Epitaphs from Copp's Hill burial ground, Boston. With notes, Part 9

Author: Bridgman, Thomas, b. 1795
Publication date: 1851
Publisher: Boston, Cambridge, J. Munroe and Company
Number of Pages: 580


USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > Epitaphs from Copp's Hill burial ground, Boston. With notes > Part 9


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The decease of the common ancestor is thus recorded in Hobart's Diary : "1661, April 1. Thomas Loring, sometime a deacon to the church at Hingham, died at Hull." His widow, Jane, had the improvement of the estate until her decease, Aug. 25, 1672. By her will, dated July 10, 1672, she ap- pointed her son Thomas executor. Among other legacies, she bequeathed to her son Thomas a volume called " The Jewell of Contentment, by Jeremiah Burroughs. Printed at London, in 1645." To Hannah, wife of Thomas, a yellow pair of bod- ices, stomacher, her best neck clothes, &c .; to her son, John, a volume called "The Covenant of Grace, by Obadiah Sedg- wick." To Mary, wife of John, a suit of head linen, her best mantle, a kersey waistcoat with gold lace, and other articles ; to her son Benjamin, a volume called "The True, or Sincere Convert, by Thomas Sheppard, of London, discovering the small number of true Beleevers, and the Great Difficulty of Saving Conversion." Also her interest in a " Catch," or vessel at sea. To Mary, wife of Benjamin, her riding suit, pillion cloth, hood and gloves, a suit of head clothes, serge gown, and other articles. To her son Josiah she gave twenty pounds of wool, to clothe his children. Rev. Zechariah Whitman was a witness to the will ; proved, Boston, Oct. 6, 1672. The agree- ment of the four sons of Deacon Thomas Loring, in the divis- ion of their father's estate, Oct. 30, 1672, is in the probate office of Suffolk.


Heraldry. - Arms of Sir Petrus Loring, granted in the reign of Henry III .: Shield -quarterly, argent and gules, a bend en- grailed, sable, for Loring. Crest -five upright feathers, stand- ing in a bowl, argent.


From "Memorials of the Cushing Family, of Hingham and Scituate, New England, descendants of Daniel Cushing, Esq., and Hon. John Cushing, sons of Deacon Matthew Cushing, of


£


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Hingham, Norfolk County, Old England, in 1638. By J. S. Loring."


Peter Cushing, of Hingham, Norfolk county, England, who, according to Deane, held large estates . in Lombard Street, London, had two sons, Theophilus and Matthew, who came to New England. The former, born in 1579, sailed in the ship Griffin, in 1633, in company with Governor Haynes ; resided on his farm, and finally settled in Hingham. He was blind for twenty-five years, had no family, and died March 24, 1678. The younger son, Matthew, born in 1588, married Nazareth, daughter of Henry Pitcher, Aug. 5, 1613, and had four sons, and one daughter, who married Matthias Briggs, May, 1648; all natives of Hingham, Old England. He embarked with his whole family and his wife's sister, widow Frances Riecroft, in the ship Diligent, of Ipswich, three hundred and fifty tons, John Martin, master ; arrived at Boston, Aug. 10, 1638, with one hundred and thirty-three passengers, among whom was Robert Peck, teacher, and settled at Hingham, in that year, where he had a grant of land, and became a deacon of Rev. Peter Hobart's church. He died Sept. 30, 1660, leaving a will. His widow died Jan. 6, 1691, aged ninety-five years. But two of his sons left descendants, Daniel and John, the former of whom was a justice of the peace, and the third town clerk of Hingham.


1. DANIEL, married Lydia, daughter of Edward Gilman, Jan, 19, 1645. Their children were, Peter, born 1646, who married Hannah Hawke, 1685. Daniel, born 1648, who mar- ried Elizabeth Thaxter, in 1680. Deborah, born in 1651, who married Benjamin Woodbridge, 1679. Jeremiah, born in 1654, who married Hannah Loring, in 1685. Theophilus, born in 1657, who married Mary Thaxter, in 1688. Matthew, born in 1660, who married Jael Jacob, in 1684.


Daniel Cushing, Esq., died Dec. 3, 1700.


2. HON. JOHN, married Sarah, daughter of Matthew Hawke. Their children were, John, born in 1662, who married Deborah Loring, in 1688. Thomas, born in-1663, who married Deborah


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Thaxter, in 1687. Matthew, born in 1664, who married Deb- orah Jacob, in 1689. Jeremiah, born in 1666, who married Judith Parmenter, in 1693. James, born in 1668, who married Mary Barrell, in 1712. Joshua, born in 1670. Saralı, born in 1671, who married Dea. David Jacob, in 1689. Caleb, born Jan. 6, 1672, who married Elizabeth Cotton, in 1698. Mary, born 1676, died 1698. Deborah, born 1674; married Thomas Loring, 1699. Joseph, born in 1677; married Mercy Pickles, in 1710. Benjamin, born in 1678; became a merchant of Barbadoes.


The arms of the Cushing Family are quarterly, gu. an eagle, argent. Gules, three right hands somewhat torn. A canton chequery or. and az. 1563.


DESCENDANTS OF GEORGE SPEAR. He was an early in- habitant of Dorchester, and was admitted freeman in 1644. He soon removed to Braintree, now Quincy, where he died. His wife's name was Mary, who died Dec. 7, 1674. IIe was probably the ancestor of all of the name in New England. Their children were, George, who married Mary Deerings, 1669. Sarah, born 1647; married George Witly, 1672. Sam- uel, born 1659; married Elizabeth Daniels, 1694. Ebenezer, born 1654. Richard. Hannah, married Simeon Bryant, 1694. Nathaniel, born 1665 ; married Hannah Holman, 1689.


1. SAMUEL, son of George, lived near Horse Neck, where he died, 1713, before the birth of his youngest child. He has a gravestone in Quincy. His estate, appraised 1714, at £111,810. He had Samuel, 1696; graduated at Harvard Uni- versity, 1715; married Rebecca Hinckley. He had the "Great Hill," which, with what was bestowed in his education, was a double portion ; also forty acres, the part of his sister, Hannah Lemont, which he bought of her. Daniel, born 1698; prob- ably died young. Elizabeth, born 1700; died 1724. Mehit- abel, born 1702; married Benjamin Neal, 1727. Dorothy, married Benjamin Veazie, 1726. Hannah, born 1706; married Robert Lemont, 1729. William, born 1708; married Hannah


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Penniman, 1730. He had the dwelling-house lately occupied by Joseph Green, and about sixteen acres of land on the site ; also two acres in Penniman's Meadow, and ten acres in Mills's Meadow. John, born 1710 ; married Mary Arnold, 1736. He had the dwelling-house lately occupied by Mr. Nightingale, barn, and two acres of woodland. Mary, born 1712; married John Saunders, 1735. She had twenty-six acres of land at Horse Neck. Benoni, born 1714; married Elizabeth New- comb, 1760. He had twenty-seven acres of his father's land. John Spear's daughter Prudence, born 1737, married Daniel Baxter, in 1755.


2. GEORGE, son of George 1st, married Mary Deerings. She died 1678. They had Mary, 1676. Ebenezer, 1678, who died same year.


3. EBENEZER, son of George Ist, married Rachel Deerings, 1679, and lived in Braintree. They were members of the church in the south parish, in 1711, and many of their de- scendants have lived there. He died, March, 1719. They had Ebenezer, 1680, who married Mary Copeland, 1718, and second wife, Mary Tower, 1727. Mary, born 1682; married Ephraim Jones, 1708. Samuel, born 1684. who married Rebecca. Rachel, born 1686; married Cornelius Thayer, of Braintree, 1717. Joseph, born Feb. 25, 1688 ; married Ann. She died, April, 1719. He married second wife, Mary Collier, of Hull, Dec. 12, 1720. He was ancestor of the Spears of Hull. Nathaniel, born 1693. Abigail, born 1695; married Nathaniel Littlefield, 1718. Benjamin, born 1698; married Sarah Niles, 1722. Deering, born 1700; married Jemima Thayer, 1726. Son Nathaniel, administrator.


4. RICHARD, son of George Ist, married, and had seven children, all of whom were baptized, April 11, 1698, in Brain- tree, viz. : Rebecca, Benjamin, Richard, John, James, Mary, and Deborah.


5. NATHANIEL, son of George Ist, married Hannah Holman, 1689, and lived in Braintree, where he died, leaving a will, Sept. 12, 1728. His wife died, 1725. Their children were,


1)


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Hannah, born 1690, who married Ebenezer Nightingale, 1711. Nathaniel, born 1692; married Thankful. John, born 1694; married Ann Perry, of Milton, 1718. Mary, born 1697; mar- ried Lemuel Gulliver, 1717. David, born 1699; married Deb- orah. Joseph, born 1701; married Abigail Cleg. Nathan, born 1703; married Mehitabel . Brackett, 1734. Margaret, born 1710. Thomas, born 1707; died young. Lydia, born " 1713: married Richard Bracket, 1733.


THE GRAY FAMILY, OF BOSTON. Edward Gray, an opu- lent merchant of Boston, arrived in this country, from Lan- cashire, England, in 1686. He served an apprenticeship with Mr. Barton, as a ropemaker, at Barton's Point, then a cow pasture. He hired Barton's Point and ropewalk of Mr. Bar- ton, for ten dollars per annum. He was married to Susanna Harrison, by Pen Townsend, Esq., 1699; had Harrison, 1711; who married Elizabeth Lewis, 1734. Treasurer of Massachu- setts Province, and left Boston with the British troops in 1776, as did his grandson Harrison, who died at London, 1830, aged ninety. Harrison senior had also, John, born 1755. Lewis. Elizabeth, 1746 ; married Samuel A. Otis, father of Ilon. II. G. Otis. Edward senior had Edward, 1702; married Hannah Bridge, 1727; had Edward, 1728. Sarah, married Jeremy Green. Anne, born 1705; married Increase Blake. Persis, born 1706. Bethiah, born 1710. Susannah, born 1712; mar- ried Col. Joseph Jackson. John, born 1713; married Mary Otis, Barnstable. His second wife was Hannah Ellis, married by Dr. Colman, '1714; a niece of Dr. Colman's wife, who sent for her from England, with a view to this marriage, owing to her warm affection called the lump of love ; and had Ellis, 1716; married Sarah Tyler, by Rev. William Welsted, 1739. Ellis was colleague pastor of Second Church, Boston; had Hannah, 1744; married Thomas Cary, late of Chelsea, one of whose daughters was wife of Rev. Dr. Tuckerman. He had also, Ellis, 1745. William, born 1747. Mary, daughter of Edward, senior, married Nathaniel Loring, 1739, a grandson of Elder


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John Loring, of Hull. Also, William, 1724; married Eliz- abeth. Hall, daughter of Capt. Stephen Hall. - Benjamin, born 1726; married Mary Blanchard. Thomas, a bachelor. Judge Hall, of Boston, married Sarah, daughter of Ellis Gray, Jr. Judge Wilson, of Washington, and Dr. Bartlett, Boston, mar- ried Hannah, daughter of Ellis Gray, Jr. Edward, senior, died 1757, aged eighty-four. Dr. Chauncy said of him, in a funeral sermon, "He was unexceptionable, unenvied, except for his goodness, universally well spoken of, both while living and now he is dead." By his will, dated Feb. 12, 1753, (witnessed by James Otis, the patriot,) Mr. Gray gave to his son John the ropewalks, seven hundred and forty-four feet in length, by twenty or more feet wide, a brick warehouse adjoining, with yarn-house, knotting-house, dwelling-house, and land, stand- ing the whole length of the present Pearl Street, and on Cow Lane, now High Street and Atkinson Street, appraised at one thousand pounds. The whole estate was appraised at about £5500. By the inventory, he had ten colored slaves, appraised at about £246.


William Gray, son of Edward, senior, had Martha Hall, 1760 ; married Dr. Samuel Danforth. Stephen H., born 1761. William, born 1762. Edward, born 1764; married Susanna Turell, who had John. Rev. Frederick Turell, who married Elizabeth P. Chapman, and had also two daughters. John, born 1768. Elizabeth Saunders, born 1769; married Jacob Eustis. Rev Dr. Thomas, of Jamaica Plain, born 1772; mar- ried Deborah, daughter of Rev. Dr. Samuel Stillman, 1793; had George Harrison, 1795; married Ann, daughter of Dr. Terence Wakefield. Hannah Stillman, born 1796. Ann Greenough, born 1800 ; married Rev. George Whitney. Thomas, born 1806, who was a physician and a poet.


Appendix. 229


HIRAM SMITH. (p. 197.)


THESE infant children of Hiram and Sarah Smith were buried in the family vault, No. 98. Their remains have been removed to Mr. Smith's tomb, in Moss Path, Mount Auburn Cemetery. The record is from a mourning piece, wrought in childhood, by the eldest surviving daughter.


The other children of Mr. Smith are now living : Sarah Eliza, wife of Dr. Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, of Boston; Maria Augusta S. Smith ; Caroline H., wife of Perez B. Howard, of Warcham ; and Almira P., wife of Wesley P. Balch, of Boston.


SIGOURNEY. (p. 137.)


THE name of Sigourney is found among that band of Hu- guenots who sought refuge in New England from the persecu- tions that succeeded the revocation of the edict of Nantes by Louis XIV. The ancestor of the American branch of that family, Andrew Sigourney, or, according to the French orthog- raphy, Andrè Sejourne, came to Boston, with other emigrants, in the winter of 1686, and died in that city, in 1727, at the age of eighty-eight. He brought with him his son Andrew, a boy of thirteen, who married Mary Germaine, in 1696, and died in Boston, at the age of seventy-five.


The Sigourneys belonged to those exiles from France, who, with their pastor, Pierre Daille, formed a settlement at Oxford, in Worcester county, on the banks of a stream which still retains the appellation they gave it, of French River. The vestiges of a fort erected by them, on a commanding height, are distinctly visible. In consequence of an inroad and mas- sacre by a neighboring tribe of Indians, they relinquished their colonial establishment, and returned to Boston about the year


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1700, where they and their descendants have become incorpo- rated among its most worthy and respected inhabitants.


The pastor, Daille, beloved almost to adoration by his peace- ful and pious flock, died in 1715. Two lowly graves in the Granary burying-ground bear the inscription of the "Reverend Pierre Daillè," and "Seyre, his wife." He was succeeded in his sacred office by the Rev. Andrew Le Mercier, author of an ecclesiastical history of Geneva. The earliest place of wor- ship of this interesting people occupied the site of the present Universalist meeting-house in School Street, and is designated in the records of those times, as the "French Protestant Church." These, like other Huguenots who took refuge in dif- ferent parts of our country. from the persecution of a tyrant king, by their industry and patience, cheerful endurance of privation, and unswerving, yet not austere piety, mingled salu- tary elements with the character of this new western world.


JOSEPH WARREN.


MAJOR GENERAL JOSEPH WARREN was born in Roxbury, in 1741. His father was a respectable farmer in that place, who had held several municipal offices to the acceptance of his fellow-citizens. Joseph, with several of his brothers, was in- structed in the elementary branches of knowledge at the public grammar school of the town, which was distinguished for its successive instructors of superior attainments. In 1755 he entered college, where he sustained the character of a youth of talents, fine manners, and of a generous, independent de- portment, united to great personal courage and perseverance.


On the 18th of April, 1775, by his agents in Boston, he dis- covered the design of the British commander to seize or destroy our few stores at Concord. He instantly despatched several confidential messengers to Lexington. The late venerable


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patriot, Paul Revere, was one of them. This gentleman has given a very interesting account of the difficulties he encoun- tered in the discharge of this duty. The alarm was given, and the militia, burning with resentment, were, at daybreak on the 19th, on the road to repel insult and aggression. The drama was opened about sunrise, within a few yards of the house of God, in Lexington. Warren hastened to the field of action, in the full ardor of his soul, and shared the dangers of the day. While pressing on the enemy, a musket ball took off a lock of his hair close to his ear. The lock was rolled and pinned after the fashion of that day, and considerable force must have been necessary to have cut it away. The people were delighted with his cool, collected bravery, and already considered him as a leader, whose gallantry they were to admire and in whose talents they were to confide.


On the 14th of June, 1775, the Provincial Congress of Mas- sachusetts made him a Major General of their forces. He was at this time president of the Provincial Congress, having been elected the preceding year a member from the town of Boston.


Several respectable historians have fallen into some errors in describing the battle in which he fell, by giving the command of the troops on that day to Warren, when he was only a vol- unteer in the fight. He did not arrive on the battle-ground until the enemy had commenced their movements for the attack. As soon as he made his appearance on the field, the veteran commander of the day, Colonel Prescott, desired to act under his directions ; but Warren declined taking any other part than that of a volunteer, and added, that he came to learn the art of war from an experienced soldier, whose orders he should be happy to obey. In the battle, he was armed with a musket, and stood in the ranks, now and then changing his place, to encourage his fellow-soldiers by words and example. When the battle was decided, and our people fled, Warren was one of the last who left the breastwork, and was slain within a few yards of it, as he was slowly retiring. His death brought a sickness to the heart of the community, and the people


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1


mourned his fall; not with the convulsive agony of a be- trothed virgin over the bleeding corpse of her lover, but with the pride of the Spartan mother, who, in the intensity of her grief, smiled to see that the wounds whence life had flown were on the breast of her son, and was satisfied that he had died in defence of his country.'


This eminence has become sacred ground. It contains in its bosom the ashes of the brave who died fighting to defend their altars and their homes.


Within a year after his death, Congress passed the following resolution : -


"That a monument be erected to the memory of General Warren, in the town of Boston, with the following inscrip- tion : - *


IN HONOR OF JOSEPH WARREN, MAJOR GENERAL OF MASSACHUSETTS BAY.


HE DEVOTED HIS LIFE TO THE LIBERTIES OF HIS COUNTRY, AND IN BRAVELY DEFENDING THEM, FELL AN EARLY VICTIM IN THE


BATTLE OF BUNKER HILL, JUNE 17, 1775.


The Congress of the United States, as an acknowledgment of his services and distinguished merit, have erected this monument to his memory."


The preceding memoir is taken from the Monthly Magazine. published in Boston, June, 1826, and is the production of San- uel L. Knapp, Esq.


The following monument stood near the site of the present Bunker Hill monument :-


* To the lasting honor of the Congress of '76, the above resolution was passed, but, after the lapse of three quarters of a century, we ask, Where is the monument ? A petition is now in preparation, to present to the next Congress, praying them to carry out the patriotic resolve of their predecessor.


Appendix.


233


Erected A. D. 1794, by King Solomon's Lodge of Free Masons, constituted at Charlestown, 1783,


IN MEMORY OF MAJOR GENERAL WARREN AND HIS ASSOCIATES, who were slain on this memorable spot, June 17, 1775. "None but they who set a just value upon the blessings of liberty are worthy to enjoy her


In vain we toiled, in vain we fought, we bled in vain, if you, our offspring, want valor to repel the assaults of her invaders !"


Charlestown Settled, 1628; Burnt, 1775; Rebuilt, 1776. The enclosed land given by Hon. James Russell.


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Appendix.


JOHN WARREN.


THE personal appearance of Dr. Warren was most prepos- sessing. He was of about middling stature, and well formed ; his deportment was agreeable, and his manners, formed in a military school, and polished by intercourse with the officers of the French army, were those of an accomplished gentleman. An elevated forehead, black eyes, aquiline nose, and hair turned up from the forehead, gave an air of reflection and dignity, which became a person of his profession and character.


His remains are deposited in a tomb erected for the purpose by his family, in the cemetery of St. Paul's Church, in Boston. In the same sepulchre rest the relics of his friend and brother. - Thacher's Medical Biography.


H. J. JOHANNES WARREN,


Bostoniensis, Temporibus suis illustris, Nec posteritati obliviscendus. Bello civili semper rei publica deditus, Juventutem patriæ sacravit. Medicus inter primos, Chirurgus facile princeps, Novangliæ Primam medicinæ scholam, Ipsius laboribus fundatam, Per xxx. annos Doctrina sustulit, Eloquentia illuminavit. Quid verum, quid honestum, Quid scientiæ, quid bono publico profuturum Exemplo docuit, Vitæ studio promovit.


Appendix. 235


Erga Deum pietate, Erga homines benevolentia sincere imbutus, . Summam severitatem Summæ humanitati junxit. Universitatis Harvardianæ Professor, Societatis Philanthropicæ Præses, Societatis Medica Massachusettensis Præses, Nullus illi defuit honos. Vita peracta non deest omnium luctus. Natus die xxvii. Julii, A. D. MDCCLIII. Obiit die iv. Aprilis, A. D. MDCCCXV.


In this Tomb Are deposited the earthly remains of MAJOR GENERAL JOSEPII WARREN, Who was killed in the Battle of Bunker Hill, on the 17th June, 1775.


TIMOTHY BIGELOW. (Worcester.)


In memory of TIMOTHY BIGELOW, ESQ., Commander of the 15th Massachusetts Regt. In the Revolutionary war with Great Britain. Born August 12, 1739. He died April 4, 1790, Aged 50 years. Here lie his Remains.


The above-mentioned Timothy Bigelow was an officer of


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Appendix.


great merit and distinction in the Revolution. He commanded a battalion of Arnold's forces in the chivalrous expedition through the wilds of Maine to Canada, and was taken prisoner in the attack upon Quebec, on the night when Montgomery was slain. After being exchanged, he was again in active and responsible service for several years. The regiment which he commanded was raised mainly by his own exertions, in the central parts of the state. He left five children, viz .: Anna, Timothy, Lucy, Rufus, and Clara. Anna married Dr. Abraham Lincoln, of Worcester, (brother of the first Governor Lincoln,) who was afterwards a member of the executive council. Lucy became the wife of Luther. Lawrence, of Groton, a lawyer, who subsequently was a prominent member of the legislature, and mayor of Lowell. Rufus became a merchant, and settled in Baltimore, where he died, unmarried, in 1814. Clara married her cousin, Tyler Bigelow, of Watertown, a lawyer, and left several children, among whom are Clarissa, the wife of Theodore Chase, a merchant and ship owner of Boston ; Charles H. Bigelow, now of Lawrence, late a captain in the army; and George Tyler Bigelow, a justice of the supreme judicial court. Timothy, the eldest son of Col. Timothy Bigelow, was born April 30, 1767, graduated at Har- vard in 1786, was admitted to the bar in 1789, and became a distinguished jurist and legislator. He was speaker of the house of representatives for eleven years ; died at Medford, May 18, 1821, aged fifty-four. He married Lucy, daughter of Judge Oliver Prescott, of Groton, (brother of William Prescott, of Bunker Hill memory.) She still survives, in a green and honored old age. Her eldest daughter, Katharine, born 1793, is the wife of Abbott Lawrence, minister of the U. S. to Great Britain. The sons are, the Rev. Dr. Andrew Bigelow, born 1795, and John Prescott Bigelow, born 1797, now mayor of Boston.


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237


JOHN BROOKS.


Sacred to the Memory of JOHN BROOKS, who was born in Medford, in the month of May, 1752, and educated at the town school. He took up arms for his country on the 19th of April, 1775. He commanded the regiment which first entered the enemy's lines at Saratoga, and served with honor to the close of the war. He was appointed Marshal of the District of Massachusetts by President Washington ; and after filling several important civil offices, he was, in the year 1816, chosen Governor of the Commonwealth, and discharged the duties of that station for seven successive years, to general acceptance.


He was a kind and skilful physician ; a brave and prudent officer ; a wise, firm, and impartial magistrate ; a true patriot, a good citizen, and a faithful friend. In his manners he was a gentleman ; in morals, pure ; and in profession and practice, a consistent Christian.


He departed this life in peace, on the 1st of March, 1825. aged 73.


This monument to his honored memory


was erected by several of his fellow-citizens and friends,


in the year 1825.


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BELOW is an engraving of a monument about to be erected in Roxbury, in memory of John Eliot, the Apostle to the Indians.


ELIOT


John Eliot JOHN ELIOT,


THE APOSTLE TO THE INDIANS, Died at Roxbury, May 20th, 1690, In the 86th year of his age.


-


PAGE


A.


Aves, Samuel


- 145


Ayre, Emeline A. - 40


Adams, Abigail


- 56


Adams, Alexander


7


Adams, Daniel -


- 180


Adams, Elijah


130


Adams, Elizabeth


68


Adams, Isaac 69


Adams, James 35 -


Adams, John 10, 132


B.


Babcock, Samuel 99


Badeock, Samuel 159


Badger, Albert - - 146


Badger, Esther 146


Adams, Thomas


116


Badger, Frances Maria 146


Adlington, John 109


Badger, Martha Emma 146


Adlington, Rebecca 109


Badger, Stephen


- 146


Allcock, Abigail - 160




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