Home / Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. / Passage

History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I

Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. 306 words

Charles Lamar, Ernest Krbert, William Murphy, Jacob Putney, John Williams, David Jones, Joaquin Jones, Charles E. Manning, William Brown, George Francis, Patrick JIdS'ully, John .Starr, Jolin I'. Minnich, Edward Dill. Thomas Davis, John A. lliitcliin.'ion, Hugh Callahan, Philip H. Harsiiiger, Henry Haniill, Carey P. Poplin, John Rigby, Tobias .\kerB, John Jolly. Charles Stewart, .Michael Fanning, Timothy G. Ltmib, George W. Dullion, Jolin West, John Smith, Frederick Kline, James Cameron, Lorenzo Covaglio, Wolsley Baxter, Theodore Handy, David Boweu, James Hughes, James Fisher, John Nichols, Jlorris Earle.

At a cost of seven hundred and fifty dollars :

John F. Jarvis, Joseph Harper, .\mos Wieney, Tim. Crowley, Charles Helwig.

At a cost of eight hundred dollars :

Francis Scber, Sanford Hallock, John G. Satterlee, Michael Quinlan, Charles Weeks, William H. Dufi', (Jeorge H. Archer, .losejih S. Gregory, Darins Lyon, .Joseph Harper (second call), Oliver U, King, D. Lanioureaux, Henry Skidmoro, S. G. Vredenburg, David Quackinbush, Christian Stark.

At a cost of eight hundred and twenty dollars :

Slichael SlcCormick.

The following men were drafted and entered the service, receiving the sums set opposite their names :

Edwani Barnum, 5450.00; Christian Knapp, $310.00.

The only item in the account that is perplexing is one which states that "one recruit" was furnished under the second call for five hundred and ninety dollars, this being, probably, at a time when the draft was nearly over and matters carelessly managed.

The Grand Army Post.s.-- This chapter would, by many, be judged to have been properly completed with the disbandment of the soldiers and the payment of the debts accruing from the Civil War, but the publishers of this history have considered that the real Ixistory of the contest in Westchester County can never be said to be finished till that of the "Grand Army of the Republic," within its borders, be also told.