Battle of New Orleans.
Showing posts with label Burlington Vt.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burlington Vt.. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2022

War of 1812 Soldiers Reburied in Vermont-- Part 2

Some more information on the story.

From the June 4, 2022, U.S. News & World Report "Vermont officials to rebury remains of War of 1812 veterans" by AP.

Thirty sets of remains were reburied Saturday, June 4, at a ceremony  in Vermont's largest city, Burlington.  They had been buried at different locations.  State and city officials will be attending the  ceremony which will take place at Lakeview Cemetery.

An estimated 500 American soldiers died in the Burlington area during the war between 1812 and 1815.  The area around Burlington's Battery Park was a military encampment overlooking Lake Champlain.  And, it was also the location of a major Army hospital.

No battles occurred in Burlington.

Military records indicate that more than 550 soldiers along with state militiamen, prisoners of war and civilian camp followers died in the Queen City.  All the burials were done on the then-undeveloped sandy plain to the north of the camp.

Over the last twenty years, the thirty that were found were located in the area known locally as the the Old North End.

Between 2002 and 2005, the remains of 23 were excavated in advance of a street improvement project.  In 2020, a housing construction project in the area recovered additional remains.

--Brock-Perry


Sunday, July 10, 2022

War of 1812 Soldiers Exhumed and Reburied in Lakeview Cemetery in Burlington, Vt.

From June 4, 2022, WCAX 3 News.

The remains of 30 War of 1812 soldiers were given a new resting place at  Burlington's Lakeview Cemetery.

Vermont's state records say that some  550 U.S. regulars died during the war.  "Because of its strategic location along Lake Champlain, which faciltated the movement of supplies and troops," said Laura Trieschmann, the State Historic Preservation Officer.

The veterans were unknown even back when they were originally buried, because they were moved from private properties in the Old North End.

In the past two decades,  30 became unearthed during various construction projects.

Now, a new columbarium and headstone added to the cemetery to mark the final resting place for them.  Some are from states all along the eastern seaboard.

--Brock-Perry


Wednesday, June 1, 2016

West Point Class of 1806: Robert Lucas-- Part 3

In late January 1814, Secretary of War John Armstrong ordered Wilkinson to detach a division of 2,000 men to Sackets Harbor and to fall back with his main body of troops to Plattsburgh, New York, on Lake Champlain.  The sick and wounded were to be moved to Burlington, Vermont.

Robert Lucas was one of those sick men, but he didn't make it to Burlington as he died February 4, 1814, at French Mills, New York, at the age of 26.

--Brock-Perry