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Page 170 text:
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IO4 He was born in Ferrisburg, Vt., july 2I,.I.8I5. He was appointed to the United States Military Academy at West Point from New York, being d' ninth in his graduated in the class of 184o, stan ing class of forty-two. . ' Upon graduation he was assigned as second lieu- tenant to the 3rd Artillery. Soon after his appoint- ment he saw his first active service, participating in the campaigns against the Seminole Indians in ' ' For two months in the Florida in 1841 and 1842. . fall of 1841, when not actively engaged against the I d' s he was returned to West Point to act as n ian , assistant professor of mathematics at the Military Academy. After the close of the Seminole campaigns he was in garrison at Fort Pike, Fla., and Fort Macon, N. C., later being transferred to Fort Moultrie, S. C., and Savannah, Ga. He was promoted to be first lieutenant November 19, 1843. It was with this rank that he served during the Mexican War in 1846 and 1847, being present at the storming of Monterey, at the capture of General Ampudia, and the siege of Vera Cruz. At the close of the Mexican War he was promoted to be captain, and was assigned as an assistant quartermaster, being so commissioned June 4, 1847. From this time until 1851 he was on duty with the Missouri mounted volunteers, and was engaged in the building of posts along the famous Oregon route. . ' He was onduty at St. Louis in 1852 and at va- rious posts in Texas until 1855, when he was made quartermaster of the Sioux expedition, being en- gaged 1n the action at Blue Water September 3, 1855. He was stationed at Fort Leavenworth, Kan.,- from 1858 until the breaking out of the Civil War in 1861. Captain Van Vliet was promoted to be a major and a quartermaster August 3rd of that year and ap- pointed brigadier-general of volunteers a little more than a month later. H, P0120 being in S Hegld. rese livin Swai Al the 1 quar quar depa 'EC1'1'1'1 to Vl depa janu color 1872 color most term Ge -Capt Infai and jersc Ge attac six h H4 188 5 reset o 1n N . tendi Vatec Lit Ille 1 from
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Page 169 text:
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- 31 ara. Ods re. ted .ber IUC, S ol St. He ill. ltan lan- mg, laer worn rad- ered ime. it of sion Nlew ited Chi it to yard 'feat nbef 'Ofkr 55 of fork He WHS IO3 buried from the home he had four ears. H Occupiid for thirty' y . e was a man of domestic hab't tastes and it was in the home life h' ' H I S and U is in uence , most felt and his personality best known A lollas 'of nature and out-of-door life, he was f l 'l' Ver U ami lar to a marked degree with everythin ' ' g pertaining thereto, An expert with the rod, each season fouhbd him ' the north woods, the Maine wilds In . , or on the Cal-nladian streams, seeking health and recreation e was a loyal and energetic member of the Society, active 1n its interests and a re ula t - . . g ra tend ant at 1ts meetings and banquets. He was closel associated with the Rev. Dr. Henry Mott t f hy 15 Church of the Holy Communion at Sixth eAilenuE and Twentieth Street and with the Y. M. C. A., of New York. CHARLES HENRY ROOSEVELT died early on Sun- day morning, March 24, IQOI, at his home, on Pel- ham Road, Pelham Manor. He was born in 1832. His father was the Rev. Washington Roosevelt, minister of the Dutch Reformed Church, and a grandson of Elbert Roosevelt, who was one of the early settlers of the manor of Pelham-on-the-Sound. Mr. Roosevelt was the manager of manylarge es- tates, and owned valuable real estate himself in Pel- ham Manor and in New Rochelle. He studied law in Poughkeepsie and after admission to the bar practised in New York City and Westchester County. He was a member of the State and County Bar Association, the Westchester Bar As- sociation, the St. Nicholas Society and Huguenot Lodge, F. 81 A. M., of New Rochelle. He.was one of the oldest members of the Holland Society having been elected in 1885. He served as Vice- President for Vlfestchester County in 1892. GENERAL STEWART VAN VLIET, our Vice-Presr dent for the United States Army, died at his resi- dence, 819 Fifteenth St., Wash1ngtOH, D- Cv OH March 28, IQOI.
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Page 171 text:
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.I3I5. llblllg- 111 his l lieu. point. lilg in QHS in III the St the f1Ct as ilitaiy ns he facon, iltrie, to be with lar in ng ol iudia, noted istant 1847. li the ed in egon itva- nade I Cll' Cl' gr Ofllly Civil l3,jOl' l HP' 11016 105 He was chief quartermaster of th , Potomac from August 20, 1861 until? :lrml of the . . 1 U ' I , 86 be1ng then asslgned to duty at New Yorlc fbuzinislii ing supplies and transportation to the armies i h field. While with the army in the field hentifa: present at the siege of Yorktown and the battles of Williamsburg, F air Oaks, Gaines Mill, White Oak Swamp, and Malvern Hill. After the war he w the regular establishment and assigned as depot quartermaster at Baltimore. Later he was Chief quartermaster of the division of the Atlantic of th , , , , e department of Missouri and IH char e of th - . r g C qLl8.I' termaster depot at Philadelphia. In 1875 he came to Washington as inspector of the quartermaster's department and remained there until his retirement january 22, 1881, having attained the rank of colonel and assistant uartermaster q -general june 6, 1872. He received the brevets of lieutenant-colonel, colonel, brigadier-general, and major-general for most faithful and distinguished service in the quar- termaster's department during the Civil war General Van Vliet left a wife and two sons- Captain R. C. Van Vliet of the 10th United States Infantry, now on duty at Fort Crook, Nebraska, and Dr. F. C. Van Vliet, of Shrewsbury, New Jersey. 1 General Van. Vliet's death was due to an acute attack of valvular heart disease, being ill but thirty- six hours. He became a member of the Society june 25, 1885, and was elected the first Vice-President, rep- resenting the United States Army, in April, 1890. as made lieutenant-colonel in WATSON VAN BENTHUYSEN died at his residence in New Orleans, March 30, 1901, Hftel' Hnillness ex' tending over a long period, but which became aggra- vated within the last two months. . Little had been heard of Mr. Van BeHl2hUYSefl In the past ten years, for he had pl'-HQYICQHY feflred from active life, but while in the Whlfl 0fb11S1HCSS Q s
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