Descendants of William Carpenter of Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony, now part of Bristol County, MA

Notes


Joseph Winters

http://www.archive.org/stream/genealogicalfami03incutt/genealogicalfami03incutt_djvu.txt
GENEALOGICAL AND FAMILY HISTORY OF WESTERN NEW YORK - A RECORD OF THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF HER PEOPLE IN THE MAKING OF A COMMONWEALTH AND THE BUILDING OF A NATION COMPILED UNDER THE EDITORIAL SUPERVISION OF WILLIAM RICHARD CUTTER, A. M. corresponding secretary and historian of new england historic-genealogical Society; librarian Emeritus of woburn Public Library; Author OF "Cutter Family," "History of Arlington," etc., etc.

( I ) Joseph Winters, of this New York fam- ily, was born, lived and died in Orange county. New York. He lived to the age of ninety-six years and his wife to one hundred and four years. He married . Children : By- ram. Joseph, Oscar, Thomas. (H) Joseph (2), son of Joseph (i) Win- ters, was born in Orange county. New York, April 2, 1820, died at .Smithboro, Tioga town- ship. Tioga county, in 1887. He came to the town of Tioga from Orange county in i860 and lived there the remainder of his life. He was a farmer, also a general merchant, con- ducted a creamerv, and at the time of his death was postmaster at Tioga Center, in religion he was a Baptist, m politics a Demo- crat. He married ( first j Julia A., daughter of Isaac Carpenter, of Orange county. He married (second) Sarah Elizabeth Carpenter, sister of his first wife. His widow died in 1903, aged seventy-eight years. Children by first wife: Sarah, born May 1, 1840, married William Cole, of Candor; Judson B., men- tioned below; Joseph E., a physician in New York City. Children by second wife: John, deceased; Julia, born June 15, 1853, married Edward J. Johnson, of Waverly ; Edgar, a druggist, of Bufi^alo, New V ork ; Carrie, niarned Hiram Horton, of Los Angeles, Cali- fornia ; Byram Lee, mentioned below ; Kate, born March 18, 1868, married George L. Free- land, of I'assaic, New Jersey; Harry B., born October 15, 1870, superintendent of State Farm, Albany.

(HI) Judson Beebe, son of Joseph (2) Winters, was born in Alinisink, Orange county. New York, April 2,1, 1844. He at- tended the public schools and was a pupil when his father was a teacher. During his bo_\hood he followed farnnng, and when a young man taught school. In 1864 he became a bookkeeper in the store of Robert Cameron. After five years with this employer he worked two years in a dry goods store. In 1871 he took charge of a hotel at Williamsport, Penn- sylvania, the Herdick House, now the Park Hotel, and continued there for four years. In 1875 ^^6 returned to Owego and in part- nership with Charles H. Hyde he bought the grocery business of Robert Cameron & Sons and continued the business under the firm name of Hyde & Winters, dealing' in groceries and produce. From 1891 until 1896 he con- tinued the business alone. After selling out in 1896 he went to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he leased oil lands and remained for two years in the oil Imsiness. In 1898 he went to Montana and engaged in the fire in- surance business until 1905, and since then he has been the proprietor of a flourishing' real estate and insurance business at Owego. New York. He has been active in politics and has been president of the village of Owego. In politics he is a Democrat. He is a member of the Ba])tist church. He married, in 1868, Emily D. Smith, of Smithboro, daughter of James W. and Abi- gail (Tavlor) Smith. They have no children. (Ill) Byram Lee, son of Jcseph (2) Win- I2I4 NEW YORK. ters, was born at Smithboro, Tioga county, Xew York, September, 1805. He was edu- cated in the schools of his native town, in the Doylestown Seminary, Pennsylvania, the Peddie Institute, New Jersey, Phillips Acad- emy, Andover, Massachusetts, and studied law at Columbia University, from which he grad- uated with the degree of Bachelor of Laws in 1888. He was admitted to the bar and practiced law in New York City for fourteen years. In 1902 he came to Smithboro to im- prove the old homestead. The farm then con- sisted of 160 acres. From time to time he has added to the acreage until he now has 800 acres under cultivation, supporting a herd of 125 cattle. His dairy is stocked with thor- oughbred registered Holsteins and Jerseys, and is one of the finest in the state. Many of his cows have a record of 1,100 pounds of milk a year. The milk from .his dairy is shipped in bottles sealed on the farm and sold as certiiied by the Kings County Medical Com- mission. He has thoroughly modern barns and all the improved machinery for farm work, liesides his own handsome mansion, he has eight houses on the farm for employees. He makes a specialty of raising seed oats. In lyii he sold a crop of 4,000 bushels for $1.25 a bushel and in the same season raised a thou- sand tons of ensilage and 360 tons of hay. In addition to the care of this farm, Mr. Win- ters is owner and proprietor of The ]]\ivcrly Free Press. In 1906 he bought The Tioga County Record and The Owego Daily Record and a Waverly newspaper, consolidating the three under the name of The JVai'erly Free Press-Record. His printing plant includes two linotype machines, three job presses and sev- eral large cylinder presses. His office is one of the best equipped and most modern in ar- rangement and fittings of anv of its size in the state. He owns the Waverly Opera House. He is president and one of the larg- est stockholders in the Chamber of Commerce, which has seventy-three acres of land on which the railroads and switches are located in the village of Waverly, and individually he also ow'ns twenty-three acres of this tract. In politics Mr. Winters is a Republican. He represented the district in the assemblv at Al- bany in 1905-06. and was renominated bv ac- clamation. While in the assemblv he ser\'ed on committees on general laws, militarv af- fairs and taxation. He is one of the mana'jers of the Rome Custodial Asvlum. He is :\ mem- ber of the order of Free and Accepted Ma- sons, of Smithboro ; the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, of Smithboro, and the Improved Order of Red Men, of Tioga Center. He is a prominent member of the Baptist church. He married, August 25, 1908, Susan R. Reynolds, of Syracuse, New York, daughter of Dr. Frank and Lucy (Rapelyea) Reynolds. They have one child, Byram Lee, Jr., born in .Syracuse, New York, July 3, 191 1.


4123. William Carpenter

BIBLE: H&E Phinney's Sterotype Edition - The Holy Bible - Cooperstown, (NY).  Sterotyped, printed and published by H. & E. Phinney, and sold by them at their book-store, and by the Booksellers generally in the United States. 1829.    "Carpenter Family Bible" as reported in the "Ohio Genealogical Society Report" Vol. 18 Number 4 (Winter 1978).  PO Box 2625, Mansfield, OH  44906-0625     ISSN Number 0473-9825.
Submitted by: William J. McIntosh  Box 100 , Clinton, OH  44216


4125. Jesse Carpenter Jr.

Number 2307 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Family on page 473 (# 706).

BIBLE data below has a Jesse junior marriage data. It it for this person?
Subj:    ROLOSON BIBLE
Date:   11/24/1999 5:16:47 AM Pacific Standard Time
From:   dburrows1@juno.com (Daniel H. Burrows)
To: NYORANGE-L@rootsweb.com
The following abstract was made by Daniel H.
Burrows of Otisville, NY on 26 May 1996 from a
Bible that was purchased at a garage sale from the
Ferguson family of Greenville. All bible entries are verbatim.
Found in a Roloson Family Bible measuring about 8
1/2 by 11 inches with a 1819 date of publication:
Births:
Peter Roloson  July 4th 1783
Rachel Roloson November 29 1783 (No doubt
his wife, see marriages that follow)
Claricy (?) Vansickel November 30th 1833
Samuel W. Vansickel May 21 1836
Mercy Roloson born February 8th 1804
Eliza Roloson born June 27th 1806
Sarah Roloson born November 30th 1808
Mary Roloson born April 6th 1811
Johnson Roloson born October 27th 1813
Juliana Roloson born September 24th 1816
Peter Roloson born July 18th 1819
Thomas Roloson born January 28th 1823
Phebe Maria Roloson born December 5th 1844
Aaron D. Roloson born April 25th 1848
Jesse P. Roloson born April 21st 1852
Alfred C. Roloson born May 16th 1856
(The last 4 children probably children of Thomas N.
and Phoebe (---) Roloson -- see hand written note below)
Marriages:
Peeter (sic) Roloson marid (sic) to Rachel
Dennis June 26th 1803 of our lord
Mercy Roloson marid January 26th in the year
of our lord 1822 to John S. (or P.) Cole
Eliza Roloson marid to Jessy Carpent[er?]
Junr April 3rd 1823
Deaths:
Thomas N. Roloson Feb 25 1882
Alfred C. Roloson died Dec 17th 1860
Found on a hand written note in the Bible:
Alfred C. Roloson born May 16th 1856 Died
Dec 17th 1860 son Thomas N. & Phoebe
Roloson Stone is 2ft 6 inch high 15 in wide.

E-MAIL:
Fwd: [NJSUSSEX-L] Reunion of Carpenter brothers - migration history
Thu, 9 Dec 1999 From: MzCortez@aol.com
Would you believe, I just joined this list this morning!   Phoebe
From: "Catherine Di Pietro"
Date: Thu, 9 Dec 1999 15:04:26 -0500
Subject: [NJSUSSEX-L] Reunion of Carpenter brothers - migration history
Resent-Sender: NJSUSSEX-L-request@rootsweb.com
Sussex Independent newspaper dated Friday 23 Nov 1906
Reunion of Three Brothers
Meet At Their Boyhood Home After Years ofSeparation
  Mr. and Mrs Peter R. Carpenter, of Waverly, NY, Horace V.
Carpenter, of Baleville and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert P. Carpenter,
of Hancock, MD are visiting their nephew, Peter Edgar
Carpenter, at the old Carpenter homestead, one mile west
of Mt. Salem.  The three are aged 78, 75 and 73 years respectively.
  Their lives have been spent at some distance from each other,
and their nephew, who is the only son of Lebeus L. Carpenter,
and who lives on the homestead, planned for the reunion of his
uncles by inviting them to make a visit with him.  While there
they have had the opportunity for calling on other relatives and
meeting many friends of their childhood days.  Undoubtedly, it
has been the happiest time of their lives.
  Their mother, Eliza Roloson Carpenter, died in 1847 and their
father, Jesse Carpenter Jr., died in 1852.  There were three
other brothers: Lebeus L., who died in 1870 at the age of 45;
Jesse C., who went to Tioga County, NY, near Tioga Centre,
and settled, where he died in 1901, aged 64 years; and
Stephen C., the youngest of the family, who also went to
Tioga county and bought a farm, which he sold and moved
to Appleton, WI, there after moving to Los Angeles, CA
where he died.
  In the autumn of 1853, Gilbert P. went to Tioga County, NY
to visit his uncle Benjamin.  While there he engaged to work
for Isaac Northrup on a farm in Bradford county, PA, at which
place he married.  The next spring he went with his uncle,
Zelotus G. Carpenter, in Chemung County, NY.
  In the fall of that year he and his wife returned to New
Jersey to visit friends and relatives, and while here he sold
his interest in the homestead to his oldest brother, Lebeus,
who was living on the place at the time and buying the
interests of the heirs when they became of age.
  On Feb. 15, 1856, after his return to Chemung county,
he moved to Marengo, IL, obtaining employment on a farm.
After eight months on the farm he went to Chicago and
secured employment in a planing mill, where he worked for
two and a half years until a panic closed all factories in that
city.  He then moved to New Buffalo, MI, where he found work
in a stave factory until the spring of 1861, at which time he
returned to his first home in Illinois and again took up the
occupation of farming.
  In August 1862, he enlisted for a term of three years in
the Union army.  He was stationed at Lake Providence, LA,
Grand Gulf, Champion Hill, and was in the rear of Vicksburg
from May 19th until after Pemberton's surrender, July 4, 1863.
>From Vicksburg he went to Natchez, Miss. with his regiment,
the 95th Illionois Vol. and later returned to Vicksburg
remaining there until the spring of 1864, when the forces
moved against Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain and
Atlanta, GA.  He was at Atlanta throughout the siege,
returning to Nashville, TN thence to Memphis, down the
river to New Orleans, crossed Lake Pontchartrain to
Dauphin Island and from there joined the siege of the
fort on Mobile Bay.  From there he proceeded to
Montgomery, AL, remaining on guard duty until August,
when his regiment was relieved and returned to
Springfield, IL, to be discharged from the service.
  Upon his retirement, he returned to his home, rented
his farm, and joined his family who were making their
home with his brother, Peter, in Tioga county, NY.  He
then came to the old home in Sussex county for a visit,
returning to Chicago, where he was again employed
by the old planing mill.
  The next year, 1866, his wife died, leaving him with
three children, 4, 6 and 8 years old.  He disposed of
his farm and purchased a property in Chicago, and
the next year married his present wife.  In the great
Chicago fire of 1871 his home and belongings were
destroyed.  He again rebuilt and in 1876 visited the
Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia, at which time
he also paid a visit to friends in NY, PA, NJ and MD.
  In March 1877, he was obliged, on account of poor
health of his wife, to dispose of his holdings in
Chicago and go to Texas, where he purchased
property and at once started to improve it, making
it a pleasant home.  Here they lived until 1883,
when they decided to sell out and return North, his
wife's health becoming more impaired by the
malarial condition of the climate.
  They returned to Chicago in 1884 where he
secured a position with the David C. Cook Publishing
Co., where he continued for 7 years.  In the spring of
1896, they rented their home in Chicago, bought a
farm near Hamcook, MD, where Mrs. Carpenter's
relatives lived, and moved there.
  In the autumn or winter of 1854 Peter R., left the
scenes of his boyhood and went to Tioga county
to visit his uncle Benjamin.  While there he hired
to a farmer, was married, purchased a farm and
settled down to improving it.  After many years of
hard work, clearing land, improving and erecting
new buildings, Mr. Carpenter retired, leaving the
management of the farm to his son and purchased
a home in Waverly, NY where he now lives.
    Horace V. married and bought a farm adjoining
the homestead remaining on it about forthy years,
during which time he worked hard and was a great
sufferer from rheumatism and a complication of
diseases.  Two years ago he went to live with
his son, Elmer, at Baleville, Sussex county, having
lost his second wife.
  Thus the three brothers, who have had varied
experiences, are permitted to meet at their
boyhood home and rehearse the reminiscences
that are so dear to them.
Hope This Was of Interest,
Cathy.

CENSUS: 1850 US Census - See image: RIN 03006  Jesse Carpenter Jr 1850.jpg
Name: Jesse Carpenter
Residence: Wantage, Sussex, New Jersey
Age: 47 years
Calculated Birth Year: 1803
Birthplace: New York
Gender: Male
Race (original):
Race (expanded):
Death Month:
Death Year:
Film Number: 443663
Digital GS Number: 4202054
Image Number: 00378
Line Number: 21
Dwelling House Number: 59
Family Number: 59
Marital Status:
Free or Slave:
Collection: United States Census, 1850

Dead in 1852


Eliza Roloson

ROLOSON, Peter, of Wantage, 2373S - Will 1844; Inv. 1844. Wife: Rachel. Sons: Thomas N., Johnson, Peter
Jr. Daughters: Mercy , wife of John P. COLE, Elsa, wife of Jesse CARPENTER JR., Sarah, wife of Jacob
COLLUM, (three oldest daughters), Julia Ann, wife of Henry BRINK. Other: Clerisa VAN SICKLE (grand
daughter). Executors: ? Witnesses: ?


9128. Horace Vale Carpenter

Seems to be the same person!

Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2007 23:31:52 EST
From: Mzzcortezz@aol.com
Subject: [CARPENTER] Horace Carpenter 1857
To: CARPENTER-L@rootsweb.com
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

Sun, Pittsfield Sun date 3/5/1857

Married at Flat Brook, N.Y., Feb 21 by the Rev. Henry Smith, Mr. Horace
Carpenter of Nassau, N.Y. to Miss Sarah E., daughter of Levi Williams of
Stockbridge, Mass.

Phoebe in CA


4126. John Mapes Carpenter Rev.

Number 2308 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 287.
Family on page 474 (# 707).

CENSUS:  1880 United States Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
John M. CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   76   NY   Babtist Minister   NY   NY
Mary H. CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   40   NJ   Keeping House   NJ   NJ
Syrena S. CARPENTER   Dau      Female   W   15   NJ   Attends School   NY   NJ
Sarah A. WILSON   SisterL   W   Female   W   48   NJ   At Home   NJ   NJ
Viola WILSON   Niece      Female   W   18   NJ   Shoe Operator   NJ   NJ
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place District 2 And 4, Burlington, Burlington, New Jersey
 Family History Library Film   1254772
 NA Film Number   T9-0772
 Page Number   124B

See also:
http://archivegrid.org/web/jsp/a.jsp?id=17138&fileloc=NYHV7554-A&archive=American+Baptist+Historical+Society


4130. Horace Carpenter

Same person!

Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2007 23:33:31 EST
From: Mzzcortezz@aol.com
Subject: [CARPENTER] Horace Carpenter d. 1818 Orange Co. NY
To: CARPENTER-L@rootsweb.com
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"

Effects of Horse Racing - On Saturday the 5th inst. Mr. Horace Carpenter of
Blooming Grove, was attending a vendue ? at Little Britain, after which he
undertook to run horses with another person and in the race of his horse fell
and injured him so that he died the next morning; he never spoke after he
received the injury.  He has left a wife and one child to lament his  untimely
fate.

GOSHEN, as all the towns mentioned are in Orange Co. NY

-------------------
This notice was in a half dozen papers..........

Phoebe in CA


4160. Horace Carpenter

CENSUS: 1880 United States Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Horrace CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   60   NY   Laborer   NY   NY
Harriet CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   50   NY      NY   NY
Jesse CARPENTER   Son   S   Male   W   25   NY      NY   NY
Olline CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   21   NY      NY   NY
Hettie CARPENTER   Mother   W   Female   W   90   NY      NY   NY
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Chester, Orange, New York
 Family History Library Film   1254910
 NA Film Number   T9-0910
 Page Number   50B


4161. James W. Carpenter

CENSUS: 1880 US Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
James CARPENTER   Self   M   Male   W   62   NY   Farmer   NY   NY
Martha E. CARPENTER   Wife   M   Female   W   56   NY   K.H.   NY   NY
J Edwin CARPENTER   Son   M   Male   W   31   NY   Farming   NY   NY
Floy CARPENTER   DauL   M   Female   W   24   NY   Housework   NY   NY
Aruba CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   19   NY   At Home   NY   NY
James W CARPENTER   GSon   S   Male   W   4   NY      NY   NY
Lizziel FROST   Other   S   Female   W   16   NY   Domestic   NY   NY
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Ahsland, Chemung, New York
 Family History Library Film   1254816
 NA Film Number   T9-0816
 Page Number   152A


Martha Elizabeth Carpenter

Number 8361 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 786.
She married a James Carpenter and they had 4 children.
The Carpenter Memorial does not indicate the relationship or who was his father.
Chemung county was created in 1836 from parts of Tioga county, NY.
Tioga county was created in 1791 from part of Montgomery county, NY.


4171. Elijah Carpenter

Number 8347 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 784.
Family on page 785 (# 1677).

SEE: The following web page has 10 Nov 1813 as the marriage published date:
http://members.tripod.com/~chickened/Marriages1812-1814.html
Carpenter, Elijah married per the Elmira NY Newspaper to  Elvira Baldwin
10 Nov 1813 issue date.


9142. William Baldwin Carpenter

Number 8358 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 785.
No family listed.

CENSUS: 1880 United States Census
 Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
William CARPENTER   Self   W   Male   W   65   NY   Farmer   NY   NY
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Big Flats, Chemung, New York
 Family History Library Film   1254816
 NA Film Number   T9-0816
 Page Number   174A


9143. Catherine Carpenter

Number 8356 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 785.


9146. Zeruiah Maxwell Carpenter

Number 8360 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 786.
It was about the time period of this child's life that the name of Newtown was
changed to Elmira.


9148. Caroline H. Carpenter

Number 8362 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 786.
Chemung county was created in 1836 from parts of Tioga county, NY.
Tioga county was created in 1791 from part of Montgomery county, NY.


Morris Isham

CENSUS: 1880 US Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Morris ISHAM   Self   M   Male   W   50   NY   Making Harnesses   ---   ---
Caroline H. ISHAM   Wife   M   Female   W   49   NY   Keeping   NY   NY
Mattie CARPENTER   Niece   S   Female   W   13   NY   Attending School   ---   ---
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place Elmira, Chemung, New York
 Family History Library Film   1254817
 NA Film Number   T9-0817
 Page Number   317B


9149. Grout Baldwin Carpenter

Number 8363 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 786.
He had one son and four daughters, names not indicated in the CM.
Chemung county was created in 1836 from parts of Tioga county, NY.
Tioga county was created in 1791 from part of Montgomery county, NY.


4174. Vincent Matthews Carpenter

Number 8345 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 784.
No family listed.


9150. Henry Carpenter

Carpenter, Henry Elmira NY Ann Brown 21 Dec 1836
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~darmi/Marriages1836AL.html


Ann Brown

MARRIAGE: An Ann Brown married Henry Carpenter - but which one?


4178. Benjamin Franklin Carpenter

Number 8346 in the Carpenter Memorial.  Page 784.
He married in 1835, but no family is listed.
Children listed not proved.


Mary

IN 1880 US Census with daughter Sarah Slocum.


4179. George Washington Carpenter

SEE: Colonial Famlies of the United States, pages 109 to 113, by George Norbury MacKenzie.
George Washington Carpenter, A.M., of albany, New York ... educated at Lancaster School and Albany Boys' Academy; appointed tutor at the age of nineteen years in this institution, serving in this capacity five years.  Here he attracted the attention and won the life-long friendship of Prof. Joseph Henry.  It was during this period that young Carpenter assisted Professor Henry in the experiments that led to the discovery of the electric telegraph.  From 1855 to 1891, he was _____________ the position of superintendent of the Alnbany City Water for several years as its President.  The honorary degree of A.M. was conferred on Mr. Carpenter by rutgers College in 1834.  He was an elder in the first Reformed church of Albany; ...

MARRIAGE: Married by Rev. Dr. John Ludlow.

CENSUS:  1880 United States Census
Household:
Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
Geo. W. CARPENTER   Self   W   Male   W   69   NY   Civil Engineer   NY   NY
Geo. W. CARPENTER   Son   S   Male   W   38   NY   Wholesale Grocer   NY   NY
Jessie CARPENTER   Dau   S   Female   W   24   NY   At Home   NY   NY
Annie MC CARTHEY   Other   S   Female   W   22   IRE   Servant   IRE   IRE
Bridget KEIRNAN   Other   S   Female   W   23   IRE   Servant   IRE   IRE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
 Census Place 7th Ward, Albany, Albany, New York
 Family History Library Film   1254805
 NA Film Number   T9-0805
 Page Number   352B


9154. 1 Carpenter

Unnamed infant.


9158. George Washington Carpenter

He never married.  He was educated at Albany's Boys' Academy.  He retired from active business life to pursue long matured plans for travel and culture.


4184. Benjamin Carpenter

Number 2246 on page 282 in the CARPENTER MEMORIAL.
He was killed on the railroad at the west.