Historic homes and places and genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Volume I, Part 71

Author: Cutter, William Richard, 1847-1918, ed
Publication date: 1908
Publisher: New York, Lewis historical publishing company
Number of Pages: 624


USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Historic homes and places and genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Volume I > Part 71


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(VI) Abijah Johnson, son of Captain Ben- jamin Johnson (5), was born in Woburn, June 13, 1745. Married, May 7, 1765, Mary Reed, daughter of George and Mary (Wood) Reed, of Woburn. He was located in the West School district, Woburn Second Parish, in 1791; was in Captain Walker's company at


Lexington in 1775; belonged to the Third Company in Woburn, Captain Timothy Winn in 1775; was corporal in Captain John Wood's company, Colonel Paul Dudley's regiment, at the battle of Bunker Hill. He was also in the Rhode Island campaign in 1778 under Cap- tain Dix. He died May 10, 1809, aged sixty- four, at Burlington, Massachusetts. Children: I. Martha, born February 28, 1767. 2. Milly. 3. Abijah, born July 20, 1769, mentioned be- low. 4. Mary, born July 8, 1772. 5. Asa, born November 25, 1774, of Rindge, New Hampshire; married, 1798, Sally Perry, who lived after his death in Westford. 6. Phebe, born April 4, 1776. 7. Luther, born Septem- ber 12, 1779. 8. Cyrus, born September 8, 1781. 9. Lucy, born August 4, 1785.


(VII) Abijah Johnson, son of Abijah John- son (6), was born in Burlington, Massachu- setts, July 20, 1769. He settled in Rindge, New Hampshire, in 1803, and died there October 2, 1819, very suddenly, while en- gaged in threshing grain. He was a prosper- ous farmer. Children: I. Lucy, born in New- ton, . Massachusetts, July 20, 1797, married (intention dated February 24, 1821, at Wal- tham) Joseph M. Dodge, of Newburyport, Massachusetts. 2. Rebecca, born September 16, 1798, at Little Cambridge, Massachusetts, died 1819. 3. Cyrus, born October 5, 1800, mentioned below. 4. William, born February 13, 1803, in Burlington, Massachusetts, mar- ried Sophia Gay. 5. Charity, born June 5, 1805, at Rindge, New Hampshire, married Mitchell; (second) Collier. 6. Phebe, born March 17, 1808, at Rindge, mar- ried Jonathan Perry, of Dover, Massachu- setts. 7. Augustus, born December 8, 1810, in Rindge, died unmarried; a mariner. 8. Eliza, born June 21, 1813, in Rindge, married, 1840, Asahel Davis. 9. Sophronia, born No- vember 9, 1815, in Rindge, married Ari Davis, and resided in Lowell, Massachusetts.


(VIII) Cyrus Johnson, son of Abijah Johnson (7), was born in Burlington, Massa- chusetts, October 5, 1800. He was educated in the public schools. He settled first at Pel- ham, New Hamphire. He married Septem- ber 23, 1823 (intention dated August 20, 1823), Harriet Tilden, at Waltham, Massa- chusetts. She was born October 9, 1801, and died at Lowell, Massachusetts, July 27, 1866. He learned the trade of carpenter in his youth and followed his trade until he engaged in business for himself as builder and contractor in Lowell, Massachusetts. He built many of the large structures in Lowell in the early days of the upbuilding of that town. He was


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a member of the Universalist church. He died in the prime of life, October 20, 1837, at Low- ell. Children of Cyrus and Harriet (Tilden) Johnson : I. William A., born January 24, 1825, mentioned below. 2. Joseph, born Feb- ruary 5, 1827, 3. Cyrus P., born March II, 1829. 4. Charles W., born April 17, 1831. 5. Andrew L., born August 6, 1833. 6. Horace D., born February 10, 1836, died Oc- tober 6, 1854. ,


(IX) William Augustus Johnson, son of Cyrus Johnson (8), was born January 24, 1825, at Pelham, New Hampshire, and was educated in the public schools of Lowell, Mas- sachusetts, where his father made his home when he was quite young. He was a traveling salesman for many years for the firm of Cutter & Walker, Lowell, Masachusetts. He was well known in business circles all through the New England states. He was a man of conspicuous ability and spotless integrity. He made his home in Lowell and commanded the utmost respect and confidence of his towns- men. He was a member of the Odd Fellows. He married, at Rumford, Maine, Lucy Adams Hutchins, December 22, 1846. She was born in Rumford, April 4, 1822. Children, born in Lowell: I. Coolidge Robbins, died in Illinois. 2. Harriet Adelpha, married Marcus Cole, of Lowell. 3. Lucy Ardena, married Nelson H. Wardwell, of Lowell. 4. Carrie Augusta, mar- ried H. H. Bennett, of Lowell. 5. Susan Abby, born in Lowell, Massachusetts, July 10, 1857, married (first) Fred Nelson Edgell and they had one son, Walter B. Edgell, cashier of the American Express Company at Salem, Massachusetts; Susan Abby (Johnson) Ed- gell married (second), June 1, 1904, Emory Francis Blodgett, of Lowell, superintendent of the Walter L. Parker Works, Lowell. 6. Rebecca Alice, married Walter L. Parker, of Lowell. 7. Clara Blanche.


Samuel Blanchard was BLANCHARD born in England in 1629, and was brought to New England when ten years old, settling in Charles Towne, Massachusetts Bay Colony, which originally included Malden, Woburn, Stoneham, Burlington and Somerville, with parts of Medford, Cambridge, Arlington and Reading, where he married and had four sons : Thomas, Joseph, Jonathan and John Blanchard. In 1672 he removed to Andover, where he died at the age of seventy-eight years, April, 1707.


(II) Thomas Blanchard, son of Samuel Blanchard, the immigrant, was born in


Andover in 1674, married and had five sons : Thomas, Joseph, Josiah, Nathaniel and Isaac Blanchard.


(III) Thomas Blanchard, son of Thomas Blanchard, was born in Andover in January, 1700, removed to Cambridge, where he mar- ried, and late in life returned to Andover, where he died November 25, 1779.


(IV) Aaron Blanchard, son of Thomas Blanchard, was born in Cambridge, July 27, 1740. Married Nellie Holt, January 5, 1762, and she died in Andover, May 5, 1778, leaving four sons and nine daughters. He married as his second wife Mrs. Mehitable Chase, Sep- tember 21, 1789, and two sons were born of this marriage. Aaron Blanchard died at Hartford, New York, October 28, 1801, and his widow died at Dracut, Massachusetts, January 3, 1820.


(V) Benjamin Blanchard, son of Aaron and Mehitable (Chase) Blanchard, was born in Andover, Massachusetts, January 1, 1793. Married Sarah N. Davidson, of Windham, Massachusetts. She was born in Windham, December 4, 1795, and died there April 23, 1843.


(VI) William Davidson Blanchard, son of Benjamin and Sarah N. (Davidson) Blan- chard, was born in Windham, Rockingham county, New Hampshire, March 4, 1823. He- attended the public school of Windham and Westford Academy, and on leaving school learned the manchinist's trade in the shops of the Lowell Machine Company, and after nine. years service as an employee in the shops became a contractor and continued his connec- tion with the company in that capacity for forty-four years. He invented the first iron planer, with four tools, and he made a two- foot rule which was submitted to the test of the London Standard, and was found exact .. He was elected to membership in the Middle- sex Mechanics' Association, of which he was a trustee for seven years. He is a trustee of the Mechanics' Savings Bank (which he or- ganized), serving for fifteen years, and is also vice-president of the same. His church affilia- tion is with the Kirk Street Congregational Church, and for eight years he was a member of the finance committee of the church. He is highly respected in Lowell, and esteemed as a man of strong character and sterling in- tegrity, as evidenced by the respectable posi- tions of trust which he acceptably filled. He served the city government of Lowell, by the will of the Republican party, of which he was an active member, his term of office extending from 1859 to 1862.


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Mr. Blanchard was married August 19, 1847, to Henrietta W., daughter of Samuel Rice, of Enfield, New Hampshire. Samuel Rice was graduated at Williams College, was a prominent lawyer of Grafton county, New Hampshire, for thirty years, and died at Low- ell, Massachusetts, October 10, 1839.


(VII) Annie Josephine Blanchard, daugh- ter and only child of William Davidson and Henrietta W. (Rice) Blanchard, was born in Lowell, Massachusetts, August 1, 1853. She was educated in the public schools of Lowell, and resided with her parents. She was promi- nent in school work in connection with the societies associated with charitable efforts undertaken by the Kirk Street Congregational Church of Lowell, of which her mother, Hen- rietta W. Blanchard, was an original member when the church was formed from the First Church, April 22, 1845. The Rev. Amos Blanchard ( 1807-1870) was called as the first pastor from his pastorship of the First Church, which he had served fourteen years (1831-1845), and was regularly installed pastor of the Fourth, afterwards Kirk Street Church, May 21, 1845, and served up to the time of his death, January 14, 1870. The charities distributed from this church for the first fifty-one years of its existence was $187,958.22, besides the unrecorded charities quietly distributed by the workers in the field of which no record exists.


Thomas Rowell, immigrant ROWELL ancestor, was born in Eng- land, and settled early at Sal- isbury, Massachusetts. He removed to Ips- wich and later to Andover, Massachusetts. He had land in the first division in Salisbury in 1640-41. He took the prescribed oath of fidelity in 1646. He was a commoner and was taxed at Salisbury in 1650; was of Ips- wich from 1652 to 1657, and of Andover in 1659. He and Thomas Pinder were appointed to build a prison house in 1652. He died May 8 or 27, 1662, in Andover. His will was dated February 24, 1650-51, and proved Sep- tember 30, 1662. His widow Margaret was appointed administrator, and June, 1681, his son Jacob was appointed in place of his mother. Rowell married (first) in England and his wife died there, being "sick in Eng- land" in 1641. He married (second), about 1651, Margaret Fowler, widow of Christopher Osgood, contracting February 24, 1650-51, to bring up her two sons and two daughters. His widow married (third), before July,


1670, Thomas Coleman, of Newbury and Nan- tucket ; and (fourth) Thomas Osborne, of Nantucket. She died in June, 1681, according to Pope. Children of Thomas Rowell: I. Valentine, mentioned below. 2. Jacob, born about 1652, married, April 29, 1690, Mary Younglove, who died April, 1692; (second), September 21, 169-, Elizabeth Wardwell, re- sided in Elizabethtown, New Jersey, in 1681 ; was in Ipswich, 1690-97; died February 18, 1700, at Ipswich; much younger than Valen- tine who was by the first wife.


(II) Valentine Rowell, son of Thomas Rowell (I), was born in England about 1620, resided at Salisbury and Amesbury, Massa- chusetts. He was a carpenter by trade, like his father. He married, November 14, 1643, Joanna Pinder, daughter of Henry, mentioned above. Rowell took the oath of fidelity in 1646; was townsman and taxed in 1650; one of the first eighteen settlers of Amesbury who signed an agreement and divided land 1654- 1662. He signed the petition of 1658. He died May 17, 1662. His widow Joanna was appointed administratrix of his estate, Octo- ber 14, 1662, and received land at Amesbury granted to the estate in 1668. She married (second), September 18, 1670, and (third), October 26, 1676, Bedad Currier. Children of Valentine and Joanna Rowell: I. Thomas, born September 7, 1644, married, September 8, 1670, Sarah Barnes. 2. John, born 1645- 46, died September 12, 1649. 3. Philip, born March 8, 1647-48, mentioned below. 4. Mary, born January 31, 1649-50, married, September 18, 1673, Thomas Frame. 5. Sarah, born November 16, 1651, married, October 26, 1676, Thomas Harvey. 6. Hannah, born January, 1653, married (first), September 16, 1674, Thomas Colby, and (second) Henry Blaisdell. 7. John, born November 15, 1655, died February 18, 1655-56. 8. Elizabeth, born August 10, 1657. 9. Margerite, born Septem- ber 8, 1659.


(III) Philip Rowell, son of Valentine Rowell (2), was born March 8, 1647-48, and resided in Amesbury. He was a shipwright by trade ; also kept an inn. He married, Janu- ary 5, 1670, Sarah Morrill, born October 14, 1650, daughter of Abraham and Sarah (Clement) Morrill. Rowell took the oath of fidelity in 1677; resided in Amesbury, Salis- bury and Nantucket. He signed a petition in 1680. He and two others with Captain Foot were killed by the Indians in 1690. The in- ventory of his estate is dated September 9, 1690 ; his widow apointed administratrix, Sep- tember 30, 1690. She had a controversy with


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Widow Hannah Foot, only daughter of Rich- ard Currier, heard by Major Pike, June 30, 1691. The Widow Rowell married (second), July 31, 1695, at Salisbury, Onesiphorus Page; (third), May 29, 1708, Daniel Merrill. Children of Philip and Sarah Rowell: I. Jacob, born January 19, 1671-72, married, December 1, 1693, Hannah Barnard. 2. Sarah, born March 3, 1673-74, married, April 6, 1693, Samuel Gould. 3. Thomas, born April 1, 1676, living in 1713. 4. Abra- ham, born about 1680, married, December 2, 1701, Mary 5. Job, mentioned below. 6. John, baptized April 30, 1699, married, March 2, 1714-15, Elizabeth Colby ; settled in Chester, New Hampshire, in 1732. 7. Hep- zibah, born March 26, 1687, died October 6, 1688. 8. Judith, born November 21, 1689, baptized April 30, 1699, married, May 5, 1715, John Gill.


(IV) Job Rowell, son of Philip Rowell (3), was born about 1682; baptized with sev- eral others of the family, April 30, 1699, at Salisbury. He was a soldier against the In- dians in 1703 in the Salisbury company, re- sided in Amesbury in 1708. He married (published August 7), 1705, Bethia Brown. He resided most of his life at Salisbury and was a weaver and farmer. His will dated May 4, was proved May 31, 1736, shortly after his death. Children: I. Elijah, born about 1706. 2. John, born about 1708. 3. Job, born about 1710, mentioned below. 4. Thomas, born about 1713. 5. Jemima, mar- ried Blake. 6. Keziah, married, Sep- tember 12, 1728, Orlando Colby. 7. Sarah, born October 4, 1719, married Edmund Saw- yer. 8. Elizabeth.


(V) Job Rowell, son of Job Rowell (4), was born about 1710 in Salisbury, Massachu- setts : settled in Goffstown and Hampstead, New Hampshire. He was in Goffstown in 1765. He built Rowell's Mills, now Hazel- line's, at Hampstead, east of the pond. He married Priscilla Emerson. Children -: I. Job, Jr., soldier in the Revolution. 2. Chris- topher, mentioned below. 3. Jonathan, sol- dier in Revolution. 4. Philip, settled in Con- cord, soldier in the Revolution, company of Captain Daniel Lawrence.


(VI) Christopher Rowell, son of Job Rowell (5), was born in Hampstead, New Hampshire, or vicinity, about 1740. He and his brothers Job and Philip settled in Con- cord, New Hampshire, about 1780. He was a soldier in the Revolution in the company of Captain Jesse Page, of Atkinson, Colonel


Jacob Gale, of Hampstead. He married Ruth . Morse. Children, born at Hampstead : I. Christopher, Jr., born August 22, 1769, men- tioned below. 2. John, born April 17, 1772. 3. Micajah, born May 6, 1774. 4. Hannah, born April 11, 1776. And probably others at Concord.


(VII) Christopher Rowell, son of Christo- pher Rowell (6), was born in Hampstead, August 22, 1769, baptized there September 17, 1769. He removed to Concord with his father's family, and about 1796 was the school teacher of that town then a small settlement. He married Child, Ira, born about 1800, mentioned below.


(VIII) Ira Rowell, son of Christopher Rowell (7), was born in Concord, New Hamp- shire, about 1800. He was educated in the common schools; was an active member of the First Parish Church and was deacon until 1829, when he joined the church of the West Parish. He was active in the temperance movement when a young man, and was one of the executive committee of a temperance society organized in Concord, April 8, 1830. When the Northern Railroad built its tracks at Concord the current of the Merrimac river was diverted somewhat from its course and some valuable land ruined. He was appoint- ed by the town with others a committee to take action in the matter, in 1851. He served on the board of selectmen and held various town offices; he was a prominent citizen, and was a farmer. He married, April 9, 1828, Re- becca Kimball, whose lineage is: Rebecca (7), Edward (6), Samuel (5), Samuel (4), David (3), Benjamin (2), Richard (I). She was born at Pembroke, New Hampshire, January 4, 1802, died December 13, 1871. Children : 1. William Kimball, born November 9, 1829, died November 22, 1886; graduate of Dartmouth, 1885; taught school at Peacham, New Hampshire, Oakland, California, and be- came principal of the Boys' Latin School of San Francisco; married (first) Mary Augusta Flint, of Campton, New Hampshire, and had six children; married (second), April 25, 1861, Helen Maria Tenney, of Chester, New Hamp- shire. 2. Elizabeth, born September 30, 1832, died January 16, 1844. 3. Edward Thomas, born August 14, 1836, mentioned below. 4. James, born May 16, 1838, married, June 21, 1866, Mary Ann Fiske; treasurer of the Mer- rimac Company in 1876 and 1877; superin- tendent of streets of Concord. 5. Christopher I., died June 3, 1849. 6. Mary C., resided at Concord and served on the board of educa-


I. T. Powell


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tion. 7. Rebecca, born September 3, 1843, married Andrew Sherburne Farnum, of West Concord, and had three children.


(IX) Edward Thomas Rowell, son of Ira Rowell (8), was born at Concord, August 14, 1836, and died at Lowell Massachusetts, August 4, 1899. He was brought up on his father's farm, and attended the public schools of his native town where he fitted for college. He graduated at Dartmouth with the class of 1861, and within four weeks afterward had enlisted in the Union army as a private in the Fifth New Hampshire Volunteer Regiment. Before his regiment was ready to leave the state he was commissioned second lieutenant of Company F, Second Regiment, Berdan's United States Sharpshooters; subsequently being promoted to captain of the company and major of his regiment. He was commis- sioned lieutenant-colonel, but on account of the reduced numbers of his regiment through losses in the service, the rules of the army prevented his being mustered in. Major Pow- ell's regiment during its entire term of service was with the Army of the Potomac. He took part in various skirmishes and battles, and was wounded in the battle of Gettysburg and again seriously wounded in the battle of Fredericksburg, where he was in command of his regiment in action.


After the war Major Rowell returned to his home in Concord, and in 1866 engaged in the iron business in Portland, Maine. In Septem- ber, 1867, he came to Lowell and with George A. Marden, who was a college classmate, and had served during the war in Berdan's United States Sharpshooters, purchased the Lowell Daily Courier and Lowell Weekly Journal, and these newspapers were published by the firm of Marden & Rowell for exactly twenty-five years. The business was then transferred to a corporation, the Lowell Courier Publishing Company, with Mr. Marden, president, and Mr. Rowell, treasurer. In December, 1894, the Lowell Courier Publishing Company and the Citizen Newspaper Company were con- solidated under the corporate name of Courier-Citizen Company. Of the new cor- poration Mr. Rowell became president, and Mr. Marden editor-in-chief of the newspaper published under the name of Courier-Citizen.


Major Rowell was appointed postmaster of the city of Lowell in1874 by President Grant and re-appointed four years later by Presi- dent Hayes. He was re-appointed and held office until the first administration of Presi- dent Cleveland when a Democrat succeeded him. In 1885 he was appointed state gas com-


missioner by Governor George D. Robinson, and held that position five years. In 1890 Major Rowell was elected president of the Railroad National Bank of Lowell. He was commander of Post 42, Grand Army of the Republic, for three years. He was secretary of the Middlesex North Agricultural Society for more than twenty years, and was secretary also of the New England Agricultural So- ciety. He had a lively interest in all things pertaining to the farm and farming. For many years he was trustee of the Ayer (Massachusetts) Home for Young Women and Children, and was Treasurer of the Low- ell General Hospital. Major Rowell was a man of varied gifts and remarkabe ability, up- right and honorable in business relations, in- fluential in public affairs, of spotless character and reputation. He filled many difficult posi- tions well. For many years he was a potent force in the Republican party in northern Massachusetts. His personality was extremely attractive, and he enjoyed the friendship of all the leading men of his city and in fact of the whole state for many years.


He married, September 8, 1870, Clara S. Webster, daughter of George and Sarah B. (Shepherd) Webster, of Lowell. She had a brother William. Two of their three children died of scarlet fever in 1880. Children: I. Sarah Webster, born October 8, 1875, died May 19, 1880. 2. Edward Webster, born No- vember 29, 1878, died May 22, 1880. 3. Clara Alice, born August 8, 1881, resides at home with her mother.


Thomas Wilder, the immigrant WILDER ancestor of the Wilders of New England, appeared first in America in the town of Charlestown, Middle- sex county, Massachusetts Bay Colony, where he was a proprietor as early as 1638, and was admitted as a freeman June 2, 1641. He mar- ried, and purchased land in the town in 1643. His wife Ann was admitted to the choral May 2, 1650, and died in Lancaster, June 10, 1692. He appears to have lived in Charlestown up to 1659, when he went through the wilderness to the newly organized town of Lancaster, Wor- cester county, which had been established on common land called Neshaway, May 13, 1653, but was not given the full privilege of a town until May 7, 1673, six years after the death of the immigrant settler, and it was left to his descendants to defend the place from the In- dians during the King Philip war, 1675-76, and against the French and Indians in the


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summer of 1704, when his third son, Lieu- tenant Nathaniel Wilder (1650-1704), was killed by the Indians. The English ancestors of Thomas Wilder settled in Berkshire, Eng- land, on land granted to chief Nicholas Wilder by Henry VII in 1485; and the property pre- viously known as the Sulham estate remained in the Wilder family for over four hundred years. Nicholas Wilder was a chief in the army of the Earl of Richmond, who succeeded Richard III, killed at the battle of Bosworth Field, August 27, 1485, and was crowned by Lord Stanley as Henry VII, the ceremony taking place on an elevation afterwards known as Crown Hill on the battlefield. When Henry VII gave him the Sulham estate he also gave him a coat-of-arms, which is the rightful property of all of his descendants. Thomas Wilder descended from this honored warrior chief through: John (I), John (2), Thomas and his wife Martha, made a widow by his death in Shiplock, Oxfordshire, Eng- land, in 1632. The Widow Wilder with her daughter Mary followed his two sons, Ed- ward and Thomas, to New England, taking passage in the ship "Confidence" that landed in Boston in 1638. She settled near her son Edward who had located at Hingham, mar- ried Elizabeth Ames and who died October 28, 1690, without issue. Thomas and Ann Wilder had six children : Mary, born June 30, 1642. Thomas, born September 14, 1644. John, born 1646. Elizabeth, born 1648. Na- thaniel, born November 3, 1650. Ebenezer. He was a selectman of the town of Lancaster, 1660-67, and died October 23, 1667. '


(II) Nathaniel Wilder, third son


of Thomas, the immigrant, and Ann Wilder, was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts Bay Col- ony, November 3, 1650. He married Mary Sawyer, of Lancaster, Worcester county, daughter of Thomas and Mary Sawyer. He was lieutenant in the militia of the town which included every able-bodied man competent to bear arms and which engaged in a fight with the French and Indians who had attacked the settlement ; he was killed by an Indian in July, 1704. The children of Nathaniel and Mary (Sawyer) Wilder were: Nathaniel, born in 1675, who lived in Petersham. Ephraim, born 1678, representative from Lancaster in the general court of the colony. Mary, born 1679. Elizabeth, born 1685, died 1707. Jonathan, born 1686, married and was killed by the In- dians in 1707. Dorothy, born 1686, married Samuel Coates. Oliver (q. v.).


(III) Oliver Wilder, youngest child and fourth son of Nathaniel and Mary (Sawyer)


Wilder, was born in Lancaster, Massachu- setts, in 1694, and was married in 1713 to Mary, daughter of Jonathan Fairbanks, a sol- dier in the King Philip's war, and his wife Deborah, daughter of Edward Shepard, both Cambridge immigrants who arrived in Massa- chusetts Bay Colony, May 10, 1643, and had thirteen children. Oliver Wilder with his brother Nathaniel were working on their father's farm in 1710 and they were attacked by the Indians. In 1707 their brother Jona- than had been cruelly tortured by the Indians and their brother Ephraim severely. In this instance Oliver and Nathaniel managed to es- cape but their Indian companion, a servant of the family who was working with them in the field, was killed. Oliver was an ensign in the militia from August 23, 1725, and he was promoted through successive ranks to colonel, and in 1757, when sixty-three years of age, he turned out with his regiment at the news of the massacre at Fort William Henry, Lake George, 1757, and marched to the relief as far as Springfield, when the need of assistance had passed he returned with the regiment to Worcester county. He, however, joined the expedition to Ticonderoga and Crown Point in 1759. He was moderator of town meeting and a selectman of the town of Lancaster. Colonel Wilder died in South Lancaster, Mas- sachusetts, March 16, 1765. The children of Colonel Oliver and Mary (Fairbanks) Wilder were: Hannah, Mary, Oliver, Tilley, Keziah, Tamar, Phineas, Lois, Moses and Abigail Wilder.




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