George K. Broomhall

George K. Broomhall

George K. Broomhall's memorial at Gott Cemetery in Wayne, ME.
Born Wayne, Maine
Place of burial Gott Cemetery
Allegiance United States of America
Union
Service/branch Union Army
Battles/wars American Civil War

George K. Broomhall was a brevet general in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Originally from the town of Wayne, Maine, Broomhall is widely credited with the invention of cream soda.[1]

Broomhall is generally considered to be Wayne's most famous resident. Broomhall never set foot in the "State of Maine," having enlisted in the military in 1817, training at Annapolis, Maryland, and eventually settling in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, after hostilities ended. He never returned to Wayne. (Maine became a state on March 15, 1820, after he moved away. It was part of Massachusetts when Broomhall lived there.)

He is buried at Gott Cemetery on Gott Road in Wayne next to his wife Amelia, daughter Josephine, and son Augustus. The four were originally buried in Mount Joy, Pennsylvania, but the bodies were exhumed in 1889 for Wayne's centennial festivities and brought to their current resting place.[2] A small memorial was also erected there.

See also

References

  1. Perkins, Jack (1968). Illustrated history of Wayne, Maine; being a contemporary and past history of a small New England town. LCC79000804.
  2. Walton, George W. (1898). History of the town of Wayne, Kennebec County, Maine, from its settlement to 1898. Farmer Publishing Company. LCC16027460.


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