Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Windsor County Court April 1


The following individuals were charged with DUI's:



Didace LaCroix, DOB 12/1/43 2nd DUI, in Bethel on March 26

Richard Pellegrino, DOB 2/7/56, 2nd DUI, in Hartford on March 21

Andrew Mann, DOB 6/29/68, in Ludlow on March 23

Jordan Rogers, DOB 3/26/93 in Hartford on March 22

Christine Rondeau, DOB 3/23/92 in Hartford on March 22



Ben Harper, DOB 2/25/85, pleaded not guilty to a charge of sale of heroin in Hartford



Michelle Hayward, DOB 4/21/81 pleaded not guilty to a charge of the sale of heroin in Hartford



Gabrielle Dimick, DOB 4/17/90 was charged with enabling alcohol consumption by a minor in Springfield





Melinda Start, DOB 1/28/82 pleaded not guilty to 3 charges of false pretenses or false tokens in Chester on September 17



Jeffrey Emerson, DOB 9/20/90, pled not guilty to the following charges:

buying, selling, possessing, concealing or receiving stolen property, in Norwich, in December, 2013 or January 2014

possession of stolen property in Norwich on January 15-17

burglary in Norwich, December 14

You can read more about these charges here:
 



Carl Lupton, DOB 2/17/57, was charged with his 2nd DUI charge, which involved driving under the influence while driving a school bus on March 24  You can read more about this charge here:
 



Clint Tetreault, DOB 1/21/58, pleaded not guilty to charges of sale and possession of marijuana in Windsor on February 12



Liam Vezina, DOB 7/6/96, pleaded not guilty to charges of simple assault and unlawful mischief in Hartford on October 17



Sean Aubin, DOB 8/24/89, was charged with careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Woodstock on June 30



Elliott Tucker, DOB 3/3/84, pleaded not guilty to a charge of enabling consumption of alcohol by a minor in Springfield on June 12, 2013






Thursday, May 22, 2014

Jonathan Chase and Saratoga


In the Spring of 1777, political battles within the upper echelons of George Washington's military commanders had left Fort Ticonderoga in New York State vulnerable to attack by the British. Colonel Jonathan Chase and his soldiers from Cornish, New Hampshire marched all the way from Cornish to Fort Ti, only to be told that their services were no longer needed because the danger from British forces had passed. The arrived home only to be sent back to New York, but on their return trip they met soldiers headed for home with the news that Fort Ticonderoga had fallen to the British. In response to this fiasco, General Horatio Gates was reinstated as the commander of the northern forces.

During the Revolutionary War, Committees of Safety in each state organized and managed the troops from their areas and districts. The Upper Valley's Committee of Safety consisted of delegates from Cornish, Lebanon, Plainfield and Hanover. In a letter dated September 17, General Gates wrote to the Committees of Safety asking them to send troops, as British General Burgoyne was headed toward Saratoga. The Committee of Safety met on September 21 to plan a response to this request. It's impressive that in the space of four days, the letter traveled safely from the war zone in the Lake George region, to the Upper valley and the Committee was able to meet and take action.

During the Revolution, troops couldn't travel long distances because of inadequate roads and primitive modes of transportation. When General Gates needed more troops in New York than that area could provide, he sent missives requesting reinforcements to committees of safety within a couple of days travel. Troops were not sent across the country to fight in other regions. I think that partially explains why the Patriot troops were more likely to win battles fought in rural areas. The men that fought in those battles were more familiar with guns and could use them more effectively than soldiers from the city who may have had less experience with firearms.

The Upper Valley Committee of Safety sent Jonathan Chase and his troops back to New York one more time, along with troops from Lebanon and Hanover. Originally, the term “regiment” referred to the geographic area a commander drew his troops from. The minutes of the Committee of Safety, quoted in “A History of Dartmouth College and Hanover New Hampshire” by Frederick Chase, say, “whatever number of men shall turn out for the purpose aforementioned from the towns of Colonel Chase's regiment shall have the liberty to chuse (sic) proper officers for their company from amongst themselves.” This quote refers to the towns of the regiment and not to the members, men, or soldiers of the regiment. There were seventeen regiments in New Hampshire and Chase's regiment was the 17th. Each regiment had to fill a quota, providing a certain number of soldiers. These men left Cornish on September 26, 1777, and traveled to Fort Number 4, crossed the river, and headed toward New York, probably via the Crown Point Road.

General Burgoyne's plan was to invade New York, and by controlling the Hudson River he would cut New England off from the rest of the colonies. He believed that if he could isolate New England the rest of the states would abandon the rebellion, because New England was the heart of the rebellion. After the British captured Fort Ticonderoga, Burgoyne sent a force of Hessian troops to Bennington,
Vermont looking for food and supplies. These men were defeated in the Battle of Bennington and never rejoined the main army in New York. Just as importantly, they never brought the much needed food and supplies they were sent to find.

While Burgoyne was on the march from Ticonderoga to Saratoga, Horatio Gates was busy building defenses on a ridge of bluffs near Stillwater, New York overlooking the Hudson River. If the Patriots controlled the river and the road coming into Saratoga, a natural bottleneck in the river valley would funnel the invading British right into a trap. On September 19, 1777, the two armies collided in a field on a farm near the bluffs. In a day of fierce fighting, the field changed hands several times but at the end of the day, the British prevailed and controlled the field. They could not manage to advance any further. On September 22, Burgoyne got word that General Clinton, the British officer who was in charge of the forces occupying New York City, was getting ready to send reinforcements to Saratoga. Burgoyne's forces had carried the day on that first day of fighting, but could not gain any further ground without reinforcements, so he decided to dig in and wait for the arrival of Clinton's men.

Clinton's men did start north, capturing a few forts a long the way. A few troops made it as far as Albany, but Clinton decided he needed them more to maintain the occupation of New York City and Philadelphia. Meanwhile, Horatio Gates' army was becoming increasingly stronger as more and more reinforcements arrived every day. One of the new arrivals was Jonathan Chase's regiment of 142 men from Cornish. Along the way, he had gathered even more recruits so that by the time he arrived in Saratoga on September 26th, he had 235 men. On October 1, 30 more men to joined the Patriot forces.

These additions, combined with significant reinforcements from northern New England, gave Gates confidence that he could meet the British in battle and beat them. On October 7th, the two armies battled again, and this time the outcome was much different. Although Burgoyne managed to hold the field on September 19th, he lost a large number of troops in the effort. On October 7th, his depleted troops faced an enemy that was substantially increased in number. The Patriots soundly defeated the
British in that battle. Burgoyne lost so many men he was outnumbered 3-1. With nightfall, he and his remaining troops retreated under cover of darkness to the town of Saratoga. In Saratoga, starving, miserable and surrounded by the Patriot army, there was no other option for General Burgoyne but to surrender. The first thing the Patriot army did after the surrender was feed the starving British troops.

There is some mention online that Jonathan Chase may have “drawn up” the Articles of Convention” that outlined the terms of Burgoyne's surrender. The Wikipedia entry for Jonathan Chase makes that claim, and so do several ancestry websites. I have spent hours looking for other, more legitimate sources that mention this, but I could not find any. The other question, not that it really matters, is what does “drawn up” mean? Did Jonathan write the Articles of Convention, supposedly, as dictated by someone else because he had good handwriting? Or did he compose and write them? Reproductions of the Articles of Convention are available for purchase, and if it could be verified that Jonathan wrote them, it would be possible to buy a document that you know is a copy of something written by him.

Sources: Chase, Frederick "A History of Dartmouth College and Hanover New Hampshire" 1891 Hanover, NH: J Wilson and son http://books.google.com/books/about/A_History_of_Dartmouth_College_and_the_T.html?id=gfEKAAAAIAAJ

Child, William Henry "History of the Town of Cornish New Hampshire" 1911 Concord NH: Rumford Press https://archive.org/details/historyoftownofc01chil

Heald, Bruce "New Hampshire and the Revolutionary War" 2013 Charleston: The History Press




Sunday, May 4, 2014

Windsor County Court March 25


The following individuals pleaded not guilty to DUI charges:

Courtney Austin, DOB 2/6/77, her second, in Royalton on March 16

Louis Lafasciano, DOB 2/9/55, his first, in Sharon on March 19

Lauri Kalinen, DOB 4/20/51, her first, in Ludlow on March 3

Dylan Graves, DOB 9/23/91, his second, in Ludlow on March 14

Addison Greenwood, DOB 6/20/75, pleaded not guilty to his second DUI charge, and to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident with property damage in Chester on March 15



Michael Gerow, DOB 7/2/72, pleaded not guilty to forging papers assigning a vehicle in Springfield on December 13

Michael Shepard, DOB 7/6/66, pleaded not guilty to taking a bear out of season in Rochester on February 13

Alexander Delaney, DOB 10/5/94, ple,aded not guilty to a charge of burglary in Hartland on September 19. This charge involves a burglary at the Hartland town library

Mackenzie Delaney, DOB 6/12/96, pleaded not guilty to a charge of unlawful trespass in a building in Hartland on September 19. This charge involves the same burglary

Jeffrey Tate, DOB 1/26/88, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Ludlow on March 4. He was also charges with DLS in Windsor on February 1

Brendon Collins, DOB 4/12/6, pleaded not guilty to a charge of possession of heroin in Hartford on January 31
 
          Three Medicaid Fraud Cases

Magen Hill, DOB 5/3/86, of Perkinsville pleaded not guilty to a charge of medicaid fraud/claim for service

Therese Ambrose, DOB 2/19/59, of Springfield, pleaded not guilty to a charge of medicaid fraud

Crystal Hathaway-Therrien, DOB 9/21/83, of Bradford, pleaded not guilty to a charge of medicaid fraud

You can read more about these charges here:




Frederick Greenwell, DOB 12/27/49, pleaded nolo contendre to a charge of careless or negligent operation of a motor vehicle in Springfield on February 4



Windsor County Crime on the web:

Christopher Bush





Jereme Schoff, Springfield









Jonathan Chase - Cornish's Revolutionary War Colonel


When Governor Benning Wentworth granted the charter for the town of Cornish, New Hampshire, he named the town after Sir Samuel Cornish, a renowned admiral in the Royal Navy. In 1765, the Chase family traveled up the Connecticut River by canoe to become the first family to live in the Connecticut River town. Judge Samuel Chase had purchased a considerable tract of land from one of the first incorporators of the town, and he and his two sons came north to establish their homesteads in the wilderness north of Fort Number 4. Judge Chase's son Dudley's and his wife Alice had 14 children, including Alice, who was born soon after they arrived at their new home. Alice Chase was the first child born in Cornish.

Judge Chase's other son, Jonathan, born in 1732, was a colonel in the Revolutionary War. He was colonel, paymaster and mustermaster of the 13th New Hampshire regiment. He was appointed as a colonel in 1775. Jonathan was 45 during the Revolutionary War. 
 

Jonathan and his men were first called to duty in the early Spring of 1777. Cornish was a rendezvous point for several other regiments. From Cornish the New Hampshire soldiers marched to Cavendish, Vermont, where they met up with more regiments and continued to Fort Ticonderoga. The whole trip took a month, and when they finally arrived at Fort Ticonderoga they were told to turn around and go home, that the danger to the fort had passed.
                                                                                                                          Jonathan Chase
Again they were called out. On June 27, Jonathan and his regiment of 186 men left again for Ticonderoga. On their way, they met returning troops who told them that Ticonderoga had fallen to General Burgoyne. When they heard this news, they were angry and discouraged, feeling that had they been allowed to stay at Ticonderoga when they were there a month ago, maybe the fort wouldn't have fallen.
                                                                 Fort Ticonderoga

During the previous several months, Patriot Generals Philip Schuyler and Horatio Gates, both in positions of importance in the northern region, had been involved in competitions for more power and more important command posts. In March, the Continental Congress gave the top position to Gates, but when Schuyler protested, the decision was reversed and the position was given to Schuyler. Gates, who was in charge of Fort Ticonderoga, refused to serve under Schuyler and went to Philadelphia.

Arthur St. Clair replaced Horatio Gates as commander in charge of Fort Ticonderoga. He arrived three weeks before General Burgoyne attacked, on June 9. Jonathan and his regiment from the Upper Valley had arrived during the change in command. Jonathan left Cornish on May 7. If the History of Cornish, by William Child (1911) is accurate, and it took exactly a month for Jonathan and his regiment to reach Ticonderoga, would have arrived on June 7, two days before St. Clair. It's possible that no one was in charge at Ticonderoga when our guys arrived, and whoever was the ranking officer there at the time just told them to go home. It's also not hard to imagine Gates there, but packing to leave and not wanting to bother with a bunch of country bumpkins from New Hampshire.
 
 

All accounts of General St Clair's arrival in Ticonderoga state that he immediately knew there weren't enough troops, and insufficient ammunition to conduct a successful defense if Ticonderoga were attacked. It's hard to believe he would have met New Hampshire's troops, knocking on the gate of the fort ready to serve, and sent them back home. When it became apparent that an attack was imminent, St Clair abandoned Fort Ti, and Burgoyne's troops arrived and took possession almost unopposed.

St Clair knew when he abandoned Fort Ti that he was putting his reputation and military career at risk. He is quoted as saying, “I knew I would have saved my reputation by sacrificing the army, but were I to do so, I would forfeit that which the world would not restore, the approbation of my own conscience. Sure enough, St Clair was court martialled for charges of cowardice. He was acquitted with the highest honor. The court concluded that “Burgoyne's army, when he met St. Clair, numbered 7863 men. St. Clair had less than 2200, all of whom were half fed and half clad. Burgoyne surrounded him with 142 guns, while St. Clair had less than 100 second rate cannon of various sizes and these were manned by inexperienced men.” (Stanley L. Klos 2011 “Arthur St. Clair” The Forgotten Fathers http://theforgottenfounders.com/the-forgotten-fathers/arthur-st-clair/)