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MILITARY SERVICE
Age: 0, credited to Vermont
Unit(s): 83rd NY INF, 94th NY INF, 97th NY INF
Service: Co. D 83rd NY; Co. F 94th NY; Co. D 97th NY
See Legend for expansion of abbreviations
VITALS
Birth: Abt 1831, Deering, NH
Death: 02/06/1913
Burial: Branch View Cemetery, Royalton, VT
Marker/Plot: Not recorded
Gravestone researcher/photographer: Heidi McColgan
Findagrave Memorial #: 0
(There may be a Findagrave Memorial, but we have not recorded it)
MORE INFORMATION
Alias?: None Noted
Pension?: Yes, 4/15/1889, VT
Portrait?: Unknown
College?: Not Found
Veterans Home?: Not Found
(If there are state digraphs above, this soldier spent some time in a state or national soldiers' home in that state after the war)
Remarks: Unknown
DESCENDANTS
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BURIAL:
Copyright notice
Branch View Cemetery, Royalton, VT
Check the cemetery for location/directions and other veterans who may be buried there.
Obituary
Death of Albert Waterman
Albert Waterman, an estimable citizen of South Royalton, died last Thursday at his late home after a short illness of heart disease, at the age of 83 years. He was a son of Benjamin Franklin and Lucy Goulett Waterman, born in Deering, N.H., in 1830. He had been a resident of South Royalton eleven years, formerly a resident of Tunbridge and Crown Point, N.Y.,
In 1862 Mr. Waterman enlisted in a New York regiment, serving until the close of the war. In 1852 he married Miss Lucina Stanton Searles, whose death occurred in 1885. In 1889 he married Sophia Lucy Brooks, who died in 1911. He leaves a son, Frank, an only child, a brother, Robert, residing in Royalton. His son and wife have been living with him the past three years.
The funeral was held at his late home last Saturday. Rev. E. L. M. Barnes, pastor of the M. E. Church, officiated. The bearers were John, James, William and George Waterman, nephews of the deceased. Don W. Blake, George H. Hackett, Albert and M. J. Sargent, veterans of the Civil war acted as honorary bearers. He was buried in the so-called Slack cemetery near his home.
Source: Herald and News, February 13, 1913
Courtesy of Tom Boudreau.