Thursday, November 29, 2012

Windsor County Court November 27


Timothy Fleming, DOB 4/28/58, pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct-noise in Springfield on October 6

Stephanie Fowler, DOB 12/18/72 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with license suspended in Hartford on October 12

Jay Robertson, DOB 7/10/66 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with license suspended in Norwich on May 26

Kyle Bingham, DOB 1/8/91 pled not guilty to a charge of careless or negligent driving in Springfield on October 6

Devin Harrison, DOB 1/13/83 pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault on August 10 in Springfield

Craig Bailey, DOB 5/27/73 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with license suspended in Hartland on September 24.

Andrew Erskine, DOB 11/22/81 pled guilty to a charge of taking a deer out of season in Cavendish on October 24

Matthew Bing, DOB 5/24/84 pled guilty to a charge of his first DUI in Woodstock on November 10

Chester Farrington, DOB 12/3/93 was judged guilty of his first DUI in Bethel on November 10

Daniel Barmore, DOB 11/28/87 pled not guilty to a charge of unlawful mischief greater than $1000 in Hartford.

Brian Dow, DOB 12/21/88 pled not guilty to a charge of unlawful mischeif greater than $1000 in Hartford

Dow and Barmore are two prolific and talented  artists who were painting large murals on railroad cars in the White River Junction train yard. Although their art is amazing and creative, it costs the railroad $900 to repaint railroad cars. Many people might enjoy seeing Dow and Barmore's artwork, but some of it covered bar codes used to check railroad cars in and out, which are expensive to replace. The two were caught in an undercover operation.

John Barrows, DOB 6/17/56 pled not guilty to a charge of his second DUI in Woodstock on October 18.

Windsor County Court November 20


Bruce Gauthier DOB 1/27/66 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Springfield on September 27

Christopher Brown DOB 4/7/81 pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault and a charge of aggressive domestic assault in Rochester on November 4

Kevin McAteer, DOB 8/31/73 was charged with aggressive domestic assault in Springfield on September 1

Timothy Murphy DOB 9/28/70 pled guilty to his first DUI charge, in Windsor on November 4

Michelle Forcier, DOB 2/11/70 pled not guilty to a charge of medicaid fraud in White River Junction on or about November 18th. Forcier is accused of submitting false claims for payment in access of $1,300 to Medicaid, for services she allegedly did not provide.

Scott Hunter, DOB 8/31/63 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license.

Howard Young, DOB 2/15/46, pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license.

Juliann Dibernardo, DOB 11/1/68 was judged guilty of of operating with a suspended license in Hartland

Fred Walsh, DOB 12/12/68 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Windsor on October 18.

Michael Robinson, DOB 9/5/55 pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Woodstock on October 13

Shelley Leonard, DOB 4/8/69, pled guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Springfield on October 9

Simeon and the War of 1812 Part 2


The United States declared war against England on June 1, 1812. That year, Simeon's continued employment at “The Washingtonian” continued to be a source of friction between him and his father. In another letter, Simeon begs his father to let him stay in Windsor a little longer. This time, he assures his father that he is just setting type for copies of the United States Constitution and Washington's Farewell Address.
 
 
 Besides, he was waiting for news from his old master, Lieutenant Churchill. Churchill was convinced that the American Campaigns against British Canada would be successful, and Canada would become part of the United States. In that event, Churchill planned to start an American printing company in Canada.

This was the common attitude all across the United States. This war would be a quick and easy invasion of Canada. The settlers of Canada would welcome the Americans with open arms, grateful for their liberation from that tyrant, Great Britain. Unfortunately, that was not what happened.

During the first year and a half, the commanders on the American side were a bunch of incompetent, cowardly alcoholics who could not command troops or run a war. Most of the military appointments were based on political connections and not on military experience, knowledge or ability. American troops repeatedly attempted Canadian invasions, once across the Detroit River, once from the Niagara Peninsula, and once with Montreal as the objective, and none of these campaigns was successful.

Incompetent commanders were not the only reason for lack of American victories in the War of 1812. President Madison's Republican administration didn't want to spend much money to pay for food, uniforms and weapons, so soldiers were ragged, starving, and poorly equipped. Disease ran rampant through American military camps. The commanders couldn't control the troops, and they raped, burned and plundered their way into Canadian villages, earning them the hatred of the Canadians rather than their gratitude. Throughout the country, the Republicans and Federalists were fighting in what became almost a Civil War. If America's leaders couldn't become united, certainly America's fighting men were not going to be able to maintain unity, either.

While they were fighting the Americans in North America, the British were also fighting the French, under Napoleon, in Europe. They didn't have the resources to fully commit to protecting Canada and going after the Americans. After Napoleon was defeated in 1814, the British could turn all their attention to the conflict in North America. They invaded the United States along the East Coast. In Baltimore, Maryland, the Americans managed to prevail (in the battle that inspired “The Star Spangled Banner”) but the British attacked Washington DC and burned many federal buildings.

After two years of war, the most either side could do was come to a stalemate. The British were sick of war. They had been fighting Napoleon and then the United States. The United States had run out of money. It was becoming harder and harder to recruit soldiers to fight in an unpopular war. The numbers of casualties on the battlefield weren't all that impressive, but American deaths from disease, caused in large part by starvation and cold weather, were staggering.

The Treaty of Ghent, signed in December of 1815, brought an end to the War of 1812. The war accomplished very little to decide the issues that started the war in the first place. The boundary between the United States and Canada stayed where it had been before the war. Impressment ended, not so much because of the war, but because Britain didn't need to impress sailors now that the war with France had ended. The War of 1812 did strengthen national feeling within the United States. We had now defeated Britain a second time, this time with a new government under a new Constitution. It wasn't really a defeat, but that was a fact that wasn't particularly broadcast in America. The successful end to the war was the end of the Federalist Party.

As I read about the War of 1812, I couldn't help thinking about what might have happened to Simeon if he had gone, as a gung-ho 17 year old, to fight on the Canadian border. Of all the people I have “met” in my research of Upper Valley history, Lemuel Ide is probably my least favorite. He comes across as being pretty self-righteous, when half the time he couldn't even support his own family. His stock rose, though, when I thought about his words to Simeon regarding his son going to war. “I will go first. Then, if necessary, you can go.” If Lemuel had let Simeon go, I might not have been writing about him now. It would have been pretty unlikely that Simeon would have been killed in the war, but far, far more likely that he would have died of a disease caused by near starvation and freezing to death. I just can't get that thought out of my mind, and the thought of the thousands, millions of teenagers who have died over the years because their parents didn't care enough, or weren't strict enough, to say the word “No”, and keep them out of harm's way.
 
Simeon's old master, Sylvester Churchill, stayed in the military for the rest of his life.  He attained the rank of Colonel and became the Inspector General of the Army, retiring due to ill health at the very beginning of the Civil War, in 1861, and died a year later at age 76.  Sylvester Churchill was distantly related to Winston Churchill and you can certainly see the family resemblance in this picture.
 
 

Monday, November 19, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving!


Windsor County Court November 13


Brandon Dimick, DOB 6/22/92, was judged guilty for operating with a suspended license on September 28 in Hartford



Amanda Bernier, DOB 10/3/87, pled not guilty to a charge of aiding in the commission of a felony. She was allegedly driving the car while another female got out and robbed an elderly man. The two had asked the man for money earlier and he gave them some. They followed him to the North Springfield Dam where he liked to read and walk, and asked him for more money. He pulled out his wallet to give them more money, when the passenger in the car jumped out and allegedly grabbed his wallet.



Jacob Allison DOB 3/12/90 pled not guilty to a charge of selling depressant, stimulant or narcotic, and two charges of selling heroin in Chester, Vermont in March.



Hunter Knox, DOB 8/24/91, pled not guilty to his first DUI charge, in Weathersfield on October 25. The Ascutney police and the Vermont State police responded to a report of an accident. When they arrived at the scene they found a car flipped onto its roof. Knox was the driver. He allegedly admitted to having been drinking, took a field sobriety test and a breathalyzer test and was subsequently arrested for DUI.



Richard Hudson, DOB 2/8/64, was charged with unnecessary/unlawful restraint of a vulnerable adult in Ludlow from January 1 to June 15 of 2012. Hudson and his wife allegedly met some people with disabilities from other states on Facebook, and convinced them to come to Vermont to live with them. When they arrived in Vermont, the allegations are that Hudson and his wife kept them captive, abused them, wouldn't let them leave, and were taking money from them. The Hudsons are also accused of instructing their son to help keep their “boarders” from leaving. You can read more about the case and watch a video taken outside the courthouse here:

 

Zachary Avery, DOB 4/7/95, was charged with unlawful mischief of $250 or less in Hartford on August 25. Avery had allegedly smashed several windshields and home windows.


Republicans, Federalists, and The War of 1812


It seems that Simeon had no burning desire to return to his father's farm. After the dissolution of the Farnsworth-Churchill partnership, and the premature end of his apprenticeship, Simeon found another printing job in Windsor, with “The Washingtonian”, a Federalist paper. Simeon, like the rest of his family, is a Republican, and in a letter home, he assures his father that he will have nothing to do with printing the paper. He will just be the bookkeeper. This didn't appease his father at all. In a letter back to Simeon, Lemuel says, “I am sorry to learn that you are in that dirty business and place. The Mosiac rule, I fear, will not cleanse the man that touches that loathsome press, 'The Washingtonian' “.

This is a pretty strong statement. Lemuel was a rabid Republican in an era when political feelings were running very strong. He was a Republican member of the state legislature for one term, but when he ran a second time, he lost the election by one vote. Louis Flanders, who wrote Simeon's biography, says that Lemuel probably would have been reelected if his political views were a little more moderate.

Certainly the events leading up to the War of 1812 would have affected the life of a young man in Vermont, just beginning to make his way in the world, especially someone involved in the newspaper business. Newspapers were political vehicles. Unlike today, when newspapers are supposed to be unbiased, newspapers of the 1800's were openly committed to one political party or the other, or for one cause or another.

Before the war, the United States was divided between the Federalist Party and the Republican Party. John Adams was a Federalist, and his administration created a strong banking system that put the new government on a firm financial footing. However, the next presidential election went to a Republican, Thomas Jefferson, and the Federalists never regained power. The Republicans, then as today, believed that less government is better, and that an agrarian based society is preferable over an urban society. Lemuel's harsh statement against the Federalist newspaper Simeon worked for mirrored the extreme animosity between the two parties clashing strongly over the impending war.

The Federalists didn't want to go to war against England. They admired England's political system and thought that the American system should emulate it. Most of New England was Federalist. New England shipping interests would only be damaged by a war with England. The Republicans supported a war with England. They hated the elitism of the British governmental system. Some Republicans believed that the Federalists secretly wanted to reunify with Britain, although that is hard to believe. John Adams, the only Federalist President, would hardly have turned the country back over to Britain. Emotions ran especially strong in Vermont. Although Vermont voted Republican in the election of 1808, it was the only New England state to do so. There were plenty of people in Vermont who sided with the rest of New England, which caused plenty of political tension.

After the American Revolution, there was a lot of unfinished conflict between America and Britain. Britain didn't believe the United States could survive as a country. They thought that a governmental system based on equality and universal suffrage would descend into chaos and anarchy and it was only a matter of time before America would come knocking on Britain's door asking to be taken back into the folds of the British empire. Looking toward that eventuality, Britain began building a government in Canada that they thought would look appealing to an America seeking to reunite with the mother country.

The border between Canada and the United States was blurry for a number of reasons. After the Revolution, 38,000 American colonists who had remained loyal to Britain moved to Canada. Canada got another influx of Americans during the 1790's, when the British offered free land and a promise of low taxes to anyone who wanted to settle there. At the same time, Irish immigrants, subjects of the King of England, poured into the United States. These migratory movements caused some confusion over the question of who was loyal to which country.

Britain took advantage of this confusion on the high seas. In British law, if you were born a British subject, you stayed a British subject for your whole life. There was no naturalization process. They didn't recognize American citizenship for their former subjects. They didn't come into America and grab British-born subjects and drag them home, but they did that very thing on the ocean. Britain was involved in a war with France, and that war was being fought mostly at sea, by the French and British navies. In addition, Britain needed sailors to man the ships that traveled throughout her far-flung empire. A small country, Britain could ill afford to lose all this manpower to the United States. Like a parent retrieving runaway children, captains of British ships overpowered American merchant ships at sea and “impressed” any sailors they thought had been born in Britain. Of course, it was hard to tell whether a sailor was American or British born. Many sailors who were born in America ended up serving on British ships, as well as sailors who had been born in Britain but were American citizens. This confusion also led to accusations of takeover plots and conspiracies on both sides of the Canadian border. The Americans were convinced that the British government was planning a new invasion of the United States, from Canada, and the British government was convinced that the Americans were sending Republican agitators and newspapers to Canada to spread republican ideals and cause unrest amongst the settlers there. Some of these accusations were accurate. There were some unscrupulous people who sought to get rich by fomenting hate and mistrust between Canada and the United States.

Our own Ira Allen, brother of Ethan, was involved in negotiations with the French to join Vermont with the French in a takeover of Quebec. After the takeover, Ira planned to have Quebec and Vermont unite and form a new state called “United Columbia”. Ira was on a ship full of guns headed to North America, when British naval forces intercepted it and impounded the contents. Ransford Rogers, one of Ira's cronies, went to Montreal to organize a secret society created to take over the city on behalf of Vermonters. The “White Cap Society” had 61 members, bound by a blood oath. During club meetings, held at night, Rogers performed occult ceremonies while all attendees wore special white caps. These ceremonies were supposed to yield the secrets to finding various hidden treasures. The White Cap Society also supposedly organized a plot to plunder and burn Montreal with the help of 1,000 armed men from Vermont. Montreal authorities got wind of Rogers' activities and chased him back to Vermont, where he disappeared. Rogers been run out of New Jersey for running a similar scam there. There's even a book about him – intriguingly entitled “An Account of the Beginning, Transactions and Discovery of Ransford Rogers, Who Seduced Many By Pretended Hobgoblins and Apparitions and Thereby Extorted Money From Their Pockets”.

These various threats to the security of Canada made the British nervous. British officers began to build alignments with Indian tribes on the American border, offering food, firearms and ammunition in return for allegiance against the Americans. On November 6, 1811, William Henry Harrison led a force of Americans in an invasion of a Shawnee Indian village, Prophetstown, on Tippecanoe Creek in Indiana. At Prophetstown, two Shawnee leaders, supported by the British, had gathered a band of followers to resist American settlement of their land. Although Harrison and his men succeeded in driving the Shawnee out of Prophetstown, they suffered heavy casualties.

The triple threats of impressment, British-sponsored Indian attacks, and troubles over the Canadian border convinced Republicans that war should be declared. The Federalists reluctantly agreed, but the two parties couldn't come to a consensus on how the war should be fought. The Federalists thought the war should be fought on the sea, with a strong American Navy, especially since the whole thing began at sea. The Republicans thought that building a Navy would be too expensive, and they didn't like the idea of any standing military. Convinced that Americans would rise to the occasion voluntarily like they did during the Revolution, the Republicans wanted a land war. They supported an invasion of Canada. They had the majority in Congress, and they carried the day.


Monday, November 12, 2012

Windsor County Court November 6


Van Monguer, DOB 3/7/64, was charged with a violation of an abuse prevention order on November 6 in Rochester.

Donna Gibson, DOB 2/7/48, was charged with driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol in Springfield on October 20.

Kathie Lawrence, DOB 12/9/50 was charged with driving under the influence on October 9 in Woodstock.

Deborah Anne Porter, DOB 9/1/58, pled not guilty to a charge of simple assault on September 16 in Springfield.

Warren Atkins DOB 8/20/67 pled not guilty to a charge of DUI in Taftsville on October 22.




Monday, November 5, 2012

Windsor County Court October 30th


Michael Bates, DOB 3/15/82 pled not guilty to two charges of the sale of a depressant, stimulant or narcotic on February 29 in Springfield



Nicholas Laplaca, DOB 2/24/90, pled not guilty to a charge of reckless endangerment in Sharon on September 16th.



Cameron Chung, DOB 2/16/89, pled not guilty to a charge of grand larceny of greater than $900, and operating a vehicle without owner's consent in Ludlow on August 3.



Don Fielder pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Bethel on October 20.



Zachary Allen, DOB 6/8/92 pled not guilty to charges of burglary, unlawful mischief, unlawful trespass, and buying, receiving, possessing or concealing stolen property. Allen allegedly used bolt cutters to break into storage units in Weathersfield on August 22.



Andrew Picknell, DOB 10/18/93, pled not guilty to a charge of buying, selling, possessing or concealing stolen property in Hartford on June 1.



Jarrad Smith, DOB 12/23/83, pled guilty to a charge of simple assault on September 15.



Richard Martin, DOB 5/23/57, pled not guilty to operating with license suspended in Cavendish on September 21.



Jenna Kendall, DOB 12/5/92, pled not guilty to operating with license suspended in Hartford on September 8.




Simeon Ide's Apprenticeship


In 1809, Simeon's childhood came to an end when, at age 15, he was apprenticed to a printer in Windsor. Oliver Farnsworth (Stephen Farnsworth's son) and Sylvester Churchill printed the “Vermont Republican” newspaper. Simeon was the first apprentice to work for the Republican. He was to serve as apprentice for six years, until his 21st birthday. It appears that his actual “master” in this arrangement was Sylvester Churchill, and not Oliver Farnsworth.

Simeon did the work of a combined servant and printing apprentice. The primary job of a beginning printer's apprentice was to deal with the ink balls. This was a dirty, nasty job. The ink balls were soft leather balls filled with horsehair and mounted on a stick. They were a little bigger than a large man's fist. The apprentice would dip the balls in ink and then run the balls over the set type before running pages through the printer. The balls wore out fast, so it was the apprentice's job to make a supply of them and keep them inked.
inking balls

In “The Franklinsonian”, Simeon tells us that he also brought in firewood, kept the fires going, carded wool and ran errands for the master's wife. He says that he did “this and that for her ladyship at any time of the day or evening.” You get the idea that his master's wife was not his favorite. He does say that the “marster” gave him time to work for other people to make some extra money. One thing he did for other printers was sew together almanacs. He used his extra money to buy books which he read in his free time, which was from 8:00 to 11:00 every night. That was as long as his candle lasted.

Simeon also mentions that during meals he ate, not with the family, but at the second table, and “thought it no indignity.” This makes me think that there were other people that worked for the Churchills, because you wouldn't have a separate table just for one person.

During Simeon's apprenticeship, tensions were renewed between the fledgling United States and superpower Britain. The War of 1812 was looming. Simeon was full of youthful enthusiasm about the war, fueled, no doubt, by his mother's fireside tales of the heroes of the Revolutionary War. Simeon was only 17 when he wrote a letter to the editor of the newspaper he worked for, encouraging his fellow Vermonters to join the war. “Soldiers of Vermont! Upon you devolves an important duty, the faithful discharge of which requires a thorough conviction of its utility and necessity. You are about to be called upon to leave your family, friends and relations, and encounter the hardships incident to a war-faring life. And for what? For the gratification of accumulating territorial possessions? No. But to retrieve the honor, independence and liberty which was purchased at the expense of the lives and fortunes of thousands who nobly broke the chains of bondage and gave us an inheritance to be transferred unimpaired to our latest posterity.”

Although Simeon's apprenticeship was supposed to last for six years, it only lasted for two. The war intervened. Churchill and Farnsworth dissolved their partnership and went their separate ways. Churchill joined the military, and Farnsworth left Vermont to go to Newport, Rhode Island, which was quite a step up! As part of his new military duties, Churchill was a recruiter and tried to recruit his young former apprentice. Of course, Simeon was all set to go, but he was underage and needed his father's permission to sign up. Lemuel didn't share his son's fervor for war. Lemuel responded to Simeon's letter asking for permission to enlist. “I will go first, then, if necessary, you can come after.”

I like this answer, and I bet many parents throughout the country were thinking the same thing. They remembered the Revolutionary War. In the end, all hands were needed and people rose to the occasion. However, they also remembered that war was no lark for 17 year olds. Lemuel is saying, “If it comes to that, I will go. If they really need you, you can come later. In the meantime – no way.”