Chautauqua Historical Society Newsletter V.6 Issue 3 No.16

Cover Chautauqua Historical Society Newsletter V.6 Issue 3 No.16
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Van Treese, bom in Kentucky in 1844, was seventeen when he enlisted in the Union Army, Fifth Illinois Cavalry Regiment He served fix)m 1861 to 1865. Two years after the war he entered the BEXJAMl.V ST JAMES FKY.
ministry two years after the end of the war. For many years he was the Superintendent of Devotions for the Pi- asa Bluffs community. Van Treese was an active Chau- tauquan for over 40 years, presiding over the dedication of Kupferle Chapel in 1926. He died in California in 1927, and is
...buried in the cemetery next to McKendree College, Lebanon, Illinois.
The first president of our Chautauqua, Benjamin St.
James Fry, served in the Union Army as a chaplain, the 63rd Infantry, Ohio Brigade. Fry was bom in Tennessee in 1 824. He grew up and was educated in the Cincinnati, Ohio area, and became a Methodist minister in 1847.
Fry kept a private diary over the period of his service (he Lo,;.. L... .. was discharged in Sta... September 1864) >r»i that comprised two volumes of personal observations: tales of daily camp life, its joys and sorrows; the names of the sick and wounded to whom he dedicated his service; the names of the dead, including those who died in hospitals away from the bat- tlefields; and sketches and diagrams of the battlefields where the Ohio Brigade was engaged.


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