Genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of Boston and eastern Massachusetts, Part 3

Author: Cutter, William Richard, 1847-1918
Publication date: 1908
Publisher: New York, Lewis historical publishing company
Number of Pages: 768


USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > Genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of Boston and eastern Massachusetts > Part 3


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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120. Lord.


177. Spring.


33. Coggeshall.


67. Gore.


121. Loring.


178. Squire.


34. Collicott.


68. Halsall.


85. Hall.


142. Oliver.


NORFOLK COUNTY.


89. llarvard.


146. Parke.


IO


BOSTON AND EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS.


6. Harding.


1 26. Poole.


PLYMOUTH COUNTY.


70. Hayden. 127. Porter. 71. Heath. 128. Purchase.


I. Alden.


56. Hicks.


2. Allen.


57. Higgins.


72. Hewes.


129. Pynchon.


3. Allerton.


58. Hilton.


73. Hill.


130. Quincy.


4. Andrews.


59. Hobart.


75. Hobart.


I 32. Richards.


6. Arnold.


61. Hopkins.


77. Hollister.


134. Robinson.


8. Baker.


63. Hull.


79. Holmes.


136. Rosseter.


9. Bangs.


64. Jacob.


80. Hoskins.


137. Ruggles.


II. Barstow.


66. Jenny.


82. Howard.


139. Sherman.


12. Bartlett.


67. Jones.


83. Hull.


140. Short.


13. Bassett.


68. Keith.


84. Hunt.


141. Smith.


14. Beal.


69. Kempton.


85. Jenner.


142. Spurr.


16. Blackwood.


71. Lawson.


87. Johnson.


144. Stearns.


17. Bourne.


72. Loring.


88. Jones.


145. Stoughton.


18. Bradford.


73. Lothrop.


89. Kibby.


146. Stow.


19. Brett.


74. Ludkin.


90. Kingman.


147. Strong.


20. Brewster.


75. Lyford.


91. Kingsley.


148. Summer.


21. Bryant. 76. Mighill.


92. Leavitt.


149. Tappan.


22. Buck.


77. Morton.


93. Lenthall.


150. Thacher.


23. Burgess.


78. Nash.


94. Lusher.


151. Thompson.


25. Chandler.


80. Oldham.


96. Makepeace.


153. Thurston.


26. Chauncy.


81. Paddy.


97. Mann.


154. Tilestone.


27. Chittenden.


82. Palmer.


98. Marsh.


155. Titus.


28. Clap.


83. Parker.


99. Marshall.


156. Torrey.


29. Clark.


84. Partridge.


IOO. Mason.


157. Trowbridge.


30. Cole.


85. Peabody.


IOI. Mather.


158. Tucker.


31. Collier.


86. Peck.


102. Maudsley.


159. Wakeman.


32. Cook.


87. Phippen.


103. Maverick.


160. Walter.


33. Cooper.


88. Prence.


104. Mayo.


161. Waltham.


34. Cotton.


89. Prince.


105. Meakins.


162. Walton.


35. Crow.


90. Rayner.


105. Metcalf.


163. Ward.


36. Cudworth.


91. Robinson.


107. Mighill.


164. Ware.


37. Cushing.


92. Saffin.


108. Miller.


165. Warham.


38. Cushman.


93. Saxton.


109. Minot.


165. Waterhouse.


39. Damon.


94. Silvester.


IIO. Moore.


167. Wav.


40. Doane.


95. Smith.


III. Morgan.


168. Webb.


41. Dunham.


96. Snow.


112. Morrill.


169. Weld.


42. Eames.


97. Soule.


113. Morris.


170. West.


43. Edenden.


98. Southworth.


114. Morse.


171. Wheelock.


44. Eells.


99. Sparrow.


115. Nash.


172. Wheelwright.


45. Finney.


100. Sprague.


116. Newberry. 173. White.


46. Fogg.


IOI. Standish.


117. Paine.


174. Wilson.


47. Folsom.


102. Stetson.


118. Park.


175. Wilton.


48. Foster.


103. Thaxter.


119. Parker.


176. Winchester.


49. Fuller.


104. Thomas.


I20. Peck.


177. Wiswall.


50. Gilson.


105. Thompson.


121. Perkins.


178. Withington.


51. Gray.


106. Tisdale.


122. Phelps.


179. Wolcott.


52. Harvey.


107. Tracy.


123. Phillips.


180. Woodward.


53. Hatch.


108. Turner.


124. Pierce.


181. Woolridge.


54. Hatherly.


109. Underwood.


125. Plumbe.


55. Hersey.


IIO. Vassall.


.


74. Hinsdale.


131. Read.


5. Annable.


60. Holmes.


76. Holbrook.


133. Riggs.


7. Atwood.


62. Howland.


78. Holman. 135. Rogers.


IO. Barlow.


65. Jenkins.


81. Houchin.


138. Sams.


.


24. Carver. 79. Norton.


95. Lyon.


152. Thornton.


15. Besbedge.


70. Kenrick.


86. Jewett.


143. Stacy.


II


BOSTON AND EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS.


III. Wadsworth. 116. Whitman.


112. Warren.


117. Willet.


113. Waterman.


118. Willis.


114. Wetherell.


119. Winslow.


115. White. 120. \iswall.


BRISTOL COUNTY.


I. Andrews.


21. Myles.


2. Angier.


22. Newinan.


3. Bowen.


23. Paine.


4. Brenton. 24. Peck.


5. Chesebrough. 25. Perry.


6. Cole. 26. Read.


7. Danforth.


27. Russell.


8. Dean. 28. Sabin.


9. Delano. 29. Seward.


10. Doughty.


30. Shove.


II. Earle.


31. Smith.


12. Emerson.


32. Street.


14. lovey.


35. Welles.


13. Gilbert. 33. Tabor.


14. Greenwood.


34. Tripp.


16. James.


37. Whiting.


15. Hooke.


35. Walker.


16. Hunt.


36. Wetherell.


17. Lane.


37. Williams.


18. Leonard.


38. Winslow.


19. Luther.


39. Wyatt.


20. Macy.


BARNSTABLE COUNTY.


I. Allen.


24. Lothrop.


2. Allyn.


25. Mayo.


3. Arnold.


26. Miller.


4. Bacon. 27. Newland.


5. Bourne.


28. Otis.


6. Chipman.


29. Paine.


7. Cobb.


30. Rider.


8. Crocker.


31. Robinson.


9. Dimmock.


32. Rowley.


IO. Dunham.


33. Russell.


II. Eldridge.


34. Sears.


12. Falland.


35. Skiff.


13. Fessenden.


36. Smith.


14. Freeman.


37. Snow.


15. Gendall.


38. Sparrow.


16. Hathaway.


39. Stone.


17. Hawes.


40. Swift.


18. Hinckley.


41. Thacher.


19. Hoar.


42. Thornton.


20. Howes.


43. Treat.


21. Huckins.


44. Tupper.


22. Hull.


45. Walley.


23. Leverich.


NANTUCKET COUNTY.


I. Folger.


3. Mayhew.


2. Gayer.


DUKE'S COUNTY.


I. Athearn.


2. Mayhew.


CENTRAL AND WESTERN MASSA- CHUSETTS.


1. Atherton.


22. Moore.


2. Bondet.


23. Moxon.


3. Brewer. 24. Parsons.


4. Chapin.


25. Partridge.


5. Chauncy. 26. Pomeroy.


6. Clark.


27. Porter.


7. Colton.


28. Pynchon.


8. Cook.


20. Rawson.


9. Frary.


30. Rowlandson.


10. Glover.


31. Sheldon.


11. Hawley.


32. Stillman.


12. Holyoke. 33. Stoddard.


13. Houghton. 34. Taylor.


15. Hunt.


36. West.


17. Mansfield.


38. Williams.


18. Marsh.


39. Wilson.


19. Marshfield.


40. Woodrop.


20. Mather.


41. Younglove.


21. Montague.


THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.


The first three generations of the first set- tlers having disappeared, the next important list existing to give an idea of the names of the prominent families in the early part of the eighteenth century was a subscription list to a book. Even lists of subscribers to literary works were then uncommon in this community, and this list has discrepencies regarding the address of a large number which cannot be explained. Leaving out the part relating to Suffolk county (which included Boston), the much smaller list for the other counties is here included. The book referred to is Prince's "Chronology.'


Prince who was one of the most learned men in the Province, speaking of the pros- perity of New England in 1736, in the dedica- tion of his work to the governor, lieutenant- governor, the councillors and representatives of the Massachusetts Bay government-men mostly, if not wholly, descendants of the founders of this commonwealth-and speak- ing also from the standpoint of an ecclesiast, as most clergymen of this period did, says: "It is to these (the founders) we firstly owe


*"Chronological History of New England In the Form of Annals," by Thomas Prince, M. A. (Boston, 1736).


.


12


BOSTON AND EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS.


our pleasant houses, our fruitful fields, our growing towns and churches, our wholesome laws, our precious privileges, our grammar schools and colleges, our pious and learned ministers and magistrates, our good govern- ment and order, the public restraints of vices, the general knowledge of our common people, the strict observation of the christian sabbath ; with those remains of public modesty, sobriety, social virtues and religion ; for which this country is distinguished among the British col- onies, and in which we are as happy as any on earth."


The following list of Prince's subscribers outside of Suffolk county illustrate the high standing in the community of certain families in 1736.


MIDDLESEX COUNTY.


77. Spring. 85. Ward.


78. Stone. 86. Webb.


79. Storer. 87. Wells.


80. Sutton.


88. Whitney.


81. Sweetser. 89. Wigglesworth.


82. Symmes. 90. Williams.


83. Trumbal.


91. Woods.


84. Vinton. 92. Wyer.


ESSEX COUNTY.


I. Allen.


23. Henchman.


2. Balch.


24. Jenison.


3. Barnard. 25. Kimbal.


4. Beck.


26. Little.


5. Berry.


27. Lynde.


6. Bixby.


28. Majory.


7. Brown.


20. March.


8. Browne.


30. Parsons.


9. Barril.


31. Payson.


Io. Capen.


32. Phillips.


II. Cheever. 33. Pickering.


12. Chipman.


34. Prince.


3. Appleton.


41. Goddard.


4. Austin.


42. Greaves.


5. Badger.


43. Greenwood.


6. Barret. 44. Hall.


7. Bean.


45. Haven.


17. Emerson.


39. Tufts.


8. Blanchard.


46. Hays.


18. Fiske.


40. Wainwright.


IO. Brattle.


48. Hendlv.


II. Breed.


49. Hide.


12. Brigden.


50. Hopkins.


13. Burr.


51. Hovey.


14. Call.


52. Hunt.


15. Cary.


53. Hurd.


I. Adams.


21. Loring.


2. Ames.


22. Marshall.


17. Codman.


55. Johnson.


3. Balch.


23. Messenger.


18. Collings.


56. Jones.


4. Baxter.


24. Metcalfe.


19. Converse.


57. Kenrick.


5. Blake.


25. Morse.


20. Cooke.


58. Kent.


6. Bosson.


26. Phillips.


21. Coolidge.


59. Kettle.


7. Bowles.


27. Quincy .


22. Cotton.


60. Lemmon.


8. Clap.


28. Smith.


23. Danforth.


61. Livermore.


9. Dexter.


29. Taylor.


24. Dummer.


62. Loring.


IO. Dudley.


30. Thayer.


25. Durant.


63. Lovett.


II. Dunbar.


31. Tilestone.


26. Edes.


64. Mason.


12. Dwight.


32. Tompson.


27. Emerson.


65. Miller.


13. Gardner.


33. Torrey.


28. Fessenden.


66. Paige.


14. Gay.


34. Townsend.


29. Fiske.


67. Parker.


15. Heath.


35. Vose.


30. Flegg.


68. Peabody.


16. Higgins.


36. Walter.


31. Fletcher.


69. Phillips.


17. Hobart.


37. Ware.


32. Flint.


70. Prescot.


18. Humphrey. 38. Whitmarsh.


33. Flucker.


71. Remington.


19. Kingsbury.


39. Whitney.


34. Flynt.


72. Rice.


20. Lincoln.


40. Wilson.


35. Foster.


73. Russell.


36. Foxcroft.


74. Sartle.


37. Frost.


75. Sheaf.


I. Arnold.


3. Beal.


38. Frothingham.


76. Skinner.


2. Bass.


4. Bourn.


36. Russell.


15. Cushing. 37. Stacey.


16. Dana.


38. Thorold.


9. Bradstreet. 47. Hemmingway.


19. Fitch.


41. Ward.


20. Gerrish.


42. White.


21. Hale.


43. Wigglesworth.


22. Hazen.


NORFOLK COUNTY.


16. Cheever.


54. Jenner.


13. Choate.


14. Coffin.


35. Rogers.


I. Abbot. 39. Fuller.


2. Allen. 40. Gibbs.


PLYMOUTH COUNTY.


13


BOSTON AND EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS.


5. Carpenter. 16. Marsh.


6. Clark.


17. Palmer.


7. Cushing.


18. Parker.


8. Gardner.


19. Perkins.


9. Ilovey. 20. Pratt.


IO. Howard. 21. Robinson.


11. Leavitt.


22. Stevens.


12. Le Baron.


23. Thacher.


13. Leonard.


24. Thaxter.


14. Lewis.


25. Weston.


15. Loring. 26. Winslow.


BARNSTABLE COUNTY.


I. Avery. 8. Mayhew.


2. Bourn. 9. Oakes.


3. Dennis.


Io. Rotch.


4. Fessenden. 11. Spear.


5. Green.


12. Stone.


6. Lewis. 13. Sturgis.


7. Lombard. 14. Webb.


BRISTOL COUNTY.


1. Bowen.


5. Crosman.


2. Church.


6. Greenwood.


3. Clap.


7. Leonard.


4. Cotton. 8. Williams.


CENTRAL AND WESTERN MASS.1- CHUSETTS.


I. Bull.


12. Marshfield.


2. Chandler.


13. Mead.


3. Cheney. 14. Parkman.


4. Cushing.


15. Prentice.


5. Doolittle. 16. Pynchon.


6. Dwight. 17. Stebbens.


7. Flegg. 18. White.


8. Frink.


10. Wilder.


9. Huggins.


20. Williams.


IO. Lec.


21. Wright.


II. Lorkin.


Cf. "New England Historical and Genea- logical Register," vol. vi., p. 189, etc.


The tax lists of the several towns contain the names of citizens at successive periods. But previously to the Revolutionary war there is very little else upon which to build a com- plete record. The first important census was taken in 1764, and this, as preserved. is not a record of names, but only a list of figures. The number of houses and persons of each sex was kept up in this way at occasional in- tervals until 1800. Thus the value of such a list as that of 1736, as above presented, may well be appreciated, even though it may con- tain the names of many students and clergy- men of that period.


When the United States direct tax of 1798 was assessed in Massachusetts, a list was pre- pared which contains a description of real estate in the hands of private persons, and the list is now valuable for its account of farms and their boundaries, and of outlands, and for the description which it gives of dwelling- houses, barns, outbuildings, etc.


Following is a list of family names most numerously represented in the original eight towns of Middlesex county, Massachusetts, during the seventeenth and eighteenth cen- turies.


Counties were first made in 1643. for ex- ample: Essex, Middlesex, Suffolk and Nor- folk (old Norfolk) were incorporated in that year.


MIDDLESEX COUNTY.


CHARLESTOWN .- Principal authority, Wy- man's "Charlestown." The families most numerously represented in this work are Adams (78), Austin (42), Brown (83). Cutter (60), Frothingham (49), Green or Greene (78). Hall (46). Harris (47), Johnson (81), Newell (45). Parker (58). Phillips, (46) Pierce (54), Rand (75), Reed (43), Richard- son (68), Russell (51), Smith (123), Sprague (45). Tufts (84), and Whittemore (56). The numbers in parentheses represent the number of Wyman's family groups. He places before the name of Kettell one of those peculiar in- dexes with which he introduces a family of large numbers, but there are several families equally as large as that one covered by the matter in his book.


CAMBRIDGE .- Authority: Paige's "History of Cambridge." The families most numer- ously represented in this work are Bordman (15). Bowman ( II ), Bradish ( II), Champ- ney (20), Cook (20), Cooper (II), Cutler (11), Cutter (52). Dana (32). Dickson (15), Fessenden (15), Fillebrown (16), Frost (35), Goddard (II), Gookin (15), Green (17), Ilall ( 15). Hancock ( 12), Hastings (29), Hill (29), Holden ( 16), Hovey (14), Kidder (14), Manning (16), Mason (21), Moore (13), Munroe (16), Oliver (II), Parker (II), Prentice (48), Reed (14), Robbins (25), Russell (41), Smith (16). Sparhawk (16), Stone (18), Swan (14), Watson (17), Well- ington (15), Whitmore ( II), Whittemore (36), Winship (36), and Wyeth (26). For the Arlington part of Cambridge. Authorities : Cutter's "History of Arlington." and the printed vital records. Adams (23), Butter- field (14). Cook and Cooke (13), Cutter (77).


14


BOSTON AND EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS.


Dickson (14), Fillebrown (14), Frost (40), Hall (13), Hill (22), Locke (38), Peirce (12), Prentice (16), Robbins (13), Russell (38), Swan (27), Wellington (12), Whittemore (24), and Winship (30). For the Newton part of Cambridge. Authorities: Jackson's "History of Newton," and the printed vital records. Bartlett (24), Cooke (22), Clark (23), Fuller (71), Greenwood (21), Hall (22), Hammond (38), Hyde (81), Jackson (93), Murdock (22), Park (28), Parker (51), Prentice (23), Richards (21), Stone (28), Trowbridge (29), Ward (40). Williams (21), Wiswall (24), Woodward (22). The numbers in parentheses represent the number of family groups.


WATERTOWN .- Many families of Watertown which fill much space in Bond's work are ex- tended greatly into the limits of other towns; but after careful consideration the following list is submitted for what it is worth. Author- ity : Bond's "History of Watertown." Allen, Bemis, Bigelow, Bond, Bowman, Bright, Brooks, Brown, Coolidge, Fiske, Flagg, Fuller, Goddard, Hammond, Harrington, Hastings, Jennison, Jones, Lawrence, Livermore, Mason, Peirce, Phillips, Saltonstall, Sanderson, Smith, Spring, Stearns, Stone, Stratton, Warren, Wellington, White, Whitney, and Woodward.


SUDBURY .- Authority: The printed vital records. The family names most numerously represented in this town are those of Brown, Goodenow, Haynes, Hunt, Maynard, Moore, Parmenter, Rice, Smith and Willis.


CONCORD .- The names of families most numerously represented in Concord, accord- ing to the vital records and Shattuck's "His- tory of Concord," are Adams (II), Ball ( II), Barrett (25), Blood (15), Brooks (33), Brown (39), Buttrick (14), Dakin (10), Davis (21), Farrar (14), Fletcher (II), Hoar (10), Hosmer (24), Hubbard (12), Hunt (13), Melvin (16), Meriam (14), Miles (12), Taylor (12), Wheeler (51), Wood (15). The figures in parentheses represent the number of heads of families.


WOBURN .- Authority: Johnson's printed vital record. The following statement is based upon the birth rate in that work. The family names most numerously represented are Brooks, Carter, Converse, Fowle, Johnson, Kendall, Pierce, Reed, Richardson, Simonds, Thompson, and Wyman. The three most numerous families are those of Johnson, Rich- ardson, and Wyman, and the name of Richard- son is represented in the birth list (to 1873) by nearly 900 entries.


MEDFORD .- The printed vital records to 1850 give as the most numerously represented names, those of Brooks, Hall and Tufts. The genealogical records in Brooks's "History of Medford" add to these those of Blanchard, Francis, Reeves, Wade, Whitmore and Willis.


READING .- The vital records of this munici- pality are not printed. From Eaton's "History of Reading" a very general estimate is made, which includes among the most numerous family names those of Bancroft, Boutwell, Browne, Bryant, Cowdry, Damon, Eaton, Em- erson, Evans, Fitch, Flint, Green, Hartshorne, Nichols, Parker, Poole, Pratt, Smith, Stimp- son, Swain, Temple, Wakefield, Walton, Wes- ton and Wiley.


ESSEX COUNTY.


The original eight towns of Essex county in 1643 were Salem, Lynn, Wenham, Ipswich, Rowley, Newbury, Gloucester and Andover.


SALEM .- Salem, like its companion seaport, Boston, is an interesting place to genealogists. But it is doubtful if in spite of earnest endeav- ors in that direction, on the part of a number that the work is nearer accomplishment gen- crally than that of Boston ,as described by Whitmore in the first part of this article. In a place so genealogically important as Salem, the vital records have been collected from various sources, and in relation to the entire subject are doubtless only fragmentary. The eighteenth century baptisms in Salem, as pub- lished by Emmerton, show for the most num- erously represented families in that century the names of Andrew and Andrews, Archer, Ashby, Ashton, Babbidge, Barr, Bickford, Bowditch, Bray, Brookhouse, Brown and Browne, Bullock, Burrill, Chapman, Cheever, Clark, Clough, Cloutman, Collins, Cook, Cox, Dampney, Daniel or Daniels, Derby, Dodge, Driver, Emmerton, Felt, Fisher, Forrester, Foster, Fowler, Frye, Gale, Gardner, Gavitt, Gerrish, Giles, Glover, Goodale, Goodhue, Gould, Grafton, Grant, Gray, Hall, Hathorne, Henderson, Hill, Hodges, Holman, Horton, Howard, Hunt, Ingalls, Ingersoll, Jeffrey, Josephs, King, Lamb, Lambert, Lander, Lane, Loring, Lawrence, Leach, Lee, Lefavor, Lis- comb and Luscomb, Mackintire, Manning, Mansfield, Marston, Mason, Massey, Masury, Mayberry Millett, Morgan, Morong, Moses, Motey, Neal, Needham, Nichols, Oliver, Orne, Osgood, Palfrey, Palmer, Parker, Patterson, Peale, Pease, Peirce and Pierce, Phelps, Phip- pen. Pickering, Pickman, Pitman, Prince, Proctor, Punchard, Putnam, Richardson,


15


BOSTON AND EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS.


Ropes, Rowell, Rust, Sage, Sanders and Saunders. Saunderson, Savage, Silsbee, Skerry, Smith, Smithers, Southard, Stone, Swasey, Simonds and Symonds, Teague, Townsend, Trask, Tucker, Valpy, Very, Ward. Waters, Webb, Wellman, West, White, Wil- liams, Woodbridge, Woodbury and Yell, and many others who are possibly entitled to a place in the list. In the published records of the parish list of deaths, kept by William Bent- ley, pastor of the East Church, Salem, cover- ing the period between 1785 and 1819, the following family names are most numerous : Allen, Archer, Babbidge, Becket, Brown and Browne, Cheever, Collins, Crowninshiekl. Dean, Derby. Fairfield. Ilodges, King, Lam- bert. Lane, Manning, Masury, Millet, Murray, Palfrey, Patterson, Peele, Perkins, Phippen. Richardson, Ropes, Silsbee, Smith, Swasey, Townsend, Ward, Waters, Webb, Wellman, White, Whittemore and Williams. Individuals having large families are very interesting genealogically, and important sociologically and physiologically; and next in interest to these facts are those of longevity ; closely akin to which subject is that of fatalities, in which accidents, war and pestilence or epidemical disease, bear an important part, events which are more likely to affect a seaport like Salem. with a large floating element in its population, than the more inland country districts.


LYNN .- Authority : The printed vital rec- ords. The most numerous families to 1850 are those bearing the names of Alley, Bachellor. Breed, Brown, Burrill, Chase, Collins, Fuller, Hawkes, Ingalls, Johnson, Lewis, Mansfield, Mudge, Newhall, Oliver, Parrott, Phillips, Ramsdell, Rhodes, Smith and Tarbox. Of these Breed and Newhall are by far the most numerous.


WVENHAM .- Authority: The printed vital records. The most numerous families to 1850 are those bearing the names of Bacheller, Dodge, Fairfield, Fiske, Kimball. Perkins, and Porter. Of these Dodge and Kimball are the most numerous.


IPSWICHI .- Authority: Felt, "History of Ipswich." Andrews, Appleton, Baker, Brown, Burnham, Choate, Cogswell, Dodge. Emerson, Farley, Foster, Giddings, Goodhue, How, Hub- bard, Killam, Kimball, Knowlton, Lord, Low, Manning, Norton, Perkins, Potter, Rogers, Rust, Smith, Staniford, Story, Symonds, Treadwell, Wade, Wainwright, Ward, Warner, Whipple, Whittingham, Wigglesworth, Wise. A late authority on the subject of the most numerously represented names, of which the


above are a number in this ancient town, is Waters's "History of Ipswich.'


ROWLEY .- Authority: Blodgette, "Early Settlers of Rowley," in this work the family names most numerously represented are Bailey, Boynton, Burpee, Clarke. Dickinson, Dresser, Ellsworth, Harriman, Harris, Hid- den, Hobson, Hopkinson, Jackson, Jewett ( numerously so), Johnson, Kilbourne, Mighill, Nelson. Palmer, Pearson, Pickard, Platts, Scott. Tenney, Todd and Wood.


NEWBURY .- Newbury, better known from the city part as Newburyport, is a very old settlement, and the list of the most numerous family names, as interpreted from Coffin's "Newbury," from 1635 to 1700, contains those of Ayer. Badger, Bailey, Bartlett, Brown, Chase, Cheney, Clark, Coffin, Davis, Dole, Dummer, Emery, Goodridge, Greenleaf, Hale, Ilsley, Kelley, Knight, Kent, Lowell, Lunt, March, Merrill, Moody, Morse, Noyes, Ord- way, Pettingell, Pike, Pillsbury, Poore, Plum- mer, Rolfe, Somerby, Swett, Titcomb, Top- pan. Wheeler and Woodman. Whether these names were continued in the same proportion in the eighteenth century is a matter of doubt, in the absence of printed vital records. Poore's "Merrimac Valley Researches" may furnish sufficient names to form a partial sub- stitute.


GLOUCESTER .- Authority: Babson's "His- tory of Gloucester." Numerous family names in Gloucester have been those of Andrews, Babson, Bennett, Bray, Brown, Chandler, Collins, Davis, Day, Ellery, Elwell, Eveleth, Gardner, Giddings, Harraden, Haskell, Inger- soll, Lane, Low, Lufkin, Millet, Norwood. Parsons, Pool, Riggs, Robinson, Sargent, Sawyer. Smith, Somes, Stanwood, Stevens, Tarr, White, Witham, Woodbury, York.


ANDOVER .- This historic old town, origi- nally embracing the present towns of Andover and North Andover, and the south portion of the city of Lawrence, was first settled in the northerly part, now North Andover, where the first meeting-house of the town was built near the old burying ground there, and here the larger number of the inhabitants dwelt for several years after the first settlement of the town as a whole. By 1707, however, it was found that the bulk of the population had changed to the southerly part, and so a new meeting-house, then needed, was planned to be built in that part. The agitation resulted in two parishes being formed, one being the North and the other the South Precinct of the town, and two meeting places for the religious


BOSTON AND EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS.


societies of that day were built. Thus the town of Cochichewick, its name when it be- came a part of the county of Essex in 1643, became eventually to be known as Andover, the southerly part especially being noted as an intellectual centre the world over. In this parish there were between the years 1711 and 1809 the number of 3592 baptisms, or eighty- ninetieths infant baptisms.


From the "Historical Manual of the South Church in Andover," published in 1859, which appears to be the principal authority on the subject of the size of families in general, are taken the following names, which appear to be those most numerously represented in the town itself: Abbot, Blanchard, Chandler, Dane, Foster, Holt, Johnson, Lovejoy, Osgood, Phelps, Russell, Stevens and Wardwell. In 1859 the name of Abbot preponderates. The publication of the vital records of Andover was begun in the newspapers several years ago.


SUFFOLK COUNTY.


The original eight towns of Suffolk county in 1643 were Boston, Roxbury, Dorchester, Dedham, Braintree, Weymouth, Hingham, Hull. Omitting Boston, Roxbury and Dor- chester, all now parts of the one city of Bos- ton, we have left Dedham, Braintree, Wey- mouth, now parts of the new county of Nor- folk, and Hingham and Hull, now parts of the present county of Plymouth.


PRESENT PLYMOUTH COUNTY.


HINGHAM .- The family names most num- erously represented in Hingham, according to the printed history of that town, are first those of Cushing (123 family groups), Hersey (III), and Lincoln (178) ; followed closely in number by Beal (89), Gardner (84), Spra- gue (74), Stodder (92), and Whiton (80). Next to these in number by Barnes (35), Bates (47). Burr (33), Dunbar (36), Fear- ing (45), French (25), Gill (22), Hobart (53), Humphrey (31), Jacob (28), Jones (30), Lane (43). Leavitt (39), Lewis (26), Loring (46), Marsh (26), Nichols (22), Rip- ley (25), Souther (21), Stowell (28), Thax- ter (30), Tower (55), and Wilder (63).


HULL .- In 1740 the Loring family was prominent in Hull, which territorily and num- erically has been one of the smallest towns in the State.


PRESENT NORFOLK COUNTY.


DEDHAM .- Authority : Vital records of the town of Dedham, as printed under the


supervision of Don Gleason Hill, town clerk. The most numerously represented names on these records are Allen ( Allin, Alleyne), Ba- con, Baker, Battle, Bullard, Chickering, Clapp, Clark, Colburn, Dean, Draper, Eaton, Ellis, Everett, Fairbanks, Fales (and Vales), Far- rington, Fisher, Fuller, Gay, Guild, Hawes, Herring, Holmes, Kingsbury, Lewis, Mason, Metcalf, Morse, Newell, Onion, Pond, Rhoads, Richards, Smith (and Smyth), Sumner, Weatherbee, White, Whiting, and Wight.




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