Veterans of the American Revolutionary War (1775-1783) helped to establish Vienna Township in the last years of the eighteenth century and the first years of the early nineteenth century.
Among the first generation of settlers of the Connecticut Western Reserve were many veterans of the Continental Army and state militias. Moses Cleaveland (1754-1806), the surveyor of the Reserve for the Connecticut Land Company, had served in the War as an ensign in the Second Continental Regiment and in 1779 was promoted to captain of a company in the Corps of Engineers. One member of the survey team laying out Vienna Township, Isaac Flower, was an American Revolutionary War veteran.
The following American Revolutionary War veterans have been identified as living in Vienna:
Some of Vienna's soldiers were buried outside of Vienna Township:
Comes [Combs], Ebenezer Newell (d. 1812) - Buried in Brookfield Township Cemetery
Wheeler, Simeon - Buried in Indiana
Thomas Lewis is mentioned by Ann Wheeler Humason as a Revolutionary War veteran living in Vienna in her application for a pension based on her husband Joel's service.[1] He is buried in Iowa.
Contributor: Shirley T. Wajda