Gustavus Adolphus JACOBS

Birth:
9 Sep 1795
Middlebury, Addison Co., or Rutland, Rutland Co., Vermont
Death:
13 Nov 1876
Plattville, Grant Co., Wisconsin
Marriage:
15 Apr 1816
Saint-Andre, Argentenil, Quebec
Father:
Gustavus John JACOBS
Mother:
Notes:
                   VT>CAN>NY
Gustavus Jacobs b. Vermont about 1796.
Married Harriet ??? (could be Perkins) probably 1818 -1820's
Source: 1830 Middlebury, Genesee Co., Ny, pg204.
Also 1850 Mt. Morris, Livingston Co, Ny Census pg 171.
Children all bornNew York, Gustavus , Harry b. abt 1832, Hannah b. abt
1834, Palmethias b. abt. 1836, Burley A.,b.abt. 1838 Wildes B. b. abt
1843.
                  
Harriet PERKINS
Birth:
21 Dec 1799
Grafton, Rutland, Vermont
Death:
3 Jun 1876
Plattville, Grant Co., Wisconsin
Children
Marriage
1
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   IN THE MEXICAN WAR
                  
2
Birth:
24 Apr 1817
Canada
Death:
25 Sep 1894
North Freedom, Sauk Co., Wisconsin
Notes:
                   In 1870 Galen Jacobs and family live next door to Marion (listed as
Morgan) Jacobs with wife Anna; and Jaffer sp? Young and wife Welthy and
son Adelbert.
                  
3
Birth:
9 Sep 1828
Wyoming Co., New York
Death:
30 Nov 1917
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Notes:
                   Civil War Pension Index lists G 18 Mass Inf, Gustavus Jacobs, mother
HarrietJacobs
Civil War Soldiers
Name:    Gustavus Jacobs ,
Residence:    Hanover, Massachusetts
Occupation:    Shoemaker
Enlistment Date:    10 July 1861
Distinguished Service:    DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served:    Union
State Served:    Massachusetts
Unit Numbers:    909 909
Service Record:    Enlisted as a Private on 10 July 1861 at the age of 18
Enlisted in Company G, 18th Infantry Regiment Massachusetts on 24 August
1861.
Received a disability discharge Company G, 18th Infantry Regiment
Massachusetts on 11 January 1862 in Hall's Hill, VA
                  
4
Birth:
1833
NY
Death:
WI
Notes:
                   Henry JACOBS, was a member of Company K, 23d Reg. Wis. Vols., and died
on thesteamer "John H. Dickey," from a wound received at Arkansas Post
                  
5
Hannah JACOBS
Birth:
1834
NY
Death:
 
Marr:
 
6
Birth:
6 Jan 1837
Wyoming Co., New York
Death:
Aft 1900
Marr:
25 Sep 1887
 
7
Birth:
1839
NY
Death:
4 Jul 1893
Milwaukee Co., Wisconsin
Notes:
                   Name:    Burley A. Jacobs
Location 1:    corner 15th and N. Canal
Location2:    622 Sycamore.
Occupation:    cooperage
Year:    1890
City:    Milwaukee
State:    WI
                  
8
Birth:
Nov 1843
Dansville, Livingston Co., New York
Death:
Jan 1900
Notes:
                   From the Commemorative Biographical Record of the Counties of Rock,
Green,
Grant, Iowa, and Lafayette Wisconsin, J. H. Beers & Co., 1901, Chicago,
IL.
Pages 723 - 724 ~ Iowa County
WILDER B. JACOBS, of Avoca, Iowa county, is oneof the most highly
esteemed
citizens, and an honored survivor of years of dangerous service in the
war of
the Rebellion.  Worthily has he been placedin the position of commander
of the
Henry Lawton Post, No. 279, G.A.R., atMuscoda, Wisconsin.
Mr. JACOBS was born in the town of Dansville, Livingston Co., N.Y., in
November,
1843, a son of Gustavus and Harriet (PERKINS) JACOBS, both of whom were
born in
the town of Rutland, Rutland Co., Vt.  GustavusJACOBS was a sergeant in
the war
of 1812, and his father, the grandfatherof Wilder B., was a captain in
the war
of the Revolution, and perhaps the patriotic blood of his forefathers
flowed
with vigor in the veins of our subject, and produced the results which
won for
him such a record for gallantry.  By trade Gustavus JACOBS was a ship
carpenter,
and his assistance was required in the building of the fleet by which
Commodore
Perry gained the victory of Lake Erie.  For many years he followed his
trade,
and at the timeof the birth of our subject he was engaged in boat
building on
the GeneseeValley canal at Mt. Morris, N.Y., but later removed to
Angelica,
Allegany county, but in 1855 the family, comprising the parents and three
sons,
cameto Wisconsin and settled in Sauk county, the children being:
Palmedus P.,
Burley A., and Wilder B.  In the fall of 1855 another son, Henry, with
his
family, also came to Wisconsin, these being all who located in this
State.  The
present survivors of the family are: Gustavus Jr., Palmedus, Wilder B.
and
Hannah.  The parents removed from Sauk county to Platteville, Wis., about
1869,
where they died in 1875, the father surviving the mother by a few
months.  They
were far advanced in life, the father aged ninety-four and the mother but
a few
years younger.  Both were highly esteemed and consistent members of the
M. E.
Church.  Mr. JACOBS was a powerful man physically and intellectually, and
was a
profound student of the Bible, his knowledge of thatBook being
remarkable.
Wilder B. JACOBS passed his young manhood on the farm in Sauk county
until his
enlistment at Prairie du Sac, on Sept. 23, 1861,in the 6th Battery, Wis.
Light
Artillery, as a private, and remained in the service until July 3, 1865.
This
battery served in Mississippi, Missouri, Alabama and Georgia, and Mr.
JACOBS
participated, with his command, in these battles, which are enrolled upon
the
pages of American history as examples of bravery for which a nation must
ever be
proud: Island No. 10; siegeof Corinth, in the spring of 1862; battle of
Corinth, on Oct. 3-4, 1862; PortGibson; Willow Springs; battle of
Raymond;
battle of Jackson; Champion Hills; siege of Vicksburg; Missionary Ridge;
and
battle of Nashville, and other minor engagements.  This battery lost a
large
number of men; at the battle of Corinth alone it lost eighteen brave men,
while
twenty-three were wounded.  As worthy of mention, Mr. JACOBS took part in
all
these battles, andwas never absent from the battery when even a skirmish
took
place.
After the close of the war Mr. JACOBS was engaged by the Prairie du Chien
division of the Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad as a conductor, and in this
position he remained for seventeen years.  In 1879 he went to Minnesota
and
South Dakota, running in the same capacity from St. James, Minn. to Sioux
Falls,
S. Dak., for the following three years, and was then employed on the St.
Paul
system, running from Sanborn, Iowa, to Mitchell, S. Dak.  In the fall of
1896 he
came to Avoca, where he has since resided.  His long and exhausting army
service
told upon his health, though he did not
                  
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Gustavus Adolphus Jacobs - Harriet Perkins

Gustavus Adolphus Jacobs was born at Middlebury, Addison Co., or Rutland, Rutland Co., Vermont 9 Sep 1795. His parents were Gustavus John Jacobs and .

He married Harriet Perkins 15 Apr 1816 at Saint-Andre, Argentenil, Quebec . Harriet Perkins was born at Grafton, Rutland, Vermont 21 Dec 1799 daughter of Philip Perkins and Sally Gibson .

They were the parents of 8 children:
Blocked
John Galen Jacobs born 24 Apr 1817.
Gustavus Adolphus, jr Jacobs born 9 Sep 1828.
Henry (Harry?) Jacobs born 1833.
Hannah Jacobs born 1834.
Palmethias P. (Palmedus) Jacobs born 6 Jan 1837.
Burley a Jacobs born 1839.
Wilder B Jacobs born Nov 1843.

Gustavus Adolphus Jacobs died 13 Nov 1876 at Plattville, Grant Co., Wisconsin .

Harriet Perkins died 3 Jun 1876 at Plattville, Grant Co., Wisconsin .