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Capt John Warner

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Capt John Warner Veteran

Birth
Woodbury, Litchfield County, Connecticut, USA
Death
2 Jul 1819 (aged 74)
Saint Albans, Franklin County, Vermont, USA
Burial
Saint Albans, Franklin County, Vermont, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Capt John Warner
Revolutionary Soldier
St Albans first physican
erected 1922 by Bellevue Chapter DAR
=================
Additional information supplied by: Chazmanbsr, Herman C. Brown, Vermont Society Sons of the American Revolution

Captain John Warner was born on May 29, 1745 in Woodbury (now Roxbury), Litchfield County, Connecticut. He was the son of Benjamin and Silence (Hurd) Warner. John was a younger brother of Seth Warner, Colonel commander of the Continental Army Regiments known as the "Green Mountain Boy's".

John moved to Bennington, Bennington County, Vermont in 1765 with his parents. He married twice. His first wife died in 1775. In August 1777, about ten or twelve days prior to the Battle of Bennington, he married Joanna Ames by whom he had nine children: Truman, Wait, Gideon, William, Benjamin F., Junia, Sarah, Levi, and Amos.

Captain John Warner commanded one of the four Company's of Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Herrick's Vermont Regiment of Rangers that was engaged in the Battle of Bennington, August 1777. John's Company entered service on July 20th and was discharged on December 3rd 1777.

John moved to St. Albans, Franklin County, Vermont in 1793. He resided there until his death on July 2, 1819. He was St. Albans first physician, specializing in medicinal botany (the use of indigenous plants in treating disease).

The photos shown in this Memorial show the grave site of Captain John Warner. The red slate marker is what is left of the original headstone. The granite and bronze marker was erected by the Bellevue Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1922."


Capt John Warner
Revolutionary Soldier
St Albans first physican
erected 1922 by Bellevue Chapter DAR
=================
Additional information supplied by: Chazmanbsr, Herman C. Brown, Vermont Society Sons of the American Revolution

Captain John Warner was born on May 29, 1745 in Woodbury (now Roxbury), Litchfield County, Connecticut. He was the son of Benjamin and Silence (Hurd) Warner. John was a younger brother of Seth Warner, Colonel commander of the Continental Army Regiments known as the "Green Mountain Boy's".

John moved to Bennington, Bennington County, Vermont in 1765 with his parents. He married twice. His first wife died in 1775. In August 1777, about ten or twelve days prior to the Battle of Bennington, he married Joanna Ames by whom he had nine children: Truman, Wait, Gideon, William, Benjamin F., Junia, Sarah, Levi, and Amos.

Captain John Warner commanded one of the four Company's of Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Herrick's Vermont Regiment of Rangers that was engaged in the Battle of Bennington, August 1777. John's Company entered service on July 20th and was discharged on December 3rd 1777.

John moved to St. Albans, Franklin County, Vermont in 1793. He resided there until his death on July 2, 1819. He was St. Albans first physician, specializing in medicinal botany (the use of indigenous plants in treating disease).

The photos shown in this Memorial show the grave site of Captain John Warner. The red slate marker is what is left of the original headstone. The granite and bronze marker was erected by the Bellevue Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1922."




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  • Created by: Barb Destromp
  • Added: Jun 20, 2006
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/14660314/john-warner: accessed ), memorial page for Capt John Warner (29 May 1745–2 Jul 1819), Find a Grave Memorial ID 14660314, citing Greenwood Cemetery, Saint Albans, Franklin County, Vermont, USA; Maintained by Barb Destromp (contributor 46785064).