in town, and | ||
| + | further still while Gilbert was farming, and with his older brother Alonzo, | ||
| + | still running lumber down the river to Philadelphia. | ||
| + | Clinton' | ||
| + | etc., so he continued his Grandfather Willet' | ||
| + | in town. I think that Erford continued running the store after Clinton' | ||
| + | death, at least for a while, so in all five generations made Cannonsville | ||
| + | their home. | ||
| + | |||
| + | I know next to nothing about Great Grandma Carrie Cuyle, but have a photo of | ||
| + | her father, Alvin Cuyle, who I learned was from nearby Masonville, by | ||
| + | looking up a Civil War record of his participation. | ||
| + | take us to the old Mason Inn in Masonville for special family dinners, like | ||
| + | Mother' | ||
| + | Dad, me and Tammy, and Uncle Dick, Aunt Dot, David and Andrew Curtis. | ||
| + | recall, we never really understood the attraction to the little place on top | ||
| + | of a hill in what seemed like the middle of nowhere to us, but it was | ||
| + | important to him, and we gladly went along. | ||
| + | him, and hey, it was his day, not to mention his nickel. | ||
| + | |||
| + | // | ||
| + | his Civil War uniform. | ||
| + | which makes sense based on my research below// | ||
| + | the first days of photography and is printed on some sort of metal plate, | ||
| + | and I cherish it.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{: | ||
| + | |||
| + | "The Centennial International Exhibition of 1876, the first official World' | ||
| + | Fair in the United States, was held in Philadelphia, | ||
| + | celebrate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of | ||
| + | Independence in Philadelphia. It was officially the International Exhibition | ||
| + | of Arts, Manufactures and Products of the Soil and Mine. It was held in | ||
| + | Fairmount Park, along the Schuylkill River. The fairgrounds were designed by | ||
| + | Hermann Schwarzmann. About 10 million visitors attended, equivalent to about | ||
| + | 20% of the population of the United States at the time (though many were | ||
| + | repeat visitors)." | ||
| + | |||
| + | //Alvin Cuyle died in 1915 in Trout Creek, NY, near Cannonsville.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | //If you look closely, you'll see that GG grandpa Cuyle is stoking that | ||
| + | cigar of his for the photo. | ||
| + | chapter, was a major cigar smoker. | ||
| + | inspired him to take up the habit.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | //If you're a photography buff, here's the history of the photo.// | ||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | |||
| + | "The Centennial Board of Commissioners awarded the sole license for | ||
| + | photography at the exposition to Edward L. Wilson, editor of the journal, | ||
| + | The Philadelphia Photographer, | ||
| + | prominent Scottish-born Canadian photographer. Notman served as president of | ||
| + | the Centennial Photographic Company (CPC) and Wilson as Superintendent and | ||
| + | Treasurer. The other officers of the CPC were W. Irving Adams of New York | ||
| + | City, who served as Vice-President, | ||
| + | John A. Fraser, who served as Art Superintendent. A CPC catalog lists 2,820 | ||
| + | photographs for sale to the public, many in more than one size. | ||
| + | **Stereoviews were sold for $.25** each; 5x8" photographs sold for $.50; | ||
| + | 8x10" photographs went for $1.00; 13x16" prints for $2.50; and 17x21" | ||
| + | photographs for $5.00 each. Exhibitors were charged substantially more for | ||
| + | the first print but were offered bulk discounts of up to 20% off the rate | ||
| + | charged the public for 50 copies. | ||
| + | |||
| + | All of the CPC photographs are silver albumen prints and were made using the | ||
| + | wet-plate process in which glass plates were first coated with a collodion | ||
| + | solution of gun-cotton dissolved in alcohol and ether and then sensitized | ||
| + | with a solution of silver nitrate. The glass plate negatives had to be | ||
| + | exposed while still wet and developed and fixed soon after exposure. Contact | ||
| + | prints were then developed in the Company' | ||
| + | paper (paper coated with a mixture of egg whites and ammonium chloride). The | ||
| + | prints were then mounted on card stock for sale. This process was both | ||
| + | complex and cumbersome. It required lots of supplies, equipment and | ||
| + | manpower. However, the process captured images in exquisite detail on the | ||
| + | negative plates. The exposure times for the treated glass plate **negatives | ||
| + | averaged twenty minutes, according to reports by one of the Company' | ||
| + | photographers, | ||
| + | issue of The Philadelphia Photographer during 1877. Exposure times as long | ||
| + | as 2 hours were reported, made necessary by the lack of good** lighting in | ||
| + | many of the Centennial buildings. | ||
| + | |||
| + | The Company was apparently quite successful and their photographs were in | ||
| + | great demand both during and after the Centennial. In the book The World of | ||
| + | William Notman, Roger Hall, Gordon Dodds and Stanley Triggs estimate that | ||
| + | the Centennial Photographic Company made a sizeable profit during the | ||
| + | Centennial." | ||
| + | |||
| + | //The soldiers from Delaware County, NY fought in the 144th Infantry | ||
| + | Regiment// | ||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | ain.htm]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | " | ||
| + | three years, which is a long time to stay alive in those circumstances)// | ||
| + | |||
| + | The following is taken from The Union army: a history of military affairs in | ||
| + | the loyal states, 1861-65 -- records of the regiments in the Union army -- | ||
| + | cyclopedia of battles -- memoirs of commanders and soldiers. Madison, WI: | ||
| + | Federal Pub. Co., 1908. volume II. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **"One Hundred and Forty-fourth Infantry**.-Cols., | ||
| + | E. Gregory, William J. Slidell, James Lewis Lieut.-Cols., | ||
| + | James Lewis, Calvin A. Rice; Majs. Robert T. Johnson, Calvin A. Rice, | ||
| + | William Plaskett. This regiment, recruited in Delaware county, was organized | ||
| + | at Delhi, and there mustered into the U.S. service on Sept. 27, 1862. **It | ||
| + | left the state on Oct. 11, 956 strong**, and was stationed in the defence of | ||
| + | Washington at Upton' | ||
| + | was then assigned to the Department of Virginia, and in Gurney' | ||
| + | assisted in the defence of Suffolk, during Long-street' | ||
| + | place. In May it was placed in Gordon' | ||
| + | Point, and snared in the demonstration against Richmond. In July it joined | ||
| + | the 2nd brigade, in (Schimmelfennig' | ||
| + | was detached from its corps on Aug. 7, and ordered to Charleston harbor, | ||
| + | when during the fall and winter of 1863 the regiment was engaged at Folly | ||
| + | and Morris islands, participating with Gillmore' | ||
| + | Fort Wagner and the bombardment of Fort Sumter and Charleston. In Feb., | ||
| + | 1864, in the 1st brigade, Ames' division 10th corps, it was engaged at | ||
| + | Seabrook and John's islands, S. C It was then ordered to Florida, where it | ||
| + | was chiefly engaged in raiding expeditions and was active in the action at | ||
| + | Camp Finnegan // | ||
| + | active at John's island in July, losing 13 killed, wounded and missing; in | ||
| + | Potter' | ||
| + | movement: with Sherman, fighting at Honey Hill and Deveaux neck. Its | ||
| + | casualties at Honey Hill were 108 and at Deveaux neck, 37 killed wounded and | ||
| + | missing. Lieut. James W. Mack, the only commissioned officer killed in | ||
| + | action, fell at Honey Hill. Attached to the 3d separate brigade, District of | ||
| + | Hilton Head, it was severely engaged at James island in Feb., 1865, losing | ||
| + | 44 killed, wounded and missing. In the fall of 1864 the ranks of the | ||
| + | regiment were **reduced to between 300 and 400 men through battle and | ||
| + | disease**, and it was then recruited to normal standard by one year recruits | ||
| + | from its home county. The regiment was mustered out at Hilton Head S.C., | ||
| + | June 25, 1865, under command of Col. Lewis. It lost by death during service | ||
| + | 40 officers and men, killed and mortally wounded; 4 officers and 174 | ||
| + | enlisted men died of disease and other causes total, 218." | ||
| + | |||
| + | //This photo was taken 10 years after the end of the war, so Alvin is | ||
| + | probably into his 30' | ||
| + | battlefield as a 20 year-old. | ||
| + | with 50,000 men, or so, dying in a single day (more than in the entire | ||
| + | Vietnam War), it's difficult for me to get my head around the hell that he | ||
| + | must have endured during his service. | ||
| + | the older stories, in previous chapters, of our more ancient ancestors | ||
| + | fighting in metal chain, with battle axes for Christ' | ||
| + | brutality of actually going through that, I think, is one of those things | ||
| + | that only he, and others who also had the misfortune of being in such a | ||
| + | situation, can speak about. | ||
| + | want to have seen old Alvin charging at me with that sword drawn and a wild | ||
| + | look in his eyes. The mere fact of his survival makes one think of those he | ||
| + | faced, and their fates.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | Of course as a kid, and then as a young man, I thought that I actually could | ||
| + | have done such things with ease. The older, more mellow Paul, isn't so | ||
| + | sure. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Also very interesting to me is the fact that during the civil war, two of | ||
| + | our distant cousins, who broke off our family branch in the beginning in | ||
| + | Connecticut, | ||
| + | Richard' | ||
| + | death. | ||
| + | regional governor of Massachusetts and Connecticut, | ||
| + | therefore somewhat more privileged, as presumably were their offspring. | ||
| + | John's descendants, | ||
| + | Same blood line, but with more cash and opportunity, | ||
| + | for example. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Both Horatio and Thomas Seymour were Governors of their respective states of | ||
| + | New York and Connecticut at this time. And both were opposed to the war, | ||
| + | and to centralizing the US government, as both were hard core Jeffersonians, | ||
| + | and therefore favoured a decentralized government. | ||
| + | much less popular these days, as Jefferson himself seems to have been | ||
| + | largely forgotten by the new, mostly immigrant population, I, myself, am one | ||
| + | of the last remaining Jeffersonians. | ||
| + | South America. [[wp> | ||
| + | |||
| + | I also made contact while doing my research with Judy Cuyle, a very | ||
| + | accomplished genealogist and wife of Bill Cuyle, who is a descendent of | ||
| + | Alvin as well. Bill was in to drag, and stock car racing in a major way. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Grandpa, Dad, and I were/are big speed freaks as well, which may have come | ||
| + | down through the Cuyle line (pronounced like Kyle). | ||
| + | common name, but is also from southern England, almost exclusively found in | ||
| + | Sussex County, England. | ||
| + | origin, I think, and it just looks and sounds French as well, which would | ||
| + | indicate Norman origin. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Now on to generation 11 in America. | ||
book/clinton10.1272852026.txt.gz · Last modified: 2010/05/02 21:00 by jims
