Dudley Swasey B 1803 Danville,Vt., is buried in Green Mount Cemetery in Vt. He is buried along with his wife, Lydia, daughter, Apphia, and his son in law. Their son, Charles Dudley Swasey, is the grave next to theirs.
Eighteen forty-five
Lord Dudley Stuart was born in 1803.
Vermont, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio
Isaac Tichenor (born February 8, 1754 in Newark, New Jersey; died December 11, 1838 in Bennington, Vermont) succeeded Paul Brigham as the third Governor of Vermont, serving between October 16, 1797 and October 9, 1807, including the whole of 1803.
There were seven states that had abolished slavery by 1803. They were Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, New York, and Vermont.
Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi,Missouri, and Ohio became states between 1803 and 1833.
The four most recent states to be admitted to the Union prior to the Louisiana Purchase (July 4, 1803) are...Ohio (March 1, 1803)Tennessee (June 1, 1796)Kentucky (June 1, 1792)Vermont (March 4, 1791)
There is no grave for George Bass, as a grave marks the location of the remains of a dead person. No remains of George Bass have ever been recovered. After his exploration with Flinders, George Bass left the Navy to become a South Pacific trader, and early in February 1803, he sailed the ship 'Harrington' out of Sydney Harbour with a cargo, bound for Tahiti. Bass was never heard of again, and his fate remains unknown. Bass is believed to have died at sea in 1803.
Asahel Peck (born February 6, 1803 in Royalston, Massachusetts; died May 18, 1879 in Jericho, Vermont) succeeded Julius Converse as the thirty-fifth Governor of Vermont, serving between October 8, 1874 and October 5, 1876, including the whole of 1875.
Vermont (1791), Kentucky (1792), Tennessee (1796), Ohio (1803), Louisiana (1812)
In 1803, an amount of land about equal to the size of the United States at that time was purchased from France. About 13 years earlier, Vermont, an independent country at that time, willingly requested U.S. statehood.
Vermont was admitted into the Union on March 4, 1791 becoming the 14th state to join the union.