USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Historic homes and places and genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Volume IV > Part 65
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(II) John Wood, son of Thomas Wood (I), was born at Rowley, Massachusetts, Septem- ber 2, 1656. He married Isabel Hazen, daughter of Edward Hazen, of Rowley. They
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lived in that part of Rowley set off as Brad- ford. He was a farmer. Children, born at Rowley: 1. John, born January 20, 1680, died young. 2. Hannah, born January 20, 1681- 82, married, July 14, 1702, Amos Bailey. 3. John, born February 13, 1683-84, removed to Bradford and joined the church there June 25, 1710. 4. Priscilla, born August 27, 1686. 5. Edward, born September 7, 1689, men- tioned below. 6. Thomas, born November 7, 1691. 7. Samuel, born November 18, 1693. 8. Joseph, born May 5, 1696. 9. Ebenezer, born September 18, 1698. 10. Bethiah, born January 19, 1702. II. Richard, born January 20, 1705-06.
(III) Edward Wood, son of John Wood (2), was born September 7, 1689, at Rowley, Massachusetts. He was one of the founders of the town of Bradford. As the farms were laid out from the river to the Rowley line, the first grantees were in order; beginning at the east: Joseph Richardson, Jonas Platts, John Hopkinson, Joseph Bailey, Edward Wood, mentioned above, Benjamin Savory, William Hutchins, Ezra Raolfe, Samuel Ten- ney, Francis Jewett, Samuel Wooster and about as many more to the westward. Ed- ward Wood married, December 23, 1713, at Newbury, Mary Spofford, of Newbury. Child, born at Bradford: Ebenezer, born about 1725, mentioned below.
(IV) Ebenezer Wood, son of Edward Wood (3), was born about 1725 in Bradford. He was a prominent citizen of his native town and held various town offices. He was a farmer. He married, May 24, 1749, Sarah Stickney, who was born October 27, 1728, daughter of Thomas and Mary (Millikin) Stickney. Her father, Thomas, was born at Bradford, June 29, 1715, married (first) Mary Millikin, daughter of Robert and Rebecca. Her mother was born September 26, 1692, and died March 2, 1732. Stickney married (second) Dorothy Monroe, widow of Daniel Monroe, of Lexington; Thomas Stickney was prominent in public life; lieutenant of the mi- litia company, selectman 1737-40-47-58; he was the son of Samuel who was born at Row- ley, July 2, 1663, and baptized April 4, 1675; married Mary Hazeltine, born April 30, 1672, daughter of Abraham and Elizabeth (Lang- horne) Hazeltine; was selectman in 1686-87- 89-1701-03 and held many other offices; died December 30, 1714. The father of Samuel Stickney was Samuel, Sr., born in England in 1633; married in Rowley, April 18, 1653, Ju- lia Swan, and (second), April 6, 1674, Pru- dence (Leaven) Gage; was admitted a free-
man October II, 1682; was called lieutenant on the records in 1691; died 1709. Samuel Stickney, Sr., was the son of the immigrant ancestor, Thomas Stickney, who was proba- bly son of William Stickney, of Frampton, England, and baptized there December 30, 1558; married Margaret Peirson ; grandson of Robert Stickney, who died in England in 1582.
(V) Amos Wood, son of Ebenezer Wood (4), was born in Tewksbury, Massachusetts, April 7, 1756. He was a soldier in the Revo- lution from Tewksbury in 1778 and was granted a pension when he was seventy-six years old. According to the government re- port of Revolutionary pensioners, published in 1840, he was living at that time in Dracut with his son, Micajah Wood, at the advanced age of eighty-five years, one of the eight pensioners surviving in that town. He was a farmer in Tewksbury during his active life. He married Mercy Whiting. Children: I. Samuel, born June 9, 1786, mentioned below. 2. Micajah, resided in Dracut. 3. Mercy. (VI) Samuel Wood, son of Amos Wood (5), was born in Tewksbury, Massachusetts,. June 9, 1786, and died in Lowell, June I, 1874. He attended the public schools and helped his father on the farm during his youth. He went to live with his uncle, Phin- eas Whiting, in 1802, and was clerk in his store until 1808. Then he went to Boston and became the proprietor of a restaurant or "victualling cellar" in front of Faneuil Hall, in partnership with Josiah Wood. From thence he went to Quincy, Massachusetts, where he kept a general store with a stock of hardware, groceries and dry goods. One of his customers there was Hon. John Quincy Adams, president of the United States.
Samuel Wood kept a general store for five years .near the navy yard, Lowell, and then went into the produce business, buying ap- ples, butter, eggs and other produce in Low- ell, together with shad and salmon from the river fishermen, carted them to the Boston markets and on his return trips brought freight of various kinds to Lowell. In the course of his business he brought to Lowell the first tierce of oil and the first bale of cot- ton used in the mills of Lowell. His uncle, Phineas Whiting, and Josiah Fletcher, built a small wooden mill on the Concord river where the Upper Middlesex Mill now is and they leased it to John Goulding and Jonathan Knowles to manufacture cotton and woolen yarns. Thomas Hurd, of Charlestown, final- ly began the manufacture of satinets there.
SAMUEL N. WOOD
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Ten pieces of cloth were manufactured a week at first; but later when Mr. Hurd had added a brick mill to his plant the output was increased to two hundred pieces a week. These goods were conveyed to Boston every week in long rolls piled up like so much cord wood on his wagons. This work for Mr. Hurd was the entering wedge, the opening for the trucking business developed by Mr. Wood as Lowell grew into a great center of industry. He became the owner of a freight line to Boston and had the business of all the mills until the railroad made his business no longer profitable or possible. During the summer he made use of the Middlesex canal, which was also put out of commission by the Boston & Lowell railroad. In winter he had great eight-horse teams for his business. An old contract of his shows that the freight to Boston on the canal was a dollar per long ton for cotton and more for certain other goods, such as coal and lumber. In December, 1821, Mr. Wood occupied his new house which stood where the Donovan Brick Block now stands, on Central street, Lowell; and a fine show of business was made by his great wagons stalled along the sides of the road. The early Congregational meetings of the town were held in his house, and the first Methodist church was organized there. The Baptists, Congregationalists and the Univer- salists all had their places of meeting in the vicinity and hence the name of Chapel Hill. When the railroad was built Mr. Wood brought eighteen carloads of cotton over it, the first brought by rail to Lowell. After giving up his trucking business he started in the grain and feed business in a store on Cen- tral street, later removing to Market street, and continued until he retired from active life. He was a man of great business ability, high character and large influence in his day. He was an Old Line Whig in politics, and a Congregationalist in religion. He married (first), in 1809, Harriet Ansart, daughter of General Ansart, of Dracut. While they were living at Quincy she fell ill of consumption and he returned to Dracut where January 2, 1813, she died. He married (second) Pa- tience Kendall, a native of Tewksbury, who died in Lowell in 1830. He married (third) in Lowell, 1831, Julia Morrill, who was born in 1806. Children of Samuel and Harriet Wood: Two died young. Children of Sam- uel and Patience Wood: 3. Harriet, born 1816. 4. Mary, born 1818. 5. Samuel Newell, born June 16, 1821, mentioned below. 6. Eliza, born 1823. 7. William H., born
1825. 8. Edward, born 1827, died young. 9. Hannah, died young. Children of Samuel and Julia Wood: 10. Julia E., born 1833. II. Edward B., born 1837.
(VII) Samuel Newell Wood, son of Samuel Wood (6), was born in Dracut, Massachu- setts, June 16, 1821. The family removed to Lowell or East Chelmsford, as it used to be known, in 1821, and he attended the public schools in Dracut. When a school house was erected in Chelmsford street in Lowell, he and his sister Harriet used to go to it through the pastures which then stretched from Chapel Hill all the way without a house or a break of any kind to the school house. There was a brook where the jail is now located, and this stream offered one of the difficulties of the "short cut," while various animals at pastur- age constituted the other danger in the daily trip on the paths of learning where now the homes and workshops of a busy city stand. His father wished him to study for the min- istry and for a time he studied under Rev. Theodore Edson, a good friend of his, whom he heard deliver his first sermon at East Chelmsford. But the youth was not destined for a preacher; he completed his education at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, in 1837, and turned to a mercantile career. Mr. Wood is one of the oldest alumni of "Phillips-Andover."
He was apprenticed to Wilson & Bancroft, grocers, who had their store in Market street, Lowell. His wages were fifty dollars for the first year; sixty the second; eighty the third and a hundred the fourth year-with board of course. His employer was so appreciative of his services that at the end of the appren- ticeship he presented the boy with a hundred dollars extra. He continued in the employ of the same firm for five hundred dollars a year, without board, a large salary at that time. He left Wilson & Bancroft to engage in the same line of business on his own ac- count in partnership with Marshall Hem- mingway in a grocery store on Central street, under the firm name of Wood & Hemming- way, but after about five years sold his inter- ests to his partner, and joined his father in the grain business on Market street, succeeding to the business about a year later, when his father retired. In 1862 he built a stone grist mill in Whipple's yard, but sold it after a time to the Sterling Mills. Mr. Wood con- tinted in the wholesale grain business with success and enjoyed a large and flourishing trade until, on account of advancing age, he retired some years ago from active business.
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He admitted his son to partnership in 1868 and in 1882 sold out to him. He resides in the dwelling house on Central street owned by his father, and for the past twenty-five years has been occupied only with the care of his real estate and other property. He has a large farm at Billerica, in which he takes great pleasure.
In early life Mr. Wood was a Whig like his father. When the Republican party came into being he and most of the Whig party in this vicinity, joined the new organization. He served the city of Lowell in 1864 in the Com- mon council. He is prominent in the finan- cial world, and is a director of the First Na- tional Bank of Lowell, a trustee of the Cen- tral Savings Bank. He is the oldest Odd Fellow in the city, a member of Oberlin Lodge, and of Wannalancet Encampment. He is an active and faithful member of High Street Congregational Church. When a young man he was for a number of years quartermaster-sergeant under Colonel Ban- croft.
The Courier-Journal published in a recent issue an interesting column of reminiscences, from which we quote: "It is called-not by courtesy-Back Central Street. . Why Back, for it, is back of nothing; it is central all the way to Davis's Corner * * Back indeed! Was it not the first in social and religious matters? * * Mr. Samuel Newell Wood has lived for eighty-five years in that neighbor- hood, and knows the history of every house and every resident there. When a lad he went to the Centre Church in Dracut with his father, went across by the Bradley Ferry and walked out the tree-shaded road to . the church. One day his father met Gus Fox walking that way and invited him to ride. But Gus was "stuffy" and gruffly declined theinvi- tation; whereupon Mr. Wood said with a meaning emphasis: "I'd like to have the bringing-up of that lad." Sometimes they went to Pawtucket church, to the old church with its high-backed pews and its sounding board. There was a bridge across the stream then, the only bridge hereabouts, a narrow, shaky structure; and the men were wont to catch salmon in the rapids below.
"The mills were just sprouting into being, and the hum of the wheels was stirring the rural air with the susurrus of industry. There was a swamp in Middle street, and Mr. Wood used to gather high-bush blueberries in Ty- ler street. Belvidere was then a houseless waste; and Zadoc Rogers was pestered by boys who invaded his orchards with looting
intent. They buried the dead in Belvidere. Fishing was sometimes more than a name in those days. Oliver Whipple used to make powder on the banks of the Concord river. Sulphur was necessary to the manufacture of powder; and this sulphur gave Mr. Wood his first taste of commercial practice. The tinder box was then the only means to secure fire. It was discovered that sticks dipped in sul- phur were a ready adjunct to the tinder box, so young Wood used to get blocks of wood at any building in course of construction, split them into sticks, and with the sulphur pro- cured at Whipple's Mills, he had the material all ready for match making. He melted the sulphur in the kitchen stove, dipped the sticks into the fluid and had the matches ready for sale. He filled a basket and peddled them after school hours and with such success that he was enabled to lend his father thirty dol- lars, for which he still holds his father's note in hand, not as a note, but simply as a me- mento of early days.
"Later came the friction match, a crude affair with a black head. Young Wood thought it was blackened with powder; so he secured some one day from the powder works, and during the family's absence he tried the experiment with disaster to the stove, but fortunately for himself he escaped injury in the explosion, al- though his match-making was done to death by the uproar. * * His boyhood playmates were Gus Fox, Ad Putnam and Bill Waugh. What times those boys did have in the open spaces everywhere; the streets were but cow- paths, and there was an uproar of canal dig- ging and of mill building which gave an ex- tra zest to living. * * Amos, Samuel N. Wood's grandfather, was a Revolutionary soldier, and was granted a pension in his sev- enty-sixth year; and it used to be the priv- ilege of young Wood in his twelfth year to drive his grandfather to Boston to draw his pension, and drive him home again all in one day; for horses were horses in those ante-mo- bile days.
"The Acre was famous because of its turbu- lency : and there were half-rates via canal to Charlestown the day Daniel Webster delivered his oration at Bunker Hill. All the men who were anybody were firemen, and the Chapel Hill company in common with the other com- panies used to fine members who were absent at roll call after a fire; and then once a year the fines were expended in feasting at French & Hersey's Cellar in the building which stood where the Appleton Block now stands. Mer- ry times were these, despite their simplicity.
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"When Tippecanoe was a candidate for the presidency, Lowell was ablaze with enthusi- asm. There were parades and orations; but the glory of the campaign was the Harrison Glee Club of which Isaac Metcalf was the di- rector and Theodore Metcalf, who sang bass, Benjamin Walker and S. N. Wood were among the members. There were Whigs, Free Soilers and Loco Focos, and each vot- er's name was recorded in a book, together with the complexion of his vote. Mr. Wood has many mementoes of the old days, none more significant, however, than a bill of John Lewis, the colored barber, who kept shop op- posite the Washington House, for "shaving for one year, $4."
Mr. Wood married, January 31, 1843, Ma- ria Gray, of Wilton, New Hampshire. He married (second), November 18, 1845, Laura J. Hyde, of Oxford, Connecticut. She was born in 1826 and died in 1856. He married (third) Mrs. Emma B. Dudley, of Epsom, New Hampshire. She died in 1862. Child of Samuel N. and Maria Wood: I. Edward N., born 1845, succeeded his father in the grain business established by his grandfather, Samuel Wood. Children of Samuel N. and Laura J. Wood: 2. Laura B., deceased. 3. Homer H., born 1849, deceased. 4. Fred- erick, born 1852, deceased. 5. Anna M., born 1854, married Charles W. Gay. Child of Samuel N. and Emma B. Wood : 6. Em- ma J., born 1862.
RICHARDSON Samuel Richardson, one of .the three noted broth- ers Richardson who were among the earliest settlers of Woburn, Massachusetts, baptized at West Mill, county Herts, England, December 22, 1602 or 1604, died in Woburn, March 23, 1658. He was son of Thomas and Katherine (Durford) Richardson, of West Mill, who were married August 24, 1590. He was second in age of the three brothers, Ezekiel, Samuel and Thomas, and the last of the three to come to New Eng- land. His wife Joanna, surname unknown, probably died in 1678. She was living as late as December 10, 1677, when she is mentioned as receiving fifty-five acres of land at a meet- ing of the proprietors held on that date. Her will dated 20th 4th '66, mentions sons John, Joseph, Samuel and Stephen; and daughters, Elizabeth and Mary Mousall. Elizabeth and Mary married brothers, sons of Ralph Mousall, of Charlestown, Elizabeth marrying John, and Mary marrying Thomas Mousall.
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Samuel Richardson was executor of his father's will, in England, dated March 4, 1630, and inherited his mother's part of his father's estate. The will was presented at court in 1634 by Samuel Richardson. Samuel was married before he left West Mill, and two of his children were baptized there-Samuel (1633) and Elizabeth (1635). It was after 1635 that he and his brother Thomas sailed for New England. In 1636 he located in Charles- town. He was a selectman of Woburn, 1644- 46, 1649-1651, and has name appears on the first tax list of Woburn in 1645. He was one of the signers of Woburn town orders of 1640. He released certain lands, with his brothers, to the inhabitants of Woburn in 1644, and helped found the first church of Woburn in 1642. His estate was located on the "Rich- ardson Row Road" of early times, and an estate known a century ago as the Job Miller estate, on present Washington street, in the present limits of the town of Winchester, was the more modern equivalent.' This estate de- scended in a direct line from Samuel (I) to Samuel (2), thence to Jonathan (3), and thence to Jonathan (4) Richardson. The last Jonathan bequeathed it to his niece, Sarah Miller, wife of Job Miller, Jonathan (4) Richardson, who was born in Woburn, had lived elsewhere during a part of his life, and returning in his latter days to Woburn, died in his native town October 31, 1798. Job Miller that year occupied the house, which was a very old one at that time, thirty-six by eighteen feet in lateral dimensions, and two stories high. The adjoining farm contained fifty acres. The family of Samuel (2) Richardson was attacked by Indians on this place, April 10, 1676, and three of the family were killed. The father was at work on the afternoon of that day, with a young son for company, in his field. He noticed a commotion at the house, and hasten- ing there found his wife Hannah and his son Thomas had been attacked and slain by a band of skulking Indians, so called, who after robbing some gardens of linen articles, at Cam- bridge, had on their retreat performed this mischief and slaughter. A further search re- vealed the fact that his infant daughter Han- nah had also been killed. Her nurse had fled with her in her arms, in the direction of a neighboring garrison house, and being closely pursued by the Indians, in order to save her- self, she dropped the child, which the Indians despatched. The father pursued the Indians with a rallying party, and coming upon them seated beside a swamp in the woods, the party shot at them, and hit one of them, fatally, as
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the body was found afterwards, in the woods buried under leaves where his associates had laid him. The fact of his being wounded was proved by traces of blood which were found in the woods from the point where he was first after he was shot; and at this place the In- dians left behind a bundle of linen in which was found wrapped up the scalps of one or more of their victims. The Smith place rep- resents the original estate of Job Miller. Prince avenue traverses the original Samuel Richard- son estate. The estate of the first Samuel extend- ed from the present tracks of the Boston & Maine. Railroad, near Nathaniel A. Richardson's house, to the Stoneham and Winchester town line ; the homestead being on the estate known to many of the present generation as the Josiah F. Stone place. A part of the lands now . . owned by Nathaniel A. Richardson were in- cluded in the original estate. The Miller house was built by the second Samuel, but the first Samuel is supposed to have lived on the other side of the present Washington street, and op- posite to the Miller place. His house stood in a little valley, and disappeared before the year 1800. Children of Samuel Richardson : I. Samuel, baptized at West Mill, Herts, Eng- land, July 3, 1633. 2. Elizabeth, baptized at West Mill, Herts, England, May 22, 1635, married John Mousall, of Charlestown; died at Charlestown, August 16, 1685. 3. Mary, : baptized at Charlestown, February 25, 1637- 38, married Thomas Mousall, of Charlestown .. 4. John, baptized at Charlestown, November 12, 1639, married (first), October 22, 1658, Elizabeth Bacon; married (second), October 28, 1672, Mary Pierson; married (third-) Margaret Willing. 5. Hannah, born at Wo- burn, March 8, 1641-42, died April 8, 1642. 6. Joseph, born July 27, 1643, married, No- vember 5, 1666, Hannah Green. 7. Samuel, born May 22, 1646, see forward. 8. Stephen, born August 15, 1649, married January 2, 1674-75, Abigail Wyman. 9. Thomas, born December 31, 1651, died September 27, 1657.
(II) Samuel Richardson, son of Samuel Richardson (I), born at Woburn, May 22, 1646, died there April 29, 1712, aged sixty-six years. He married (first) Martha ; she died December 20, 1673. He married (second), September 20, 1674, Hannah Kings- ley ; she was slain with her only child, an in- fant, by Indians, April 10, 1676. He married (third), Phebe Baldwin, born September 7, 1654, died October 20, 1679, daughter of Dea- con Henry and Phebe (Richardson) Baldwin, of Woburn. He married (fourth), September 8, 1680, Sarah Hayward, daughter of Na-
thaniel Hayward, of Malden; she died, his widow, October 14, 1717, aged sixty-two years. He was a soldier in King Philip's war, 1675, and resided on a farm on Richardson Row, sometimes called the Miller farm, where on April 10, 1676, his wife and two of his children were killed by Indians, as before stated. His will, dated 1710, (proved 1712) names wife Sarah, sons Samuel, Zachariah, Ebenezer, Eleazer, David, Thomas, and Jon- athan, and daughters Elizabeth Wyman, Sarah Richardson and Hannah Pratt. Children by first wife : I. Samuel, born November 5, 1670, see forward. 2. Thomas, born Novem- ber 5, 1670, killed by Indians, April 10, 1676. 3. Elizabeth, born about 1672, married, No- vember 23, 1687, Jacob Wyman. 4. Martha, born December 20, 1673, died November 9, 1677. Child .by second wife: 5. Hannah, born April, 1676, killed by Indians, April IO, 1676. Child by third wife: 6. Zachariah, born November 21, 1677, married, February 14, 1699-1700, Mehitable Perrin. Children by fourth wife: 7. Thomas, born August 18, 1681, died September 9, 1681. 8. Sarah, born August 20, 1682, married William Chub. 9. Thomas, born September 25, 1684, married, September 29, 1715, Rebecca Wyman. IO, Ebenezer, born March 15, 1686-87. II. Son, born August 17, 1689, died same day. 12. Hannah, born August II, 1690, married Pratt. 13. Eleazer, born February IO, 1692-93. 14. Jonathan, born July 16, 1696, married, about 1720, Abigail Wyman. 15. David, born April 14, 1700, married (first), May 21, 1724, Esther Ward ; married (second), October 19, 1726, Remember Ward ; married (third), Abigail Holden.
(III) Samuel Richardson, son of Samuel Richardson (2), born at Woburn, November 5, 1670, died September 3, 1754, aged eighty- four (gravestone). Married (first), January 6, 1703-04, Susanna Richardson, born August 5, 1684, died August 6, 1726 (gravestone), daughter of John and Susanna (Davis) Rich- ardson. Married (second) Esther
she died in 1764. . He was a selectman of Wo- burn for eleven years between 1717 and 1736, representative to the general court two years, I732-33. His will, 1747, mentions wife Esther, and sons Thomas and Zachariah, who inherited his Woburn estate. Children, all by first wife: I. Samuel, born September 15, 1704, see forward. 2. Thomas, born Novem- ber 19,'1706; see sketch. 3. Ebenezer, born January 18, 1708-09, died February 24, 1708- 09. 4. Uriah, born June 30, 1710, married Miriam Green. 5. Susanna, born November
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3, 1713, married, November 16, 1738, Eben- ezer Fosket, of Stoneham. 6. Elizabeth, born December 4, 1715, married, February 28, 1739- 40, Joseph Upham, of Malden. 7. Zachariah, born May 21, 1720, married, May 10, 1744, Phebe Wyman. 8. Martha, born March 22, 1723, died January 16, 1723-24. -
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