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WILLIAM WARREN6 DURGIN (LEVI5, EPHRAIM4, JOSHUA3, WILLIAM2, WILLIAM1)1 was born December 18, 1839 in Stoneham, Oxford Co., Maine, and died January 27, 1929 in Stoneham, Oxford Co., Maine. He married FANNIE E.. Notes for WILLIAM WARREN DURGIN: From "Biographical Review" Leading Citizens of Franklin & Oxford Counties, Maine, 1897. William Warren Durgin was given a good practical education in the common schools. He went to work at farming and lumbering when seventeen years of age, and was steadily employed thereat until his twenty-second year, when he responded to the call of his country for men to defend the Union. He enlisted April 25, 1861, in Co. G, First Maine Infantry, under Capt. George L. Beal, of Norway, and Col. N. J. Jackson. After serving three months he returned home and re-enlisted in Co. K, Ninth Maine Infantry. This company participated in the capture of Port Royal, S. C.; of Fernandina, Fla.; of St. Mary's, Ga.; of Talbert Island, Fla.; and of Yellow Bluff on the St. John's River. In July 1863, Mr. Durgin was transferred from the Ninth Maine Infantry to the tenth Regiment of Veteran Reserves, being assigned to Co. F. In the spring of 1864 he re-enlisted, joining the same company and regiment. He was promoted to the rank of Orderly Sergeant while in Co. K, and retained his rank when transferred to Co. F. He has to-day a more forcible reminder of his term of military service than his commission, for he was wounded in the ankle, and suffers yet from the hurt. When President Lincoln was assassinated Sergeant Durgin, then in the veteran reserve force, was immediately called into action. He was one of the military bearers who escorted the body of the President to the rotunda of the Capitol, and was one of the guard of honor that accompanied the remains to Springfield, Ill. He is the proud possessor of a medal presented to him on that occasion, one of twenty nine in the whole United States, and the only one in Maine. He was one of the guards who surrounded Mrs. Surratt's house, the allege place of rendezvous for the conspirators. He also retains a vivid recollection of the excitement caused by the news that Booth had been shot by Sergeant Corbett on Garrett's farm, near Port Royal on the Rappahannock. After serving in all four years and seven months, Sergeant Durgin received his discharge in November 1865, and returned to Stoneham. Settling in North Stoneham, he remained there four years, working at farming and lumbering. He was subsequently engaged in turning spools in a mill in Stowe, this county, where he remained one year, and for nine months working in a clothespin factory in Chatham, New Hampshire. Then for eighteen or nineteen years he was engaged in turning spools at North Lovell. At the end of that time he settled on the farm where he now lives, and has since given his attention chiefly to agriculture, except one year spent at Albany, New Hampshire, turning spools. He has forty five acres of farming land, and he owns timber land in different parts of the county. He has been very successful as a farmer and stock raiser; but he is unable to do much active work, on account of his ankle, and is now receiving a pension from the government. A stanch Republican, Sergeant Durgin takes an active interest in politics. He is now serving his eighth term as Noble Grand in Crescent Lodge, No. 25, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, of North Lovell; and he is a comrade of Parker Post, No. 151, Grand Army of the Republic, at Lovell Centre. Child of WILLIAM DURGIN and FANNIE E. is: i. CHRISTIE7 DURGIN, d. February 20, 1873, Stoneham, Oxford Co., Maine. Notes for CHRISTIE DURGIN: Died in infancy. ********** Endnotes 1. "Biographical Review" Franklin & Oxford Counties, 440. ********************************************* (Dear David Young, I looked at the Diaries you have posted and thought you may be interested in this article I found on William Warren Durgin. It doesn't seem to fit on the Diary page but thought it would be interesting for Stoneham or Oxford County page. I found the cemetery where he (william Warren Durgin) is buried in Stoneham and the gravestone is inscribed with the fact he was a pall bearer at Abe Lincoln's funeral and escorted the body to Ill and helped place it in the tomb. Caroline) (c) 1998 Courtesy of the Scarborough, Cumberland Co, Maine USGenWeb Project Caroline Chamberlain ************************************************* * * * * NOTICE: Printing the files within by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. 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