THE PERINTON 78

The following are the names and bios of the 78 Fairport/Perinton residents who perished in service to our Country.
 
If you have any additional information you would like to submit regarding these individuals, please hit the 'Contact' button at the top of this page to send us an email.
 
Special thanks to post member, Colonel Pete Owen, USMC, Retired for researching these names and bios. 
 

 FIRST  MIDDLE  LAST  CONFLICT  BRANCH  UNIT  DATE OF DEATH BIO Picture
 Guy
C Adams Civil War Army 107th NYVI August 3, 1864

 Rayfield  C  Adams  WWII  Army  10th Infantry, 5th Division  September 21, 1944

 Smith  J  Austin  Civil War  Army  33rd NYVI  March 1, 1863

 Larry  A  Baker  WWII  Army    

 Richard  A  Bales  Vietnam  Army  Co. D, 1st BN, 20th Inf, 11th Light Inf. Brigade  December 4, 1968

 Frank  M  Beaumont  WWI  Army  Company E, 17th Calvary  May 31, 1918

 Sharick    Benson  Civil War  Army    

 James  Gordon Bolton  WWI  Army  10th Canadian Battalion  September 28, 1918

 Belden   Bortles  Civil War  Army  108th NYVI  September 17, 1862

Kenneth   L Bridges   WWII  AAF 5th Air Force   April 6, 1945

Clifford   H Brizee  WWII  Army    November 11, 1944 

 J Willard  Brooks  WWI  Army  Co. M, 308th Inf. 77th Div.   October 15, 1918

 Michael   Burns   Civil War Army   140th NYVI  August 1863

 Murvale Butler  WWI   Army 304th Guard & Fire Co. Quartermasters Corps.   January 24, 1919

 Patrick  A Carini   Korea  USAF 509th Bomber Wing  March 20, 1953 

Stephen     Corwin Civil War  Army  107th NYVI  August 3, 1864 

 Oakley  Crane WWII   Army 1st Special Service Force September 17, 1944 

 Joseph    Critelli  WWII  Army   January 1, 1945 

 Francis    Crowley  WWII Army     

Charles     Dancy Civil War   Army  8th NY Cavalry, Co.A July 25, 1862 

 Charles   DeMott  Civil War  Army  1st NY Light Artillery   June 3, 1864 

Thomas   H Downing   Civil War  Army 108th NYVI  November 16, 1864 

Alvin    Fassett   Civil War  Army 108th NYVI   August 1862

 Jerome  B Fellows   Civil War Army  108th NYVI   June 3, 1864

Charles    Frontuto  WWII   Army  70th Tank Battalion  August 27, 1944

 Mason   Gaffney   WWII Army   Rochester Ordinance Dept. May 8, 1944 

Frank   G Garofono   WWII Army   151st Inf, 38th Div.  May 17, 194

Asaph     Goodell  Civil War Army   33rd NYVI  February 10, 1863

Lawrence   Hembrock WWII  Army    March 14, 1943 

John   Howell WWI   Army HQ Co., 17th Field Artillery, 2nd Div.   March 13, 1918

 Paul    Humphrey WWII  AAF  8th Air Force  May 12, 1944 

Edmund 
 Humphreys WWII  AAF?     January 12, 1943

David  Jerrells   Civil War  Army  13th NYVI August 31, 1862 

Carl Kishbaugh   WWII Army   Tank Division January 1, 1945 

 Robert  Kramer  WWII  AAF   October 10, 1943     
Martin  James  Larwood   WWI Army   9th Co., Recruit Camp, Camp Wheeler, GA November 3, 1918     
David   W Lawrence  Civil War   Army  8th NY Cavalry  March 7, 1864    
Frederick  Daniel  Leary  WWII  Army    February 8, 1945     
 Donald LeFrois   WWII  Navy    June 26, 1943    
Edward    Lowner   WWII          
 Albert  P  Lyndon  Civil War Army  140th NYVI   March 23, 1865    
 Jesse Albert  Maurer   WWI  Army  11th Recruit Co., Columbus Barracks, OH October 19, 1918     
 Maitland   McDonald  WWII   Army   November 25, 1944     
 Charles  W Moore  WWII  AAF  354th Fighter Group, 9th Air Force   April 4, 1945    
 Charles  F  Moore  Civil War  Army  108th NYVI  April 29, 1862    
 William  Morrison Civil War  Army  108th NYVI   December 27, 1862    
Erdinand    Newman   Civil War  Army  140th NYVI  July 2, 1863    
 Patrick    O'Neil Civil War  Army  14th NY Heavy Artillery   July 24, 1864    
Howard  Allan  Parkinson  WWII  USMC  4th Marine Division  April 18, 1944     
 William   Phelan  WWII   Army    April 3, 1945    
Sylvester    Pike   Civil War Army   3rd NY Cavalry  June 29, 1864    
 Mario    Pomponio WWII  Army    January 1, 1945      
 Lewis   Price   WWII Army  87th Division   May 1945    
Gordon    Reitz  WWII  Army    November 29, 1944    
 Alfred    Rinaldo WWII  Army  15th Inf., 3rd US Div.  January 24, 1944     
 Alexander  Roczen  Vietnam  Army  Co. A, 1st BN, 8th Inf. Div. July 4, 1968     
 Raymond    Rugenstein  WWII Army    August 16, 1944     
Gordon   W? Schrader   Korea Army  Co. A, 9th Inf., 2nd Inf. Div.  August 30, 1951     
 Jeffrey Schumacher   Vietnam  Army Co. D, 2nd BN, 5th Cav., 1st Cav Div.  June 14, 1971     
 Newney  Shamon  WWII Army     August 26, 1944    
Charles    Shear  Civil War  Army  140th NYVI   May 5, 1864    
Howard   L Shepard   WWI Army  Co. G, 108th Inf., 27th Div.   October 1, 1918
When the Fairport National Bank first opened its doors on West Avenue in 1 July 1916, the bank’s  twenty-two year-old assistant cashier was not there. Howard Shephard—the bank president’s son--was down in Texas with his National Guard company, guarding the Mexican border. Shepard kept the folks here in Fairport informed of life as a soldier in many letters he wrote to the Fairport Herald.
  

After Shepard’s company returned home and demobilized in October 1916, he returned to his work at the bank. Howard was a youth minister at the First Methodist Church at 31 West Church Street. His return home was cut short when Congress declared war on Germany and his company was once again mobilized, this time as Company G, 108th Infantry of the 27th Division. By the time Company G arrived in France in May 1918, Shepard was a sergeant serving in an intelligence billet. Shepard continued to write to the Fairport Herald, and his letters a reveal he was a highly conscientious young NCO dedicated to doing his duty.

Shepard’s company first entered the front lines near Ypres, Belgium in August 1918. On 30 September, the 108th Infantry assaulted the Hindenburg Line, Germany’s last fortified belt. One New York doughboy stated the German artillery and machine-gun fire was so brutal that the attacking infantry had "just become figures going down, like pins in a bowling alley.”[1]

One of those struck down was Howard Shepard. He was seriously wounded in his right thigh. Shepard was brought to a field hospital, where he slipped into unconsciousness and passed away the following evening.

The Fairport Herald called Howard "one of the finest principled young men it has been our privilege to become acquainted with.” In November 1919, Fairport’s American Legion Brooks-Shepard Post was dedicated in honor of Sergeant Shepard and Private Willard Brooks, another Fairport man killed in France. Shepard’s unit, the 2nd Battalion, 108th Infantry, continues to serve to this day as one of New York’s National Guard units.

 
Jacob     Sherman  Civil War Army  140th NYVI  Mat 5, 1864     
 William  A H Sherman  Civil War   Army  8th NY Cavalry  September 14, 1861    
 Amasa  J Slocum   Civil War Army  47th Illinois   January 24, 1863    
 Edwin A H   Slocum Civil War   Army 8th NY Cavalry   July 1, 1863

One of the more inspiring local residents was Edwin Slocum. Edwin was the great-grandson of Benjamin Slocum, a Revolutionary War veteran and one of the original lot owners in Perinton in 1805. He grew up on his parents’ farm near the junction of NY-31 and NY-250 today. Edwin was living in Indianapolis with his wife and four year-old daughter and working as a railroad engineer in 1860.

New York contributed the most soldiers of any state to put down the rebellion. Slocum was twenty-seven years old in September of 1861 when he enlisted in Company A of the 8th New York Cavalry, which was raised here in Monroe County. After eleven months he was promoted to first sergeant in August 1862, just before the Antietam campaign. When Robert E. Lee’s army encircled the garrison at Harper’s Ferry, Slocum and the 8th Cavalry escaped in a harrowing, all-night ride that culminated with the  capture of eighty Confederate ammunition wagons they intercepted on their way to the fight at Antietam.

In May 1863 Slocum and the 8th New York Cavalry opened the Battle of Brandy Station—the largest cavalry battle in American history—with a surprise attack on Confederate pickets.

Two months later, the 8th New York opened the battle of Gettysburg. Fighting under General John Buford’s vastly outnumbered command, as the first sergeant of Company A, Slocum and his fellow troopers fought a delaying action on McPherson’s Ridge to buy time for the Army of the Potomac to arrive.

First Sergeant Edwin Slocum gave his life during this fight on 1 July 1863. His remains are interred at Gettysburg National Cemetery. Perinton’s Grand Army of the Republic Post #211 was named in his honor. 
 
 Horatio Spafford   WWII  Army   October 26, 1944     
 Dexter   Still   Civil War  Army 6th NY Cavalry  November 22, 1862     
Arthur    Teeter   WWII Army   101st Airborne Division  December 22, 1944
Arthur Teeter lived with his parents on Hogan Road while attending Fairport High School. Evidently, Teeter was a bit of a daredevil. When he was nineteen, he and a friend were arraigned for driving down High Street at 70 mph.Arthur Teeter lived with his parents on Hogan Road while attending Fairport High School. Evidently, Teeter was a bit of a daredevil. When he was nineteen, he and a friend were arraigned for driving down High Street at 70 mph.

In 1942 Arthur left his wife in East Rochester and his job at the American Can Company here in Fairport and enlisted in the army. Arthur was assigned to the famed 101st Airborne Division, where he served as an 81mm mortarman in the 1st Battalion, 327th Glider Infantry Regiment.

Teeter was one of the first Americans to land in Normandy on D-Day. He was in action continuously until he was wounded after four days of fighting. After recuperating in England, Teeter made his second airborne operation, landing in Holland during Operation Market-Garden in September. Teeter fought in Holland for another six weeks until getting wounded a second time.

When German panzer divisions crashed through the Ardennes forest in December, the 101st rushed up to the town of Bastogne. Teeter, now a sergeant, was back with his mortar platoon, even though he had been wounded just six weeks earlier.

The German panzer divisions soon encircled the 101st Airborne at Bastogne. On a bitterly cold Christmas Day, an enemy company penetrated into the mortar platoon’s position. Sergeant Teeter fetched two American tanks and brought them to the aid of his platoon. Perched on top one of the tanks, Arthur Teeter fired its .50-caliber machine-gun into the German infantry. Teeter then dismounted and led his squad into a new defensive position. Crawling forward, Teeter was mortally wounded by an enemy hand grenade. Teeter was posthumously awarded the Silver Star medal.

 
 
Orson     Treadwell Civil War   Army 8th NY Cavalry   January 21, 1862    
 George Vane   WWII Army  305th Inf., 77th Inf. Div.   May 8, 1945    
 Curtis  E Vincent  WWII  Army  Medical Det., 16th Inf., 1st Div.  December 4, 1943     
Donald   F Vincent   Korea Army  19th Inf., 24th Inf. Div.   July 16, 1950     
Donald  Williams  WWII  AAF  15th Air Force  May 10th, 1944     
John   W  Williams Civil War   Army        
 George  B Wiltsie  Civil War  Army  4th NY Heavy Artillery  March 21, 1865    
Wykoff  Civil War  Army   28th NYVI November 12, 1861