Bio: Chesley, Jacob (1880)

Contact: Les Dickenson
Email: lesd729@hotmail.com

Surnames: Chesley, Dickenson, Cramer

----Source: MARSHFIELD NEWS HERALD (Marshfield, Wis.) 08/02/1935

Chesley, Jacob (1880)

Marathon County’s first war veteran’s grave has been located as a result of the emergency relief administration’s project for the registration of all veterans’ graves. The grave is located at the Colby (Colby, Clark Co. Wis.) Cemetery, which is in Clark County, and is the grave of Jacob Chesley, a reisent of the town of Hull, Marathon Co., until his death, Jan. 25, 1880.

Chesley was 12 years of age when he enlisted as a drummer boy with the United States forces in the Indian war of 1812 in New York state. Little of his war experiences is known today by his granddaughter, Mrs. George Dickenson, who still resides in the home where Chesley had lived with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Cramer.

Mrs. Cramer previous to her marriage was Wealthea Chesley, a daughter of this veteran of the war of 1812. Other children included J. P. Chesley of Stevens Point, who was a Civil War veteran, and Hiram Chesley, who died in Oregon and who at one time had a homestead in Section 1 of the town of Hull. Mrs. Dickenson has a brother, Alfred Cramer, at Santa Monica, Cal., and numerous other descendants of Jacob Chesley lived in Iowa.

Jacob Chesley left New York state in his early manhood for Illinois and became a widower early in life. He lived at Stevens Point before coming to the town of Hull. He was a farmer by occupation.

 

 


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