Charles W Canney Camp #5, SUVCW
  • Home
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Past Events
    • 2004 Abraham Lincoln Award
    • 2005 New Hampshire Preservation Alliance Preservation Award
  • Membership Information
  • Co A, 12th NH Infantry
  • NH's Civil War Monuments
    • NH's Civil War Monuments
    • Monument Preservation >
      • Candia, NH Soldier's Monument Restoration Project
      • Raymond, NH Civil War Soldier's Monument Restoration Project
      • Rochester, NH Civil War Soldier's Monument Restoration Project
    • Barrington, NH's Civil War Soldiers Memorial
    • Candia, NH Civil War Soldier's Monument
    • Dover, NH's GAR Monument
    • Hollis NH's Soldiers' Monument
    • New Durham, NH Civil War Soldier's Memorial
    • Raymond, NH Civil War Soldier's Monument
    • Rollinsford Civil War Monument
    • Seabrook Civil War Monument
  • NH GAR Posts
  • NH SUVCW Camps
  • New Hampshire's Medal of Honor Recipients
  • New Hampshire's Last Civil War Veterans
  • Related Links
    • Related Links
    • Journals - NH Encampments
    • NH Regiments in the Civil War
  • Contact Page
  • Blog

Memorial Day, 1897, with Carlton Post 24

5/26/2018

0 Comments

 
Picture
This item is a flyer for the "order of exercises" for the Memorial Day event which took place in Farmington, NH on 31 May 1897 [the usual day of the 30th being on a Sunday, the holiday's service had been moved to Monday]. It began with a parade from Main St to the town cemetery, led by the Farmington Cadet Band, with the local company of National Guard, the G.A.R. and Woman's Relief Corps members following, and the town officers, clergymen, and the public bringing up the rear. 
Picture
After the ceremony at the (Pine Grove) Cemetery, it was followed by exercises at the Civil War monument downtown. That evening, a program was held at the opera house.

The back side of the flyer listed the "Names of Deceased Soldiers and Sailors, of Farmington, N.H." that were decorated, including veterans of other wars besides the Civil War.
Picture
Farmington Cemetery
John O Hayes
Everett Leighton
Herbert E Dame
Levi W Hayes
Nahala Leighton
John Lewis
James W Rogers
John Martin
Lowell Sanborn
John P Moses
Edmund B Small
Alonzo Nute
Lucius Smith
C.W. Nute
John W Stevens
Nathaniel Parker
John D Wallingford
Charles L Pearl
Gates Wentworth
Rufus K Pearl
Hiram Wentworth
Robert K Peavey
Gates Cloutman
C.F. Whitehouse

Wingate Whitehouse
Winthrop Penney
David Witham
Gates Pinkham
Charles York
Charles Richardson
Alamanda Young
Joseph Ricker
George E Pinkham
J.L. Pike
J.B. Roberts
A.G. Burrows
John Averill
Thomas Davis
William H Hayes
Lester H Allen
E. Dodge
William Hodgdon
Charles H Austin
Woodbury Downs
Albert Howard
Leonard Babb
Samuel A Kimball
​C.E. Ricker
Charles Durgin
George W Hubbard
Dexter Bailey
Horace Emery
Joseph Hurd
James Colomy
Samuel Flanders
Herman Jones
John F Colomy
Rufus B Foss
James M York
Ralph Carlton
Hiram French
George Jones
Daniel P Cilley
J.W. Ham
Charles Kelley
Leighton D Colbath
Frank Hayes
Emerson Keniston
Dudley I Colbath
Henry Hayes
​H.C. Amazeen
WAR of 1812
Jeremiah Willey, Timothy Davis, Asa Willey, George L Whitehouse, Thomas Ham, Daniel Willey
1812 - Ten Rod Road
Mark Demeritt, Nicholas Ricker, Samuel Chesley, Samuel C. Jones, Timothy Henderson, Dennis Downing
Chestnut Hill Road - John K Walker
Rochester Road - Isaiah Peavey, John Tanner
MEXICAN WAR
John F Place, C.B. Roberts, ----- Shapleigh (Florida War)

Outside Yards
Augustus Horne, Ten Rod Road
Thomas Pinkham, Hodgdon Yard
Jonathan Stevens, Stevens Yard
Samuel Bunker, Bunker Yard

More about: 
Farmington News, 28 May 1897
Farmington News, 4 June 1897
Pine Grove Cemetery burial listing on Find a Grave

Note: The Carlton Post, No. 24, of Farmington, NH, was first organized in 1870, with 51 members. It later disbanded, only to be reorganized in 1882. It was named for Ralph Carlton, who was captain of Company I, Third New Hampshire Infantry. New Durham born, he was a resident of Farmington when he enlisted in 1861. He was killed 16 June 1862 in Secessionville, SC.
0 Comments

    Author

    Steve, Secretary/Treasurer of the Canney Camp

    Archives

    May 2022
    June 2021
    January 2021
    May 2020
    March 2020
    October 2019
    May 2019
    March 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    May 2018
    March 2018
    July 2016
    May 2016
    November 2013

    Categories

    All
    10th NH Infantry
    11th NH Infantry
    12th NH Infantry
    16th NH Infantry
    19th MA Infantry
    1st MA Heavy Artillery
    6th NH Infantry
    7th NH Infantry
    9th NH Infantry
    Atkinson NH
    Battle Of Chaffin's Farm
    Battle Of Fort Harrison
    Battle Of Gettysburg
    Battle Of Spotsylvania
    Battle Of The Crater
    Candia NH
    Carlton Post
    Civil War
    Concord MA
    Exeter NH
    GAR
    Korean War
    Last Veteran
    Living History
    Lynn MA
    Massachusetts
    Medal Of Honor
    Melvin Memorial
    Memorial
    Memorial Day
    Merrimack NH
    Monument
    New Durham NH
    New Hampshire
    Newington NH
    Portsmouth NH
    Raymond NH
    "Roll Of Honor"
    Salisbury NH
    Sullivan County NH
    Sunapee NH
    Sweden Maine
    US Navy
    Vietnam War
    Wentworth NH
    World War 1
    World War II

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.