Historical souvenir of Phoenix, , and vicinity . .shall passdown to future generations. Cliarles \V. Camlee divided hiscliildliood days lietween workingon till farm and attend ng thedistict school. On Feb. :i, IK47,he married Ann H. Marsli ofWhitesboro. X. Y.,and in ISld hebougiit ihe farm his father hadowned near Ph(eiiix. The latterdied in August, lSt)2, 71 years old,and liis wife in Dec. , S4 yearsold. In ISll and i- Charles W. was in the grocerybusiness in Phitmix with Orange Chappel, theirstore !? landing cm the site of the Howard wife died Oct. 2!t. and o


Historical souvenir of Phoenix, , and vicinity . .shall passdown to future generations. Cliarles \V. Camlee divided hiscliildliood days lietween workingon till farm and attend ng thedistict school. On Feb. :i, IK47,he married Ann H. Marsli ofWhitesboro. X. Y.,and in ISld hebougiit ihe farm his father hadowned near Ph(eiiix. The latterdied in August, lSt)2, 71 years old,and liis wife in Dec. , S4 yearsold. In ISll and i- Charles W. was in the grocerybusiness in Phitmix with Orange Chappel, theirstore !? landing cm the site of the Howard wife died Oct. 2!t. and on Dec. Ml,ISIKiMr. (audee married !\Irs. .toinette FrauceneCheever, the daughter of Allen Hicks of SenecaFalls. When Mr. Candee sold the farm to his sonhe moved into the vdlage, and built the house in?which he now resides, his ])urcliase containingforty acres which he had surveyed and largely cutup into village lots, opening Bridge street throughfrom Barnes to Lock street, and erecting addi-tional dwellings on Bridge and Lock streets. i\ .Mis, Miiyer. IIidIo. C. W. ( AMIEES KESII lENCE. GRIPS HISTORICAL SOUVENIR OF PHCENIX. 35 Canclee served as supervisor in 1864 and has alsoserved as commissioner of highways and poor-master. He was one of the iucorjioi-ators of theOswego and Onondaga Insurance Co., and formany years has ])een an active member of theCongregational church, of which he is the oldestdeacon now living, having been such since the war Mr. Candee was chairman of thetown committee to liU the town quota requii-edbinder several calls of the president for troops, ofwhich D. T>. McKoon and Edmund Merry weremembers. He was also called to sit with JudgeTyler at Oswego to enforce the drafts of 18(>i,which to him, as to all good union men, was atrying time. The children by his first wife areMary (Mrs. J. W. Loomis) of Phoenix, who wasmarried in 1873, Charles E., who married Eliza-beth Boli in 1881 and Huldah (deceased) who Historic Earhtworks.—Remains


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidhistoricalph, bookyear1902