Monday, May 27, 2013

Windsor County Court April 30


James Filipowicz, DOB 6/20/90 pled not guilty to a charge of burglary in Cavendish on February 20



Walter Surething, DOB 9/24/55 pled not guilty to his second DUI charge, occurring in Ludlow on April 20



Christal Truell, DOB DOB 1/7/94 pled not guilty to a charge of possession of cocaine, marijuana, depressant, stimulant or narcotic in Hartford on March 18



Linsi Nylund, DOB 2/18/93 pled not guilty to a charge of petty larceny and buying, selling, receiving, possessing or concealing stolen property in Weathersfield in February.



Tony Jones, DOB 9/2/80 pled not guilty to a his first DUI charge occurring in Springfield in April.



Cameron Hartwell, DOB 6/7/94 pled not guilty to charges of unlawful mischief and unlawful trespass in Hartford on March 26, these charges involve some incidents of graffiti.



Devon Dudley, DOB 7/4/89 pled not guilty to a charge of unlawful mischief and unlawful tresspass in Hartford on March 26. These charges were also grafitti- related.



James Edgar, DOB 1/14/68 pled not guilty to charges of reckless or negligent operation and operating with a suspended license on April 21



Jessica Chandler pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana in Hartford on March 9



Michael Buckholtz, DOB 8/18/63 pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, on April 24 in Hartford



Raymond Blanchard, DOB 12/30/80 pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI on April 24 in Hartford.



Thomas Berecz, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Sharon on April 23



Four Additional Court Cases from December, 2012



Ronald Evans, DOB 8/4/81, pled not guilty to charges of domestic assault and unlawful mischief on December 27, 2012, in Hartland



Jordan Tabor, DOB 9/11/79 pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, on December 25, 2012 in Windsor



Sean Dunton, DOB 10/5/89, pled not guilty to two charges of unlawful mischief in Hartford on November 1, 2012



Joesph O'Keefe, DOB 4/29/93, pled not guilty to charges of obstructing justice, reckless endangerment, assault with a deadly weapon, unlawful mischief, giving false information to a police officer, and committing a crime with weapons, in Hartford on November 12, 2012. O'Keefe allegedly fired a gun into a person's home. You can read the whole story here:http://www.vermonttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/RH/20121222/NEWS02/712229933


Thursday, May 23, 2013

Vermont's Nine Months Soldiers


During the month of May, I have been busy with some family issues, and with a course I have had to take for my job. The course is finally over as of today, (I got an A) and I am psyched to be researching Upper Valley history again. These stories never cease to amaze me.

When I finally had to leave the Curriers of Canaan, New Hampshire, I realized that I hadn't written anything about the Civil War. The Civil War started in 1861 and ended in 1865. 2011 was the 150th Anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War. The Southern states seceded from the Union during the winter of 1861. The Southerners decided they wanted to take control of Fort Sumpter, an American fort in the Harbor of Charleston, South Carolina. The war was started when Fort Sumpter was attacked, in April of 1861.

I googled “Vermont in the Civil War” and found a site that listed all of the towns that had companies in the army during the Civil War. I chose Barnard because it was the first Upper Valley town I saw, which makes sense since it was first in the alphabet. The first name I came to was Charles Aikens. And so I began a journey back in time.

The first Union offensive against the Confederate States was the Peninsula Campaign, with George McClellan commanding. The campaign started with Union troops winning a few unsubstantial battles against Confederate General Joseph Johnston, but when Robert E. Lee replaced Johnson as Confederate commander, Lee delivered defeat after defeat to the more cautious McClellan.

As 1861 ended and 1862 began, it became clear to President Lincoln that he would need more soldiers to fight a more aggressive war. He decided to call for another 300,000 troops. These troops would serve for only nine months. Each state had a quota of troops to fill. Vermont's Governor Holbrook, of Brattleboro, called on town officers to enlist men and form companies to fill Vermont's quota of 4,898 men. Each town wanted to fill its company totally by volunteers, thus avoiding the embarrassment of having to draft men to fight. Wealthy citizens offered a bounty of 50 dollars to men who would join. Committees went from farm to farm, trying to convince prospective recruits to join up for nine months. In the end, Vermont met its quota. Around 50 men were drafted, but they officially signed up as volunteers, to avoid giving the impression that their towns were full of men who shirked their duty to their country.

These people enlisted in the army not to free the slaves, but to “put down the rebellion”. They were willing to put their lives on the line to force the recalcitrant southern states to rejoin the union. It wasn't about protecting the homeland, it was about preserving the power and prestige of their nation, which had been disrespected by a bunch of renegade southerners who had decided they would separate from the United States and form their own country. By 1862, 10,000 Vermonters had already left their farms and towns to go down South and reunite the country by force, but the fight was proving more difficult than had been predicted. By the time the leaves had begun to turn and the apples were in the cider presses, almost 5,000 more were getting ready to leave.

Not every town had a company. Larger towns were responsible for recruiting and organizing companies, and hosted drill sessions for the new recruits. During the country's early years, the militia was active and citizen soldiers drill ed every month to keep their military skills sharp. By the mid 1800's, this practice had been discontinued and the new six month recruits didn't know the first thing about military maneuvers.

Each company was made up of approximately 100 men. 10 companies made a regiment of 1000 men. Vermont had five nine month regiments: the 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th and 16th. Three of these regiments held companies from the Upper Valley. The 12th Vermont had companies from West Windsor, Woodstock, Tunbridge, and Bradford. Colonel Asa Blunt, from St Johnsbury was the commander, with Roswell Farnum from Bradford as Lieutenant Colonel. West Fairlee had a company in the 15th Vermont, commanded by Colonel Redfield Proctor of Cavendish. The company from Barnard was in the 16th Vermont, commanded by Colonel Wheelock Veazey of Springfield.

Charles Aikens was born in Royalton in 1833. He had two brothers and one sister. He married Jane Paddock in 1857, which means he had only been married for four years when he enlisted from Barnard in August of 1862, at age 29.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Thoughts on the Boston Marathon Bombing


In researching the Currier family of Canaan, and Noyes Academy, general stores, the postal system and consumption, I feel like I skipped right over the Civil War. I've ordered some books on the Civil War and I'm waiting for them to come. I've been thinking about the media exposure of the Boston Marathon bombers and some issues here in the Upper Valley.

The Boston Marathon bombing was horrible. It doesn't matter how you look at it, it was just horrible. The Marathon has long been viewed as a Spring Rite in Boston, an athletic event of amateurs. Boston is well-known for its sports teams and sports history, but the marathon isn't about superstars or money-making. The Boston Marathon draws 500,000 spectators and more than 25,000 participants. It is a rite of spring that involves running, cheering, and no superstars making millions of dollars to play a game. It is just heartbreaking that, even once, the experience of the Boston Marathon would be ruined by violence.

Why would two brothers, a teenager and a young adult, build bombs and detonate them at the Boston Marathon. I can comprehend religious fanaticism and dying for a cause, but these boys had been in America for 10 years. It's hard to understand. Were they biding their time for ten years? Were they recruited by Muslim extremists? Are we lucky more of these incidents haven't happened? It just seems hard to fathom that two kids, practically, could cause so much damage.

And then locking down the whole city of Boston for a day while law enforcement searches for the surviving brother – wow. If you study behavioral science, you are well aware that human beings engage in behavior for a goal. Every single time a person does anything, it is to achieve a goal. Every action is going to have a positive reinforcement or a negative consequence. When national newscasters went nuts proclaiming that “In Boston's 350 year (or so) history, this has never, ever happened”, I cannot believe that if there was a terrorist group responsible for the bombing that day, they didn't get lots and lots of positive reinforcement for the unprecedented event of Boston being shut down for a whole day. Oh, and in the end, military and police personnel didn't find the kid. An average citizen, acting with more than average bravery, I think, noticed something out of place in his back yard, investigated, and called 9-1-1. I just think newscasters need to show a little restraint. Although, who wasn't watching the whole thing unfold on national television? We certainly were. Now I look back on it and the media circus surrounding those two boys, and wish it had been handled a different way.

Which brings me to another point. I do research for this blog and I discover lots of interesting information. I just can't get enough of the history stuff. The more I do it the more I want to do. I can't wait for this summer when I can visit some of these historical societies and explore some of the sites I couldn't go to during the winter and early Spring. I went to Canaan over April vacation and froze in the rain and wind while I was in the cemetery. I learned some awesome history, but I'm looking forward to doing it in the nice weather.

I also learn about crime in Windsor County. Hardcore drug dealers from New Jersey dealing heroin in front of the Springfield Middle School. They had lots and lots of various drugs in their car, and an actual safe to hold the money they made. I couldn't believe my eyes when I read this. In front of a middle school? How does this happen?

Not so fun fact – heroin comes from Afghanistan. The Taliban controls the heroin trade. How much damage and devastation does heroin do in the Upper Valley, in terms of human lives, in terms of lost production, in terms of dollars spent trying to combat it, in terms of the suffering and heartbreak of the families of people whose loved ones are drug addicted? The city of Boston willingly shuts itself down for 24 hours, submitting to door to door searches to find a terrorist bomber. National news channels go on for day after day, giving repetitive moment by moment updates regarding the search for the surviving bomber, and then his capture. They continue with his life story, and interviews with his family, friends, classmates, etc. Yet right here in Vermont, drug dealers from New Jersey, probably gang members, park in front of a middle school and deal poison that originally came from Afghanistan, spending American dollars to buy poison that ruins lives, slowly, painfully, tearing whole families apart, and in the process funding the Taliban, and it's just kind of accepted. Yes, it's horrible, but what can you do?. I'll tell you what you can do. Be as actively engaged as the man in Watertown. If you see something wrong, investigate. Call 9-1-1 and make sure the situation is addressed. If it isn't, call back. If the town police don't respond, call the State Police or the sheriff's office.

Windsor County Court April 23


Stephen Desimone DOB 2/6/85 pled guilty to a charge of his second DUI in Woodstock on April 6



David Sheppard, DOB 4/26/80 pled guilty to a charge of possession of cocaine in Chester on March 12



Anthony Merritt Dob ½/75 pled not guilty to a charge of his third DUI in Perkinsville in March 8



Melissa Donato DOB 11/13/82 pled not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license in Hartland on March 8



John Zannini, DOB 7/27/58 pled not guilty to a charge of DUI on April 5 in Hartford


Leigh Whitten, DOB 2/3/72 pled guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana, on March 8 in Hartford.



Joshua Corliss, DOB 7/7/82 pled guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license in Springfield on February 28



Frederick Rogers, DOB 12/16/79 pled not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license in Weathersfield on March 15



Michele Demar, DOB 11/18/65 pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Royalton on February 14.