In today's Burlington Free Press there is a story about John Dewey. Al Daniels called me tonight to see what I had on his ancestors and I do have 27 individuals with the name Dewey in my records. He wondered if I knew where the family farm was and I gave him the name of one of our experts here in town on the early land records. Here is the part in the article that refers to Fairfax:
“I want to make people aware of his legacy,” Gonzalez said, acknowledging that parade watchers routinely ask him if he’s commemorating the person who devised the Dewey Decimal System. “He was well known throughout the world but his hometown — oh, boy!”
Dewey’s kin were once quite well known hereabouts. His father, Archibald Sprague Dewey, decided to opt out of becoming the fourth generation on the family’s Fairfax farm. He headed south to Burlington, opened a grocery store and, at 44, married a woman — Lucina Artemisa Rich — who was 20 years younger. Together they spawned four sons, one of whom died in infancy. She was involved with philanthropy on behalf of the region’s impoverished factory workers.
As an adolescent, John sold newspapers and labored at a Burlington lumber yard. During the Civil War, Archibald fought with the Union Army in Virginia. A veteran in the late 1860s, he ran a Burlington cigar and tobacco shop.
To read the whole article, click on the link below and should we find anything out on John Dewey's ancestors, I will add it here:
http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/article/20111016/ARTS04/111014022/-1/ARTS/John-Dewey-changed-how-Vermonters-learn-remains-an-important-part-state-s-cultural-heritage