Monday, March 8, 2010
Ransom W. Towle Letters
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Checking Chester's Cairns with Bruce Flewelling
"On the other side of the mountain--the Bingo side over Jones Mountain."
Map of The Gap
Map showing Goshen Four Corners, Mount Horrid and the Great Cliff, the Neshobe River flowing west, Romance Mountain, Hogback Mtn, the Long Trail and Sucker Brook Shelter (where I fed myself on the best brook trout one morning forty years ago!), and the Great Cliffs of Mount Horrid, with the Smith Brook running East, where Chester Smith's stone cairns--hundreds of them--are located.
This is The Gap. The Dividing Line. Where brooks flow East to join others and become rivers—Branches of the White River (itself a branch—one of 3). And begin West. Out here is also Moosalamoo, a unique land-magement, wildlife area, and town/government partnership with some great goals and ideas, not to mention the fun of non-motorized outdoor recreation and camping area with trails from the challenging to the religious.
Schools in West Rochester
There were three schools in West Rochester from 1850 on, the West Hill School (pictured), in District No. 13, the Corner School, in District 14 in Bingo, and the Branch School, in District No. 15 furthest West in Bingo, located in various places--possibly at one time not even in Windsor Co but a half mile over the line into Addison Co, at the foot of Wyman Hill. This was probably due to the activity of the sawmills. Also, the "Amen" church on at the Four Corners (intersection of Route 73 and Bingo Road, in what was once the town of Robinson), served as a school for a while, as well as a church, and served as a place for other functions as well, like entertainment and dances.
Harry Washburn
Harry Washburn was Ransom Towle's cousin, friend, neighbor, and fellow soldier. Harry died at Camp Griffin, March 14, 1862, age 21. Ransom notes his ill-health in his letters. "Nov. 26 1861 Headquarters Camp Griffin, Fairfax County Va.
"Your most welcome letter found Camp Griffin last night and found me better than some previous ones though not in very good strength. The great peculiarity of the cases of sickness here seems to be that when the disease has left a person it is almost impossible to regain our strength. There are those here Harry Washburn for one, had the measles some four weeks since and is not able to be out though there seems to be nothing ailing him but a general prostrations. Carlos Carr[1] is another case though he first had typhoid fever. Most of the West Rochester Boys are unable to do duty though none of them [are] dangerously sick".[2]
[1] Carlos Wellington Carr, cred. Brandon, VT, age 23,
enl 9/4/61, m/i 9/21/61, 2SGT, Co. E, 4th VVI, pr 1SGT, comn 2LT, Co. I, 7/19/62 (9/29/62), pr 1LT, 5/5/64 (6/11/64), tr to Co. A 2/25/65, tr to Co. C, tr to Co. F, pow, Weldon Railroad, 6/23/64, prld 3/1/65, m/o 5/6/65 (more)
Born: 7/13/1838, Died: 9/11/1914, buried: Pine Hill cemetery, Brandon, VT.
[2] Marshall (1999) writes, “Of the five thousand men in the Vermont brigade, as many as a thousand at a time were sick at Camp Griffin, a ratio far out of proportion to that of the camp as a whole. Among the diseases common at the camp, measles and mumps infected many who had never been exposed before and were now living in close quarters” (p. 48).
Bingo Family Burial Plot
Bingo Cemetery
- Bingo Cemetery, Windsor County, Rochester.
- West Hill Cemetery, Windsor County, Rochester.
- Goshen Cemetery, Addison County.
West Hill Cemetery
Until 1847, West Hill was called Old Philadelphia. Hunters still say, "Let's go up to Old Philadelphia to hunt bear!"
Goshen Cemetery
Saturday, March 6, 2010
West Hill and the Land of Goshen
What's West Hill have to do with Goshen? Before 1847, West Hill was part of the town of Goshen. It wasn't until 1847 that a large tract of land--11,600 acres--was parceled off to the town of Rochester.
This included the already settled West Hill, called Old Philadelphia, as well as parts of Bingo. For this and other reasons, West Hill's early settlers came from Goshen, and more "the Brandon side of things than the Rochester side," said Rochester historian Marcus Blair pointed.
Goshen also owns it's own "national forest," with so much land there is "kickback" to the citizens...maybe maple syrup or some wood.
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Lieut. Ransom W. Towle
Monday, March 1, 2010
Robinson at the turn of the Twentieth Century
Over half of these buildings are gone. Robinson was a mill town with some large sawmills, in Robinson, up in Bingo (the area that you will find if you don't make the 90-degree turn that Route 73 makes and continue straight on the dirt road), and along Brandon Brook at the foot of West Hill, up Chittenden Brook, and along Brandon Brook as the road climbs towards the gap towards Mount Horrid.