1. C. H. Robinson Northfield
2. D. Sloan Middlebury
3. Mrs Hough & Child
4. Miss Do
5. W. A. Bacon Ludlow William A. Bacon (1822 1896) - Perfumer; Co-owner of the weekly newspaper The Blotter first issue November 18, 1854
6. Lyman Densmore Rochester (1808 1882) Captain in the Vermont Militia, 1841 1844;
7. E. B. Shear Niagara Falls
8. A. J. Fleming W Vt RR
9. John Olsaver - Do
10. C. Fox - Do
11. L. A. Powers - Do
12. J. W. Furnald R Vt RR
13. Geog O. Hutchins W Vt RR
14. A. J. Bennett W Vt RR
15. R. D. Morehouse Rutland
16. H. H. Draper Rupert, Vt Hiram Hill Draper (1826 1920)
17. T. French New Haven
18. J. Jones Jr Boston
19. Jas Edwards NYC RR
20. C. R. Roberts W Rutland - Born in Rutland, VT. Early settler of Marion County, Kansas - Marion County Commissioner, Marion County Surveyor, Clerk of District Court, Marion Township Trustee, Owned a ranch on the Old Santa Fe Trail in McPherson County, Kansas.
21. Geo Thrall -
22. Thos J. Lyon -
23. W. J. Cain P O Rutland, Vt Captain William Jesse Cain (1835 1879) from the Rutland Daily Herald & Globe, Jan. 18, 1879:
The subject of this notice, Capt. Wm. J. Cain, son of John and Mary B. Cain, of this town, was born March 26, 1835. Aside from a common school education, he pursued his studies at the academies in Rutland and Poultney, in this State, and at Andover, Massachusetts, at Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and other places.
At the breaking out of the civil war he studied law in the office of Messrs. Prout & Dunton, in this place. He accompanied the Second Vermont regiment to the field as quartermaster-sergeant in 1861; was in the battles of the first "Bull Run"; resigned his position and enlisted as a private in the United States Light Artillery in 1862; was with General Pleasanton's advance just after the battle of Antietam; participated in the battle of Fredericksburg, after which he received a commission as second lieutenant in the Third Regular Cavalry in February, 1863; was promoted to first lieutenant October 9, 1865; served on General Sherman's staff, and later on the staff of both General Logan and General Harrow; was in the battle of Chattanooga, South Mountain, Missionary Ridge and Atlanta; was at the side of the gallant General McPherson, in advance of our army, when the General was shot down by a rebel sharp shooter, and was promoted to Captain by brevet, for meritorious services, March 18, 1865.
Since the termination of the war he was stationed at Memphis, Tenn., Little Rock and Fort Smith, Ark., and Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico. In 1867 he had command of a cavalry escort to General Wright's surveying party from Ft. Logan, Colorado, through New Mexico and Arizona to the Pacific coast; left the army and was engaged in surveying lands on the Northern Pacific railroad. Later still he had charge of the freight department of 700 [illegible] of the Missouri and Texas railroad, with headquarters at [illegible], Mo. Two years ago his health began to fail, as his physicians say, from exposure in the [illegible] and a few weeks ago he had a stroke of paralysis, from which he partially recovered. A few days ago he had a second attack which terminated in his death. His wife, a daughter of the late Judge Kittridge, of Fairhaven, Vt., and a son, two years of age, are, from sickness, unable to accompany the remains to Vermont. Captain Cain has many friends in Rutland and in the army, who will mourn the loss of a generous and [illegible] companion, who had not an enemy in the world.
24. M. Dibble
25. J. R. Wyman North part of Penn
26. R. N. Patch Gone to bed
27. Ward Cotton Hartland, Vt (1793 1868)
28. Samuel Clark