USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Newburyport > City Officers and the Annual Reports to the City Council of Newburyport 1896 > Part 11
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Cost since I took charge, maintenance $88.95. The balance of our account is a lay-over from 1895. We shall leave no such amount to lay-over.
Respectfully submitted,
F. CURTIS,
December 31, 1896.
Superintendent.
37
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
BOARD OF HEALTH
OF THE
CITY OF NEWBURYPORT FOR THE YEAR 1896.
REPORT.
To His Hon. the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of the City of Newburyport :
GENTLEMEN :- The Board of Health herewith sub- mits its twenty-first annual report, for the year end- ing Dec. 31, 1896:
Appropriation $1,000 00
Credits 12 10
$1,012 10
Amount undrawn
62 32
EXPENDITURES. $ 949 78
Nathaniel Ireland, groceries. .$ 14 84
Thomas Noyes & Sons, groceries 8 44
M. C. Adams, provisions 15 96
George W. Knight, salary as agent and cash paid 219 20
C. M. Lunt & Sons, removal of house offal
322 75
Wm. H. Lawrence, services as inspector of plumbing.
174 00
T. N. Cook, milk. I 80
Amounts carried forward. $756 99
$949 78
294
ANNUAL REPORTS.
Amounts brought forward. $756 99
T. A. Moynihan, milk
$949 78 I 40 Moses Little, milk 3 90
James F. Carens, groceries
30 14
Richard T. Noyes, milk.
I 75
N. P. Herald Co., advertising
12 00
News Publishing Co., advertising.
15 82
J. Walter Akerman, provisions II 80
Henry M. Briggs, horse hire
I 75
Charles P. Kelley, groceries.
3 48
Amos H. Geary, clerk one year
50 00
Henry J. Hidden, special officer on diph- theria case.
20 25
George J. Ross, special officer on diph- theria case
20 25
Moses P. Towne, special officer on diph- theria case 20 25
$949 78
WORK OF THE AGENT.
George W. Knight, agent of the board, makes the following report:
Complaints attended to 146
Nuisances abated 95
Cesspools 46
Closets 83
Neglect and stealing swill
77
Dead animals removed
41
Cruelty to animals .
3
Sick animals attended 21
Houses placarded
5
fumigated
18
Rooms
74
Carriages "
I
295
BOARD OF HEALTH.
REMOVAL OF NIGHT SOIL AND CONTENTS CESS- POOLS.
The amount of work done by C. M. Lunt & Sons is as follows:
January 43 loads.
February
6
March.
31
66
April
62
May
.86
66
June.
.83
66
July .
72
August
89
66
September 59
66
October
.51
66
November
.80
December
28
-690 loads.
The board would recommend, as they do not de- sire to force the citizens to enter the sewer, a dis- continuance of all privys and cesspools for the pub- lic good, and the better protection of the sanitary condition of the city. The contract for removing house offal was awarded to Jeremiah Sweeney, for one year ending June 1, 1897.
1
296
ANNUAL REPORTS.
CONTAGIOUS DISEASES.
Diphtheria
Scarlet Fever
Membraneous Croup
Typhoid Fever
Measles
January . . . .. .
O
4
O
3
16
February .....
8
I
O
O
60
March. ..
..
O
O
O
O
29
April
6
O
I
O
9
May
O
O
O
9
June
2
O
I
5
July .
O
I
O
I
August
I
O
2
I
September . ..
I
O
O
O
October.
.
O
I
O
November. ...
2
O
o
7
0
December. ..
I
2
O
3
O
-
-
-
2I
7
2
17
130
REPORT OF INSPECTOR OF PLUMBING.
Mr. William H. Lawrence, inspector of plumbing, reports the number of inspections for the year 1896 as 151, connections to sewer, 99; additions and con- nections to cesspools, 52 ..
JOHN E. BAILEY, CLARENCE C. DAY, ARTHUR WITHINGTON.
297
BOARD OF HEALTH.
BOARD OF HEALTH RULES FOR PLUMBING.
Unless the Board of Health shall authorize varia- tion by special permit, on request of the owner, the drainage system of a hotel, tenement house, dwell- ing house, stable with sleeping apartments, factory, shop or other buildings in the city of Newburyport, shall be constructed according to the following rules for plumbing :
SECTION I. Inspector. The board of health shall annually appoint an inspector of plumbing, to whom suitable compensa- tion shall be allowed.
SECT. 2. Plumbers. No person shall carry on the business of plumbing unless he shall have first registered his name and place of business in the office of the board of health. Notice of any change in the place of business of a registered plumber shall be immediately given to the inspector of plumbing.
SECT. 3. Filing Plans and Specifications. No person shall proceed to construct, add to or alter any portion of the drainage system of said buildings (except to repair leaks) until a notice of the work to be performed has been filed with the inspector of plumbing, upon blanks in such form as the board of health shall order. No person shall commence work upon such drainage or plumbing until the plans are approved by the board of health. Plans and specifications will be approved or rejected within five days of the time of filing. After a plan has once been approved no alterations of the same will be allow- ed, except on a written application of the owner.
SECT. 4. Pipes and other fixtures shall not be covered or concealed from view until approved by the inspector, who shall examine the same within two working days after notice that they are ready for inspection.
SECT. 5. Plumbing work shall not be used unless the same
38
29S
ANNUAL REPORTS.
has been tested in the presence and under direction of the in- spector, with the water test, or if required by him, with the peppermint or other reliable test, and approved by the board in writing.
SECT. 6. Main Drain. Every building herein referred to shall have separate and independent drainage into a common sewer, or cesspool where sewers are not accessible. There shall be uninterrupted circulation of air through the drain pipe, from the fresh air inlet near the main trap, to a point two feet above the roof, and at least ten feet from any window. In the basement wall and for five feet beyond it drain shall be of extra heavy 4 inch cast iron soil pipe. Within the building or base- ment, it must be of sound cast iron with strong iron supports from floor timbers, or secure fastenings to cellar walls ;- must have slope of 1/2 inch to the foot, if possible-never less than 14 inch to the foot, and if beneath the cellar floor must be in a walled trench with movable covers, unless it be of extra heavy pipe with perfect lead joints tested by 20 feet head of water or more, in which case the inspector may give permission to cover it with not over one foot of earth.
SECT. 7. Traps. The main drain must have a 4-inch trap close to the foundation wall, with a suitable clean-out plug. A suitable grease trap, approved by the board of health, shall be placed where directed by the inspector of plumbing, in every hotel, eating house, restaurant, or other public cooking estab- lishment in such a manner as to be easily accessible for inspec- tion and cleaning. Outside grease traps where used may be of masonry or earthware, safe from frost. Water closet traps shall be actually close to the closet ; all other waste pipes shall be trapped within thirty inches of the fixture it serves.
SECT. 8. Waste pipes from water closets shall be cast iron 4 inches in diameter, rising of undiminished size two feet above the roof, or six inches above the ridge, open at top and clear of all windows. From sinks, basins, bath tubs, wash tubs, etc., they shall be of cast iron when two inches or more in diameter, and of lead when less than two inches.
299
BOARD OF HEALTH.
SECT. 9. Fresh Air Inlets. There must be a fresh air inlet pipe entering the drain on the house side of the main trap, of not less than four (4) inches, internal diameter, extending therefrom to the external air, away from all windows and cold air box of the furnace and protected from dirt and obstruction.
SECT. 10. Connections. All connections with horizontal pipes shall be made by one-eighth (18) bends and Y branches, and all changes in direction shall be by curved pipe. No trap shall be placed at the foot of a vertical soil pipe.
SECT. II. Drip or Overflow Pipes. Drip or overflow pipes under water closets, or other fixtures, or from tanks or cisterns, shall in no case be connected directly with house sew- ers. Sediment blow off, steam exhaust pipes for boilers, shall in no case be connected with sewers directly or indirectly.
SECT. 12. Refrigerator Wastes. No waste pipe from a refrigerator, or other receptacle in which food or provisions are stored, shall be connected with a drain soil or other waste pipe, but must be separated therefrom by an open sink or tray, fur- nished with a trap.
SECT. 13. Ventilation of Trap. All traps must be fur- nished with a vent pipe, run from the crown of the trap, but the highest closet trap in a system if within twelve (12) inches of a vertical stand pipe may be excepted. The vent pipe from a water closet trap must be at least two (2) inches in diameter ; other vent pipes must be as large as the waste pipe from the trap. All ventilation pipes from a soil or waste pipe must be run of undiminished size, separately or combined together, to the roof, and carried up at · least four (4) inches internal di- ameter, through the roof, and at least two (2) feet above it, and left open, or may be run into a soil pipe above all connections. In no case shall a soil, waste or ventilation pipe, from a soil or waste pipe be connected with a chimney. No brick, earthen- ware or sheet metal pipes shall be used for ventilation pipes from a soil or a waste pipe.
SECT. 14. Cast Iron Pipes. All cast iron pipes must be
300
ANNUAL REPORTS.
free from holes and other defects, of a uniform thickness of not less than one-eighth (18) inch, for a diameter of four (4) inches or less.
INTERNAL DIAMETER
ORDINARY PIPE
EXTRA HEAVY PIPE
Inches.
Lbs. per foot.
Lbs. per foot.
2
32
52
3
4.2
9}
4
6₺
13
And before being connected shall be thoroughly coated, inside and out, with coal tar pitch, applied hot by immersion, or some equivalent substance satisfactory to the board of health.
SECT. 15. Joints. Connections between lead and iron pipes shall be made with brass ferrules, full size of the iron pipe calked into the iron pipe with soft lead, and united to the lead pipe with a wiped joint. Lead pipes may be connec- ted with a water closet only by a solid brass flange one- quarter of an inch thick, strongly soldered to the lead, and clamped to the closet with proper packing. All joints in the cast iron pipe and fittings must be so filled with oakum and soft lead as to make a tight joint and no putty or red lead used. There shall be at least 12 ounces of soft lead used to each inch diameter of pipe.
SECT. 16. Water Closet Supplies. No water closet shall be supplied directly from the house supply pipe, or tank, nor shall receive any overflow or waste from the same, but shall be supplied from a special water tank or cistern used for no other purpose, and the flooding pipe shall not be less than one and one-quarter (1 14) inch in diameter.
SECT. 17. Traps, Vents and Back Air Pipes. No trap, vent or back air pipe shall be used as a soil wash or conductor pipe. Lead air pipes may be used only where exposed to view If air pipes to any water closet shall exceed thirty feet in length,
301
BOARD OF HEALTH.
the excess shall not be less than three inches in diameter. All air pipes shall be run as directly as possible.
SECT. 18. No tank or cistern excepting that supplying the water closet, shall be placed in the water closet room unless ab- solutely necessary.
SECT. 19. Whoever violates any provisions of these rules is liable to a fine not exceeding $100. [Public Statutes, Chapter So, Section 18.]
Adopted. IN BOARD OF HEALTH, March 15, 1895.
Attest,
AMOS H. GEARY,
JOHN E. BAILEY, Clerk. Chairman.
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
SURVEYOR OF HIGHWAYS
FOR THE YEAR 1896.
REPORT.
NEWBURYPORT. Dec. 3, 1896.
To his Honor the Mayor and Committee on High- ways:
GENTLEMEN :- In submitting this report to your honorable body of which I am your representative, having the expenditure of the money appropriated for this department, it is with a certain feeling that what has been done this year will add to the credit of what has been done during previous years. And as the year's work was started with the impression that this department was to receive a certain amount in addition to what was appropriated, and that fail- ing to mature, and the amount being expended when we reached Lime street going down Prospect, this department was brought to a standstill for the year. leaving Prospect from Lime to Bromfield, High street from Bromfield to Marlborough, Green street,
39
306
ANNUAL REPORTS.
also, Washington from Olive to Kent street, to be done another year.
Much comment has been made on the localities where the work was performed, but no one unprej- udiced can truly say that they did not need what they received.
In conclusion of these remarks to your honorable body, my sincere thanks are extended to his honor the mayor and gentlemen of the committee, city clerk, police, and all others who by their courtesy have helped in the discharge of the duties of the surveyor of highways.
Yours with respect,
CHARLES M. PRITCHARD, Surveyor of Highways.
EXPENDITURES.
Bought and used during the year, 3817
tons crushed stone at $1.30 per ton
gross, $1. 15 net. $ 4,831 44 Cost of city teams 6,000 00
Vacation of 6 drivers, $12 each
72 00
Cash paid for paving blocks
765 08
stone .
22 00
. 6
66 gravel used .... 70 40
lumber used ... 61 93
Amount carried forward. . ... $11,822 85
307
SURVEYOR OF HIGHWAYS.
Amount brought forward. . . . . $11,822 85 Sand used for streets
170 40
Horse bought for No. I stable. 225 00
Cart and harness.
94 98
New wheels for road roller. 254 00
Extra repairs and new work for roller 114 36
Cash paid engineer and supplies ..... 284 33
George W. Langdon, engi-
neer . 90 00
Salary of surveyor, and horse ... 1,200 00
$14,255 92 Expended for labor in the several departments $7,322 67
Whole amount expended for year 1896. $21,578 59
SIDEWALK AND GUTTER EXPENSES, ETC.
14,000 square yards Macadam, 35 cts. . . $4,900 00 3,100 gutters, 25 cts . · 775 00 Amount expended for outside teams, cleaning of gutters, sanding of streets, hoky-poky cart, and minor repairs of whatever nature in con- nection with the highway depart- ment 1,647 67
$7,322 67
308
ANNUAL REPORTS.
PROPERTY OF THE CITY IN CARE OF SURVEYOR OF HIGHWAYS.
One 10 ton road roller. $2,500 00
One Climax road machine 225 00
Four snow ploughs at $10 each. 40 00
Two gravel screens at $10
20 00
66 66 $5 66 10 00
One horse shovel .
6 50
One paving widder, iron
- 5 00
Twelve paving widders for gutter laying $1.50 each 18 00
Two spirit levels at $1 each 2 00
Four signs for road roller at $2.50 each. 10 00 Eight irons for road roller at $1 each ... 8 00
Two tool boxes at $4.50 each. .
9 00
Four wooden horses at $2 each . 8 00
Twenty-four pickaxes at $1 each. 24 00
Two hose at 5oc each. 1 00
Four rakes at 5oc each. 2 00
Eighteen scoops at 5oc each. 9 00
Twelve grub-hoes and adzes at 75c each
9 00
Four paving hammers at $1 each. ....
4 00
Thirty-six water pails at 12c each. 4 32
Two kerosene oil cans at $1.25 each ...
2 50
Eight lanterns at 4oc each . 3 20
Six water cans at 5oc each
3 00
Four wheelbarrows at $1.50 each. 6 00
Four baskets at 75c each. 3 00
Sixteen steel pinch bars at $1.50 each .. 24 00
Four tamping bars at 75c each 3 00
Eight chains at $1 each. 8 00
Four chains at 5oc each 2 00
One brush cutter 2 00
-
Amount carried forward $2,971 52
309
SURVEYOR OF HIGHWAYS.
Amount brought forward. ... $2,971 52 Two pendants for snow ploughs at $1
each. 2 00
Six stone chisels at 20c each 20
Ten rattan brooms at 5oc each 5 00
One road plough 25 00
6 00
Four stone hammers at 5oc each
2 00
Four mauls at $1 each .
4 00
Six ice chisels at 5oc each. 3 00
Two trowels at $1 each.
2 00
Twelve rollers at 15c each.
I 80
Nine horses at $225 each.
2,025 00
Three double carts at $100 each
300 00
One single cart.
90 00
66 66
50 00
66 66
25 00
Three double sleds at $105 each 315 00
Three single sleds at $70 each 210 00
One stone jigger . 225 00
Three double harnesses at $75 each . ...
225 00
Three single cart harnesses at $35 each. 105 00
Three single sled harnesses at $30 each.
90 00
Nine horse blankets at $5 each
45 00
Nine horse covers for ash days at $5 each. 45 00
Stable implements for three stables at $10 each
30 00
One hoky poky rubbish cart. 25 00
One sand sled for sidewalk use
Two double blocks 4 00
5 00
One single block
1 50
Two falls. 8 00
Four lengths of hose used in connection
with macadam roads 60 00 .
$6,907 02
310
ANNUAL REPORTS.
EDGESTONE AND SIDEWALK EXPENSES.
Bought during the year 7,947 feet edge-
stones at 327/8c per foot. .$ 2,617 54 Wharfage. 77 00
$2,694 54
New bricks and labor, work in connection with the repairs 761 34
New concrete laid, and also the re-covering of certain sidewalks in parts of the city, 970 4-9 yards. 628 72 The above is subject to the abuttors' one-half cost on all new work that has been done during the year.
This department has a credit of a cargo of edgestones valued at $700, lying at the city landing. .
RUBBISH ACCOUNT.
3,115 loads at 36 cents per load (labor) men's pay collecting . . . .... .$ 1,123 20
3, 115 loads at 36 cents per load, 3 double and 3 single teams. 1,123 20
'$2,246 40
Credit by 348 loads rubbish sold at 5c per load
17 40
$2,229 00
The above is the amount collected for 1896, and the expense in its collection for teams and men.
Nine hours each for three double teams weekly at 50 - cents per hour . $13 50
Nine hours each for three single teams weekly at 30
cents per hour 8 10
$21 60
REPORT
OF THE
Atkinson Common Commissioners
FOR THE YEAR 1896.
REPORT.
To the Hon. Mayor and City Council of the City of. Newburyport :
GENTLEMEN :- The commissioners of the Atkin- son common hereby submit their annual report end- ing December 19, 1896. During the year there has been expended on the common, seven hundred and seventy-eight dollars and sixty-seven cents.
Three hundred of it was appropriated by the city council, the balance by the Belleville Improvement Society.
Expended as follows :
Trees and shrubs $120 44
Teaming 98 60
Fertilizers . 78 00
Express and freight 13 25
Crushed stone
15 40
Tools
19 75
Amount carried forward. $345 44
40
314
ANNUAL REPORTS.
Amount brought forward. .$345 44
Seeds. . . . . . 12 53
George Milton, labor, 25 weeks, 262 50
Extra labor by other men 158 20
$778 67
Received from city .
· 300 00
$478 67
Expended by Belleville Improvement Soci- ety in the years 1893, 1894, 1895 . ...
598 58
$1,077 25
A. R. CURTIS,
JAMES F. CARENS,
Commissioners.
ORLANDO F. HATCH, ALVAH HOYT.
CITY OF NEWBURYPORT.
LIST OF JURORS.
1897.
[Published in accordance with the requirements of Section 3 of Chapter 514 of the Acts of the Year 1894.]
THE LIST.
Name
Residence
Occupation
Adams, Aaron B.
15 Parson st.
Adams, Frank D.
29 Jefferson st.
Adams, Fred
II Summer st.
Shoemaker.
Adams, John Q.
17 Charter st.
Express driver.
Adams, Rufus Allen, Charles H. Allen, Jere
23 Summer st.
Clerk.
Ash, Charles E.
30 Kent st.
Baker.
Atwood, Lewis J.
20 Oak st.
Shoemaker.
Austin, John A.
84 Merrimac st.
Candy maker.
Badger, Charles F.
19 Essex st.
Janitor. Grocer.
Batchelder, Edgar J.
91/2 Atwood st.
Mason.
Batchelder, Elbridge K. 306 High st.
Barlow, Joseph
II Atwood st.
Shoemaker.
Baker, James H.
14 Unicorn st. Clerk.
Bailey, Ralph S.
IO Market st.
Engineer .-
Ballou, J. Willard
5 Prospect st.
Tailor.
Balch, Eben G.
Die sinker.
Balch, John H.
I 14 Merrimac st. 181 High st. 8 Auburn st.
Banker. Accountant.
Balch, Leonidas
Bamford, Benjamin M. 61 Merrimac st.
Retired.
Bartlett, Edward H. 3 Fruit st.
Engineer.
Bartlett, W. Lunt
107 Merrimac st.
Apothecary.
Book-keeper.
Burnisher.
Carpenter.
37 High st.
14 Allen st.
Retired.
Batchelder, Dudley T. 8 Tyng st.
Farmer.
318
ANNUAL REPORTS.
Bartlett, Joseph W.
24 Milk st.
Barton, David A.
9 Dalton st.
Berry, Marshall
31 Prospect st.
Berry, James F.
60 Washington st.
Bishop, William D. 178 High st.
Blaisdell, John C. M.
48 Temple st.
Shoecutter.
Blake, Charles S.
28 Liberty st.
Painter.
Bollman, Philip
21 Bromfield st.
Machinist.
Car maker.
Mgr. W. U. T. Co.
Brown, George D.
22 Bromfield st.
Pumps and blocks.
Brooks, Joseph I.
20 Jefferson st.
Motorman.
Bradbury, Lincoln G.
67 Federal st.
Shoecutter.
Bridges, Samuel A.
II Market st.
Traveling salesman
Briggs, Henry M.
13 Elm st.
Stable keeper.
Brown, William
57 Washington st.
Carpenter.
Buckley, Cornelius H. 28 Dove st.
Buckley, Jeremiah W. 11 Pond st.
Capers, Thomas
161/2 Prospect st.
Florist.
Carver, J. Hermann
46 Prospect st.
Reporter.
Cate, Daniel W.
7 Carter st.
Gardener.
Casey, William
81/2 Buck st.
Laborer.
Caldwell, George M .. Washington st.
Retired.
Chase, Joseph T.
7 Essex st.
Foreman box mfy.
Chase, John M.
Curson road.
Farmer.
Chase, Joshua L.
25 Forrester st.
S.R.R. Conductor.
Chase, Jacob J.
59 Bromfield st. 444 Merrimac st.
Farmer.
Coffin, William B.
272 High st.
Retired.
Comley, Joseph J.
208 High st.
Florist.
Carpenter.
Carpenter.
Cook, Moses E.
712 Lunt st.
Shoemaker.
Creeden, John J.
Crowell, Charles B.
Cor. Monroe and Broad Driver.
Cogger, Thomas W.
13 Eagle st.
Iron moulder.
Cooke, Charles W.
Cooper, John A.
13 School st. 60 Warren st.
Silversmith.
145 Merrimac st.
Watchman. Carpenter. Clerk.
Rope maker. Retired.
Brock, William S., jr. 241 Merrimac st. 100 State st.
Brown, John T.
Shoemaker.
Gate tender, B.& M
Machinist.
Cole, Nathaniel R.
319
LIST OF JURORS.
Name
Residence
Occupation
Currier, Albert
IO Water st.
Laborer.
Currier, Calvin E.
I28 State st.
Carpenter, builder.
Dame, Percy L.
25 Milk st.
Book-keeper.
Davis, Charles W. A.
60 Lime st.
Mason.
Davis, Charles W.
6 Butler st.
Bolter.
Davis, Thomas H. II Brown sq.
Retired.
Dockum, John H.
35 Broad st.
Carpenter.
Donnell, Charles C.
25 Marlboro st.
Clerk.
Dole, Samuel P.
29 Prospect st.
Carpenter.
Emerton, Benjamin C. 44 Temple st.
Master mariner.
Edmunds, LeRoy S. Felch, Daniel M.
37 Broad st.
Machinist.
Fogg, James S.
63 Federal st. 7 Charles st.
Shoecutter.
Follansbee, Henry D.
20 Summit pl.
Clerk.
Fillmore, John T.
I Congress st.
Ship builder.
French, John
Frost, John B.
Fuller, Frank H.
Gerrish, Gilbert
Clerk.
Carpet dealer.
Clerk.
Shoecutter.
Clerk.
Retired.
Sail maker.
Carpenter.
Clerk.
Real estate.
Mason.
Shoe cutter.
Carpenter.
Wood worker.
Baker.
Carpenter.
· Gerrish, B. Gardiner Gorwaiz, Albert M. Gove, Alfred F.
Goodwin, Fred S.
Goodwin, Samuel P. Goodwin, Eben P.
Goodwin, William A.
Glynn, Thomas H.
Greely, Nathaniel
Greeley, Lucius H. Greenleaf, George P. Greaton, Obed W. Hawkes, Horace A. Hathaway, Ben. F. Hatch, Willard A. 19 Otis pl.
431/2 Olive st. 12 Temple st. 112 State st.
29 Milk st. I Buck st.
30 Oakland st. 39 Bromfield st.
7 Neptune st. 5 Orange st.
40 Prospect st. 15 Tremont st. 37 Marlboro st. 78 High st. 33 Bromfield st. 18 N. Atkinson st. 328 Merrimac st. 50 Purchase st.
Shoe foreman. Tinsmith.
15 Charter st.
Carpenter, builder Gardener.
Ford, Samuel J.
320
ANNUAL REPORTS.
Name
Residence
Occupation
Laborer.
Linotype operator.
Hatter.
Janitor.
Horsch, William M. II Summit pl.
Howard, Wm. H. P.
117 Merrimac st.
Holsgrove, Thomas A. 55 State st.
Hopkinson, Albert W. 311 High, rear Hoyt, Alvah 26 Oakland st.
Hoit, Arthur A.
22 Olive st.
Engineer.
Hunt, Calvin P.
12 Beck st.
Clerk.
Humphreys, Thomas
75 Purchase st.
Silver worker.
Rigger.
Ingalls, William B.
212 High st.
Retired.
Ireland, Benjamin P. Jackman, Rueben
14 Fair st.
Machinist.
Jackson, Percy B.
15612 High st.
Upholsterer.
Johnson, William H.
Johnston, William
Jones, Oliver O.
49 Prospect st.
Master Mariner.
Shoemaker.
Jones, Edward S. Kelley, John J.
26 Prospect st.
Blacksmith.
Knight, James A.
238 Merrimac st.
Clerk.
Knight, Alpheus G.
24 Atwood st.
Retired.
Knight, George T.
54 High st.
Shoemaker.
Knapp, Joseph H.
9 Elm st.
Clerk.
Landford, Joseph W.
20 Salem st.
Veterinary surgeon
Lancey, John L.
9 Jefferson st.
Shoe maker.
Lang, George S.
2 Harrison st. Printer.
Lang, John C.
II Marlboro st.
Shoemaker.
Leach, Hiram
13 Broad st. 36 High st.
Carpenter. Clerk.
Lougee, Parker M.
17 Bromfield st.
Carriage maker.
Mannix, James E.
15 Market st.
City editor News
Mansur, George W.
4 Garden st.
Shoe foreman.
Hale, John
Healey, Freeman P.
Herlihy, Timothy
154 Merrimac st.
Hinckley, Fred P.
136 State st.
Engraver.
Foreman baker.
Motorman.
Clerk.
Foreman carpenter
Hutchins, William W. 12 School st.
174 State st.
Shoemaker.
5 Beck st.
Janitor.
49 Ashland st.
Carpenter.
30 Fair st.
Little, Isaac W.
II Russia st.
16 Dove st.
LIST OF JURORS. 321
Name
Residence
Occupation
McConnell, Robert C. 269 Merrimac st.
Teaming.
McLean, Allen J.
8 Broad st.
Silversmith.
Mckay, William
65 Merrimac st.
Boat builder.
McQuillen, Irwin
Ash.cor Merrim'c st. Clerk.
Merrill, Alfred D. Merrill, Oliver B. Miskell, Michael
Woodland st.
Monroe cor. Broad st. Teacher.
7 Pike st.
Comb-maker.
Morse, William C.
68 Marlboro st.
Carpenter.
Morton, Charles F.
42 Prospect st.
Pressman.
Moylan, Albert E.
33 Olive st.
Boots and shoes.
Moody, Edward G.
218 High st.
Shoe manuf.
Morse, Israel A.
IO Tyng st.
Farmer.
Morrill, George A.
Jefferson court.
Shoemaker.
Morrill, David C.
Jefferson court
Shoemaker.
Murphy, James F.
184 Merrimac st.
Laborer.
Murphy, John F.
14 Dove st.
Silversmith.
Nevins, Thomas T.
II Brown square.
Retired.
Noyes, Gilbert A.
44 Kent st.
Gardener.
Noyes, John J.
133 State st.
Retired.
Noyes, George W.
68 Bromfield st.
Carpenter.
Noyes, Isaac P.
52 Purchase st.
Retired.
Noyes, Joseph
6 Tyng st.
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