Alden Partridge

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Alden Partridge : biography

February 12, 1785 – January 17, 1854

Appointed chief of the surveying expedition establishing boundaries between the U.S. and Canada required under the Treaty of Ghent, Partridge mapped the Saint Lawrence River and Hudson River natural watersheds areas, but still consumed with plans for a military college based on his program decided to resign from the expedition in 1820, and retired to his hometown, Norwich, Vermont.Barnard, Alden Partridge, p. 54

Personal life

An avid hiker, Partridge is described as "a noted pedestrian" in A History of Norwich.Goddard and Partridge, A History of Norwich, p. 233 He had reportedly already ascended Mount Monadnock and Mount Moosilauke in New Hampshire when in 1818 he walked 76 miles from Norwich to climb both Camel’s Hump and Mount Mansfield in two days. It rained the entire journey, according to his journal, and while one friend joined him climbing Mansfield, he hiked the balance of the expedition accompanied only by his "inseparable companions," his knapsack and barometer.Stier, Maggie and McAdow, Ron, Into the Mountains: Stories of New England’s Most Celebrated Peaks, p.

In 1823 Partridge adopted a young Greek boy, George Colvocoresses, whom he raised and educated at Norwich University. Colvocoresses, NU Class of 1831, was appointed to the United States Navy in 1832; from 1838-1842 he served in the United States Exploring Expedition, better known as the Wilkes Expedition of the Pacific Ocean. Three separate geographical features, two on the west coast of the U.S. and another in Antarctica, were named for Colvocoresses.

Married to Ann Swasey in 1837, by whom he had two sons, Partridge died in Norwich January 16, 1854. His widow survived him by 48 years.Goddard, M.E. and Partridge, Henry V., A History of Norwich, Vermont, 1905, p. 233

A Democrat, Partridge served as Vermont’s Surveyor General from 1822 to 1823., published by Vermont Secretary of State, 1918, page 141 He also served four terms in the Vermont House of Representatives, (1833, 1834, 1837 and 1839)., by Henry Villiers Partridge, 1905, pages 270 to 271, edited by Lewis Cass Aldrich and Frank R. Holmes, 1891, page 484 In addition, he ran unsuccessfully for the United States House of Representatives on five occasions between 1834 and 1840, losing each time to Anti-Masonic and Whig party candidate Horace Everett., by Vermont Secretary of State, Archives and Records Administration, 2006, pages 4 to 6