Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Salmon Chase, Secretary of the Treasury and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court


Salmon Chase was the son of Ithamar and Janette Chase. Although he was born in Cornish, his father left Cornish to join a glass-making business in Keene. This business went bankrupt, and Ithamar died soon after, leaving his wife Janette a widow with eleven children to feed. She did the best she could, but life was very difficult. She was determined to provide Salmon with a good education, because she felt he was the smartest of all of her children. As time went on, she found it harder and harder to feed and educate her children, until finally she asked her brother-in-law Bishop Philander Chase if he would educate Salmon and provide him with food and board in exchange for his labor. Philander acquiesced, and at age twelve, Salmon was sent to frontier Ohio to live with his Uncle. This was a very difficult time in Uncle Philander's life as well, and Salmon spent an unhappy year and a half with Uncle Philander before he returned home to New Hampshire.

On his way home, Salmon couldn't help but notice that his home state was going through hard times. The economic downturn that had helped to cause Ithamar's downfall was still being felt throughout New Hampshire, and more and more families were leaving Northern New England to go west. In every town he passed through, Salmon saw abandoned homes, farms and mills.

When he arrived home, his mother and sisters greeted him with happy surprise and open arms. Life for them was more difficult than ever because his mother had become almost totally blind. Even so, she was still determined that her son would continue his education. Through family connections, Salmon was given an opportunity to teach school in a nearby town. Salmon had spent most of his education in private tutoring or in boarding schools. He had no idea how to run a multi-age classroom of both boys and girls. Many of the students were older than he was, and he had very little patience with them. The only ways of discipline he had learned were the harsh methods he had experienced while he lived with Uncle Philander. He certainly had never learned that praise or encouragement would yield better results or less misery. As a result, he used so much corporal punishment that the parents complained and the school board fired him.

Once again, Salmon landed at home on his mother's doorstep. This time, she sent him to live with his favorite aunt, Rachel Denison, in South Royalton. At Aunt Rachel's, at last, he enjoyed being part of a functional, loving family. While he lived with the Denison's he studied at Royalton Academy under Nathaniel Sprague. This was a final push of studying to prepare him to apply to Dartmouth College in 1824.

All of his mother's efforts came to fruition while Salmon was at Dartmouth. He excelled academically and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He had some good friends, and in fact, one friendship was almost his undoing. In his biography of Salmon, author John Niven tells the story. When one of his friends was suspended, Salmon requested and was granted a meeting with the President of the college, in order to argue his friend's innocence. When the President of the college told Salmon that the college was a better judge of a student's guilt or innocence than another student, Salmon told him that he would have to leave college, if that was the college's stance on the matter. The President asked him if he had talked it over with his mother, and Salmon said he had not, and requested leave to visit her to discuss the situation. The President refused to grant him the leave, and Salmon said he would go anyway, and then left. His mother was not very happy with him when he arrived on her doorstep yet again. Niven neglects to tell us how Salmon mended the fences between himself and the President of the college, but he was readmitted and graduated with excellent grades.

After he graduated, Salmon decided that he would seek his fortune in Washington, DC. He traveled to the nation's capital, and sought a clerkship from his Uncle Dudley. This is the Uncle Dudley who had raised so many other Chase cousins, including Uncle Philander's own sons. Uncle Dudley gave Salmon a cool reception, however, offering him the price of a spade and the advice to earn a living by using it. Uncle Dudley said that he had procured a clerkship for another nephew, and the clerkship proved “the boy's undoing and he vowed he would never do this for a relative again.” Salmon left his uncle and years later, thought back and decided that this was the best thing his uncle could have done for him, because if he had gotten that clerkship, he might have remained a clerk for his whole life.

Salmon finally got a job teaching again, this time more successfully than the first. When saved enough money, he went to Cincinnati where he became a lawyer. As a lawyer, he became interested in politics when he argued a few legal cases regarding the rights of free Negroes. He was a leader in
the anti-slavery movement as Governor of Ohio and as a Senator from Ohio. During Abraham Lincoln's Presidency, he was the Secretary of the Treasury. While he was the Treasure Secretary, he created a national banking system. Under Salmon Chase, the government first issued paper money, called “greenbacks”. Prior to the Civil War, the government only issued gold and silver coins. The first 1$ bill had Salmon's picture of it. One of these dollar bills can be found on Ebay for sale for $1,150. Salmon's portrait is also on the highest denomination of American money, the $10,000 bill,
no longer in circulation.













In 1864, Salmon resigned as Treasury Secretary and became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. He served as Chief Justice until his death in 1873. One of his first duties in this role was when he admitted the first African American attorney who argued a case before the Supreme Court. Salmon also presided over the impeachment of Andrew Johnson, the Vice President who succeeded President Lincoln after Lincoln was assassinated.

The Chase National Bank , founded four years after Salmon's death, in 1877, was named after Salmon, memorializing his creation of American paper money. This bank became Chase Manhattan Bank in 1955 and JPMorgan Chase in 2000.

Although the rest of the Chases may have looked down on his father and his family, Salmon rose to a pinnacle of success that surpassed even his illustrious relatives. Although he was successful in the national political, legal and financial world, Salmon was not really happy in his personal life. He had few close friends, although the few friends he did have meant a great deal to him throughout his life. He was never satisfied with what he had accomplished, and spent most of his life trying to maneuver his way to the presidency. His difficult childhood, especially the time he spent with Uncle Philander, taught him never to let his guard down and never to relax. He lost three wives at an early age, continuing the sadness he learned at an early age when he lost his father.

Chase had two daughters, Kate and Nettie. Both grew up in boarding schools. As a young woman, Kate played the role of Washington hostess for her father, reveling in the socialite whirl of the nation's capital. She married Rhode Island Senator William Sprague, who was a millionaire, but also an alcoholic and not particularly a nice person. Then again, Kate was not known for her sweet innocence, herself. Nettie married William Sprague Hoyt, a wealthy banker and cousin of Kate's husband. Nettie was much more shy and less ambitious than her sister. Apparently Nettie and her husband had a happy marriage.

Two of Salmon's brothers, William and Alexander, were unable to support their families, and were both alcoholics. His sister Hannah married John Whipple. Abigail married Dr. Isaac Colby, and died at age 38 after having lost three infant children. Dudley died at age 20 in Kentucky. Janette seems not to have married and died in Ohio at age 55. Janette married Josiah Skinner, had four children, and died at age 55 in Ohio. Alice, one of Salmon's favorite sisters, never married and died in Cincinnati when she was in her early fifties. She helped take care of the girls after Salmon's wives died. Edward married Mary Eliza Metcalf. He also died in his early fifties, in Niagara, New York, and apparently did not have children. Salmon's favorite sister, Helen, married Reverend Henry Wallbridge, at the same time Salmon married his second wife, Eliza, in a double wedding. Helen also died in her early fifties, but did have children.

You would think that the other Chases would have made a huge big deal out of their relation to Salmon. There are plenty of places on the internet that mention that Dudley Chase Jr, or Philander Chase are uncles of Secretary of the Treasure Salmon Chase, but the Chases themselves constantly mention Bishop Philander and pretty much snub Salmon. Even Philander himself, and his granddaughter Laura Chase Smith, fail to mention their connection to Salmon, even though Philander raised (using that term loosely) Salmon for a while. Laura's book was published in the early 1900's, giving her plenty of time to get used to the idea of having another famous relative. If anything, you would have thought that she would have given her grandfather some of the credit for having raised Salmon. Maybe Salmon himself gave Philander a bit of bad press and the family took that badly.

There are many biographies of Salmon. The biography I took most of my information from is John Niven's “Samuel Chase”. Very late in the process of writing this post, I came across a better one, actually a children's story, that is quite enjoyable to read and contains a lot of personal information, written by a friend of Salmon's. This book portrays Philander in a very unfavorable light, and was written quite early on. This could be the reason the Chases were so standoffish regarding Salmon. The book is called “The Ferry Boy and the Financier” written by John Trowbridge in 1864. I highly recommend this book for the story of Salmon's life as a childhood and young adult.

This ends the story of the Chases of Cornish, New Hampshire. Most of the Chases that moved to Bethel ended up leaving Vermont for the West. Not many of the Chase family stayed in the Upper Valley, although every time I see the last name “Chase”, I wonder about their connection to the Chases of Cornish.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Windsor County Court February 17


Autumn Langlois, DOB 10/08/93, pleaded not guilty to charges of possession of marijuana and trafficking marijuana, in Royalton on October 31

Dale Durkee, DOB 12/8/55, pleaded not guilty to a charge of possessing a big game animal taken by illegal means, on December 13

Chelsea Emery, DOB 10/02/90, pleaded not guilty to a charge of embezzlement, in Springfield in September.

Francis Phelps, DOB 12/23/91, pleaded not guilty to charges of possession of marijuana and trafficking marijuana, in Royalton on October 31

Susan Williams, DOB 8/8/85, pleaded not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle while her license was suspended, in Chester on January 17

Hunter Seace, DOB 2/17/91, plead guilty to a charge of his second DUI, in Norwich on February 11

Keagan Sharkey, DOB 4/14/88, pled not guilty to charges of his first DUI, and giving false information to a police officer, in Hartford on January 30

Jesse Laflam, DOB 9/21/72, pled not guilty to a charge of operating a vehicle while his license was suspended, on December 18 in Springfield, and also to the same charge occurring on December 17 in Springfield.

Derik Rogers, DOB 3/7/71, pleaded guilty to a charge of sale of marijuana in Hartford on January 9

Tina Cushman, DOB 2/24/76, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving a vehicle while her license was suspended, and for giving false information to a police officer in Weathersfield on December 19. She was also charged with driving with a suspended license on December 31.

Virginia McGrody, DOB 8/3/72, pleaded not guilty to a charge of her first DUI, in Windsor on February 3

Michael Sigmon, DOB 10/4/88, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Ludlow on February 8

Windsor County Crime Online:



Miriah Atwood, age 23, of Woodstock http://vtstatepolice.blogspot.com/2015/01/dui.html



 

 

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Salmon and Uncle Philander


Salmon Chase was born in Cornish, New Hampshire, to Ithamar and Janette Chase. Ithamar was the son of Dudley Chase, one of the founders of Cornish. Jannette was the daughter of a wealthy innkeeper from Keene. Ithamar left Cornish when Salmon was 8 years old, to seek his fortune in glasmaking. Due in part to the end of the War of 1812, and in part to the economic panic caused crop failure during 1816, the Year Without a Summer, Salmon and his business partners lost everything in their glassmaking venture.

The one part of the property Ithamar had not lost from Janette's dowry was a nondescript farm at the town's edge, so she moved there with her kids that autumn. Salmon went to the neighborhood school there in Keene that year, but the year after that he endured another upheaval when she sent him back north to Windsor, where she thought the education would be better. Of all of her children, Janette felt that Salmon was the smartest, most gifted and should have the best education.

John Niven, author of Salmon Chase's biography, says that Janette sent Salmon to “board and study” with Josiah Dunham. He certainly did not attend Dunham's academy in Windsor, which was for females. It does appear that Salmon embarked on a rigorous course of education in Windsor. Josiah Dunham, in addition to being an educator, was a farmer, politician, and newspaper publisher. Before moving to Windsor, he had lived in Hanover and had established Hanover's first bookstore.

While he lived with the Dunhams, Salmon discovered a pile of the newpapers his teacher had published several years before. As he sat down and read them, Salmon developed an interest in politics that would become the bedrock of the rest of his life. Josiah Dunham was an ardent Federalist, and his newspaper, The Washingtonian, championed his political leanings. (This is the same newspaper that Simeon Ide worked at after he lost his apprenticeship due to the war. See http://connecticutrivervalley.blogspot.com/2012/11/republicans-federalists-and-war-of-1812.html )

Although the timeframe in the next few years of Salmon's life is unclear, Niven says that after studying with Dunham, Salmon returned to Keene and spent a few years continuing his studies with Reverend Zedekiah Barstow, an esteemed academic who was on the board of both Kimball Academy and Dartmouth College. Janette certainly was successful in her efforts to provide an excellent education for her son.

Although he had received an excellent education, Salmon's young life had been filled with inconsistency, upheaval, and hard labor. He had been doing hard physical labor all of his young life. Although he had worked hard in Cornish at a very young age, he had enjoyed the status of being a Chase in Cornish. He was an outsider when he first moved to Keene, and virtually a charity case in Windsor. Upon his return to Keene from Windsor, the years he spent studying under Reverend Barstow would be a time he looked back on fondly.

Those happy days came to an end in 1820, when Janette decided her son should leave Keene yet again, and go to live with her brother-in-law Philander Chase. Philander had just become the Episcopal Bishop of Ohio and was head of a boys' school in Worthington, Ohio. Worthington, Ohio was on the western frontier at this time, and the population was too sparse to provide support to a religious bishop and school teacher, so Philander also had a farm. Janette's agreement with Philander was that Salmon would do farmwork in exchange for room, board, and further education. He was twelve years old at the time.

One wonders, “What was she thinking?” Philander had left his own two older sons behind with Uncle Dudley in Randolph and did not hesitate to take his ailing wife and newborn baby all the way from Vermont to the Ohio wilderness. Doris Kearns Goodwin, in her book “Team of Rivals”, says that Janette could no longer make ends meet and was forced to break up the family and send the children to live with relatives. Doubtless it was very, very difficult to run a farm without a husband to help. Yes, but, Philander seems like a horrible choice. Why did she not send Salmon to Uncle Dudley? Maybe Uncle Dudley had too many chldren living with him and had no room for one more. I wonder if the rest of the family had shunned Ithamar and his family, and Janette hesitated to ask for help from them.

Salmon's oldest brother Alexander, was 23 years old and a geologist. He and a friend were headed west to join a government sponsored expedition, and he could bring his 12 year old younger brother with him for most of the way. Traveling to Ohio from New Hampshire meant traveling over rough, almost nonexistent roads through hundreds of square miles of undeveloped territory. The three boys started out in April of 1920. During the trip, they saw Niagara Falls on their way to Lake Erie and Cleveland.

Cleveland, Alexander and Salmon parted ways. They left Salmon with a fellow New Englander, Judge Barber. Mr Barber promised to find a way to get Salmon to Uncle Philander's house in Worthington, 125 miles away. A week later, Salmon hitched a ride with an Episcopal priest headed to Medina – twenty-five miles closer. Uncle Philander had organized an Episcopal convention in Worthington, and since there was one road from Medina to Worthington, Salmon would probably quickly get a ride the rest of the way. Sure enough, after a week, three young Episcopal priests passed through Medina on their way to the convention and agreed to take Salmon the rest of the way.

It was such rough going that it took them four days to go a hundred miles. When they got to Worthington, Salmon met his uncle for the first time. In his biography of Salmon, John Niven quotes Salmon's description of his uncle. “Large and heavy as he was, He was remarkably light and graceful in his movements, and when not ruffled with opposition or displeasure, exceedingly agreeable, polished and finished in his manner.” At the time, Philander was 44 years old and in the prime of his life. He was ambitious, highly intelligent, and tended to be mercurial and imperious. I'm sure the key words there are “When not ruffled with oppposition or displeasure”.

Living in Uncle Philander's household was the most difficult place Salmon lived before he reached adulthood. Philander had promised Janette a home and an education for his nephew in return for physical labor. John Niven says that the year and a half that Salmon spent at Worthington was a period of “intense physical and intellectual labor and emotional torment.” As the Episcopal Bishop in Ohio, Philander was away from home a lot, and while he was gone, Salmon was expected to excel at his schoolwork and take care of all the farm chores, including milking the cows and bringing them back and forth to pasture, taking the grain to the mill, keeping up with firewood, and the seasonal chores of maple sugaring, plowing and planting, and helping sheer the sheep and transporting the wool for processing. Although this is a huge workload for a twelve or thirteen year old, Uncle Philander would always return home and find fault with Salmon's work, punishing him with a beating or some type of confinement or isolation, accompanying the punishment with religious teaching. Doris Kearns Goodwin, in her book “Team of Rivals” retells a story that Salmon often told as an adult. One day Philander overheard Salmon complain to a friend that his uncle was a tyrant. Philander forbade anyone to talk to Salmon, and forbade Salmon himself to speak until he apologized. Days later, Salmon finally apologized. Salmon ended the story by saying. “I still almost wish I had not.”

When Philander moved his family to Cincinnati, Salmon went with them and was the person primarily responsible for getting them there, since Philander was ill at the time. When he was 15, Philander went to England on a fundraising trip and Salmon was finally allowed to go home to Keene. Philander gave him four dollars traveling money in Albany. He walked 110 miles, and then spent the last of his money to ride the last thirty miles. That thirty miles took three days. His mother and sisters had no idea he was coming home and were overjoyed to see him. Salmon had carried a peach with him all that way, to give to his younger sister Helen, and as an adult, she remembered that it was the first peach she had ever eaten.

Salmon learned a lot during his stay with Uncle Philander, both good, and bad. Philander was careful to give him a good education, and his exacting standards regarding Salmon's schoolwork paved the way for his nephew's acceptance into Dartmouth College. Salmon was always a very hard worker and always strove for excellence. However, he had never had any leisure time almost since the day he was born, and never really learned how to have a good time or enjoy the company of other people. Salmon never lost the religious zeal he acquired as a member of Bishop Chase's household. On the other hand, John Niven explains that, “the devious means he adopted to escape his uncle's severe discipline lead to a blending of morality and expediency that became second nature.” He also developed an obsessive need to excel and acquire social stature and importance, probably as a result of a boyhood spent in poverty performing hard labor. It is also quite possible that Salmon spent a lifetime trying to earn back the status his father had lost in the disastrous move to Keene.


Monday, March 23, 2015

Windsor County Court January 20


Robert Rainville, DOB 3/21/87, pleaded not guilty to a charge of possession of heroin in Hartford on January 8

Daniel Wood, DOB 2/10/88, pleaded not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle while his license was under suspension

Andrew Gourley, DOB 3/31/65, pleaded not guilty to a charge of attempted simple assault in Chester on January 7


Jordan Swain, DOB 8/15/91, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Cavendish on January 14


Brian Hathaway, DOB 3/8/88/, pleaded not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle when his license was suspended, in Plymouth on December 20

Shawn Lafayette, DOB 2/28/91, pleaded guilty to a charge of giving false information to a police officer, in Springfield on October 20.

Alex Martin, DOB 4/8/95, pleaded guilty to a charge of sale of marijuana, in Hartford on January 9

Joey Bergeron, DOB 6/26/81, pleaded not guilty to charges of grand larceny and buying, selling, receiving, possessing or concealing stolen property, in Chester on December 13. He also had outstanding charges involving operating a vehicle with gross negligence, eluding the police, and violating conditions of release, in Chester on January 25

Marjalla Lavin, DOB 12/19/50, pleaded not guilty to ten counts of cruelty to animals in Woodstock on November 14. You can read more about these charges here: http://www.vnews.com/news/14349082-95/herd-owner-defends-care


Jeremy Jondro, DOB 3/9/85, pleaded not guilty to his 3rd or subsequent DUI drugs, alcohol or both, in Hartford on January 25

Windsor County Crime Online:

Todd Swasey, age 18, of South Royalton
http://www.wcax.com/story/27783913/social-media-leads-vt-police-to-wanted-man There are multiple other internet stories about Swasey's brushes with the law.

Nathan Lambert, age 34, of Cavendish

Jeffrey Arruda, age 28, of Hartland

Matthew Rikert, age 40, of South Royalton


Paul Roberts, age 34, of Bethel

Seth Brownell, age 34, of Bridgewater

Dennis Furman, age 33, of White River Junction

William Rose, age 58, of Sharon Vermont

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Windsor County Court January 13


Carson Mashler, DOB 11/15/87, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, disorderly conduct/noise and enabling consumption of alcohol by a minor on December 24 in South Royalton
You can read more about these charges here:

Christopher Olmstead, DOB 9/7/95 pleaded guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Weathersfield on December 26

James Keith, DOB 2/27/47, pleaded not guilty to charges of reckless endangerment, reckless or negligent operation, and disorderly conduct in Chester on November 7

Rodney Williams, DOB 12/23/66 pleaded not guilty to baiting deer in Springfield on October 26

Neil Tinker, 1/5/74, pleaded guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license in Hartford on October 30

Thomas Dube, DOB 10/3/89, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Ludlow on December 29

April Melendy, DOB 6/11/93, pleaded not guilty to a charge of her first DUI, in Hartford on January 17



Windsor Crime Online:

Jeremy Colson, age 35 and Travis French-Dyer, age 31, both of Royalton

Megan McCarthy, age 21, of Baltimore, Vermont


Christopher Grisham, age 31, of Sharon, Vermont

Jamie Howe, age 28, of Royalton, Vermont






Childhood of Salmon Chase


I can't leave the Chase family without writing about Salmon Chase. It is his house out in Cornish that has the historical marker in front and is known as the “Chase House”. Salmon Chase was an Ohio governor, US Senator from Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury under Abraham Lincoln, and the Chief Justice of the United States from 1864 until his death in 1873. In terms of the house, it really has little historical significance. Salmon Chase was born there in 1808, but his family left Cornish when he was quite young. However, it is the only residence still in existence that has any association with Salmon Chase.

Salmon Chase was Dudley and Alyce Chase's grandson. Their second child, Ithamar, was his father. Ithamar married Janette Ralston of Keene. In the History of Keene, Simon Goodell Griffin describes the Ralston family as one of Keene's wealthier families. Mrs Ralston, also named Janette, came from a wealthy family in Scotland. She married her husband, not from a wealthy family, at age 18 against her family's wishes. They came to America in 1773 and to Keene in 1775 “with a stocking full of gold”. They owned a tavern, several farms, and a distillery. They were the largest taxpayers in town for many years, and Ralston Street in Keene is named after them. Janet's sister also married a Chase, Jonathan Jr, General Jonathan Chase's son.

Although it's probably not accurate to say that Ithamar was the black sheep of Dudley and Alyce's children, in a family of very high achievers, he definitely was not one. John Niven, the author of an autobiography of Salmon Chase states, “Chase's father, Ithamar, seems to have been a less driven person than his brothers.” Ithamar did not go to Dartmouth like his brothers, but was content to stay and farm in Cornish. His farm was productive enough to feed his family of eleven children and produce enough surplus to pay for the building of a large and stately house. Although the house was quite impressively large, it may not have been as cozy and comfortable as some of his sisters' more modest houses in Bethel. Niven states in his book that the house was drafty and heated only by one inefficient fireplace, which was used for cooking along with a dutch oven and a bake kettle. The family had enough to eat, but all of the children had to help on the farm as soon as they were old enough, and life was difficult.

It looked like Ithamar would be the one Chase son to stay in Cornish and farm, but in 1815, Ithamar heard that glass making was becoming a profitable new enterprise. Because of the war with Britain, Americans were unable to import glass from the English, and were establishing their own glassmaking businesses to make American glass. He sold his land and house in Cornish and moved to Keene to join two other men who were starting a business in glassmaking there. As soon as he had moved to Keene and the family was settled into a house his father-in-law owned, the second war with Britain ended and cheap glass again flooded the American market. To make matters worse, the next year saw a severe worldwide weather disruption caused by a volcano eruption in Indonesia. In northern North America, it snowed every month, even in the summer months. Crops everywhere failed. (The year without a summer also affected Simeon Ide – see my blog entry for December 9, 2012: http://connecticutrivervalley.blogspot.com/2012/12/simeon-finds-true-love.html ) The crop failures triggered a serious economic downturn. People in New England could barely afford the basics of life, and certainly had no money for luxuries like American made glass.

The business Ithamar had so recently joined went bankrupt. He had invested the money from the sale of the Cornish farm, and also had lost some property Mr. Ralston had deeded to him and Janet when they were married. This kind of thing did not happen in the Chase family. Ithamar was devastated, financially, and spiritually. In August of 1817, he had a massive stroke and died at age 53, leaving Janette a widow at age 42 and responsible for the support of eight children. Salmon was 9 years old.
Photo from Wikipedia taken by Jerrye and Roy Klotz, MD

Monday, March 2, 2015

Windsor County Court January 6


Duval Fludd. DOB 10/30/92, pleaded guilty to a charge of simple assault, in Springfield on August 31

Carson Mashler, DOB 11/15/87, pleaded guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct/fight in Woodstock on November 22

John Boldosser, DOB 7/17/76, pleaded guilty to a charge of disturbing the peace by phone, in Hartford on September 27

Brian Prish, DOB 2/25/87, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his second DUI, in Hartford on December 25

Bertie Thorton, DOB 10/2/67, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Royalton on December 24

Courtney Rogers, DOB 3/30/91, pleaded guilty to a charge of prohibited act, in Hartford on November 16 You can read more about this charge here: http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/20141122/THISJUSTIN/711229946

Ryan Seaver, DOB 5/27/74, pleaded not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Springfield on December 27

James Badger, DOB 2/16/92 pleaded not guilty to a charge of operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, in Royalton on December 18. He had already been charged with driving suspended in October.