Manchester New Hampshire’s Marine Corps Iwo Jima Flag Raiser, Rene Arthur Gagnon (1925-1979)

Rene Gagnon, son of French Canadian mill workers, was born and raised in Manchester, New Hampshire. According to some, he was “a shy, self-conscious, ‘mama’s boy.'”

He worked with his mother in the local mill until he was drafted in 1943, when he decided to join the Marine Corps. He was discharged on 27 April 1946.

On February 23, 1945, Pvt. Rene Gagnon was the runner for Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 28th Marine Regiment, 5th Marine Division, a unit assigned to capture Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima. That morning a group of Marines raised a flag on the mountain, but the battalion commander told 2nd Lt. Albert T. Tuttle, his assistant operations officer, to get a larger flag, and was directed to give the flag to Gagnon. Continue reading

Posted in Military of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Men | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

New Hampshire’s Day of Terror

The 19th of January, 1810, was, in the central part of New Hampshire at least, a day of terror, one never to be forgotten in the annals of the “hill towns” of this beautiful State.

The afternoon of the 18th was unusually warm and mild; the thermometer indicated forty-three degrees, or eleven degrees above freezing.  Before light the next morning a winter hurricane was sweeping over the mountains, hills, plains and valleys, snapping off good-sized pine-trees, in its extended path, as if they were but fragile reeds.

Great oaks were twisted by the force of the wind like switches in the hands of a giant.  Barns were swept to ruin, and sheds of lighter construction were carried away by the storm of wind like chaff.  This horrible blizzard continued during nearly a whole day.  Nearly all the while the air was filled with fine, hail-like particles of snow, caught up by the gale, so that it was impossible to see more than a few rods away.  To add to the gloom of the occasion and its deathly danger, the mercury of the thermometer sank, in the sixteen hours following the previous day’s thaw, to twenty-five degrees above zero.  The mercury runs as low every winter as it did that day, but mortal man has never known a severer day in this New England.

Thousands of fowl were blown away and never seen by their owners again; rabbits, partridges and crows were frozen in the thickest woods; young cattle were frozen solid as they huddled together in the half-open barn-yard sheds, some of which withstood the force of the wind; many cattle perished where they were tied in their stalls.

The heavens roared like the sea in a cyclone.  Branches of trees, hay from demolished barns, loosened clapboards and shingles from such houses as had great oaken frames and immense chimneys to hold the structures in place, rose in the air and mingled together in terrifying confusion.  The loss of live stock and buildings in Merrimack County aggregated scores of thousands of dollars.  The “cold Friday” was known and is remembered throughout the New England States.

Janice

Source: The History of Merrimack and Belknap Counties, New Hampshire. edited by D. Hamilton Hurd. Philadelphia: J.W. Lewis & Co. 1885, page 670

Posted in Haunted New Hampshire, History | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Hermit of the White Mountains: John A. Vial aka English Jack

He was the most picturesque of latter-day White Mountain characters“English Jack”–known to thousands of visitors to the region as the “Hermit of the White Mountains,” or the “Crawford Notch Hermit.”

English Jack, Hermit of the White Mountains - old postcard

English Jack, Hermit of the White Mountains – old postcard

According to the “Chronicles of the White Mountains,” John Alfred Vials (or Viles) was 90 yrs old when he died in April 1912 (so b abt 1821). Jack spent his summers in an old shanty which became known as the “House That Jack Built,” and which was situated at not great distance from the highway, in the woods above the Gate of the Notch.  His house — “ship” he preferred to call it–was reached by paths from several directions, signboards indicating the way thither. Here in a low-ceilinged room Jack received his visitors. From the sale of picture postcards of himself, of a booklet containing what purports to be his life-story, told in rhyme by James E. Mitchell, and of other souvenirs, he acquired what was a considerable revenue at that time.

He usually had some trout in a small aquarium just outside his door. Besides fish, it was commonly reported that snakes were sometimes articles of diet with him. Asked about this rather queer taste attributed to him, he replied, “Well, they never ketched me at it, anyhow.” For a beverage, other than the cool sparking water of the near-by brook or spring, Jack brewed a kind of beer out of hops and roots which grew near the hut, with which stimulant he sometimes regaled his visitors. “Among the Clouds for July 25, 1877 tells of his eating half of an uncooked striped snake, “with apparent relish.” This was done in the presence of a party of people from the Crawford House.

According to the “Story of Jack,” he was born in London and left an orphan at twelve, with one pound in gold as his whole fortune, and with the sole ambition of going to sea. For days and days he frequented the docks seeking an opportunity to shop as cabin-boy, but in vain. Nobody would take him, and at last, tired and homesick, he sat down to cry.

A five-year-old girl came toddling up and told him not to cry, saying that she was looking for her father’s ship and that she was lost as well as he.  Hand in hand, Jack and little Mary walked along the hot street, a sad pair.  Mary suddenly saw her father on top of a passing omnibus, but he did not hear her call to him, so occupied was he in talking with his sailor mate.  With quickness of mind and action, Jack pushed Mary through a door and ran after the omnibus, which he caught and mounted blurting out, “Your little girl is gone!”

At that the father at once started off with Jack to find Mary, which they did to the father’s and little daughter’s great joy.  When Jack told his tale, the grateful Bill Simmonds took the friendless lad home with him, and he and his wife cared for him. When Bill went to sea again, he got Jack a berth as cabin-boy on his ship.  After sailing together for eight years in different ships, Bill and Jack, who had by this time become an able seaman, shipped in the good ship “Nelson” for the Indian Ocean. Jack, Mary, and her mother had forebodings that all would not be well on this voyage, but the men laughed them off and  joined the crew.

Nothing untoward happened until the ship was in the Indian Ocean, when one Sunday afternoon a terrible gale struck it.  After running for hours before the hurricane, the ship was wrecked upon a small desert island.  Jack, Bill, and eleven others were all that were saved out of a crew of forty-two.  Water, fortunately, was found, but the only food to be had, after a water-soaked cash of break was consumed, consisted of mussels, crabs, limpets, snakes and the like.  Before the rainy season came on, disease and death had reduced the company to four.  For nineteen months the four lived on what they could pick up on the barren shore, and then Bill succumbed, his dying wish being that Jack look after his wife and Mary and tell them about his end.

A week or so after Bill’s death, there came a violent hurricane and when the stored had cleared off a sail was seen.  The shipwrecked men’s signal had been seen also, and the ship, an American one, rescued them.  Jack’s two companions died before they could reach home, and he alone of all the Nelson’s company returned alive to London. When he had reported to the owners the fate of the ship, Jack started in search of Mary and her mother. After many days he learned that Bill’s wife was dead and that Mary had been taken to the workhouse. Jack at once took her out and placed her in a school, paying her board for a year, and then took ship on a vessel bound for Hongkong. All went well with the sailor both on the outgoing and on the return voyage.  Immediately after the ship’s arrival at Liverpool, the anxious Jack took the train for London. When, however, he reached the school, he received the heart-crushing news that Mary had died just a month before.

Eventually, and against his wish, Jack recovered from the severe sickness caused by this blow to his hope and love. He then joined the navy, with the thought that death might overtake him in that service, but although he fought in many skirmishes and battles, his life was spared through all. He tells in the “Story” of fighting in Africa to free the slaves, of going with Inglefield to search for Sir John Franklin’s crew in the frozen North, and of serving through the Crimean War and in the Indian Mutiny. After traveling land and sea for many years, Jack left old England and came to America.

Drifting to the Crawford Notch to work on the railroad, he came to like the region so much that he took up the life of a hermit there in the summer months. He used to spend his winters hunting, trapping, and making souvenirs to sell to his summer visitors.  Latterly, in the winter, Jack lived with a family at Twin Mountain.

He was well read, it is said, in history and literature. He had spent much time and money in searching through advertisements and otherwise for his relatives, but, as he met with no success in this, he came to the conclusion that they were all dead.  He had a kind heart. One way in which he manifested this was by assisting orphans and other unfortunates among the Mountains.

Jack was a real person, as evidenced by extensive stories about him.  Unfortunately I have not been able to find any trace in the U.S. Census of a John/Jack Vials/Vialls/Viles who was living in the white mountains. [And usually the “hermits” WERE included in the census].

If anyone knows the identity of this man, or can direct me to documents or census records confirming his presence, I would be grateful.

Janice

Most of the above taken from: “Chronicles of the White Mountains,” by Frederick Wilkinson Kilbourne; Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1916.
page 266

————–
Update: August 2013
I located the death record probably of the hermit as follows:

==DEATH RECORD OF JOHN A. VIAL==
——page 1——
Name: John A. Vial
Place of Death: Carroll, NH
Date of Death: Year-1913  Month-4 (April)  Day-24
Age:  Years-89  Months-3  Days-15
[This would make his approx date of birth as January 9,  1824]
Place of Birth: England
Sex: M   Colors: W   Single
Occupation: Sailor
Cause of Death: Appoplexy, Duration three weeks; contributing cause: Nephritis
—-page 2——
Name of Physician: Dr. H.M. Wiggin
Address: Whitefield NH
Place of Interment: Carroll NH
Date of Interment April 26, 1912
Name of Cemetery: Protestant
Undertaker: R.V. Howard
Address: Whitefield NH
Certificate signed by: Dana Brown, Clerk of Carroll NH, May 8, 1912

****ADDITIONAL READING****

English Jack, the Hermit of Crawford Notch – from Whitemountainhistory.org

See some GREAT Photographs of English Jack

[Editor’s Note: links and information updated January 12, 2014]

Posted in New Hampshire Men | Tagged , , , , , , | 9 Comments

The Osgoodites of Warner, New Hampshire

the harvest warner nhThe early nineteenth century was a time of great religious change in New Hampshire.  New Christian sects were sprouting up, including the Millerites, (now Seventh Day Adventists), the Mormons, and also a little known sect with its roots in Warner, New Hampshire called the “Osgoodites.”

 

The founder of the Osgoodites was Jacob Osgood, son of Philip & Mehitable (Flanders) Osgood.  He was born in South Hampton, New Hampshire 16 March 1777, and moved to Warner with his family as a young boy.  He married Miriam Stevens, daughter of Jonathan Stevens of Sutton. In 1812 he built a low, unpainted house with ragged chimneys on his hundred-acre farm on the Mink Hills in the upper part of Warner. His physical weight sometimes reached 350 pounds. He was “a man of considerable ability and of the warmest sympathies.” Continue reading

Posted in Genealogy, History | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Hanover New Hampshire Internationally Known Pioneer Plastic Surgeon, Dr. Radford C. Tanzer (1905-2003)

Dr. Radford Chapple Tanzer was a world-renowned, pioneer plastic surgeon.

Dr. Radford Tanzer in 2002 after receiving Hanover’s Boston Post Cane.

I treasure the times we spent with this amazing man. I first met Uncle Rad and his wife Velma at Lake Pleasant, New York, where his  family spent at least a week each summer. Many times before and after his first wife’s death, I would take trips to lovely Hanover, New Hampshire, to visit with him. We would sometimes go canoeing, to a football game, and other times out to lunch. We’d chat mostly about family, the weather, and what was new at Dartmouth College.  Upon meeting him, you would never know Uncle’s Rad’s ground-breaking past–he was such a humble man.  The book shelves in his study contained not only medical journals, but hand-signed books from both Ted Geisel (“Dr. Seuss“) and Robert Frost, who were his friends. Continue reading

Posted in New Hampshire Men | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments