USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Holliston > Genealogical register of the inhabitants and history of the towns of Sherborn and Holliston, 1856 > Part 37
USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Sherborn > Genealogical register of the inhabitants and history of the towns of Sherborn and Holliston, 1856 > Part 37
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).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47
53. Samuel,? w. Deliverance, had Samuel, Nov. 21, '65 ;
54. Isaac Whitney,? w. Mary -, had at HI., I. Sarah, Sep. 12, 1773; II. Isaac, Aug. 12, '75.
55. Simeon had Betsey, bp. '95, at S.
1. James Wight, an active and useful citizen, long leader of the Choir in H., had, I. James, r. II. ; II. Warren, Aug. 13, 1794, r. H.
4. Nahum Wight w. Hannah, had, Hanh., July 27, 1772, at S.
5. Joel Wight, had, I. Hannah, Mar. 11, 1769, at Dublin ; II. Ephraim, May 20, '71, at S. ; III. Eli, May 6, '78.
Samuel Williams, m. Abigail Godard, who d. Mar. 6, 1716-17 ; 2d, Abig'l Wood, Feb. 4, '19-20, had at S., I. Eleazer Wood, Jan. 5, 1720-1; II. Dorotha, July 8, '22, and rm. to Marlboro'.
John Wilson, Doet., w. Mary -, had at S., I. Elizabeth, July 25, 1740 ; II. Alice, Aug. 4, '42, d. Nov. 7, 1805, m. Samuel Twitchell, Esq., of Dub. ; III. Sarah, Feb. 8, '44 -- 5 ; Iv. John, Nov. 14, '47 ;
v. Hannah, June 2, '53.
Nathaniel Winship, w. Merey, had in H., I. Amos, Aug. 10, 1745 ; II. Mary, Nov. 24, '47, d. yg. ; III. Nath'l, d. Dec. 27, '53; IV. Mercy, b. Apl. 26, '54, at S.
Jona. Wiswall, m. Mary Daniels, July 5, 1764, had in H., I. David, Mar. 3, 1765, m. Mary -- , and had, I. Moses C., June 30, '94 ; II. Lowell, Oet. 8, '95; III. David, Oct. 27, '98;
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II. Margery, Sep. 11, '66 ; III. Sabery, Jan. 23, '71 ; Iv. Betty, Aug. 10,'72; v. Sally, Aug. 7, '74 ; VI. Mary, Aug. 12, '76.
3. Jona. Wiswell, w. Polly -, had, Margery, Dec. 26, '97, at H.
Nicholas Wood. In the early forest of Woods in New England, appeared
1. Nicholas, of Concord, where he had Abigail, 10 (2), 1642;
2. Nicholas, of Dorchester, in 1640, who, in company with And. Pitcher, took the freeman's oath, June 2, 1641, and for a series of years occupied as tenant, the extensive farm of Hon. John Glover, in what is now Milton.
Here a gross insult was offered to his wife by an Indian, from about Providence, which the Government noticed, by sending to Meantanomo, Sep. 8, 1642, a demand that the offender should be sent to them to be punished, " not with death, but some other punishment."
The Sachems, Sacanonoco, of Pawtuxet, and Pumhom of Shawomock (now Warwick, R. I.) having, on 22 (4mo.) 1643, formally placed themselves and country under the jurisdiction of Mass., Nicholas Wood, with Henry Adams, senr., of Brain- tree, Henry Adams, junr., and Tho. Samuel, John and Christopher Adams, and above twenty others, were induced to petition the General Court, who, Oct. 1, 1645, granted them 10,000 acres West of Narragansett Bay, to be " set out for their town," and resolved that the number of 7 actual settlers should have power to admit or keep out whom they should think good ; that the General Court should write letters to Benedict Arnold to compound with Pumhom at the easiest rate he could, for bis right in any improved ground ; and that the petitioners should dispose of the houses built upon said ground [by the persecuted Gortonites], and pay to such as built them, what the Court shall hereafter appoint, adding for their encouragement, "if they shall see cause so to do." [Col. Rec. and Drake's Book of Indians. ]
The iniquity of this enterprise, which no doubt originated with the intolerant and grasping Winthrop & Co., was probably discovered, and voluntarily relinquished ; or the prior sale of Shawomock, by Miantonomo to the Earl of Warwick, and by the Earl to Rev. Samuel Gorton and associates, compelled the Government to revoke their grant, and yield to Gorton his prior rights ; for neither Nicholas W. nor his associate grantees ever took permanent possession ; nor does it appear that they ever received indemnification for the relinquishment of the grant.
On 8 (3mo. ) 1652, Nicholas W., with Tho. Holbrook and Andrew Pitcher, all of D., received of Richard Parker, of Boston, a deed for 535 acres of meadow and upland, " lying in the woods on the W. side of Charles River, 3 ms. from Natick, lying between the land of Capt. Robert Kayne on the S. side, and Mr. Richard Browne, of Watertown, in some part on the S. side, also ; by Charles R. on the E., [and a rocky point, now called the neck, running into the R.] ; and by common woods on the W."
This tract now includes most of the farms of Mj. John Goulding, Jona. Holbrook, Martin Barbour, Walter Barbour, David Daniels, Joseph and Jedh. Leland, Dexter Amsden, and Charles How. It seems probable that Goodman Wood had taken pos- session, and made improvements prior to the date of this deed, for an act of the Gen. Court, passed three weeks after, directing the laying out of Natiek, ordered the Eastern line to be extended up the river as far as his house ; and he had a child, b. pr. at Milton, recorded at Medfield, the nearest incorporated town, as early as Jan. 3, 1651. He erected his house 13 rods S. of Holbrook's mills, where the road now runs, and founded it upon a rock ; as if he would say to succeeding generations of the town he first planted, build upon the rock of ages. He seems to have been a very responsible and enterprising man. He signed the first petition for the incorporation of S .; was a member of the chh., and for his day, possessed of a large property. He left no male posterity, who perpetuated his name, but his blood has mingled
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extensively with families of other names ; and from him have descended many orna- ments of literature, science and religion. His grave, marked by a mound, more than that of any other founder of S., merits an imperishable monument.
WILL OF NICHOLAS WOOD.
In the year of our Lord, 1669, on the 16th day of January, I, Nicholas Wood, living at my farme in Natick Bounds, having been for some considerable time under the afflicting hand of God, and thereby very weak and low in body, but of perfect remembrance, thanks be to God, and considering that the end of man's life is very uncertain, and forasmuch as I am persuaded that it is my duty to provide for death, that I be not unprovided when I shall approach [my Judge ] I have thought it good for the quiet of my mind, to ordain and make this my last will and testament, in manner and form as followeth :- First, I having most and chiefest care of my soule, do humbly commend the same into the hands of Almighty God, from whom I first received [it], trusting in and through the mercy of Jesus Christ, my Saviour, that my said soule, after it be departed out of this my body, shall immediately inherit life and glory ; and as for my body, I commit it to the carth from whence it was taken to be Christianly buried at the discretion of my Executors. And as concerning my worldly goods, which God of his mercy have given me, I do dispose of them as followeth :- First, I will and bequeath unto Anna, my now loving wife, the thirds of all my houses and lands at my farm, which I formerly bought of Mr. Parker, with all her wearing clothes and linen, and £17 a year out of the produce of the farm and my other lands, until my son, Jona., come to one-and-twenty years of age, for the bringing up of my two younger children. Item, I will and bequeath unto my son, Jona. Wood, all those lands, both upland and meadow, which I formerly bought of Mr. Parker, being the farme which I now live upon, with all the buildings upon it ; 4 acres of English pasture, lying on the N. side of the brooke, that runneth by my house, excepted ; allsoe I give unto the above said Jona., ten acres of meadow land out of that parcell of meadow, which I formerly bought of Lt. Fisher, of Dedham, as it shall be set out to him by my executors, at the south line of the said meadow next unto Mr. Jno. Hull's far n : allsoe I give unto the said Jona., one pair of oxen, one cow, one young horse, two ewes, one-half of all my tackling belonging to my teamne, one-half of all my wearing clothes, and one-fifth part of all my household stuff. Item, I will and bequeath unto my son, Eleazer Wood, all those lands, meadow and upland, which I formerly bought of Lt. Fisher, of Dedham, adjoining to my other farme above said, the ten acres of meadow land given to my son, Jona., above said, only excepted. Allsoe I give unto the said Eleazer, four acres of English pasture, which lyeth on the North side of the Brook above excepted : allsoe I give unto the said Eleazer, one pair of oxen, one cow, one young horse, three ewes, one-half of all my tackling belonging to my teame, one-half of all my wearing clothes, and one-fifth part of my household stuff. Item, I will and bequeath unto my daughter, Mehetabel Wood, all that my meadow land, lying in the town of Milton, in the salt marsh, provid al that what it sh ill amount to more than £60, upon a just and due valuation by indifferent men, shall be returned into the hands of my executors. Moreover, I give unto the said Mehetabel, two cows, two ewes, and one-fifth part of all my house- hold stuff.
Item, I will and bequeath unto my daughter, Abigail Wood, all those my lands lying and being in the town of Roxbury, both upland and meadow, and what it shall fall short of £60, upon a just and due valuation by indifferent men, it shall be made up by [my ] executors out of my other estate. Moreover, I give unto the said Abigail two cows, two ewes, and one-fifth part of all my household stuff.
Item, I give unto my daughter, Bethya, all those houses and lands that I have in Watertowne, which I had with my last wife, after her decease, provided that what
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they shall amount to more than £60, upon a just and due valuation by indifferent men, shall be returned to my executors. Moreover, I give unto the said Bethya, two cows, three sheep, and one-fifth part of all my household stuff. And further, my will is, that if it should please the Lord to take away my son Jona. before he come to one-and-twenty years of age, bring in a single condition, that then my son Eleazer shall be sole heir to his portion, paying out to all his sisters then living, ten pounds apiece, which said payments shall be made as followeth, viz., ten pounds to his sister Mary Thurston within one year after the decease of ye said Jona , and so annually until he have paid to each of them ten pounds ; or if it should please God to take away my son Eleazer by death, before he shall come to the age of one-and- twenty years of age, that then my son Jona. shall be sole heir to his estate, paying out thereof six pounds apiece to all his sisters then living, which said payments shall be as followeth, viz., £6 to his sister, Mary Thurston, within one year after the decease of his brother, and so annually until such time as he have paid each of them £6; or if it should please God to take away any of my three daughters, now in their minority, before they be of age to dispose of what I have left, then being in a single condition, that then their portions shall be equally divided between their brothers and sisters then living.
Item, I will to my grandchild, Abraham Harding, the son of my dear daughter, Hannah Harding, now deceased, the sum of £5, to be paid him by my son Jona. when the said Abraham shall be one-and-twenty years of age.
And as for the residue of my estate, bills, bonds, debts, or moveables, with the produce of my farme, and my other lands, the £17 a year above mentioned, for the bringing up of my two younger children, except unbequeathed, and not given in this my last will and testament, my debts being paid, and funeral expenses, with all other necessary charges defraid, my mind and will is, that it should be equally divided between my two sons and my six daughters, when my son, Jona. Wood come to one- and-twenty years of age. And considering that the future as well as the present good of my family consists as much in their peace and love, as in what I have done for them ; and therefore as it have been so, at present is, as my duty, so my care, God assisting, so to leave things as might most conduce to the end, and therefore my will is, that if any of my children, one or other, son or daughter, shall be discon- tented with what I have here done, and shall thereby occasion any uncomfortable agitations or distractions, or suits at law, thereby to trouble my executors, notwith- standing their faithful endeavors to perform the trust committed to them, according to my true intent and purpose, their so doing shall stand as a just plea and bar against them, whosoever they be, for having any right to any part of my estate left, and the portion above willed them, shall be equally divided between the rest of my children.
Item, I constitute, appoint and ordain Anna, my now loving wife, and John Thurston, jun., and Tho. Bass, both my sons-in-law, all executors of this my last will and testament, to ye intent that they shall see the same effectually performed, according to my true intent and meaning in the same.
Item, I nominate and appoint my loving friend, George Barbour, of " Medfield," suprouisar of this my last will and testament, desiring him, that he would be aiding and assisting to my executors in the execution thereof ; and I do hereby utterly revoke all other wills made by me at any time, with all gifts, legacies, whatever, by me at any time made ; and in token that this is my last will and testament, I have hereunto put my hand and seal this 18 of ye 4, 1669, in the presence of
HENRY LAYLAND, HOPESTILL LAYLAND.
NICHOLAS X WOOD, his mark, and scal .*
* He wrote when in health a fair hand, as did other Puritans whose wills were signed by a mark. The same could not be anciently said of all the nobility of England.
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Nicholas W. d. Feb. 7 1669-70 and his estate was inventoried 1. (12) 1669-70 at £1,049, consisting of real estate, 88 bus. of wheat at 4s. 6d. per bus., 60 do. of Indian corn at 4s. 4d. per bus. ; 12 oxen at £60 ; 4 horses and a colt at £15 ; 11 cows at £36; 12 young cattle at £24; 12 swine at £7 10s. ; 13 sheep and 3 lambs at £6 ; 2 carts and 2 tumbrels ; 7 sickles ; G scythes, hempbrake, &c. By Robert Badcock and Wm. Daniell of Milton, by Robert and Samuel Williams of Roxbury, and by others of Medfd. All debts, including £50 due to his wid. " by agreement upon marriage," and his funeral expenses, &c., amounted to £72 2s., leaving £978 18s., a large estate for his day.
He m. Mary (pr. Williams, ? and elder dg. of Dea. Robert W., of Roxb. ), who seems to have returned from D. to Roxb., for her first confinement, and whose reputed father and brother, Dea. Robert and Samuel Williams, were appointed appraisers of lands in R, acquired by her. She d. Feb. 19, 1662-3. He m. 2d, Anna -, pr. sis. or sister-in-law to Robert Badcock, of Milton, and do. to the wife of Henry Layland, of Sherborn. He had,
I. Mary, Dec. 25, 1642, at Roxb., m. John Thurston, of Medfd. ;
II. Sarah, b. also Dec. 25, 1642, m. Tho. Bass, Dea., Oct. 4, 1660, and d. Dec 29, 1678, at Braintree ;
III. Hannah, m. Dea. John Harding, of Medfield, Nov. 28, 1665;
Iv. Jona., Jan. 3, 1651, d. Feb. 21, 1675 -- 6, killed by Indians on the 2d bank of Charles R , opposite Death's bridge, m. - , and had only Silence, posthumous, b. in Bullard's fort the day after the massacre of her father ; and her mother expired a few hours after giving her birth. She m. John Holbrook, of S .;
v. Mehetabel, Jly. 22, '55, the first Anglo-American child ascertained to have been born in S., m. Oct. 17, 1671, Capt. Joseph Morse, from Medfd., who settled upon a part of the farm left by her father, and built where Welter Barbour rs. She d. Nov. 12, 1681 ;
VI. Abigail, Sep. 13, 1657; VII. Bethiah, Jly. 28, 1660 ;
VIII. Eleazer, May. 14, 1662, d. May 20, 1704, m. Dorotha -, pr. Badcock, fr. Milton, dg. of Geo. B. He fell beneath the tomahawk, by the side of his brother, in '75 -- 6 ; was scalped and left for dead, yet recovered. He was ever after depressed in mind, and " strange." He inherited a large landed estate, and lived near Maj. Goulding's. He had
I. Dorotha, who m. Capt. John Ware, senr., of Wrenth., Dec. 21, 1709, and d. pr. without issue ;
II. Hannah, b. Feb.11, 1688, m. Cpt. Joseph Ware, fr. W., Jan. 5, 1708, who first settled on the place left by her father ; was grd.mother of Henry Ware, sen., D. D., Harv. U., and gr grd. do. of Hon. Asher W., of Me. III. Abigail, Nov. 25, 1692, who m. Feb. 4, 1719 -- 20, Samuel Williams, of S., the s. of Isaac Williams, of Newton, b. 1692, and grd. s. of Isaac W., of Roxb. and N., and gr. grd s. of Dea. Robt. W., of R., her reputed 2d, or rather 3d cousin, and rm. to Marlboro'. She had, I. Eleazer Wood, Jan. 5, 1720-1, at S .;
II. Dorotha, Jly. 8, 1722, at S., and pr. others at Marlb.
Tapley Wyeth, M. D., grad. at H. U., 1786, and was M. M. S. S. He m. Sally Fisk, dg. of John F., of S., s. upon the Plain where Dea. Benoni Learned and his s. Capt. Edwd. L. had lived, and became an eminent physician and valuable citizen. He served 6 years as selectman, and repre- sented S. 1813, and was especially useful in the cause of education. He d. 1813, had, 1. Eliza Fisk, Jan. 21, 1799, d. unm .;
II. Lucy Cooledge, bap. June 17, 1804, rs. at the homestead.
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KEY TO THE MAP OF SHERBORN,
Showing the original grant and changes of the township prior to the incorporation of Framingham in 1701.
S. R., Sudbury River.
H. ch., Hopkinton 1st and 2d meeting-house.
F. cl., Framingham do.
N. ch., Natick, North do.
I. ch., Indian meeting-house.
M. M., Medfield 1st, 2d and 3d do.
E. M., E. Medway, 1st, 2d, and 3d do.
W. M., W. Medway, 1st do.
H. ch., Holliston, 1st and 2dl do.
S. M., Sherborn, 1st, 2d and 3d d ).
D. Dedham, now Bellingham and Dover.
W. Wrentham. now Franklin.
A. A., Medfield first grant.
B. B., Medfield second grant.
S. S., part of Natick first grant, given Sherborn for N. N.
H. II., Sherborn first grant.
M. Mendham corner taken out of Sherborn 1st grant.
N. N., given out of do. to Natick for S. S.
G. G., remainder of Sherhorn first grant.
X. Deer Brook.
7. Cold Spring Brook.
R. Cochituate Brook, and " Natick's land " added to S. 1695. Q. Sawin's Brook.
Y. Bogistow Brook and Pond.
WV. K., Washacum Pond.
V. Winnekening Lake.
C. L., Cochituate Lake.
F. L., Farm Lake.
T. Maggunkog Hill.
P. Pocassett Mountain. Jr. Jasper's Hill and Rock. k. and 1., where the first planters settled.
F. M., place first agreed on for the first meeting-honse.
NOTE .- The lands represented by this map were laid out by circumference, except B. B.
HISTORY OF SHERBORN.
Sherborn is situated between 17 and 22 miles of W. S. W. of Bos- ton, having Medway on the S., Holliston and Ashland on the W., Fra- mingham on the N., Natick on the N. and N. E., and Dover and Medfield on the E. From the two last S. is separated by Charles River. The township now contains about 10,000 acres, and her ex- treme length from N. to S. is six miles and thirty rods, and from E. to W. 4 miles and 154 rods.
The peninsula included between Concord and Charles Rivers,* and a line from Saxonville to S. Natick, across the centre of which the origi- nal township extended, and which now embraces Sherborn, Medway, Holliston, Hopkinton, and large portions of Bellingham, Milford, Ash- land, Framingham and Natick, was originally occupied by the Nipmuck Indians, and formed the S. E. part of their country. They were the first inland tribe with whom the English formed an acquaintance. When first reported to some from Plymouth in 1621, they were an independ- ent nation, governed by a squaw-sachem, who resided near Wachusett mountain. They possessed most of the present counties of Middlesex and Worcester. On the N. and W. their country is supposed to have extended still farther. In 1647 they had difficulty about a chief, and, in their anarchy, bands of them seem to have attempted the preservation of their nationality. Tradition favors the belief that one body of them set up for independence, and erected their Stannocks W. of the straits in Sherborn, and that, long after, in consequence of a dispute about the location of the S. End schor I-house, and of the secession of the WV. half of the district, and the erection of another school-house, the name was revived and applied in reproach to the new house, and at length to the whole of the new district. This band of the tribe are supposed to have had their principal residence at Mucksquit. Other portions of the nation also set up for independence, so that the Nip- mucks at one time had no less than five distinct chiefs. These divisions were probably a death-blow to their power and importance : for, "hav- ing no [single ] chief of their own, they were at liberty to unite with other tribes." Those of the S. W. united with the Narragansetts ; but those
* These rivers rise so near each other in the W. part of Hopkinton, that a snow bank on the intervening ridge might supply water for both fountains.
+ All Indian deeds to traets of this country were signed by members of that tribe, except a quit-elaim by Josias to Medfield, while including Medway. Josias' was the grandson of Chickatawbut, who resided on Neposet R., and was subject to Massa- soit, in 1621, while the Nipmueks seemed to have been independent. Both tribes at a later day were called the Massachusetts.
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HISTORY OF SHERBORN.
occupying our peninsula and further N. became the allies or subjects of the great Massasoit, and were induced by his son and successor, Philip, to join in his disastrous war upon the English.
Previous to this, Eliot had preached to them in their language, and very small congregations of them had been collected at Natick, Grafton, Hopkinton, Dudley, Marlboro' and Groton, most of whom re- lapsed, joined King Philip in the war of 1675, and miserably perished. The last body of them remaining together in force sufficient to cause alarms, resided in Rutland. Of the remainder, who professed to wel - come Christianity, enough has been written. How long they had inhab- ited here, cannot be conjectured. Throughout the peninsula have been discovered stone arrows, knives, hatchets, pestles, chisels, &c., attesting to the remote presence and barbarism of their predecessors. These have not been found equally dispersed. In some localities the greater number discovered point out the scenes of their encampments and battles ; and especially on the S. W. side of Winthrop's Lake, where they were gather- ed in such quantities by my great-grandfather and sons, as to induce the belief that one of the petty tribes, into which the Nipmucks finally divided, were located here when instruments of stone were dropped in exchange for those of iron and steel ; and that here stood the Indian town of Mucksquit .* After the grant of Medway to the proprietors of Medfield in 1650 and 1659, a body of the Nipmucks resided within its territory, and, notwithstanding the deed of Josias, of the Massachusetts tribe, acknowledging the grant of his grandfather Chickatawbut, and con- firming to Medfield her entire territory, it is highly probable the Nipmucks continued to claim all W. and N. of Charles River, and that their claim was at length partially acknowledged, though I have met with no In- dian deeds to prove it ; for a band of them resided in the unimproved part of M. in 1698, and probably later ; and such of them as finally re- tired to Natick, continued in their descendants, within my own recol- lection, to claim the right of cutting broomsticks and making basket-stuff in M. ; and I was told by my father, who was remarkably curious in such matters, and accurately informed in the history of Med., that " such was the agreement, and that neither he nor his neighbors had any right to forbid them." Thus, it is presumed, conflicting claims to M. were
"This name was applied as a term of reproach to the N. W. quarter of Medway, but by most of the early settlers, it was repudiated, pushed N. and E., and confined to a tract scarcely larger than my ancestor's farm. Several circumstances must have in- vited the Indian to pitch here rather than elsewhere on the peninsula. It was near its territorial centre, bordering on its largest and mnost central lake. Here is a S. E. declivity and several moraines that offered sheltered situations for his wigwams on the N. E .; the shore of the lake is here bold, and indented with narrow bays and inlets, to afford facilities for hunting and fishing, launching and loading his canoes ; here herring and shad, which then ascended to the place, were stopped ;- a few rods W. was an elevated ridge for watching the flight of game, and, on three sides, were natural mead- ows to attract it; and from this place, during vernal and autumnal floods, he could descend in his canoe to Bogistow pond and Charles River, through marshes and meadows teeming with fowl, or by the portage of his canoe, one-third of a mile W. he could glide down Wennakeening brook to the same river, and on its current visit l'opulatic pond, pass through the Broad meadows, land at Bogistow pond, pack home his game or, on the next flood, return by water.
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