FAYSTON. 177
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FAYSTON.
BY
MRS. LAURA BRIGHAM BOYCE.
This township is in the S. W. corner of the County, 20
miles from Montpelier; b. N. by Duxbury, E. by Waitsfield, S. by Warren and
Lincoln, W. by Huntington and Buell's Gore; 6 miles square; land elevated,
lying in large swells, except along Mill brook and Shephard's brook, where
there is some intervale. Shephard's brook runs through the North part of the
town, and empties into Mad river in Waitsfield. It affords ample water power,
and several flourishing mills are in operation on its banks.
There was an extensive beaver meadow on this stream, and
many of the trees on its banks were partly cut down by these animals. The brook
received its name from one Shephard, who used to hunt beavers here.
Mill brook runs through the South part of the town, in an
Easterly direction, and empties into Mad river in Waitsfield; this stream has
good water-power, and several mills and one tannery are located on it. There is
considerable good lumber in town, especially in the more mountainous parts, the
most valuable of which is spruce. As many as 7,000 or 8,000 clapboard logs are
annually cut in Fayston, besides the common lumber, ash, basswood, etc. There
is also a good deal of hemlock, the bark of which is used extensively in
tanneries. The spruce and hemlock lumber is a source of profit to the
inhabitants. The maple is abundant, and there are many valuable sugar orchards;
some have a thousand handsome second growth trees in one body. This adds an
item to the income of the farmer, at the prices that have prevailed for maple
sugar and syrup of late years.
The soil is strong and fertile, though not as easily
tilled as a more sandy loam. These fertile upland farms are well adapted to
dairying, as the sweetest grass is found here, and water as pure and soft as
ever drank, two indispensable requisites for the dairy. Dairying is the chief
source of income of a greater part of the inhabitants, though wheat and oats
are raised here in
178 VERMONT HISTORICAL
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abundance, but potatoes more especially. Corn is often a
remunerative crop; but not so sure as on the intervales.
Fayston was granted Feb. 25, and chartered Feb. 27, 1782,
to Ebenezer Walbridge and his associates. It was first settled by Lynde Wait
in 1798. In 1800, there were 18 persons in town.
Lucia Wait, daughter of Lynde Wait, better known as Squire
Wait, was born in 1801, the first child born in town; subsequently, Wait Farr,
a son of William Farr, was born, and received a lot of land from Griswold Wait,
as being the first male child born in town. From which we see in those
primitive days the weaker were oppressed by the stronger, as they are still.
There was no orthodox reason why Lucia Wait should not have had that lot of
land as her birthright—except that she wasn't a boy.
The town was organized Aug. 6, 1805. James Wait was the
first town clerk; Thomas Green the first constable; and Lynde Wait, Rufus
Barrett and William Williams the first selectmen. Aug. 27, 1805, there was a
town meeting called to petition the General Assembly to be set off with other
towns from Chittenden County, which was not granted until some time in 1810 or
1811, when Fayston became a part of Jefferson County.
The first highways were surveyed in 1807, by Edmund Rice,
surveyor. The first school district was organized in 1809, and consisted of the
whole town, but subsequently, in 1810, we believe, it was divided into two
districts. The first tax levied on the grand list was in 1807, which was 5
cents on a dollar, to be worked out on the highway. The first tax levied on the
grand list to be paid in money was in 1810. It was 1 cent on a dollar, and we
have no doubt was as hard for these people as were the excessive taxes during
the war for their descendants. The taxes levied on the grand list in Fayston
during the war in one year were $10.79 on a dollar of the grand list, making a
poll tax of $21.58, and school and highway taxes besides, which must have made
another dollar. This was in 1864. There were several other bounty taxes raised
during the war, but this was the heaviest. Fayston paid her war debt as she
went along, and can show a clean record. In 1812, the town voted to raise 1
cent on a dollar for the support of schools, which was to be paid to the town
treasurer in grain. At this time there were 25 children in district No.
1, between the ages of 4 and 18.
In March, 1809, William Newcomb, William Rogers and
Marjena Gardener were elected "hog howards," an office now obsolete,
and exactly what its duties were, even then, we are unable to learn. But it was
an old-time custom to elect newly-married men to that notable office,
which might have been no sinecure after all, as the swine in those days all ran
where they listed, and unless they were much less vicious than their modern
descendants, it must have needed three "hog constables" to a town to
have kept them in order.
In April. 1808. William and Paul Boyce, two Quakers,
emigrated from Richmond, N. H., and settled near beaver meadow, on Shephard's
brook. This was the first opening in what is now called North Fayston. There is
a little romance connected with this same William Boyce. It seems that
William's susceptible heart had been touched by one Irene Ballou, a Quaker
maiden of his native place, and when he had made a beginning on his new home in
the woods he began to be lonely, and feel the need of a helpmate to wash his
wooden plates and pewter porringer, and also to assist him in picking up brush,
planting potatoes, and several other things wherein the good wives made
themselves useful in "the olden time," being then truly helpmates
for men, instead of help spends, as many of the more modern wives are. So
William journeyed to Richmond to claim his bride. He tarried long, and when he
returned it was not the gentle Irene who accompanied him. Whether he met with a
fairer Quakeress than she, and lost his heart with her against his will, or
whether Irene was averse to going into the new country, among the bears and
wolves, tradition saith not, but that it was not the latter reason we may infer
from her farewell to
FAYSTON. 179
him: "William, I wish thee well, I hope the Lord will
bless thee, but I know He wont." Says one of his descendants: "I
think He didn't, for be was always in some sort of trouble or other." Let
the fate of William be a warning to all young Quakers, as well as those who
quake not at all, to always keep their promises.
BOYCE FAMILY OF FAYSTON.
PAUL BOYCE married Rhoda Palmer, of Waitsfield, and here
on the farm they first rescued from the wilderness, they lived to a ripe old
age, and were finally buried in the cemetery not far away.
Their son, ZIBA WENTWORTH BOYCE, always resided in town
until his death, 1877, age, 63. He received but a common school education, but
by his own efforts, ultimately became a thorough scholar, and taught school
many terms. Later he served the town in various capacities, and up to the time
of his death was noted for his fine mental endowments. He was often jocosely
called the "wisdom of North Fayston," and not altogether without
reason. He was a writer of considerable ability, both in prose and verse. His
two daughters inherited his talent for writing, more especially his younger
daughter, Mrs. Emongene Smith, now a resident of Dubuque, Iowa. The eldest
daughter, Mrs. S. Minerva Boyce, has always remained at the homestead.
When Ziba W. was quite a young lad, his father sent him
one night with his brother after the sheep, but they having strayed from their
usual pasture, they failed to find them. In the morning they found what there
was left of them, eleven having been devoured by the wolves during the night.
On one occasion Paul Boyce was going off into the woods
with his oxen, when he met a bear with two cubs face to face. The meeting was
not a remarkably pleasant one to him; he being a Quaker and averse to fighting,
was pleased when the bear turned and trotted off.
About the year 1809, Stephen Griggs emigrated from
Pomfret, Conn., and settled about one-half mile from Esquire Wait's farm. He
resided there as long as he lived, and his companion, who survived him many
years, died there. The place has never passed out of the family, a granddaughter
at present residing there. This farm and the Brigham farm are the only ones in
South Fayston which have never passed out of the families of the first settlers.
Deer-yards were frequently found on the eastern slopes of
the hills. The early settlers used to hunt them in winter when the snow was
deep, so that they could not escape. Buck's horns were often found in the
woods. Sable were quite abundant. Ezra Meach, of Shelburne, passed through the
town in 1809, setting his line of traps for sable, and blazed trees along his
route. He found it quite profitable business, as these animals were exceedingly
good in the western part of the town. The panther, the great dread of the
juvenile community, was often seen, or supposed to he seen, but never captured
in this town.
UNCLE JOHN'S INDIAN RAID.
Some time about 1803, there were then five or six families
settled in what is now known as South Fayston. There were Uncle John and Uncle
Rufus Barrett—I call them Uncle John and Uncle Rufus, as there were the names
by which I knew them in my early childhood, albeit they were both young men at
the date of my story. There were Squire Wait and Thos. Green, and if there were
others I do not know their names.
Now at that time the raising of a new house or barn was a
job that required plenty of muscle and new rum, for they were built of logs,
and very heavy.
On a certain day, somebody in Warren was to raise a barn,
and as the country was sparsely settled, everybody was invited far and near,
and all the men of Fayston went except Uncle John. Whether he stayed at home
to guard the women and children from the bears and wolves, tradition saith
not. I only know he "tarried by the stuff," and all went well till
near sundown, when suddenly there burst upon his ears a long, wild cry, between
a howl
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and a whoop. Uncle John was on the alert; he listened with
bated breath a few moments; louder and nearer than before came that terrible
howl, this time in a different direction.
" 'Tis the Indian war whoop," said Uncle John;
"no doubt we are surrounded, and the men all away." He stood not upon
the order of going, but went at once. Uncle John was no coward, and if the redskins
got his scalp, they should buy it dearly, he resolved, and seizing his gun,
bidding his wife to follow, he ran to alarm the neighbors, and get them all
together, that he might defend them as long as possible. In a short time every
woman and child in the settlement was ensconced in Uncle Rufus' domicile, with
all the firearms the settlement contained, the door barricaded, and all the
preparations made to receive the red-skins that one man could do, aided by a
few courageous women. They listened, with hearing made acute by fear, for the
repetition of the war whoop. Now they heard it evidently nearing them—Uncle
John loaded all the guns—now they heard it further away. With pale faces and
palpitating hearts, they awaited the onset. The twilight shades deepened, the
night closed in, but still the Indians did not attack them.
Now there was an additional anxiety among the inmates of
the little cabin, for it was time for the men to be returning from the raising,
and as they were unarmed, they would fall an easy prey to the Indians.
Meanwhile the men, having finished their labors, were
returning home, all unconscious of the danger menacing them. They reached
home, but were surprised to find those homes deserted. "Come on to my
house," said Uncle Rufus, "perhaps the women were lonesome, and have
gone to make my wife a visit." So, not knowing what else to do, they went
on. Yes, there was a light at Uncle Rufus', sure enough, and a glance sufficed
to show that there was some unusual commotion within. What could it be?
"Hark, I hear voices," cried one of the women,
"it is the Indians this time, sure." The children began to cry, and I
suppose it would have been very delicate if the women had fainted, but they did
no such thing.
"What are you all about here? why don't you let us
in?" cried Uncle Rufus, shaking the door. The door was opened speedily,
and instead of being scalped by the Indians, they fell into the arms of their
astonished husbands.
"What is all this pow-wow about, anyway?" said
one. Then Uncle John explained how he had heard the Indian war-whoop off in
the woods, and had gathered the women and children there together for
protection. The men burst into a loud laugh. "It was the wolves,"
said Squire Wait, "we heard them howling on the mountain as we came home.
I'll be bound there isn't a red-skin within 50 miles."
Uncle John was somewhat crestfallen, but he was rather
glad after all that it wasn't Indians, for he preferred to have his scalp in
its proper place, rather than dangling from the red-skins' belts.
Some time in 1814, there was a rumor current of great
treasure buried by the Spanish Legions at the forks of Shepherd's brook, and
William Boyce, having a desire for "the root of all evil," resolved
to find it. He engaged one Arad Sherman, a man of such magical powers that in
his hands a witch-hazel rod performed as many antics as the rod of Aaron, and
they went about the search. Arad took the enchanted rod, and lo! it pointed out
the exact location of the buried treasure, but it remained for them to dig and
get it. It had been revealed to Arad that they must dig in the night time, and
no word must be spoken by any one of the number during the whole time of the
digging, else the treasure would be lost to them. So one night they started on
their secret expedition. Nothing was heard but the dull thud of the bars in
the earth, and grating of the spade. The earth was obstinate, but they were
determined no powers of earth should cheat them of their treasure. The hours
wore on, when suddenly William's bar struck against the iron chest containing
the treasure, with a sharp "clink." Over‑
FAYSTON. 181
joyed at their success, William forgot the caution and
cried out "I've found it!" At that instant the box shook with an ominous
rattle, and sank down, down, far below the sight of their longing eyes, taking
the bar and all with it, says the tradition. Frightened nearly out of their
wits, they "skedaddled" for home, sadder if not better men, and the
treasure remains buried there to this day.
In the winter of 1826, a beautiful doe was run down
Shepherd's brook to Mad river, near Jason Carpenter's and brought up in an open
eddy out of the reach of the dogs. Judge Carpenter caught it in his arms, and,
seven or eight hunters coming up just then, he told them that they could not
have the doe, but each one of them might go and select a sheep from his flock,
if they would go home about their business. Nothing but the beautiful doe would
satisfy these blood-thirsty hunters, and, seizing the deer by main force, they
killed it on the spot.
Pigeons were abundant. One device for keeping them off the
grain patches was a boy threshing a log chain around a stump. They used also to
construct bough houses on the edge of the field, and draw a huge net over the
baiting place, thus securing dozens at a haul. Partridges were caught on their
drumming logs in snares, or, if not there, the gunner was sure to find them in
some thicket. So it came to be a proverb, "hunted like a partridge."
In early days Uncle Moses Eaton used to bring corn from
Richmond on the backs of two horses, the roads not being passable for any
vehicle.
On his journey Uncle Moses met Uncle Joe Clark, of
Duxbury, at Pride's tavern in Waterbury. "Now," said Uncle Joe,
"you will want some pork to go with that corn, and you just call at my
house, and tell Aunt Betsey to put you up a good clear piece of pork." The
next time they met Uncle Moses said, "I called on Aunt Betsey, as you told
me, and she raised her hands and blessed herself, saying, "What on airth
does that man mean, sending any one here for pork, when he knows that we haint
had any kind of meat in the house for six months?" But Uncle Joe enjoyed
the joke hugely.
In Fayston there was considerable snow on the 8th and 9th
of June, 1816, and everything was frozen down to the ground. The trees put out
new leaves three times during that season, having been cut off twice by frost;
hardly anything ripened, and the settlers saw dreary times.
WILLIAM NEWCOMB
came to the township quite early in its settlement, and
finished his days here. He built one of the first framed houses in town,
Esquire Wait's being the first; Mr. Newcomb and Merrill Tyler each built theirs
the same year, but I am unable to learn in what year. Mr. Newcomb's farm was
occupied by his son Hosea many years, but has passed into the hands of
strangers. The old house was burned during a high wind, in Oct. 1878.
DR. DAN NEWCOMB, son of Hosea Newcomb, was born and
reared here, but has been for several years a practicing physician in Steele
County, Ill. He is also the author of a medical work entitled, "When and
How," a work of considerable merit. Don Carlos, another son, is a
prominent wholesale merchant of Atchison, Kansas.
NATHAN AND JACOB BOYCE.
In 1808, Nathan Boyce and his wife, Zeviah, came to
Fayston, and settled on Shephard's brook, near Paul Boyce, of whom he was a
relative, and also of the Quaker faith. Nathan Boyce died many years ago; his
wife in 1856, aged about 90, I think. She resided with her son Jacob, who died
in 186—. His wife still survives him, at the age of 81 (1878. She is still
living, Aug. 1881.) She lives on the old farm with her son, Seth Boyce. The
farm has always remained in the family.
Jacob Boyce had 4 sons and 4 daughters, all of whom, save
one, are settled in Fayston or the immediately adjacent towns.
BRIGHAM FAMILY.
In 1809, Gershom Brigham and family emigrated from
Winchester, N. H., and settled in South Fayston, near Lynde Wait's. Elisha,
their third child, was then 17 years old, and eventually settled on the
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same land, his other brothers and sisters finding other
homes. His parents resided with him while they lived, and their bones rest in
the little green grave-yard on the old Wait farm. Elisha lived here to ripe old
age, raising a family of it children, all of whom are now living except one
daughter, who died at the age of 42. The two eldest sons and the two youngest
daughters of this family have some literary talent, having all contributed to
the press acceptably, in prose and verse. The eldest son, [See separate notice
of Dr. G. N. Brigham].
Elisha Brigham died in 1863, aged 70 years; his widow in
1876, aged 77. The old home that she had resided in for more than 40 years, took
fire in some mysterious manner, and was burned in the early morning hours,
when her demise was hourly expected. She was borne from the flaming house to
the home of a neighbor, and breathed her last in the very house whence she went
on her wedding day to be married 59 years before.
Mrs. Brigham was a woman of remarkable powers, mental and
physical. Left an orphan by the death of her mother at the age of 12, she came
from Randolph, Vt., her native place, to reside in the family of Esquire Wait,
so she became early identified with the history of the town. Her remarkably
vigorous constitution and ambition to excel, fitted her for the position of a
pioneer's wife, and she endured the hardships and deprivations consequent on
the building up of a new place, with great fortitude. With a large family of
her own and many cares, yet she acted as nurse for half the town, and such was
her skill in the management of the sick, that the old physician, now dead,
used always, if he had a critical case, to send for Mrs. Brigham, and said,
with her to nurse them, he felt pretty sure of bringing his patients through.
Her very presence and touch seemed to bring healing with them.
When Mrs. Brigham was a fair, young wife of 19, she was
small, lithe and supple, with nerves of steel, and she never shrank from any of
the hardships of her life. They then made sugar nearly a mile from the house.
It was growing late in the spring, and Mr. Brigham was anxious to be about his
spring's work, and his wife, being equally anxious for a good supply of sugar,
offered to go with her sister, a girl of 17, and boil in the sap. Taking the
baby with them, they started for the sugar-camp. It was late in spring and
quite warm, and babies were not killed by a breath of fresh air in those days.
They boiled sap all day, Mrs. B. gathering in some sap near the boiling place.
In the afternoon they heard a good deal of barking off in the woods, but
supposed it was some hounds after foxes. Mr. Brigham did not get up to the
sugar-camp to bring down the syrup till nine o'clock, they staying there alone
until that time. A neighbor passing through the camp early the next morning,
found a sheep dead at the foot of a tree where Mrs. Brigham had gathered sap at
sundown. The sheep was still warm when Mr. Brigham arrived on the spot. On
looking around, they found 20 sheep had been killed by the wolves. Mrs. Brigham
and her fair sister did not care to boil till nine o'clock the next night.
On one occasion Mrs. Brigham, desiring to get some weaving
done, mounted an unbroken, 3-years-old colt, that had never had a woman on his
back before, and started on a ride of 4 miles through the woods, to Wm. Farr's,
with a bag of yarn fastened to the saddle-bow. There was only a bridle-path
part of the way, and the colt was shy, but he found his match in the little
woman of scarce 100 pounds' weight, and carried her safely to her destination.
Her business dispatched at Mr. Farr's, she started homeward by another route,
having occasion to call at one William Marsten's, who lived far up on the road
leading over the mountain into Huntington, and from thence homeward by a route
so indistinctly marked, blazed trees being the guide, she mistook a path worn
by the cattle for the traveled road, and did not discover her mistake till she
came up to the pasture fence. Nothing daunted, she took down the fence, passed
over, then replaced it, and went over, being then so near home that she felt
pretty sure of her whereabouts. After the colt became better broken, she
FAYSTON. 183
used often to take one child in her arms and another
behind her, and go to the store, 3 or 4 miles distant, or visit a distant
neighbor, or to go to meeting.
JOTHAM CARPENTER
was the first settled minister, and received the minister
lot of land in this town. How many years he remained here I know not, but he
has one son now living in Brookfield.
Preaching has generally been of a desultory character,
owing to the fact that North and South Fayston are divided by a natural
barrier of hills, that makes it far more convenient for the North section to go
to Moretown, and the South part is more accessible to Waitsfield, so that it
seems probable that the different sections will never unite in worship. The
people in N. Fayston have an organized Baptist society, and have quite frequent
preaching, and some years hire a minister, and many years ago, the Methodists
had quite a large society in So. Fayston, but it has been dismembered a long
time, and most of its former members are dead, and those remaining have united
with the Methodist church in Waitsfield.
John and Rufus Barrett were among the early settlers, and
one Thomas Green, but as they have no descendants remaining in town, I cannot
tell when they settled here, but they were here as early as 1803, it is
believed.
Elizabeth, widow of John Barrett, died in Waitsfield a few
years since (1878) aged 93 years. She survived her husband many years.
One Jonathan Lamson died in town several years ago, at the
age of 84. His wife lived to the age of 107 years. Timothy Chase died at the
age of 91; his wife, Ruth, some years earlier, over 80. Lynde Wait, the first
settler, moved from town many years ago, and eventually went West, and I have learned,
died at an advanced age, over 80. Nearly all the early settlers whom I have
known, lived to ripe old age, but they have passed away, and with them much of
the material for a full history of the town. I have gathered as much as I could
that is reliable, but even the last two, from whom I have elicited most of the
facts recorded here, have now gone to their long homes, and much that I have
gathered here would now be forever sealed in silence, had I began my work a
little later.
CAPT. ELLIOT PORTER,
the first captain of the militia in the town, was born in
Hartford, Vt., 1785, married Sidney Ward in 1811, and soon after removed to
Fayston, where they began to clear them a home in the North part of the town,
where they resided till their death. He died at the age of 89; his wife at 86.
They had 8 children. William E. Porter, their son, died at 57; 4 sons are now
living.
WILLARD B. PORTER,
son of Elliot, has always resided in town, near where he
was born, and has served the town in almost every official capacity. He has
been town clerk 31 years, school district clerk 25 years, treasurer 14 years,
justice of the peace 30 years, and in that capacity married 86 couple. He has
represented the town 6 sessions, including 1 extra session, and has attended 2
constitutional conventions. Mr. Porter says the first school he attended was
in his father's log-house chamber; the scholars, his eldest brother, himself
and one Jane Laws; the teacher's name, Elizabeth Sherman. Mr. Willard Porter
has done more business for the town than any other person now living.
WARREN C. PORTER
served as a soldier during nearly the whole war of the
Rebellion, and has taught school 24 terms. Dr. Wilfred W. Porter, see separate
notice. Walter, the youngest son, remains on the old homestead, and it was his
care to soothe the declining years of his parents as they went slowly down the
dark valley.
There was no death occurred in the family of Elliot Porter
for 50 years.
WILLIAM SHERMAN
was among the early settlers of Fayston, though I am not
informed in what year he
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settled here. He represented the town in the general
assembly, and held other town offices. His daughter, widow of Eli Bruce, still
lives on the old homestead that he redeemed from the wilderness.
ELI BRUCE
was a long-time resident of Fayston, and did a large
amount of business for the town, several times being the representative, and
justice of peace for many years. He died at the age of 69. His daughter was the
first person buried in the cemetery in N. Fayston.
SILAS W. FISHER
resides in N. Fayston, on the farm where he has lived for
50 years. His wife has been dead some years. He has two surviving sons; one in
the West, and the other, C. M. Fisher, is constable of Fayston at the present
time—1878. He died in 1879.
BENJAMIN B. FISHER
was the first postmaster in town, and held the office till
his death, and his wife held the office 4 years afterwards. Truman Murray is
the present incumbent.
RILEY MANSFIELD
came to the town when he was quite a young man, and passed
his days here, dying in 1876, aged 75; his wife in 1874; out of a large family,
there is only one surviving child of theirs.
JOSEPH MARBLE
came to Fayston in September, 1809, and with his wife
Susan passed the remnant of his days here, dying at the age of 84; his wife at
81. They had 11 children, two only are living (1878.) One daughter in
Wisconsin, and Benjamin on the farm where his father began 70 years ago. He is
I think now over 80 years of age—is still living, aged 86. Cynthia, daughter of
Joseph Marble, and widow of Peter Quimby, died Aug., 1878, aged 74.
One fall, Joseph Marble, Jr., had a log‑rolling, to
build a new house, the old one giving signs of failing up. In the evening the
rosy cheeked lasses from far and near joined with the athletic youths in a
dance. It wasn't the "German," nor waltz, nor polka, but a genuine
jig. It was a merry company who beat time to the music of a corn-stalk fiddle
in farmer Marble's kitchen, the jocund laugh and jest followed the "O be
joyful," as it went its unfailing round, which it always did on such occasions.
They grew exceedingly merry, and one fellow, feeling chock full and running
over with hilarity, declared "When they felt like that they ought
to kick it out." So they put in "the double shuffle, toe and
heel," with such zest that the decayed sleepers gave way. Down went floor,
dancers, corn-stalk fiddle, and all, into the cellar. Whether the hilarious
fellow "kicked it out" to his satisfaction, we are not informed, but
if his fiddle was injured in its journey it could be easily replaced.
In 1830, a little daughter of William Marston, 4 years
old, strayed from home, and wandered on and on in the obscure bridle path. She
came out at one Carpenter's, in Huntington, having crossed the mountain, and
spent a day and a night in the woods; and beasts of prey, at that time were
numerous upon the mountains.
Jonathan Nelson had a son and daughter lost in the woods
about 1842. The boy was 12 years of age, the girl younger. After a toilsome
search, they were found on the second day, unharmed, near Camel's Hump.
In 1847, the alarm was given that a little son of Ira
Wheeler, 4 years old, had not returned from school. The neighbors turned out,
and searching all day returned at night without any trace of the lost one. The
mother was almost distracted. The search was continued the second day with no
better results. I remember hearing my brother say, as he took a quantity of
provisions with him on the third day, that they were "resolved not to
return home again until the boy was found either dead or alive," though
many thought that he must have perished already, either from hunger and
fatigue, or from the bears infesting, the woods. He was soon found in the town
of Duxbury, several miles from home, having been nearly 3 days and nights in
the woods. He had carried his dinner-pail when he started from school
FAYSTON. 185
at night, and providentially some of the scholars had
given him some dinner that day, so that his own remained untouched.
This being the second time the men had been called out to
hunt for lost children in 5 years, some of them were getting rather tired of
the thing, whereupon Ziba Boyce drew up a set of resolutions and read them on
the occasion, after the child was found, and all were feeling as jolly as such
weary mortals could. I have not a copy of them all, but it was resolved
"that mothers be instructed to take care of their children, and not let
them wander off into woods to be food for the bears, or for the neighbors to
hunt up."
There have been no more lost children to search for in
Fayston since that, so we may suppose it to have been effective. Fayston, along
with other towns, has suffered from freshets at various times. In the year
1830, occurred what was known as the "great freshet." Buildings were
swept away, one person was drowned, and others barely escaped. The famous
"Green Mountain slide," which began within a few feet of the summit,
where the town is divided from Buel's Gore, in sight of the homestead where I
was born, occurred in the summer of 1827. It had rained quite hard some days,
and the soil, becoming loosened, gave way, carrying with it trees, rocks, and
the debris of ages, on its downward course. Gathering impetus as it advanced,
for the mountain is very steep here, it went thundering down the mountain side
a distance of a mile or more, with a crash and rumble that shook the earth for
miles around, like an earthquake. One branch of Mill brook comes down from
here, and, being dammed up by the debris of this grand avalanche, its waters
accumulated till it became a miniature lake, then overleaping its barriers it
rushed down to its work of destruction below. In July, 1858, a destructive
freshet visited Fayston, and the towns adjacent. It had been exceedingly dry,
and water was very low. At 7 o'clock in the afternoon, on Saturday, July, 3,
the workmen in the mill of Campbell & Grandy were desiring rain, that they
might run the mill. They got what they desired, only got too much; for instead
of running the mill they ran for their lives, and let the mill run itself, as
it did very rapidly down stream, in less than 2 hours after the rain commenced.
The old saying "it never rains but it pours" was verified; it came in
sheets. I remember watching the brooks surging through our door-yard; we felt
no alarm, thinking a thunder shower not likely to do much damage. We retired to
rest, and slept undisturbed, not being in the vicinity of the large streams. We
learned in the morning every bridge between Fayston and Middlesex, but one, was
swept away. Campbell & Grandy's mill went off before 10 o'clock, and the
house pertaining to the mill was so much undermined by the water, the inmates left,
taking what valuables they could with them. Mr. Green's family also deserted
their house. The water was several feet deep in the road, but, the storm soon
subsiding, the houses did not go off.
A clapboard mill owned by Brigham brother, on Shepherd's
brook, was ruined. Not a mill in town escaped a good deal of injury. Many
people left their houses, expecting them to be carried down the seething flood,
and but one bridge of any account was left in town, and the roads were
completely demoralized!
This storm seemed a local one, not doing much damage
except in the towns in the Mad river basin and on tributary streams. I have
heard it speculated that two rain clouds met on the mountain ridges. Be that as
it may, I think two hours' rain seldom did such damage in any locality.
In the freshet of 1869, Fayston suffered less than many
other towns, but several bridges were carried off, the roads cut up badly, mill
dams swept away, etc.
The mill rebuilt on the site of the one swept away in
1858, this time owned by Richardson & Rich, was again carried off, but as
considerable of the machinery was afterward found, Mr. Richardson determined
to rebuild, putting it a few rods lower down the stream. He has built a
186 VERMONT HISTORICAL
MAGAZINE:
fine, large mill there, and feels secure this mill shall
stand.
Fayston is a very healthy town. There are several living
in town over 80 years of age.
[This was
written in 1867.]
ELISHA BRIGHAM
was born in old Marlboro, Mass., 1792. In the common
school he obtained all the education he ever had beyond the poor chance of
gleaning a little, here and there, from a limited supply of books, amid a
multitude of cares at home; but at the age of 12, he had mastered most of
Pike's Arithmetic; performing more examples by the feeble light of an
old-fashioned chimney fire-place, than at school. So engaged was he that he
often went to bed on a difficult problem, to dream it out on his pillow. From
Old Marlboro, the fammily removed to Winchester, N. H., and there hearing of
the emigration to the Winooski, and Mad River Valleys, they cast lots with the
pioneers to this then wilderness country, and removed on to the tract of land
owned in the present homestead. Elisha, now 16, began to take the lead in
business, his father being very infirm. About half a dozen families were
settled in the south part of the town, having made little openings in the
forest, with no well worked road into the town. He and two other members of the
family, came the first year to roll up the log-house. The next year all came
on, and a family of 8 persons, several children younger than himself, seemed to
be dependent on him, even so young, as a foster-father and a guardian. He
commenced levelling the old forest trees, and bringing into tillage, meadow and
pasturage. Early and late he toiled, and year by year the meadow widened, and
the line of woods receded.
In the earliest business transactions of the town, we find
the name of Elisha Brigham. There was hardly a year from that time till his
death, but what he held some town office. But what most distinguished him was
his exact honesty. No man could ever say that he defrauded him of the least in
this world's goods. He would rather suffer wrong than to do wrong. He never
could oppress the weak, as, instinctively, his whole nature prompted him to
espouse their cause. And his religious example was the crowning glory of the
man. He was the real pioneer of Methodism in the town; for many years leader in
all their social meetings, and around him grew up a thriving class. In this
earlier history of the community it might well have been christened the home of
the good. Class-leader and chorister, he guided them encouragingly on, and yet
his manner was never exciting, hardly, even, could it be said to be fervid or
warm; but solid goodness, tenderness, and genuine interest in all that
pertained to the soul's welfare, were manifest. The wavering came to him, for
he never faltered; the weak, because he was a pillar of strength. He was a man
of no doubts in his religious belief, and a man living not by emotion, but
principle, and his home was one of hospitality; particularly was the preacher
his guest.
In 1816, collector, often juror and selectman, many years
lister, nearly always highway-surveyor, district clerk or committee man. In
all his more active life, however, he was nearly alone in his politics, he
being a thorough whig, while the town was intensely democratic. For which reason
probably he was never sent to the Legislature of the State, as this seems to be
the only office of importance which he at some time has not held.
At the age of 24, he married Sophronia Ryder. They had 12
children, but one of whom died in infancy; the rest were all living in 1863.
One daughter died in July, 1866; the rest are all living, 1881. And in the
fullness of affection and tenderness all will say he was a good father. Daily
he gathered them around his family altar, while they lived with him, and
sought for than the reconciliation of God. He walked before them soberly,
patiently, peaceably. His soul seemed like an unruffled river, gliding ever
tranquil and even in its banks almost alike in sunshine and in storm. He had
no enemies; but was Grandfather, and "Uncle Elisha," to all the
neighborhood. Even
FAYSTON. 187
the old and young far out of his own immediate
neighborhood, called him by the sobriquet of Uncle Elisha, and seemed to mourn
for him as for a good old uncle. His family physician remarked of him after his
decease, that he was "the one man of whom he could say, he did not know
that he had an enemy in the world. He was a peacemaker."
ONLY
A LITTLE WHILE.
BY MRS. LAURA BRIGHAM BOYCE.
Only
a little while
Lingers the springtime with its sun and dew
And song of
birds, and gently falling rain,
And springing flowers, on hillside and on plain,
Clothing the
earth in garments fresh and new.
Only
a little while
The summer tarries with its sultry heat;
Showering its
smiles upon the fruitful land,
Ripening the harvest for the reaper's hand,
Ere autumn
shall the fruitful work complete.
Only
a little while
The autumn paints with gorgeousness the leaves,
Ere wintry
winds shall pluck them from the bough
To drape the earth's dark, corrugated brow,—
Then hasten,
loiterer, gather in thy sheaves.
Only
a little while
The winter winds shall moan and wildly rave,
While the
fierce storm-king walks abroad in might,
Clothing the carol in garments pure and white,
Ere the grim
monarch, too. shall find a grave.
Only
a little while,
Life's spring-time lingers, and our youthful feet
Through flowery
paths of innocence are led,
And joyous visions fill our careless head;
Too bright,
alas! as beautiful as fleet.
Only
a little while
Life's summer waits with storm and genial sun,
With days of
toil and nights of calm repose;
We find without its thorn we pluck no rose,
And spring-time
visions vanish one by one.
Only
a little while
Ere autumn comes and life is on the wane
Happy for us if
well our work be done,
For if we loitered in the summer's sun,
How shall we
labor in the autumn rain?
Only
a little while,
And winter comes apace; the hoary head,
And palsied
limbs, tell of the labors past,
And victories won—ah! soon shall be the last,—
And they shall
whisper softly "he is dead."
W. W. PORTER
was born in Fayston, July 24, 1826. He was the 4th son of
Elliot Porter and Sidney Ward, the former a native of Hartford, the latter a
native of Poultney, Vt., and a daughter of Judge William Ward, judge in Rutland
Co. 22 years.
Wilfred spent his time until he was 17 on the farm, and
attending school winters; at which time he commenced studying falls and
springs, and teaching winters, attending the academies at Montpelier and
Bakerstield, and working on the farm during the summer months until he was 22
years of age.
As early as fifteen he had set his mind upon the medical
profession for life, and bent all his energies in that direction. Having
studied medicine some time previously, he, at 22, entered the office of Dr. G.
N. Brigham, and began the study of medicine, which he continued summers,
teaching school falls and winters for 1½ year, when he entered the medical
college at Woodstock, where he remained one term, and afterwards at Castleton,
Vt., for two terms, graduating from that college in the fall of '51, when he
came to Syracuse, and entered the office of Dr. Hiram Hoyt for a short time;
May, 1852, entered the school at Geddes as principal teacher for one year, and
May 16, 1853, opened an office in that place to practice his profession, which
he has continued until the present.
At the close of his first year, the resident doctor of
Geddes died, leaving him in full possession of the field. Dr. Porter rose
rapidly, and by integrity of purpose and dealing, grew into a very large and lucrative
practice, which he carried on for 15 years, as it were, alone, after which he
had partners in the practice of medicine.
His practice gradually extended to the city of Syracuse,
when, in 1875, the demand upon him for medical treatment from that city became
so great that he opened an office there, which he alternately attends upon,
with his home office in Geddes. He has been for 25 years a member of the Onondaga
County Medical Society, and for one term its president, and a permanent member
of the New York State Medical Society; also a member of the American Medical
Association, and upon organization of the College of Medicine of Syracuse
University, in 1872, he was appointed clinical professor of obstetrics and
gynaecology the first year, and at the end of the year, professor in full,
which position he still retains.
His skill in the treatment of diseases has
188 VERMONT HISTORICAL
MAGAZINE.
won for him a position in the esteem of the people to be
envied by young practitioners, and his indomitable perseverance and endurance
of body have enabled him to gratify, in a great measure, the laudable ambition
of his earlier years—to be among the first in his profession. He was one of the
first movers in the organization and establishment of a university at Syracuse,
and since its beginning has been a trustee and closely identified with all its
interests, and has been largely identified with the public schools of his town
since his first residence there, being supt. of the schools of the town for
some 2 years, and trustee of the village school for some 25 years; also being
president of the board of education.
He and his wife are warmly attached to the Methodist
Episcopal church, and are not only liberal supporters of the same, but of any
enterprise they regard as looking to the building up of good society.
In the year 1853, Nov. 13, he married Miss Jane, daughter
of Simeon Draper and Clarissa Stone, of Geddes; children, Clara A., George D.
(deceased), Wilfred W. Jr., Jane and Louie.
LONGEVITY RECORD IN 1881.
Ruth Chase died in 1865, aged 84; Timothy Chase in 1875,
93; Benj. Corliss, in 1865, nearly 91; Henry Morgan, 1868, 84. The wife of
Henry Morgan (in Northfield), over 80 years. Her home was in Fayston. James
Baird died in 1870, aged 81; Geo. Somerville, 1870, 80; Margarett Strong, 1870,
98; Elizabeth Lamson, in 1872. Her friends differed as to her age; some claimed
she was 104; others that she was but 102. Her husband, Jonathan Lamson, died
some 20 years since, aged between 80 and 90; Jane McAughin died in 1872, aged
82; Capt. Elliot Porter, 1874, nearly 90; Sidney Porter, his wife, 1875, 86;
Joseph and Susan Marble, over 80; Zeviah Boyce, 1856, aged about 90; Mehitable
Tyler, 1855, between 80 and 90. Elizabeth Barrett died in Waitsfield in 1873,
aged 93. She was for many years a resident of Fayston, but moved to W. a short
time before her death.
TOWN OFFICERS 1871-1881.
Town Clerks,
Willard B. Porter, 1871 to '80; D. S. Stoddard, 1880; S. J. Dana, 1881. Representatives,
1871, none; S. J. Dana, 1872; M. S. Strong, 1874; D. S. Stoddard, 1876; Seth
Boyce, 1878; Nathan Boyce, 1880. Treasurers, D. S. Stoddard, 1871, '72;
A. D. Bragg, 1875, '79; Seth Boyce, 1880, '81. First Selectmen, C. D.
Billings, 1871; Dan Boyce, 1872; C. S. Dana, 1874; Seth Boyce, 1875; J.
Patterson, 1876; M. S. Strong, 1879; John Maxwell, 1878, '79; J. P. Boyce,
1880, '81. Constables, Cornelius McMullen, 1871, 72; H. G. Campbell,
1873, '74 C. M. Fisher, 1875, '76, '79; S. J. Dana, 1877, '78, Allen S. Howe,
1880; M. S. Strong, 1881. Grand Jury, G. O. Boyce, 1871, '72, '73, '75;
W. B. Porter, 1874, '76; C. S. Dana, 1877, 78; Seth Boyce, 1879, '80; R.
Maxwell and Wm. Chipman, 1881. School Supt., Grey H. Porter, 1871, '72,
'73; Rev. J. F. Buzzel, 1874 to 1881. Trustees of the Town, Seth Boyce,
1873, '79; Geo. Boyce, 1877, '78, '80, '81. Justices of the Peace,
Willard B. Porter, 1872, '74, '76, '78; G. O. Boyce, 1872, '74; D. S. Stoddard,
1872, '76, '78, '80; Z. W. Boyce, 1872, '74; H. H. Morgan, 1872; C. D.
Billings, 1874; E. Ainsworth, 1874; S. J. Dana, 1876, '78, '80; O. S. Bruce, J.
Z. Marble, 1878; Nathan Boyce, Stephen Johnson, Dan Boyce, 1880.
GERSHOM NELSON BRIGHAM, M. D.,
for 20 years a practicing physician at Montpelier, was
born in Fayston, Mar. 3, 1820, was son of Elisha Brigham, who made his pitch in
F. with the first settlers. His mother, Sophronia Ryder, whose mother was Lucy
Chase, a relative of the Hon. Dudley Chase [See Randolph History, vol. II], was
a woman of vigorous constitution and an active, original mind. Several
ancestors in the Brigham line have been physicians, one of whom was Gershom
Brigham, of Marlboro, Mass., the old ancestral town of the Brighams of this
country, the stock tracing back to the parish of Brigham in Northumberland
Co., England. Dr. G. N. Brigham received his education in our common schools,
with a
FAYSTON. 189
year in Wash. Co. Gram. Sch. and a half year at Poultney
Academy, and studied medicine with Dr. David C. Joslyn, of Waitsfield, Dr. S.
W. Thayer, now of Burlington, Prof. Benj. R. Palmer, now of Woodstock,
graduating at Woodstock Medical College in 1845, attending three courses of
lectures. He has practiced 3 years at Warren, then 3 years at Waitsfield;
removed to Montpelier, 1849; attended lectures at the college of Physicians
and Surgeons, N. Y., spending much time in the hospitals of the city, about
which time he became a convert to homeopathy, and was the second person in
middle Vermont to espouse the cause at this time so unpopular, and one of six
who founded the State Homoeopathic Society. He has educated quite a number of
students in his office, among whom, his own son, Dr. Homer C. Brigham, of
Montpelier, and Prof. Wilfred W. Porter, of the Medical Department in the
Syracuse University. While at Montpelier he served a while as postmaster; was
town superintendent of common schools; lectured on education, temperance and
sundry scientific subjects, and has been a contributor to medical journals, and
known to the secular press in essays and poetical contributions for over 25
years. He delivered the class poem before the Norwich University in 1870; published
in that year a 12 mo. vol., pp. 180, "The Harvest Moon and other
Poems" at the Riverside Press, which with additions came out in a
second edition.
The Doctor has since issued a "Work on Catarrhal
Diseases," 126 pp., and reports a work on "Pulmonary Consumption,"
nearly ready for press; that he has written this year, 1881, a play in tragedy,
"Benedict Arnold," that he expects to publish. He is regular
contributor to three medical journals, and has written for as many as thirty of
the leading newspapers, East and West. He married, 1st, Laura Elvira Tyler,
dau. of Merrill Tyler, Esq., of Fayston; children, Homer C., Willard Irving,
Julia Lena, Ida Lenore. His first wife died Mar. 12, 1873. He married, 2d, Miss
Agnes Ruth Walker, dau. of Ephraim Walker, Esq., of Springfield. They have one
child. Dr. Brigham has resided since 1878, at Grand Rapids, Mich. His son, Dr.
Homer C., is in practice at Montpelier. In his poetical writings—not a few—the
Doctor has always inclined to the patriotic.
Aug. 16th, 100th anniversary of Bennington battle. At the
meeting of the Vermonter's Society in Michigan, at Grand Rapids, Hon. W. A.
Howard delivered the oration, and Dr. G. N. Brigham, the poem. We give an
extract. In our crowded pages we have scarce room for poetic extracts, even,
and this appears to be the musical town of the County. Such a flock of native
poets, all expecting by right of manor, to sing in the history of their birth
town, with the one who has written the most in this prolific field, we must
begin to be brief. Haply, he has published too widely to be in need of our
illustration:
FROM "THE BATTLE OF BENNINGTON."
When Freedom's cause in doubtful scaie
Hung trembling o'er Columbia's land,
And men with sinking hearts turned pale
That 'gainst the foe there stood no brand,
Vermont, thy banner rose.
Green waved thy lofty mountain pine,
Which thou didst make thy battle sign,
Then from the mountain fastness thou
Didst sally with a knitted brow,
And tyrants felt thy blows.
The bugle blew no frightful blast
Where th' sulphrous smoke its mantle cast,
For oft thy sons in forest field
The heavy broadsword learned to wield
In their old border frays.
Bred to reclaim the native soil
With sinewed limb and patient toil,
The forest path to stoutly fend,
Where foes did lurk, or wild feasts wend,
No danger did amaze.
Free as the mountain air they breathe,
The vassal's place they dare disown;
The blade from scabbard to unsheath
And see the slaughters harvest sown,
Ere wrong shall rule the day.
So when the midnight cry, "To arms!"
Did reach them at their northern farms,
They snatched the musket and the powder-horn,
And shook their brand with patriots' scorn,
And gathered to the fray.
Vermont, thy soul's young life was there,
There from thy rocks up leapt the fire
That made thy hills the altar-stair
To holy freedom's star-crowned spire,
While all the world did doubt.
In native hearts and native blades
The freeman's hope forever lives;
The soul that first in sorrow wades,
The most to human nature gives
In sorest times of drought.
190 VERMONT HISTORICAL
MAGAZINE.
The hosts of Albion sleep secure,
The mountain path to them is sure,
And in their dreams they wait the day
To feast and drive the mob away,
And
forage on the town.
That dream to England sealed her doom;
They roused to hear the cannon boom,
And see the mountaineers they scorned
In serried line of battle formed,
And on
them coming down.
And who here making pilgrimage,
When told how, with their muskets clubbed,
Our sires from breastworks drove the foe,
How here were English veterans drubbed
By
plowmen gloved in steel,
Shall say, the race keeps not to-day
The Spartan fire—
• •
• • •
• • •
•
Shall say, if with this trenchant warp
There runs not through it thread of gold;
Or if the Attic salt still flows
Through pulsing veins of later mold,
And
pledges colored wine.
• •
• • •
• • •
•
From hence the field of Bennington
With Concord and with Lexington,
Upon the patriot's scroll shall blaze,
And virtue's hearts proclaim her praise,
Till
chivalry's page shall end—
Shall tell how Mars did glut his rage,
How screamed the eagle round her nest,
When death or freedom was the gage,
While war unloosed her battle vest,
And
carnage rode a fiend.
• •
• • •
• • •
•
And where the nations strive and hope,
And in the breaking darkness grope,
Here may expiring faith still burn,
And see the patriot's emblem turn
Above
this crimson sea.
From another poem on the same subject:
How grand thy towering cliffs, where twines
The hemlock's
green to wreath thy crown;
How bright thy peaks when day declines,
As there thy
glory settles down.
When stirred the border fend, how rang
The note of
war;
• •
• • • •
• • •
And where the wolf ran down her prey
By grange girt
in with woodland dun,
The ranger hurried to the fray,
There flashed
the border-guardsman's gun.
And when a mightier cause called for
Thy sons to
draw the sword • •
•
• •
• • •
• • •
•
The bugle gave
the hills its blast.
And men in buckskin breeches came,
Their waists
slung with the powder-horn,
Their hearts with freedom's spark aflame, ,
And battled
till the STATE was born.
• • •
• • •
• thy border cry
Rang to the
Northern cliffs for help,
When Allen mustered for old Ti.,
And drove from
there the lion's whelp.
From there to Hoosick's bloody flume
Marched forth
our sires with hearts aflame,
And snatched the British lion's plume,
And wrote for
us a storied name.
From a remembrance to Vermont:
O, bring the spring that plumes the glen,
And hearty be
the greeting;
We'll think in kindness of the men
Whose hearts to
ours gave beating;
Nor shall their armor rust
Taken by us in trust.
• •
• • •
• • •
•
Bathed in the noon of peace, green, green
Forever, be
those hills;
Green where the hoar frost builds her screen,
And winter's
goblet fills,
The frost and cedar green!
Queen Virgin of the Ancient North,
Throned spirit
of the crags,
Who called the sturdy Aliens forth
To weave thy
battle-flags.
We take the sprig of pine,
Proud of our lineal line.
Vermont! Vermont! Our childhood's home,
Still home
where'er we roam.
MISS SUSAN GRIGGS.
BY
ANNA B. BRAGG,
Many efficient teachers of our district schools have been
reared and educated in this town, though the greater part have followed
teaching but a few terms before commencing "life work," but Miss
Griggs has made teaching the business of her life, and in years of service,
number of pupils, and different branches thoroughly learned and imparted to
others, has no equal here, and perhaps but few in our whole country. She was
born in this town, Feb. 1814. From her earliest schooldays, her book was her
favorite companion, often upon her wheel-bench, that sentence after sentence of
some coveted lesson might be committed to memory, while her hands spun thread
after thread of wool or flax, working willingly for herself and her brothers
and sisters, as was the custom in those days.
When 12 years of age, her father, an earnest Christian
man, died, leaving his wife and little ones to struggle along the path of life
alone in God's care. But as in his life he had often said, "Susan is our
student," so in all her young days after she seemed to hear his voice
encouraging her to give her time, talents and life to the work of Christian
education. She began teaching in the Sabbath-school at 13, and at 16 in a
district-school, where for many years her time was spent, and in attending
school, as she completed the course of
FAYSTON. 191
study at Newbury Seminary. In 1850, she was one of the
teachers sent out to the South and West by Gov. Slade. She taught one year at
Wilmington, N. C., and then went to Wolcottville, Ind., under the direction of
Gov. Slade, a small village in a new town, first teaching in the family of
George Wolcott, with the addition of a few neighbors' children; then in a small
school-house. The school so increased, Mr. Wolcott, the founder of the village,
built a convenient seminary at his own expense, furnished with musical
instruments, library, apparatus, etc. Here she taught for 17 years, principal
of the school, having sometimes one or two assistant teachers, and often a
hundred pupils. Beside the common and higher English branches, there were often
classes in German, Latin, French and painting, and always in music, vocal and
instrumental, and always a literary society, and always a Sabbath-school, in
which she taught a class, and was sometimes superintendent. She says
"these years were full of toil, but bright with hope that minds were there
awakened to the beauties of the inviting realms of purity and truth."
After a short rest with a brother in Missouri and another
in Wisconsin, she resumed teaching in Fort Wayne College, Ind.; afterward in
Iowa about 2 years, and is now in Kendallville, Ind., one of a corps of 12
teachers; 60 pupils under her charge. "Many will rise up and call her
blessed."
Mrs. Celia (Baxter) Brigham, of Evart, Michigan,
contributes the following for the Baxter family:
EBER H. BAXTER AND FAMILY
came to Fayston in April, 1831, and lived there 20 years.
They had 14 children; one died in infancy. They removed to Michigan with 10
children—two remained in Fayston—in 1851. Albert Baxter, eldest son, had then
lived in Mich. about 6 years. He has been for the last 20 years connected with
the Grand Rapids Eagle; is now editor of Grand Rapids Daily Eagle.
Albert, Celia—Mrs. C. B. Brigham; Rosina—Mrs. R. B. Cadwell, now in California;
Edwin, lawyer in Grand Haven, Mich.; Uri J., lawyer in Washington, D. C.;
Sabrina—Mrs. S. B. Cooper, Evart, Mich.; and Vienna I.—Mrs. V. I. B. Corman,
Lowell, Mich., of the Baxter family, are more or less known as occasional
authors in prose and poetry. Twelve children, the father now in his 80th year
(1879) still survive. Ira C., sixth son, left his body on the field of
Chickamauga, Sept. 20, 1863. E. H. Baxter was town clerk and justice of peace
in Fayston for several years.
MRS. CELIA B. BRIGHAM
has written many years for press, and for many newspapers
and journals short poems. She has sent us for her representation in the dear
old birthtown, a rather pretty collection, for which we can make room only for
the following:
TO MY SLEEPING BABE.
Gently, little cherub, gently
Droop those
weary eyelids now;
Slumber's hand is pressing lightly,
Softly on thy
cloudless brow.
Meekly, little sleeper, meekly
Folded on thy
guileless breast
Dimpled hands of pearly whiteness—
Lovely is thy
"rosy rest."
Calmly, little dreamer, calmly
Beats that tiny
heart of thine—
As the pulses of the leaflet,
Rocked to rest
at eventime,
Softly, little darling, softly
Dies away thy
mother's song;
And the angels come to guard thee,
Through the
night hours, lone and long.
Sweetly, blessed infant, sweetly
Fall their
whispers on thine ear;
Smiles are on thy lips of coral—
Snowy pinions
hover near.
TO AN UNSEEN MINSTREL.
The lark may sing to the chickadee,
From his lofty
azure throne,
Nor feel the thrill in the maple tree,
Where his
listener sits alone;
Even thus, thy spirit sings to me—
Hearest thou
the answering tone?
From their sunward flight, can thy tireless wings
Ever fold where the forest warbler sings?
Thou callest the voices of long ago
From
level-trodden graves,
As the wind may call an echoing note
From out the
dark sea caves—
As the burning stars of heaven may call
To the
restless, heaving waves—
That, ever-changing beneath their gaze,
Can answer only in broken rays!
THE NEGLECTED
BIBLE.
Precious, but neglected Bible!
Let me ope thy
lids once more,
And, with reverential feelings,
Turn the sacred
pages o'er.
192 VERMONT HISTORICAL
MAGAZINE.
Source of joy and consolation,
Vainly does thy
fount supply
Me with life's pure crystal waters—
Lo! I languish,
faint and die!
Not because is sealed the fountain
That could
soothe the keenest woe;
Not because the stream unfailing
Hath one moment
ceased to flow;
But because my thirsty spirit,
Seeking bitter
draught, passed by,
Heedlessly, the living waters—
Lo! I languish,
faint and die!
Descriptive of how many a Vermonter felt in 1851, is a
little "sonnet" below, by ELISHA ALDIS BRIGHAM, sent me by Mrs.
Brigham, that her husband may, as well as herself, have a little niche in the
history of their native town:
SONNET.
O, tell me not of Liberty's bright land!
Where man by brother man is bought and sold;
To toil in sweat and tears, for others gold,
Obedient to a tyrant's stern command;
Where children part upon the auction stand
To meet no more, and weeping parents torn
Asunder—slave-bound captives long to mourn,
Are scattered far and wide, a broken band.
Where Justice on proud Freedom's altar sleeps,
Where mercy's voice is never heard to sigh;
Where pity's hand ne'er wipes the tearful eye
Of Afric's exiles, who in misery weep—
The millions three who wear oppression's brand;
Oh! call it not sweet Freedom's happy land!
Fayston, 'Feb. 1851.
A whole budget from natives in the West: We will not give
any one's long piece entire; but not having the heart to leave any son or
daughter who knocks at the old Green Mountain door, out entirely, even if they
are unfortunately a "poet," we shall give some one short extract, or
sonnet for all who have sent home their pieces for Fayston, and let the dry
old, only statisticians, growl as they may. Here comes the Fayston men and
women of the pen for a page or two: First, a long poem, almost a news-column,
fine print, "written in my chamber at Washington, on the anniversary eve
of the assassination of President Lincoln." We will have six or seven
verses from
THE
ANNIVERSARY OF THE ASSASSINATION.
BY H. J. BAXTER
Why sound the
bells
So mournfully upon the air of night?
Why volley forth the guns upon the night,
With sudden
peal that tells
Of darkling horror and of dire affright ?
The morn shall
ope
With a dread tale that tells of dark eclipse—
Of a dark deed that throws its black eclipse
On all a
nation's hope,
And smites the joy that filled a nation's lips?
Stricken and
low!
Aye, let us weep—weep for the guilt and crime—
The ingrate sense—the coward guilt and crime!
Dissolve in
tears and woe
The darkling horror of this monstrous time!
His name
breathe not,
His thrice-accursed name, whose brutal hand—
Whose foul, polluted heart and brutal hand
A demon's
purpose wrought,
And whelmed in grief our glad, rejoicing land.
• •
• • •
• • •
•
A nation's heart bowed with him in the dust
We turn our
hope in vain
To seek a chieftain worthy of his trust.
No marvel here!
Two kingliest come not haply born and twinned—
Each age its one great soul, nor matched, nor twinned,
Owning no
mortal peer—
So is his glory in our age unkinned.
His mantle
fell—
On whom is not yet shown—yet sure its folds
Are buried not—its rich and loving folds
Shall lay some
blessed spell
On him who inset his noble spirit hold.
Great
chieftain! rest!
Our hearts shall go as pilgrims to thy tomb;
Our spirits mourn and bless thy martyr tomb;
We deem thy lot
is blest;
Our love shall rob our sorrow of its gloom,
All coming time
Shall never despoil thy glory or its crown—
Each year Shall set its jewels in thy crown—
Each day bell's
passing chime
Shall add it tongue to speak thy just renown.
LITTLE
BEN.
BY SARAH BRIGHAM MANSFIELD.
In a lonely spot in a dismal street
Little Ben sat chafing his bare, cold feet,
And so hungry, too, for nothing to eat,
All the long
day had poor Ben.
His mother, alas, had long been dead—
So long, he could just remember, her and
The sweet pale face as she knelt by his bed
And prayed God
to bless little Ben.
The twilight deepened, how dark it grew,
And how heavily fell the chill night dew,
And the moaning winds pierced through and through
The form of
poor little Ben.
"Oh! why am I left here alone," he cried,
"Dear mamma told me before she died
She was going to Heaven; Oh, mamma," he sighed,
"Why don't
you come for poor Ben?"
"Can you be happy, tho' in Heaven a saint,
While I am so cold, so weary, so faint?
Dear mother, dost hear your poor darling's plaint?
Oh, come for
your own little Ben!"
The morning came with its rosy light,
And kissed the wan cheeks and lids so white.
They were closed for aye! in the lone night
An angel had
come for poor Ben.
FAYSTON. 193
THE
FIRST FLOWER OF SPRING.
BY ZIBA W.
BOYCE, (deceased.)
The first April violet beside the bare tree,
Looking gayly up seemed to be saying to me,
"I come with yon robin, sweet spring to recall,
There caroling above me the glad news to all—
How pleased all your feelings—your eye and your ear;
With gay exultation you welcome us here;
But in the soon future, surrounded by flowers,
And Summer bird's plumage, far gayer than ours,
Forgotten the perils we willingly bore—
First messengers telling of winter no more."
I thought of the bird, and the flower, and then
Confessed it is thus with all pioneer men.
Let them labor and suffer new truths to disclose,
Their wants or their woes there's nobody knows.
The world owns the work when the labor is done—
They, the bird and the flower, forgotten and gone.
THE RAIN.
BY MRS. D. T.
SMITH.
When from winter's icy spell
Burst the brooklets in the dell,
With a
song;
When the early robins call
From the sunny garden wall,
All day
long;
When the crocus shows its face,
And the fern its dainty grace,
And the
daffodil;
And the dandelion bright
Decks the field with golden light
On the
hill;
When the Spring has waked a world again,
And the
apple-blossoms whiten,
And the grasses
gleam and brighten,
Then we listen to the rythmic patter of the rain.
When the lilies, snowy white,
Gleam upon the lakelet bright,
'Mid
their leaves;
And the twittering swallows fly,
Building nests for by and by,
'Neath
the eaves;
Roses blush i' the dewy morn,
Bees their honey-quest have gone
All the
day;
And the daisies, starry, bright,
Glisten in the firefly's light
As they
may;
When Summer decks the mountain and the plain,
When she binds
her golden sheaves,
Then she tilts
her glossy leaves
In the splashing and the dashing of the rain.
When the maple forests redden,
And the sweet ferns brown and deaden
On the
lea,
Straightly furrowed lie the acres,
And we near the roar of breakers
Out at
sea;
When the birds their columns muster,
And the golden pipins cluster
On the
bough,
And the autumn breeze is sighing,
Springtime past and Summer dying,
Here and
now;
And autumn winds are filled with sounds of pain
When the
katydids are calling;
Then the
crimson leaves are falling
Through the weeping and the moaning of th' rain.
Dubuque, Iowa.
THE MOSS-COVERED TROUGH.
BY S.
MINERVA BOYCE.
That moss-covered trough, decaying there yonder,
I remember it
well when but a child;
Though years have flown by, I still love to wander
Along the old
road by the woodland wild.
Ah! yes, I remember when full and o'erflowing,
With the clear,
sparkling nectar, so cool;
The old farmer came with his bucket from mowing,
And we drank
from his cup, then trudged on to school.
And then 'neath the low-spreading maple close by it,
Were gathered
the wildlings of May;
There blossomed the hat of lad who drew nigh it,
And blue-bird
and robin sang sweeter that day.
Though now thrown aside, to give room for another,
All neglected,
and moss-grown, and old,
I still find a charm to be found in none other,
Were it carved
e'er so lovely, or plated with gold.
Long ago the old farmer finished his mowing,
Filled his last
bucket, "reaped his last grain;"
Then went just beyond where seed-time and sowing
Will never
recall him to labor again.
And here we give, if we may nip at will, the buds, for
which we only have room, a pretty extract from SABRINA BANTER, born in
Fayston:
BUDS
AND BLOSSOMS.
We walked within my garden
On a dewy, balmy
morn—
• •
• • •
• • •
•
We paused beside a rose-bush,
The swelling
buds to note—
To drink the gushing fragrance
Which round us
seemed to float;
• •
• • •
• • •
•
One bud we'd viewed but yesternight,
When very fair
it grew—
We'd waited for the morrow's light
To see it
washed in dew,
A worm had found the curling leaf,
• •
• • •
• • •
•
Had marred the bursting budlet,
Had withered stem
and flower.
Alas! for earthly happiness,
In bitterness I
cried,
Naught beautiful, naught lovely,
May on this
earth abide!
A blight is on the floweret,
A blight is on
the grove,
A doubly blighting power upon
Those objects
that we love!
"Mortal!" the voice seemed near,
And musical the
tone,
• •
• • •
• • •
•
Are there no buds, whose brightness
Outshines the
garden rose?
What worm had nipped the blossom?
Who answereth
for those ?
"Within the human garden
How many a
floweret lies,
Despoiled by reckless gardener—
• •
• • •
• • •
•
And in the whispered lays we heard,
And from the
flowers there smiled,
A plea for human rose-buds—
• •
• • •
• • •
•
194 VERMONT HISTORICAL
MAGAZINE.
Taking a skipping extract from EMOGENE M. BOYCE:
I paused once more, gave a few lingering looks
At the dear olden place, the remembered nooks:
The orchard, the garden, the dark, silent mill,
The little red cot at the foot of the hill,
Where the little trout brook, still murmured alone:
The old lofty pines sang the same mournful song,
When with father and mother, we children four,
Had gathered at eve 'round the old cottage door.
SOLDIERS OF FAYSTON.
BY
DORRIC S. STODDARD.
The notes of war that rang through the land in the winter
and spring of 61 were not without their effect upon the town of Fayston. Her
hardy sons willingly responded to their country's call. The following is the
record of services rendered and lives given, who served for their own town in
the order of enlistment:
THOMAS MAXWELL, the first resident of Fayston to respond
to the call for volunteers. He enlisted May 7, 1861, at the age of 20 years, in
Co. F. 2d Vt. Reg.; was discharged, by reason of sickness, Feb 21, 1863;
re-enlisted Mar. 20, '64, in Co. F. 17th Vt. Reg.; severely wounded in the
Wilderness May 6, '64. The ball entered the neck, passed through the roots of
the tongue, and lodged in the base of the head, where it still remains;
discharged June 17, '65.
MARK AND LUTHER CHASE, brothers, enlisted Aug. 14, '61, in
Co. H. 6th Vt.; aged 26 and 18 years. Mark was discharged May 29, '62;
reenlisted Nov. 27, '63; taken prisoner, and died at Andersonville, Ga., July
3, '64. Luther died in hospital Jan. 31, '62.
GEO. SOMERVILLE, age 23, enlisted in Co. G. 6th Vt., Aug.
29, '61; discharged June 23, '62.
JOHN H. HUNTER, age 41; enlisted Sept. 2, '61, Co. H. 6th
Vt.; chosen corporal; discharged; reenlisted Dec. 15, '63; lost an arm in the
service; finally discharged Mar. 10, '65.
GEO. L. MARBLE, age 30, enlisted in Co. G. 6th Vt., Sept.
10, '61; reenlisted Feb. 8. '64; taken prisoner Oct. 19, '64; supposed to have
died in Libby Prison.
WM. M. STRONG, age 19, enlisted in Co. G. 6th Vt., Sept.
23, '61 ; served 3 years; mustered out Oct 28, '64.
ALLEN E. MEHUREN, enlisted in Co. G. 6th Vt., Sept, 27,
'61, age 23; discharged by reason of sickness, Feb. 4, '63.
CORNELIUS MCMULLEN, age 29, enlisted in Co. B. 6th Vt.,
Oct. 3, '61, re-enlisted Dec. 15, '63, transferred to Co. H. Oct. 16, '64,
served till the close of the war, mustered out June 26, '65.
HENRY C. BACKUS, age 24, enlisted in Co. G. 6th Reg't.,
Oct. 7, '61, promoted sergeant, mustered out Oct. 28, '64.
WARREN C. PORTER, age 37, enlisted Oct. 15, '61, in Co. G.
6th Vt., served 3 years, mustered out Oct. 28, '64.
CHESTER S. DANA, age 33, enlisted in Co. B. 10th Vt., July
18, '62, chosen 5th sergeant, promoted to 1st ser'gt., sick in general hospital
much of the latter part of his service, discharged May 22, '65.
LAFAYETTE MOORE, enlisted in Co. F. 2d Vt. as a recruit,
July 30, '62, age 26, died in the service Feb. 29, '64.
HEMAN A. MOORE, age 21, enlisted in Co. F. 2d Vt., Aug. 2,
'62, mustered out June 19, '65.
ELI GIBSON, recruit in Co. G. 6th Vt.. enlisted Aug. 13,
'62, age 22, died in the service April 7, '64.
LEWIS BETTIS, a resident of Warren, enlisted for this town
in Co. G. 6th Vt., Aug. 13, '62, age 37; transferred to the Invalid Corps, Jan.
15, '64.
JOHN CHASE, age 23, enlisted in Co. G. 6th Vt., Aug. 13,
'62; mustered out June 19, '65.
NATHAN THAYER, age 23; enlisted in Co. H. 6th Vt., Aug.
13, '62; discharged June 3, '63.
NELSON J. BOYCE, age 32; enlisted in Co. G. 6th Vt., Aug.
16, '62; transferred to the Invalid Corps July 1, '63.
LESTER H. HARRIS, age 25; enlisted Aug. 18, 62, in Co. F.
2d Vt.; died May 18, '63.
The following 17 soldiers all members of Co. B. 13th Vt.,
(9 months), enlisted Aug. 25, '62; mustered in Oct. 10, '62, at Brattleboro;
mustered out at the same place July 21, '63; the battle of Gettysburg being
the only one in which they participated:
GEORGE O. BOYCE, 2d serg't., age 28;
FAYSTON. 195
with others of his company taken prisoner by rebel
guerrillas while going from Camp Carusi to Fairfax station with supply teams,
May 14, '63. They were paroled the next day, and returned to the regiment.
Dorric S. Stoddard, 3d corporal, age 28; William E. Backus,
age 22, detailed scout; John Baird, age 20, died of fever soon after returning
home; Matthew Blair, age 27, afterwards re-enlisted in 56 Mass., killed in the
Wilderness; Charles D. Billings, age 19, died at Camp Carusi May 19, '63;
Chauncey Carpenter, age 39, re-enlisted Dec. 31, '63, in Co. C. 17th Vt.,
discharged May 13, '65; Samuel J. Dana, age 29, wounded at Gettysburg; Royal S.
Haskins, age 21; Charles C. Ingalls, age 18, re-enlisted Sept. 1, '64, in Co.
G. 6th Vt., mustered out June 19, '65; Stephen Johnson, age 21, re-enlisted
Aug. 26, '64, in Co. G. 6th Vt., mustered out June 19, '65; Ziba H. McAllister,
age 21, re-enlisted in Cavalry Co. C. Nov. 30, '63, transferred to Co. A.
June 19, '65, mustered out June 26, '65; Levi Nelson, age 20; William Nelson,
age 26, Daniel Posnett, age 47, Winfield S. Rich, age 24, Reuben Richardson,
age 45, transferred to Co. H., re-enlisted Nov. 30, '63, in Co. H. 6th Regt.,
discharged May 12, '65.
William G. Wilkins, age 18, enlisted in Co. F. 2d Vt.,
June 16, '63, discharged Jan. 21, '64.
Robert Hoffman, age 21, enlisted in the 3d Battery, Oct.
19, '64, discharged June 15, '65.
John W. Palmer, enlisted in Cavalry, Co. C. Nov. 28, '63,
age 23, transferred to Co. A. June 21, '65, mustered out Aug. 9, '65.
Judson W. Richardson, age 29, enlisted in Co. H. 6th Vt.,
promoted corporal June 19, '65, and mustered out June 26, '65.
Charles O. Dyke, age 18, enlisted Nov. 30, '63, in Co. H.
6th Vt.; mustered out June 26, '65.
Myron Mansfield, age 18, enlisted Dec. 2, '63, in Co. H.
2d U. S. Sharp-shooters; transferred to Co. H. 4th Vt., Feb. 25, '65; supposed
to have died at Andersonville.
Benj. B. Johnson, age 20, enlisted Dec. 3, '63, in Co. G.
6th Vt.; transferred to Vet. Res. Corps, Dec. 4, '64; mustered out July 15, '65.
Wm. H. Johnson, age 18, enlisted Dec. 3, '63, in Co. G.
6th Vt.; pro. corp. Sept. 23, '64; serg't. June 20, '65; mustered June 26, '65.
Charles B. Corliss, age 18, enlisted Dec. 3, '63, in Co.
G. 6th Vt.; discharged June 28, '65.
Anson O. Brigham, age 21 , enlisted Dec. 5, '63, in Co. H.
6th Vt.; trans. to invalid corps, and discharged June 28, '65.
Calvin B. Marble, age 18, enlisted Dec. 9, '63, in Co. G.
6th Vt.; mustered out June 26, '65.
Edwin E. Chaffee, age 18, enlisted Dec. 9, '63 in Co. H.
6th Vt.; pro. corp. June 19, '63; must. out June 26, '65.
Asa E. Corliss, age 20, enlisted Sept. 7, '64, in Co. G.
6th Vt.; must. out July 19, '65.
John W. Ingalls, age 28, enlisted Sept. 16, '64, but did
not enter service.
This town also furnished 14 non-resident soldiers, of whom
I can give but a meagre report, as follows:
Geo. Arnold, Francis E. Buck, Thomas Bradley, 1st army
corps; Sidney Dolby, 54 Mass. (colored); Wm. W. Green, Philip Gross, 1st A. C.;
Wm. J. Hopkins, cav.; John J. Hern, 1st A. C.; Randall Hibbard, 1st A. C.;
Frederic Kleinke, 1st A. C.; Nelson Parry, Co. B. 7th Vt., Nicholas Schmidt,
1st A. C.; John S. Templeton; James Williamstown, 1st A. C.
The following persons were furnished under draft, five of
whom paid commutation: Hiram E. Boyce, Eli Bruce, Jr., Nehemiah Colby, Charles
M. Fisher, Julius T. Palmer, and one, Nathan Boyce, procured a substitute.
This town probably furnished from her own residents as
many, if not more, soldiers for other towns than were credited to her from
non-residents, the record of some of which is given as follows:
Andrew J. Butler, Co. H. 6th Vt.; Hiland G. Campbell, 3d
Vt. Battery; Alba B. Durkee, Co. I. 9th Vt.; Timothy Donivan, Co. H. 6th Vt.
In Co. G. 6th Vt.: Edward Dillon, G. W. Fisher, James N.
Ingalls, Robert Max‑
196 VERMONT HISTORICAL
MAGAZINE.
well and Samuel Maxwell. In 3d Vt.: Wm. W. McAllister. In
Co. G. 6th Vt.: James H. Somerville, Ichabod Thomas. Dexter Marble lost a leg
in the service, in a Wisconsin regiment.
Thus I have given as best I can from memory, and from data
at command, an imperfect record of Fayston and Fayston men during the
rebellion. Undoubtedly the foregoing record is not perfect, yet I think it is
substantially correct.
Probably no town in the state suffered more financially
than this. During the latter part of the war when large bounties were demanded
by volunteers, and paid by wealthy towns, Fayston, to save herself from draft
was obliged in one year (1864) to raise for bounties and town expenses the
almost unheard of sum of $12.50 cents upon every dollar of her grand list, thus
subjecting the owner of a simple poll list to the payment of a tax of $25. Yet
this enormous sum was paid immediately, with scarce a murmur of complaint, and
not a dollar left to be a drag-weight upon taxpayers in after years.
Fayston can look back upon her financial record as a
town, and the military record of her soldiers with no feelings but those of
honor, satisfaction and pride; knowing that the privations and valor of her
sons in the field, and the liberality of her citizens at home all contributed
their mite to keep the grand old flag still floating over a free and undivided
nation.
GRAND
ARMY REPUBLIC'S RESPONSE
TO SUMNER'S BILL FOR ERASING
OUR BATTLE RECORDS.
BY D. S.
STODDARD.
Blot out our battle records, boys,
Charles
Summer's bill doth say;
Forget that you were soldiers once,
And turn your
thoughts away.
Yes, turn your thoughts away, my boys,
So noble, brave
and true;
Forget you lugged a knapsack once,
And wore the
army blue.
Flaunt not that starry flag, my boys,
With Lee's
Mills, on its fold,
'Twill make some rebel's heart ache, boys,
To see it there
so bold.
And blot out Savage Station, too,
And likewise
Malvern Hill;
That was a noisy place, you know,
But blot it
out, you will.
Fort Henry, too, and Donelson,
Where Grant
"Surrender" spake,
In such decided tones it made
The rebel
Pillow shake.
And Shiloh, too, and Vicksburg, where
One Fourth of
July day,
Brave Pemberton his well-tried sword
At the feet of
Grant did lay.
And Cedar Creek, and Winchester,
And Sheridan's
famous ride :—
Forget it, boys, forget it all,
It hurts the
rebels' pride.
And Fredericksburg, and Antietam,
Where cannon
rang and roared;
And Gettysburg, where three long days
Grape shot and
shell were poured.
Where thousands freely gave their lives,
And drenched
with blood the sand,
To stay the flow of Treason's tide
In Freedom's
happy land.
And Richmond, too, and Petersburg,
And the
Wilderness, forget;
And comrades dear who fought so well,
Whose sun of
life there set.
Forget, my boys, you ever marched
With Sherman to
the sea!
Deny you ever fought against
The rebels
under Lee!
And Appomattox Court House, too,
Where Lee
dissolved his camp;
And gave his long and well-tried sword
To General U.
S. Grant.
Those names, we've loved them long, my boys,
And oft a glow
of pride
Has thrilled through every vein, to think
We fought there
side by side.
And oftentimes, my comrades dear,
These comes a
sadder thought—
The price, the price! by which our land
These cherished
records bought.
And now shall we erase those names,
And make our
battle-flags,
Which e'er have been the soldier's pride,
Nothing but
worthless rags?
No more shall read those glorious names
While swinging
in the breeze?
No more our hearts shall swell with pride
To think of
bygone deeds?
And must we suffer all this shame
To please that
rebel horde,
Who brought the war upon themselves
By drawing
first the sword?
Then we must ask their pardon, too,
For what we've
done and said;
Tramp down the graves of comrades dear.
And honor rebel
dead.
And I suppose the next kind thing
That Sumner'll
want is this,
That we get down upon our knees,
And rebel
coat-tails kiss!
Now, comrades, when all this appears.
'Twill be when
we are dead!
When every man who fought the rebs
Sleeps in his
narrow bed!
MARSHFIELD. 197
For while there's one of us alive,
Though kicked,
or cuffed, or spurned!
Our battle-flags shall bear those names
That we so
richly earned!
And when we swing them in the breeze,
Those names
shall glisten there,
As long as they enfold a stripe
Or bear a
single star.
Rebels may sigh for what they lost,
And mourn for
what we won;—
Their moans and sighs can ne'er atone
For half the
mischief done.
And comrades, when we older grow,
And gray hairs
fill our head,
And some of us lie sleeping there
Amid the quiet
dead;
Our children then will catch the theme
Those
battle-flags inspire,
And oftentimes their hearts be filled
With patriotic
fire!
And should it be in future years
That Treason
rears its head,
And threatens to destroy the land
For which we
fought and bled;
Our sons will hoist those war worn flags,
And wave them
tow'rd the sky,
While rebels learn again, my boys,
That Treason
then must die.
Those records fair shall never be
Expunged from
human sight!
Before we'll suffer that, my boys,
We'll go again,
and fight.
Fayston, Vt., Jan. 8,1873.
Mrs. L. B. Boyce continues and thus; closes the record of
Fayston:
SAMUEL
DANA
has been a resident of Fayston for many years, and raised
a large family here. Six of his sons and one son-in-law were in the army in the
great rebellion. Several of them were seriously wounded while in service, yet
all are now living and the father and mother also.
I have been able to gather but little concerning our
military record previous to our late war.
In 1841, one Jesse Mix was a revolutionary pensioner, and
William Wait, and a Mrs. Hutchinson. John Cloud, who lost a leg in the
revolutionary war, was for many years a resident of this town, but died
clsewhere.
Of the war of 1812 there are no records that I can find,
and the old inhabitants are either dead or moved away.
——————————————
MARSHFIELD.
BY
MRS. H. C. PITKIN.
Marshfield was granted to the Stockbridge tribe of
Indians, Oct. 16, 1782, and chartered to them June 22, 1790, by the General
Assembly of Vermont, containing 23,040 acres; lat. 44° 19', long. 4° 30' on the
upper waters of the Winooski; bounded N. by Cabot, E. by Peacham and Harris'
Gore, S. by East Montpelier, Plainfield and Goshen Gore, W. by Calais and East
Montpelier.
In the charter it is stipulated the township shall be
divided into 75 equal shares, etc., with the usual charter conditions.
The charter is signed by Gov. Moses Robinson and Joseph
Tracy, Sec.
The township was purchased of the Indians by Capt. Isaac
Marsh of Stockbridge, Mass., in honor of whom it is named, for £140 lawful
money, and the deed was signed by 18 Indians, thus:
O Joseph Shawguthguat, O Hendrick Aupanmat, O Jehosuhim
Alokaim, 0 Peter Pohijhionurpjsut, + Joseph Luonahant, + John Pophmin, +
Solomon Quargariahont, + Uhndrw Warmaeruph, + Vendru Waumurmn, + Hudrink
Ihchumhwmh, + Moses Laupunmsapeat, + Thomas Wind, + John Thonhpol, + David
Nesonukausdahawauk, + Cornelius Janmauch, + David Nesonuhkeah Grum, + Abraham
Maummumthickhur, + Isaac Unamprey.
This deed was given July 29, 1789, and witnessed by David
Pixley and John Sargeant, missionary.
These Indians, it is supposed, when they secured the grant
of this land, intended to remove here, and make it their hunting-ground, but
finding white settlements were beginning to cluster around it, they disposed
of it as best they could, and sought the unbroken forests of New York and
called the new home there, in honor of the old one in Massachusetts.
Capt. Marsh had married, for his second wife, a young
widow by the name of Pitkin, of East Hartford, Conn., and four of her sons, and
two of his own daughters were among the pioneers of his new township. Caleb
Pitkin one of these sons, came from East Hartford as a surveyor, with a com-