Seasonal & Holidays

CT's 'Shortest' Memorial Day Parade Has Unique Format, Lots Of History

Vernon's Talcottville parade features a short march, an interesting format and a long history.

The old Talcott Bothers Mill looms over the starting point of Connecticut's 'shortest' Memorial Day parade.
The old Talcott Bothers Mill looms over the starting point of Connecticut's 'shortest' Memorial Day parade. (Chris Dehnel/Patch )

VERNON, CT — The Memorial Day weekend parade that is arguably the "shortest" in Connecticut might be just a quarter-mile long, but it is steeped in a long history.

At 9 a.m. Sunday, Vernon's Talcottville Memorial Parade is set to step off from the Talcottville Church at 10 Elm Hill Road and travel the short distance while passing historic mills and homes to Mount Hope Cemetery, tucked behind 100 Main St.

The parade includes vintage cars, a fife and drum corps and "anyone who'd like to march." That means spectators are part of the parade and don't just stand along the sidelines and watch.

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The ceremony at Mount Hope cemetery includes a recitation of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.

The cemetery features a stately Civil War memorial perched atop a hill. It was erected in 1869 and is generally considered one of the oldest in the nation.

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The soldiers whose names appear on the stone structure represent a Civil War textbook from the bloodiest day in American history to the most infamous prison camp of the conflict.

The Civil War monument at Vernon's Mount Hope Cemetery. (Chris Dehnel/Patch)

Here is a look at who is on the monument:

  • Capt. Frank Stoughton, Company D, 14th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. He's the ranking soldier on it and he died on Jan. 1, 1866. He lived for nine months after Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox. The regiment was involved in 34 major battles and skirmishes, and there is a display noting its record of service on a wall at the New England Civil War Museum and Research Center at the Vernon Town Hall. The battles the 14th fought include Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Bristoe Station, The Wilderness, Spotsylvania and Cold Harbor.
  • Horace Hunn, Company B, 16th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. Hunn died in a hospital in Maryland on Oct. 12, 1862, two days shy of a month after the Battle of Antietam. According to a feature on the monument on stonesentinels.com, the regiment engaged 779 soldiers and suffered 43 killed and 161 wounded at Antietam.
  • Philip Foster, Company B, 16th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. Foster died at the Battle of Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862, considered the bloodiest day in American military history. The Civil War Trust places the casualty total at 22,717 as 87,000 Union troops slugged it out with 45,000 Confederates.
  • Henry Loomis, Company B, 16th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. Loomis drowned in the Potomac on April 24, 1865. It was a day when troops were dispatched up and down the river in search of Abraham Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth. Booth was located and killed by Federal troops two days later.
  • Alonzo Hills, Company B, 16th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. Hills died in a Charleston, SC, prison camp on Oct. 6, 1864. In April 1864, the 16th was defending the garrison at Plymouth, NC, and, vastly outnumbered, was forced to surrender.
  • James Bushnell, Company B, 16th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. Bushnell died on Nov. 15, 1862, nearly two months after Antietam. The troops had loaded their muskets for the first time the day before the battle.
  • Orrin Brown, Company A, 106th Regiment, New York Volunteers. Brown died of typhoid fever on April 22, 1863, according to a history of the regiment on dam.ny.gov. Disease ravaged the troops during the war.• Francis Brantley, Company H, 6th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers. Brantley died at the notorious prison camp in Andersonville, GA. He was one of about 45,000 who perished there because of disease, starvation and abuse.

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