


John
Augustin Trowbridge
Born: May 28, 1839, Morris Plains, Morris County, New Jersey
Died: Flourished, 1894
Parents: Elijah Freeman Trowbridge & Temperance Ludlow Muchmore
Occupations: Soldier, Carpenter
Military Service: Company F, First New York Company of Engineers
First Lieutenant, Thirty-Third Regiment of Colored Troops, Union Army, American Civil War
Marriage: April 26, 1866, Unknown
Wife: Margaret Lum
Born: Unknown
Died: Unknown
Children:
Alfred
M. Trowbridge
Roy
S. Trowbridge
Harriet
E. Trowbridge
Mr.
Trowbridge, whose name begins this review, was a child of nine when with his
parents he removed to Brooklyn, where he acquired his education in the public
schools. At the age of eighteen he began to learn the carpenter’s trade,
serving a four-year apprenticeship, in which time he thoroughly mastered the
business, becoming an expert workman. But when he had completed his term his
attention was called to other things. The question of the extension of slavery
had involved the country in civil war, and being true to the union, Mr.
Trowbridge enlisted on the 11th of December 1861, being assigned to Company F,
First New York Volunteer Engineers, serving in Hilton Head, Charleston, and
Morris island. Later he was commissioned second lieutenant of the First
Regiment South Carolina Volunteer Infantry, Company A, afterward the
thirty-third Regiment of Colored Troops, this being the first regiment of
colored troops organized during the war. They were engaged in provost, guard
and picket duty, and were often on detailed service. Mr. Trowbridge continued
at the front until December 1864, when he resigned and returned home.
Again
reaching the north, he worked his trade in Brooklyn until 1866, when he came
to Chatham, where he has since been engaged in business. His thorough
understanding of the trade, his reliability and promptness and his skillful
workmanship has brought him a creditable success. On April 26, 1866, Mr.
Trowbridge was joined in wedlock to Miss Margaret Lum, a daughter of Harvey
Lum, and together they have five children: Alfred M., a carpenter in Chatham,
Frank L., who is engaged in merchandising in Chatham; Charles L., a mason and
a carpenter; Roy S., a machinist, and Harriett E. The parents hold membership
in the Presbyterian Church, and Mr. Trowbridge is a member of the A.T.A.
Tolbert Post, No. 24, G.A.R., and Mr. Trowbridge exercises his voting
franchise through the local Republican party.
From “History of Morris County, Vol. 1”, Lewis
Publishing Co., 1914