The Roll Call The Binghamton Civil War Historical Society and Round Table We meet third Tuesdays (except July & August) at American Legion Located in Hillcrest, NY at 7 p.m. Volume 17 Issue 3 www.bcwhsrt.org 725-5654 798-0766 Joe Card 770-7330 John Goodnough Willis L. Platt Peg Relyea Brian Swartz Willis L. Platt [email protected] 204-0316 759-1513 240-7167 768-1894 759-1513 U. S. Mail Address: Binghamton Civil War Roundtable P. O. Box 2435 Binghamton, NY 13902-2435 TREASURER'S REPORT February 2015 Previous balance: Dues/Donations: (+) Expenses: Current balance: $5496.11 $209.00 $00.00 $5705.11 Regular Membership – $15.00 Family Membership – $25.00 Student (Junior) Membership – $10.00 Please make out checks to "Binghamton Civil War Round Table" Or (BCWHSRT). Mail your check to Willis L. Platt, Treasurer, 71 Shaw Road, Conklin, NY 13748 Members Paid for 2015 …………34 *Baker-Duff, Blakeslee, Bogdasarian, Buckley, Bundga, Card, +Ciringione, Crosby, Cuculich, Dueul, English, +*Gardiner, +#Gauger, Gillette, Goodnough, Hotaling, *Jordan, Kristek, Marsh, McDonald, McNerney, Jr., *Messersmith, Miller, Ondreyko, Platt, *Relyea, Slama, Snapp, White, Young Note: (+) Denotes New Member Note: (*) Denotes Family Membership Note: (#) Denotes Student / Junior Membership Thank you for paying your dues. Members paid for 2014........55 Willis L. Platt, Treasurer YOUR 2015 DUES ARE DO You can pay at the meeting or use the form at the end of the newsletter and mail it with your check 1 MARCH 17th MEETING Joe Card Well—which is it? Did March coming in like a lion?/or was it a meek little lamb?? Frankly, this whole winter has been quite a lion, and I am truly tired of it. The only warmth I seem to have found this winter has been the warmth of friendship I have found in our CWRT meetings!!! Spring does show its face later this month, and I tell you, I am truly looking forward to our Spring months: April—Ed Bears, May—Jeff Wert, and June—John Schildt. If we were a baseball team and these were our starters, I would be planning for October post-season activities!! I will be filling you in a bit more on these visitors prior to our March speaker on the 17th. Also, I must thank you all for your help in our cold winter meetings. All who took part in our December Show and Tell session, and January’s Panel Discussion are hereby given a heartfelt thank you from all of those who attended—and also a grateful thank you to Peg Relyea for her talk last month dealing with 1862/1863 Battle of Stones River! As I have stated so many times, we would not survive as a group without the help of our members!!!!!!!!!!! For March, you will have to put up with a talk given by your Program Director—little old me.(Sorry about that) On President’s Day last month I gave a new talk on Abraham Lincoln to a group at the Spot Restaurant. Logically, I talked about Lincoln! I titled it “Lincoln: President, Commander in Chief and Man”. That morning, prior to the talk, I went on line to the MSN news page that comes up on my computer. Low and behold I found an article 1 Cliff Miller Dick Shiel Page CONTACTS: President 1st Vice President / Hospitality 2nd Vice President / Program Director Secretary Treasurer Trustee Trustee Roll Call Editor Email MARCH 17th 2015 * * * PRESIDENT’S COLUMN Cliff Miller Chattanooga This isn't about the battle. This is about the city, a city worth visiting. There is plenty to see, in case the family isn't all that thrilled about Civil War sites, which we'll get to. The Tennessee Aquarium is great. It's a real gem for a city of Chattanooga's size. Ruby Falls is a 145-foot waterfall located inside Lookout Mountain. The cave it's in is interesting. Rock City, on Lookout Mountain, has a rock trail lined with gardens and bizarre rock formations. There is also a waterfall there, 140 feet. And certain members of our group would like the Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum. Chattanooga was important in the Civil War as a railroad town, and that is reflected at the museum, which also offers a short and slow ride pulled by a steam locomotive. So much for that. Now for our real reason to visit. The Civil War raged there. Like at Wauhatchie, at the bottom of the western slope of Lookout Mountain. The battle land isn't preserved, but there is a monument to our New Yorkers. The casualty count shows that our 137th NY was in the thick of it. That is where Gen. Greene took a bullet to the face, his jaw crushed and some teeth gone. That resulted in the 137th's Col. Ireland getting command of the brigade. Ireland would have that command for 10 1/2 months, until his death at Atlanta. He never got his well deserved Brigadier star. Then there's the afore mentioned Lookout Mountain. There is a NPS visitor center there, with a nice painting of the "Battle Above the Clouds." In Point Park is a magnificent 2 Then there's Orchard Knob. It was taken by the Union a few days before Missionary Ridge. Around 14,000 Union soldiers drove out 634 Confederates who held the position. It wasn't a fair fight, but the rebels fought hard. Gen. Grant would later set up there, where he watched the assault on Missionary Ridge. \ Then, Missionary Ridge. A road goes along the top, with stops at various points of interest, such as Gen. Bragg's HQ. I've often talked about the luck of Gen. Grant. That luck was evident here. Grant gave orders to take out the rifle pits at the foot of the ridge. This was done, and the troops there realized that they were sitting ducks. Without orders, the soldiers started up the ridge, and the Confederates were driven away. Grant asked whose troops who they were. They were George Thomas' boys. Grant said they better succeed, and they did. At the north end, Gen. Sherman found out how good of a fighting General Pat Cleburne was. Despite Sherman's very superior numbers, Cleburne, on the defensive, cleaned his clock. There is also a National Cemetery in Chattanooga, with over 50,000 internments. While you're in the area, don't miss out on Chickamauga. It was the site of Bragg's greatest victory, a victory he didn't seem to realize that he had. It predated Chattanooga by around two months, and it was the end of William Rosecrans as that army's commander. Rosecrans was reassigned to command the Department of Missouri, where he opposed Sterling Price's raid. That battle is where Gen. Thomas got his famous nickname, "The Rock of Chickamauga." His determined stand on Snodgrass Hill saved the Union from further destruction. The Union army retreated into Chattanooga after that battle. For the Civil War traveler, the area is a must-see. And for the family members who inexplicably don't share that interest, there are things to do as others roam the history. 2 * monument to the NYS troops there. And the view of Chattanooga from there is legendary. Just down the hill from the summit is the Craven House, where the 137th NY fought. There is a nice monument there, too. I took some time to hike around the mountain, taking what I thought was the route the 137th taken. What a thrill! * * * * Page dealing with President’s Day, and checked it out. It was basically entitled something like: Unusual Facts About US Presidents”. Well I checked Abraham Lincoln’s fact, and then I put two new slides into my talk on Lincoln—I’m leaving them in for you. It is scary how our news media today can mess up history!! I think you will agree!!! This talk will cover a variety of things about Lincoln as President, his family, his religious beliefs and end with a look at the Second Inaugural Address. I hope you will find it interesting and informative. Chair Joe Card or Newsletter Editor Will Platt. In the meantime, we hope to see all at the meetings! FROM THE SECRETARY'S TENT, By John Goodnough MARCH 1865 by John Goodnough Last month, we listed many programs we were aware of to finish out March and April 2015. If any of you plan on attending one or more of them, please plan on bringing back some of your perceptions, photos or other items of the remembrance exercises to share with those of us who won't be traveling. The Executive Board of officers will be meeting for a business session on the evening of March 24, 2015, in the public conference room at Dunkin' Donuts, Reynolds Road, Johnson City, NY. We hope to begin the session at 7 p.m. and be finished about 9 p.m. Officers and committee chairs, please have your reports ready to present. Will things come crashing down, now that the official sesquicentennial of the Civil War is about wrapped up? We don't believe so - there are still likely oodles of history and lore from the 18611865 era still waiting to be uncovered or "hashed out" to make a more complete record not only of the war's "big picture," but the roles played in it by hundreds of soldiers who hailed from the Broome County era. And we hope to hear from many more notable historians, researchers and authors to be enlightened on aspects of our region's participation in the war. Spring officially begins on the weekend of March 21st. We look forward to return of milder weather, and the continued support of the membership. If you have any ideas on future topics, or have a craving to submit articles for publication in this newsletter, please see Programs 3 On the same date, over near the entrance to the harbor at recently evacuated Charleston, SC, Admiral John Dahlgren's flagship HARVEST MOON struck a floating rebel mine, which exploded. The ship sank and Dahlgren had to transfer to another vessel. After a heated series of skirmishes near Chesterfield, SC the next day, some of Slocum's troops occupied the small town. At about the same time over in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley, forces under General Phil Sheridan occupied Staunton, Va. With able assistance from a portion of his army under the youthful General George A. Custer, Waynesboro, Va. was also taken. These events and others in recent days succeeded in sapping a large measure of the morale remaining with southern soldiers lately under General Jubal Early. The federals captured over 1,000 Confederates and about 200 wagons loaded with food, munitions and other supplies the Confederacy would sorely miss, effectively closing down all major military operations in the Valley. Back at Washington, D.C. on March 4th, Abraham Lincoln was sworn in to serve his second term as the nation's President. During the event, he gave his Second Inaugural speech, deemed by many to have been his finest, surpassing the substance of the famed Gettysburg Address. On the 5th, a member of the military from Broome County, NY passed away with little notice of others except perhaps the medical people in attendance at his death. He was Private Justin 3 A century and a half ago, the final weeks of the Civil War were slipping by. For the most part, the major opposing armies were still often arrayed in battle order, and there would be many more killed, wounded, captured or missing. Here in the early spring, many organizations, municipalities, government entities and other sponsors are completing plans for the final commemorative events regards the War of the Rebellion. As the month opened, elements of General Sherman's 60,000 -man army were coming steadily north through South Carolina in two major wings, the right commanded by General O.O. Howard, and the left by General Henry W. Slocum. As the long lines of men, horses, wagons, artillery and miscellaneous equipment moved along, often through some rough territory, roving groups of Confederate cavalrymen nipped at the army's flanks. Sporadic skirmishing was almost a daily occurrence. A sharp encounter took place on the 1st, for instance, at Wilson's Store, SC. Page We're now well "over the top" with winter, and Eastern Daylight Savings Time is also coming up this month. Seems like its way early! 4 resident took pity on the deplorable conditions and procured a GAR Civil War veterans' flag holder, placing it in the brushy remnant of a cemetery entrance drive. The cemetery may hold the gravesite of least one other Civil War veteran besides Briggs, however more research is ongoing. Justin Briggs was not totally forgotten, however; his name appears on the tablet at the Broome County ALL WARS MEMORIAL along with over 500 other local men who perished in the Civil War. One glaring error remains in a record published by someone collecting data for the memorial - Briggs is mistakenly shown as being a member of the 109th NY Infantry, but we hope that now the error will be corrected. On March 6, 1865, General Joseph E. Johnston was officially made commander of all Confederate forces in the Department of North Carolina. Accounts differ, but with the recent addition of troops evacuated from the City of Charleston, SC, and arrival of some fugitive troops from Hood's former Army of Tennessee, Johnston likely had around 35,000 men in arms at his disposal. In the meantime, Sherman's army was being boosted in number by joining with forces under Generals Terry and Schofield that were coming into NC from the Carolina coastal areas, leaving only token troops to hold captured territory (such was Wilmington, NC and Charleston, SC). In essence, Sherman would soon have nearly 100,000 men to face Johnston's relatively rag-tag army. On March 11, Sherman's men took Fayetteville, NC and destroyed a vital rebel arsenal there. As the men under him advanced toward Averasboro, NC in the middle of the month, Confederate forces under General William Hardee collided with a portion of Slocum's federal columns, causing a brief delay in the massive Union march. Over the next several days, significant elements of Johnston's army either deserted, or were captured in engagements with Sherman's troops. Hundreds of rebel soldiers were detailed in a frantic attempt to quell the large numbers of federal prisoners 4 Also early in March, federal forces were advancing on Mobile, AL. Although the harbor there had been taken several months previous, the city itself still remained in Confederate control. There were numerous skirmishes being fought in such states as Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri and Mississippi, but the eyes of most people were on two places - the state of NC and the war zones before Petersburg and Richmond, Va. Page Briggs, late of Co. "E," 137th NY Infantry. Briggs had been born about 1825 in Greene County, NY, and by the late 1840s was farming in the Town of Chenango. The names of his parents have not been found. The 1850 U.S. Census shows him and wife Clarissa living in the farm household of Ira and Adelia Scofield in the town. By the 1855 state enumeration they had two children. At age 36 Briggs answered President Lincoln's recent call for 300,000 volunteers and was mustered in on September 3, 1862 at Camp Susquehanna on the south side of Binghamton. By early October '62 the 137th was on its way south via troop train, and soon was cleared to take the field in regular duty, thanks to the diligent basic training rendered by the regiment's commander, Col. David Ireland. Company "E" was commanded by (then) Captain Milo Eldredge of Whitney Point, NY. After campaigning with the 12th Corps in western Virginia and Maryland, the regiment spent a portion of the fall in the pestilential military camp on Bolivar Heights, overlooking Harpers Ferry. While there Private Briggs became ill, and as of January 18, 1863, according to a later report given by Eldredge, Private Briggs was "sick in hospital." Apparently during his enlistment he was in and out of hospitals. As of a roll call held late in March, '65 he was again reported "absent, in hospital." One source indicates that he had been moved to a hospital at Troy, NY, where he passed away on the 5th. His remains were brought back to be interred in the little cemetery at "Dimmick Settlement" off present-day Brooks Road in the Town of Chenango. Apparently the grave was unmarked for a time, but records indicate that in November 1879 a regulation military headstone was procured from the New England stone quarry of D.W. Whitney. Placement was likely in the spring of 1880. In the decades following, ownership and care of graves in the little plot became controversial. Some factions insisted the site was private; others stood firm that it was the Town's responsibility to maintain it. Nevertheless some individuals or small groups rendered care and maintenance on an intermittent basis. As weeds and brush invaded the site, volunteers periodically came to remove the vegetation and clean up the cemetery, but by the early 1900s it was becoming run down due to vandalism, action of the elements, and gross neglect. Fast forward to the late 1900s when residential development started to encroach on the small site. Headstones and other markers were approaching a serious "tumble-down" condition. Brush and small trees inundated most of it, and it was all but forgotten. However a Castle Creek On March 20th, federal troops converging on Mobile, AL were happy to learn reinforcements under General Frederick Steele were coming from Pensacola, FL via naval transport ships. And as a diversion to worry General Robert E. Lee, then trying to manage his diminished lines facing the federals before Petersburg, General George Stoneman of the Union army was conducting a series of raids on rebel holdout areas in eastern TN, southwestern VA and western NC. Lee could not spare the troops to assist his beleaguered outposts. In an act short of desperation, Lee, on the 25th, ordered General John B. Gordon to make a surprise attack on federal Fort Stedman in the contested ground before Petersburg. Side actions occurred almost simultaneously at Fort Fisher and the Watkins House in the vicinity. This series of actions resulted in total casualties of nearly 5,500, with the lion's share suffered by the rebels. After all was done, the federals regrouped and recovered most of their lost ground. By the 26th, Sheridan's troops were back at Grant's disposal from the Shenandoah Valley operations; his cavalry crossed the James River on pontoon bridges provided by Meade's engineers, and reported to headquarters at City Point. General Grant immediately sent several troops of mounted men out on local raids. Late in the month, the federal campaign for Mobile, AL was nearing its most important stages. On the 27th, a siege was launched against Spanish Fort, AL. On the same date President Lincoln, who had traveled down to City Point, Va., met with Generals Grant and Sherman, and Navy Admiral David D. Porter aboard the RIVER QUEEN to 5 Among the federal troops operating in the vicinity of Petersburg in late months was the 51st NY Infantry that contained several men from the Broome County area. Among local men in its membership was James C. Brown, born 1837 and a son of Alonzo Brown, who operated a large farm in the Southern Tier. James went to New York City to enlist as a Private in Co. "A" early in November 1861. A bright young man, he soon won favor among his comrades and immediate superiors. The regiment was mostly with the 9th Corps, Army of the Potomac, but spent part of its existence briefly under the 23rd Corps when it was on assignment in the war's western theater. Brown saw action at many places, including Roanoke Island and New Bern, NC, Kelly's Ford and the 2nd Battle of Bull Run in Va., South Mountain and Antietam in Md. By the end of 1862 he had been promoted to Sergeant. In the spring of '63 the regiment was in the campaigns for Vicksburg, MS and also saw some action at Blue Springs and Campbell Station, TN. While the regiment was paused briefly at Crab Orchard, KY on December 1, 1863, Brown reenlisted as a veteran. In the spring of '64 the regiment returned to the eastern theater with the 9th Corps and was assigned to take part in General Grant's Overland Campaign. On May 3, '64, just prior to the major clash at The Wilderness, Brown was made 1st Sergeant. For a time the regiment served in support of the federal engineers. At Spotsylvania Court House, Va. on the 12th, he received a serious gun shot wound to his right shoulder, taking him out of active duty for several weeks. While recuperating he went home on a well-deserved furlough and married Tressa Truesdell of Vestal. They eventually had five children. Back with his regiment early in September, he was promoted to the rank of 2nd Lieutenant, Co. "F." to fill a vacancy. The 51st NY was subsequently rotated in and out of the war zones during the Siege of Petersburg, Va. over the ensuing months. In February '65 a vacancy came up in Co. "K" and he was promoted to 1st Lieutenant to fill that post, under Captain George W. Whitman (the brother of famed poet Walt Whitman). On March 25, '65, the regiment saw some severe fighting during Lee's attempt to capture Fort Stedman. Brown 5 On the 18th, a major portion of Johnston's forces attempted to "best" Slocum's wing at Bentonville, NC. The Battle of Bentonville raged sporadically over the next three days. Elements of the right wing arrived in support of Slocum, and the attackers were driven off at a cost of hundreds taken captive by the Union troops. discuss plans for closing operations of the war and initiating reconstruction. All of them had noted recent developments indicating the Confederacy was surely coming to an end. It was here that Grant expressed strategies to launch what would become the Appomattox Campaign. Page that were escaping from stockades and thinly guarded areas in parts of Georgia and South Carolina. Around this time, many historians say, over 3,000 federal prisoners were "at large" trying to reach friendly territory or federal forces. A substantial portion of the Broome County men in the ranks had a sense that something very big was about to happen; no doubt many of them sent hastily written letters to friends and relatives back home, as some believed they would not survive the upcoming ordeal. * * * * BENJAMIN BROWN By Jerry Marsh During the American Civil War, between 188,000 and 196,000 African Americans fought in the 6 Early on Benjamin would tell inquiring northerners he was born "down south." He may have been purposely vague with that response. It was some time after President Abraham Lincoln's formal Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863, that Benjamin asserted he was born in Montgomery County, Maryland. Benjamin and his wife Evalena resided in Binghamton in the 1850s. Their daughter Sara Frances was born there in 1851. Louisa Jane made her appearance in Binghamton in 1853, Mary Elizabeth in 1855, and James Edward Brown in November 1857. The family subsequently moved to the town of Barton, Tioga County, where they were living when Benjamin enlisted on January 4, 1864, at Barton in the 26th United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) regiment of infantry. When he signed up, Benjamin informed the recruiters he was 43years-old although records, to include the New York Census of 1865, listed his age as high as 50 years. Soon after enlisting, Private Brown was transported to Rikers Island, New York Harbor. At the end of February 1864, one month after mustering in, the 26th U.S.C.T regiment was ordered south to serve in the District of Beaufort, South Carolina, Department of the South. Company Muster Roll reports reflect Benjamin was present for duty each month through the end of 1864 except for two short absences due to sickness. On December 22, 1864, while in a skirmish with Confederate troops at Grahams Neck, South Carolina, Private Brown suffered a gunshot wound that fractured the top of his skull and caused paralysis of his left side. The brave soldier died twelve days later at General Hospital in Beaufort. Private Benjamin Brown is buried at the National Cemetery in Beaufort. His widow Evalene and their four youngest children were living in Waverly in October 1866, when Evalene was 6 On March 29, 1865, several men from the Broome County area were engaged in fighting at Lewis Farm/Gravelly Run, Va. as Grant put some of his plans in motion against the Petersburg defense lines. Sharp infantry fighting occurred along Quaker Road on the same day. Swiftly, he ordered Sheridan to take a large cavalry force and move on several other local points in hopes of drawing off some of Lee's men in the Petersburg defenses. Supported by the 5th Corps under General Warren, Sheridan engaged Confederate troops under General George Pickett at Dinwiddie Court House, Va. and other nearby places on the last day of the month. Grant instructed Meade to prepare his Army of the Potomac for a massive assault along rebel lines deemed in weakened condition. Union's armed forces. Several of those soldiers came from Tioga County. Recent research by Jerry Marsh of Newark Valley has identified at least two of the county's black soldiers who gave their lives for the Union in that long cruel war. One of the soldiers was Benjamin Brown of the town of Barton. Page was with his men through the April 2nd final breakthrough, and the subsequent campaign that led to the surrender of Lee at Appomattox Court House, Va. In May, Whitman was promoted to the rank of regimental Major, and Brown was moved up to Captain of Co. "K." He was mustered out with the company near Alexandria, Va. on July 25, 1865. By 1870 he and wife Tressa had one infant child, and were living in the farm household of her parents in the Town of Vestal. He applied for and received a military pension and was shown on the federal List of Pensioners on the Roll as of January 1, 1883, then receiving a monthly stipend of $6.00 for his wartime shoulder wound. James C. Brown reported in Vestal during the 1890 Special Veterans' Census, confirmed his wartime service in the 51st NY Infantry and his final rank of Captain, noting he had suffered "gunshot wound, right shoulder." According to the epitaph on the family monument in Vestal Center Cemetery, Brown passed away in 1918, however some sources show his death year as 1919. receiving a widow's pension of $8.00 a month plus a $2.00 monthly stipend for each of the children. * * * * * ITEMS OF INTEREST * * * CIVIL WAR NIGHT It was another very successful Civil War night The Binghamton Senators Game. All of the displays were on the main concourse where they were in the high traffic area. The Senators Game Day Manager had a special Presidential Box that over looked the entire arena where Mrs. and President Lincoln escorted by Captain Brain Swartz were introduced to the crowd of over three thousand spectators. Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War were represented by Bonnie Baker-Duff and Joanne Thornton. They had a great table display. We again had authors of Civil War books in attendance. They included Eileen Patch, David Clutz, Kurt Lafy and Brian Keator. The weather prevented some who were planning to attend not be able to make and we certainly understand that. We have already started talking to the hockey representatives to get a later date. Finally the fund raiser under the direction of Laurie-Ann Platt was very successful as she was able to raise a greater amount than was raised last year. ALL IN ALL IT WAS A GOOD NIGHT * Ben Gardiner organized members of the 137th N.Y. Infantry and the 141st PA Infantry. From the 137th N.Y. were Laura and Ben Gardiner, Therese and Thomas McEntire, Gail Markstein and James Duran. From the 141st PA were Kurt Lafy, Jon, Bud and Jody Fiske. In addition to having table displays the two regiments were honor to have presented the colors during the singing of the National Athum. Having people in uniform was very important as it brought people to the historical displays. * * * * PHELPS MANSION MUSEUM CIVIL WAR DAYS SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 2015 Noon – 4:00 PM * * * CIVIL WAR TRUST The money from our BOOK RAFFLE goes to support the “CIVIL WAR TRUST”. If you are not a member of the “Civil War Trust” you should consider joining. Their web site is Page www.civilwar.org. 7 Your BCWHSRT were represented by Joe Card and John Goodnough who had many picture boards and other memorable. Brain Swartz who dressed in his Captain dress blues who worked the tables and escorted the Lincolns Eileen and David Patch were the hit of the show with their appearance and Eileen was also there as an author signing her book. 7 Directions to Hillcrest American Legion Coming from Binghamton take the Brandywine (Rte. 7) and then onto I-88. .Take the Chenango Bridge Exit (the very first exit on I-88). Stay in the left lane of the exit and at the light make a left. At the very next light make a left—this is almost immediately after the turn,( be careful don’t get back on !-88). Once you are on this rd., the American Legion is less than a half mile on your right. From Syracuse, take I-81 South to Exit 6 (Rte. 11), take a left at the first light onto Rte. 12, continue on Rte. 12 for about ½ mile and make a right onto Rte. 12a. Continue for about a mile—at you second light make a right on to Chenango Street(Labeled Service Road) the American legion will be less than a half mile ahead on your right.* The primary income to cover the operational expenses of our Round Table comes from MEMBERSHIP. It would be great if each current member would sign up a new member. Binghamton Civil War Historical Society and Round Table Annual Dues are $15.00 Student Dues are $10.00 Family Dues are $25.00 Please make out checks to “Binghamton Civil War Round Table”. (BCWHSRT) Mail your check and attached form to: Willis L. Platt, Treasurer 71 Shaw Road Conklin, NY 13748 USA IT IS THAT TIME OF THE YEAR WHEN YOUR DUES ARE DO Please fill out and return the following information so that we can keep our membership file current. NAME: _____________________________________________ ADDRESS: __________________________________________ CITY: __________________________ ST: _________ ZIP CODE: _________________ TELEPHONE; ______________________________________ Page 2 EMAIL ADDRESS; ___________________________________ 2
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