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Windham County Connecticut
CTGenweb Project
WINDHAM COUNTY RECORDS |
CAPT. BENJAMIN TURNER LOOMIS AS RECORDED IN: COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD OF
TOLLAND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF PROMINENT
AND REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS AND OF MANY PUBLISHER: J.H.BEERS & CO., CHICAGO; 1903 P. 423 CAPT. BENJAMIN TURNER LOOMIS, an honored veteran of the Civil War, and an inventor of note, is now living retired at Tolland, Tolland county, in the same house in which he was born, March 7, 1838. Sylvanus Loomis, the grandfather of Capt. Loomis, lived in Mansfield, Conn., where he followed the occupation of a farmer. Both he and his wife, who in her maidenhood was Olivia Turner, of Mansfield, lived unusually long lives, and she drew close to the completion of ninety-five years. They were both devoted members of the Congregational Church. Two of their children lived to mature years: Leonard, mentioned below; and Stephen T., who went West and located at Painesville, Ohio, where he died (he was quartermaster in the same regiment with James A. Garfield, and was always a staunch friend of that eminent Ohio statesman). Leonard Loomis, son of Sylvanus and
father of our subject, was born in Mansfield, Conn., in 1798; he
died in Tolland in 1862, and was buried in the Mansfield cemetery.
He was a man of good education, and when he was only eighteen years
old published an arithmetic which was received with much favor by
school teachers, and which was widely used for many years in a number
of States in the Union. He served as a fifer in the American army
during the war of 1812, though he was only thirteen years old at
the time he entered the service, and he participated in the campaign
around New London. Mr. Loomis was a good stump speaker, and was well
known as a deep thinker and a logical reasoner. In 1836 he removed
to Tolland where he taught school, and had a large business as a
house and sign painter. Mr. Loomis was established at first at Tolland
Center, and a year later the Turnpike Company built a house where
Capt. Loomis now lives, and there the father kept the toll-gate for
ten years. Mr. Loomis was married to Mary Turner, the daughter of
Benjamin Turner, of Mansfield. Her father was an extensive farmer,
and made combs on a large scale when comb making was the principal
industry. To this union were born: (1) Mary D. married first, Charles Capt. Benjamin T. Loomis received his education in the Tolland schools, continuing there until just before his sixteenth year, when he began to paint with his father. In 1855 he began teaching, his first school being in Willington, the following winter in Coventry, and the winters of 1857-58 and of 1861-62 in Tolland, working during the summer time at painting. Early in the spring of 1858 he went to Meriden, to learn the burnishers trade and the following year removed to New York to work at burnishing solid silver for Wood & Hughes, where he remained until Jan. 1, 1861. As Woods & Hughes sold their goods
very largely in the South, they were compelled to shut down, and
Mr. Loomis returned to Tolland to resume the occupation of teaching
for a time. In 1862 he raised a company in Tolland, and went into
the nine months
service as captain of Company K., 22nd Conn. V.I. The regiment was largely
engaged in picket and guard duty around Washington, and in Virginia,
and saw but little actual fighting. Nevertheless the service was very
exhausting, and when Capt. Loomis was mustered out with his command in
Hartford, after being in the war about a year, his health was greatly
impaired. When he had somewhat regained his strength he again sought
work with friends in New York, and was engaged for Capt. Loomis retired in 1896,
and made his home on a farm in Tolland, which he bought in 1893,
and which is known as the old toll-gate place. He has been very
successful in his business life and is a self-made man. In 1859 he
joined the I.O.O.F., in New York, and the F.&A.M. in 1870. A
Jeffersonian Democrat, he has never been a politician or an office
seeker. Capt. Loomis is a pleasant and genial gentleman, and his
hospitality is but one of his many good traits. A firm believer in
cremation, he has built a splendid mausoleum on his farm in which
is deposited the ashes of his deceased daughter. It is made to receive
his own ashes when the time shall come for his incineration, as well
as those of other members of his family. Reproduced by: Linda D. Pingel great-great granddaughter of Cyrus White of Rockville, Ct. |
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