TOWN OF ADDISON. 



147 



third-interest in the mill, and has since been associated with 

 Mr. Curtis under the firm-name of Curtis & Paxton. Mr. 

 Paxton is a citizen of Addison, and is also interested in 

 mercantile business. 



These mills are furnished with 4 run of stones, and have 

 a capacity of 12,000 bushels of grain per year. 



E. J. HORN, FOUNDRY AND MACHINE-SHOP. 



In 1846, E. J. Horn and Stephen Lewis, under the firm- 

 name of Lewis & Horn, established the foundry business for 

 the purpose of manufacturing mill-machinery, steam-engines, 

 and general castings. Their first shop was burnt in the 

 fall of 1846, and they immediately rebuilt. In 1856, Mr. 

 Lewis retired from the firm, and Mr. Horn has since con- 

 ducted it alone, except during five or six years, when the 

 business was managed by his sons, as the firm of 0. A. 

 Horn & Brother. This foundry has supplied a great* 

 amount of machinery to a large section of country around. 



MANUFACTURE OF BOOTS AND SHOES. 



Mr. George W. Farnham has erected in the village of 

 Addison a building of three stories and basement, especially 

 adapted to the manufacture of hand-made boots and shoes 

 on a large scale. He was formerly associated in this busi- 

 ness with Mr. Gokey, firm of Gokey & Farnham, and their 

 goods obtained a wide reputation. From 40 to 50 hands 

 are employed in this establishment, besides several ti'aveling 

 salesmen. This interest bids fair to be one of the most im- 

 portant branches of manufacture in the Canisteo Valley. 



ADDISON AND ELKLAND PLANK-ROAD. 



In February, 1850, some of the citizens of Addison and 

 Elkland, in the Cowanesque Valley, in Pennsylvania, con- 

 sidering it important that a better and more direct road be 

 made between the two places, organized a plank- road com- 

 pany, obtained a charter, and built a plank-road from Ad- 

 dison to Elkland, Pa., a distance of eleven miles, at a cost 

 of $20,000. The first directors of the road were Henry 

 Wombough, William R. Smith, Joel D. Gillet, Rufus 

 Baldwin, Joel Parkhurst, Leander Culver, William Wom- 

 bough, H. Ross Jones, and James H. Van Vleck. The 

 first officers were Joel D. Gillett, President ; H. Ross Jones, 

 Vice-President; William W. Baldwin, Secretary; William 

 R. Smith, Treasurer ; Joel D. Gillett, Rufus Baldwin, H. 

 Ross Jones, Building Committee. The road was built by 

 John and Patrick Rehill, and completed in 1851. The 

 south seven miles of the road was surrendered to the towns 

 through which it passed in 1857, and the remaining four 

 miles Sept. 1, 1878. 



MILITARY RECORD OF ADDISON. 



James H. Milep, capt., 107th Inf., Co. F; must. Aug. 14, 1862, three years; res. 



Feb. 28, 1863; in battle of Antietam. 

 John T. Jackson, 1st sergt., 107th Inf., Co. F; enl. July 28, 1862, three years; 



in battle of Antietam ; disch. Nov. 22, 1863, for disability. 

 John D. Hie, private, 107th Inf., Co. F; must. July 12, 1862, three years ; pro. 



to 2d sergt., March 1, 1863; to 2d lieut., June 2, 1863; killed in action at 



New Hope Church, Ga., May 25, 1864; in battles of Antietam, Chancel- 



lorsville, and Gettysburg. 

 Leander Moses Hadloch, private, 107th Inf., Co. F ; enl. July 28, 1862, three 



years ; took part in battles of Antietam, Dallas, Resaca, and Kulp's Farm ; 



taken prisoner, July 18, 1864, in front of Atlanta, Ga.; disch. June 19, 



1865, by reason of expiration of term of service. 



Wm. B. Ilurlburt, musician, 107th Inf., Co. F; enl. July 28, 1862, three years; 

 engaged in the battle of Antietam ; disch. on account of disability, June 

 2, 1863, by command of Maj.-Gen. Sclienck, commanding 8th Army Corps, 

 Baltimore, Md. 



Geo. W. Wombough, wagoner, 107th Inf., Co. F; enl. July 26, 1862, three years; 

 disch. June 3, 1863, on account of disability. 



Wm. A. Benedict, private, 107tli Inf., three years ; disch. on account of disabil- 

 ity, Feb. 13, 1863 ; re-enl. Jan. 5, 1864; wounded May 15, 1864; disch by 

 muster-out, June 6, 1865. 



James B. Cherry, private, 107th Inf. ; enl. July 25, 1862, three years; received 

 commission as 1st lieut. ; never mustered ; in battles of Antietam, Chan- 

 cellorsville, Gettysburg, and Nashville; must, out with rogt., June, 1865. 



Emmett Crane, private, 107th Inf.; disch. Oct. 18, 1862, on account of gunshot 

 wound received accidentally. 



Manly D. Crane, private, 107th Inf. ; enl. July 23, 1862, three years; in battles 

 of Antietam, Gettysburg, Eesaca, Ga., Peach-Tree Creek, Ga., at capture 

 of Atlanta and Savannah, and the entrance to Raleigh, N. C. ; must, out 

 with regt., June, 1865. 



Cornelius W. Herrington, private, 107th Inf., Co. F; enl. July 31, 1862, three 

 years; disch. Feb. 10,1863, on account of disability; in battle of An- 

 tietam. 



Benjamin Kimble, private, 107th Inf, Co. F; enl. July 26, 1862, three years; 

 in battles of Antietam, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg ; detailed July 

 13, 1863, as stretcher-bearer in Amb. Corps ; must, out with regt., June, 

 1865. 



Theophilus Krumloff, private, 107th Inf., Co. F; died Jan. 18, 1863, at Fairfax 

 Station, Va , of camp fever; buried at Fairfax Station. 



Walter Crandall, private, 107th luf., Co. F. 



Samuel Miller, private, 107th Inf., Co. F ; killed in action. May 25, 1864, at New 

 Hope Church, Ga. 



Charles J. Marble, private, 107th Inf., Co. F ; pro. to corporal. 



James S. Molson, private, 107tli Inf, Co. F ; killed in action. May 25, 1864, at 

 New Hope Church, Ga. 



David B. Parcells, private, 107th Inf, Co. F; wounded at New Hope Church, 

 Ga.,-May 25, 1864. 



Robert Short, private, I07th Inf, Co. F; enl. Aug. 4, 1862, three years; disch. 

 July 20, 1865. 



Alanson Stoddard, private, 107th Inf., Co. F; disch. Aug. 13, 1864, on account 

 of loss of arm at New Hope Church, Ga. 



Frederick Wm. Wagner, private, 107th Inf, Co. F; enl. July, 1862, three years ; 

 {V\m\ Jan. 10, 1863, of typhoid-pneumonia, at Fairfax Station, Ya. 



Silas We ley Kimble, private, 107th Inf., Co. E; enl. Feb. 8, 1864, three years; 

 in battles of Resaca, Peach-Tree Creek, and Dallas ; trans, to 6t)th N. Y, 

 Yet. Regt., June 5, 1865; disch. by S. 0. No. 160, Dept. of Washington, 

 July 5, 1865. 



Henry B. Aldrich, private, 107th Inf, Co. F, three years; died in hospital, 1862. 



Wm. Hutchinson, private, 107th Inf, Co. F, three years; w^ounded at Chancel- 

 lorsville; disch. May 12, 1864, on account of wound. 



Melvin J. Lynch, private, 107th Inf., Co. F; wounded May 25, 1864, at New 

 Hope Church, Ga. 



Abram Miller, private, 107th Inf., Co. F ; died Oct. 16, 1862, at Harper's Ferry, 

 Ya., of typhoid fever; buried on Maryland Heights. 



Lee Multbrd, private, 107th Inf., Co. F; wounded at Chancellorsville, May 3, 

 1863; pro. to. Corp., April, 1863 ; to sergt., Nov. 1, 1863; commanded de- 

 tachment — Provost-Guard of 2d Brigade, 1st Division, 2d Army Corps — 

 from surrender of Atlanta to end of the war. 



Hiram Tung, private, 107th Inf., Co. F; disch. for disability, Jan. 1863. 



John G. Taft, private, 107th Inf., Co. F. 



John Worrell, private, 107th Inf., Co. F ; enl. Dec. 10, 1863, three years; died 

 of chronic diarrhoea at Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 15,1864. 



Henry David Orser, private, 11th H. Art., Co. A ; enl. May 22, 1863, three years. 



Wm. Albert Orser, private, 11th H. Art., Co. A ; enl. June 6, 1863, three years ; 

 pro. to sergt.; previously enl. in 23d N. Y. Yols., April 30, 1861 ; disch. 

 May 22, 1863. 



James Wright, private, H. Art., Co. I; enl. June 1, 1863, three years; pro. to 

 sergt. in H. Art., N. Y. S. Yols. ; trans. Jan. 1, 1864, to 4th H. Art. ; disch. 

 Sept. 26, 1865. 



Lewis Putnam, private, 23d Inf. ; enl. April 30, 1861; disch. May 22, 1863; re- 

 enl. May, 1863, in 11th H. Art. 



Nicholas Millspaugh, 11th H. Art.; enl. May 22, 1863. 



Oliver D. Stewart, private, 107th Inf.; enl. Dec. 10, 1863, three years. 



John Rial, private, 33d Inf. ; enl. June, 1862, two years. 



Henry Baldwin, capt., 34th Inf., Co. E ; enl. May 18, 1861, two years ; must, out 

 June 30, 1863, by reason of exp. of term of enlistment ; was engaged in 

 the battles of Ball's Bluff, Harper's Ferry, Winchester, Yorktown, West 

 Point, Fair Oaks, Seven Days before Richmond, Bolivar Heights, Snicker's 

 Gap, Warrenton, and first and second Fredericksburg. 



Henry W. Sanford, private, 34th Inf, Co. E ; enl. May 18, 1861, two years ; pro. 

 to 1st sergt, July 31, 1861 ; to 2d lieut., May 30, 1862 ; to 1st lieut., Oct. 

 31, 1862; in battles of Ball's Bluff, Yorktown, West Point, Fair Oaks, 

 Seven Days before Richmond, second Bull Run, South Mountain, Antie- 

 tam, Ashby's Gap, and first and second Fredericksburg; disch. June 30, 

 1863, by reason of exp. of term of service ; recruited a company and must, 

 in as capt., Oct. 10, 1863, in 2d N. Y. Yet. Cav.; engaged in battles of 

 Henderson's Hill, La., Pleasant Hill, La., Campti, La., Bayou Saline, La., 

 Cane River Crossing, La., Chambers' Plantation, Bayou De Glaze, La., 

 Yellow Bayou, La., Marksville, La., and fifteen other battles and skir- 



