USA > Massachusetts > Worcester County > Sutton > History of the town of Sutton, Massachusetts, from 1704 to 1876, including Grafton until 1735, Millbury until 1813 and parts of Northbridge, Upton and Auburn > Part 45
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 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70
William5 (Josiah+, Josiah3, Jonas2, William1), m. Sarah Waters, Mar. 28, 1792. Ch .- 1, Alvan, b. Apr. 27, 1793; 2, Sally, b. May 7, 1795; m. June 1, 1820, Nehemiah Chase; 3, Cyrus, b. Nov. 22, 1797; d. July 31, 1817.
Jonas4 (Josiah3, Jonas2, William1), m. Hannah Hicks, Oct. 30, 1755. Ch .- 1, Hannah, b. Mar. 13, 1757; m. Abel Chase, Sept. 24, 1779; 2, Esther, b. Oct. 21, 1761; m. Joseph Bancroft, Apr. 9, 1793; 3, Lydia, b. May 4, 1765; 4, Jonas, (not on record).
Jonas5 (Jonas4, Josiah8, Jonas2, William1), m. Polly Waite, Aug. 6, 1798. Ch .- 1, Nancy, b. Mar. 20, 1799; 2, Amasa, b. July 6, 1800.
BOUTELL.
Samuel Boutell m. Elizabeth -. Ch .- 1, Hannah, b. Feb. 8, 1736; d. Sept. 23, 1741; 2, Hepzabah, b. Jan. 30, 1740; 3, Samuel, b. Dec. 17, 1741; 4, Enoch, b. Jan. 25, 1747; 5, Ebenezer, b. Feb. 4, 1750.
Samuel2 (Samuel1), m. Hannah Barton, Oct. 29, 1765. Ch .- 1, Samuel, b. Aug. 12, 1766; 2, Jedediah, b. Apr. 20, 1768; 3, Alpheus, b. Jan. 5, 1770.
BUCKMAN.
Jeremiah Buckman and his wife united with the church by letter from the church in Beverly, in 1734, and Jeremiah Buckman, jr., and his wife, from the same church, in 1735. There is no record of their children.
Stephen Buckman, son of Jeremiah, jr., m. Ruth Gould, Nov. 3, 1743; d. Apr. 24, 1744. Ch .- 1, Ruth, b. Aug. 24, 1744.
Daniel Buckman (probably the son of Jeremiah, jr.), m. Phœbe -; d. June 10, 1783. Cl1 .- 1, Ellenor, b. May 19, 1745; 2, Elizabeth, b. Apr. 11, 1748; 3, Jonas, b. Aug. 3, 1750; 4, Ruth, b. June 3, 1760.
Joseph Buckman (ancestry unknown), m. Mary -. Ch .- 1, Amos, b. Sept. 25, 1744.
Daniel Buckman (ancestry unknown), m. Abigail Pratt, Apr. 18, 1774. Ch .- 1, Russell, b. Feb. 22, 1775.
592
FAMILIES OF THE
Russell2 (Daniel2), m. Polly Lord, Oct. 27, 1799. Ch .- 1, Albert Gallaten, b. Aug. 11, 1803.
Isaiah Buckman (ancestry unknown), m. Mary Dike, Mar. 22, 1759. Ch .- 1, Jeremiah, b. Sept. 11, 1761; 2, James, b. Oct. 19, 1763; 3, Rhoda, b. Apr. 8, 1766; 4, Isaiah, b. Mar. 15, 1768; 5, Hannah, b. Feb. 4, 1770; 6, Lucretia, b. Jan. 21, 1774; 7, Molly, b. July 12, 1777.
BLANCHARD.
Joseph Blanchard (ancestry unknown), m. Abigail -. Ch .- 1, Joseph, b. July 24, 1751; 2, Abigail, b. Jan. 17, 1754; 3, Ann, b. Sept. 16, 1756.
Joseph2 (Joseph1), m. Mehitabel Putnam, Apr. 10, 1770. Ch .- 1, Joseph, b. Dec. 23, 1770.
John Blanchard (ancestry unknown), m. Sarah Carriel, Dec. 19, 1765, she d. Apr. 26, 1805. Ch .- 1, Sarah, b. July 2, 1766; 2, John, b. Mar. 12, 1769.
Samuel Blanchard (ancestry unknown), m. Susanna Tenney, Mar. 17, 1775. Ch .- 1, Stephen, b. Oct. 26, 1775; 2, John Brewer, b. Mar. 2, 1780; m. Silence Barton, Feb. 17, 1805; 3, Simon, b. Feb. 17, 1782; 4, Samuel, b. June 25, 1784; 5, Polly, b. July 3, 1786; 6, Thomas, b. June 24, 1788.
Stephen2 (Samuel1), m. Cyna Marble, Nov. 26, 1803. Ch .- 1, Adeline, b. Sept. 25, 1805.
BULLARD. By WILLIAM S. BARTON, EsQ., of Worcester.
In the genealogical history of the " Descendants of several ancient Puritans," published by Rev. Abner Morse in 1857, and afterward reprinted with important additions and cor- rections, may be found an interesting account of the Bullard families in New England. From this work and from sun- dry manuscripts and family records deemed reliable, the writer has prepared for publication, with the annals of the town of Sutton, a few of the materials for a concise history of the ancestry and descendants of Dr. Bullard, from early colonial times down to the close of the year 1877.
Among the first planters of New England, according to the latest researches in genealogy, appear four men of the name Bullard, viz: Robert, George, John and William. They all, doubtless, emigrated from England about the year 1630, and were certainly among the first settlers in Water- town and its vicinity. The first two above named, or their children, had lands assigned them in Watertown in 1637 and 1644, and the last two in Dedham, about the year 1636.
In the first edition of Mr. Morse's work, it is stated that of the several planters of the name of Bullard, "Benjamin
593
TOWN OF SUTTON.
is the only one whose entire race admits of being traced with certainty and separated from all others bearing the name." By substituting the name of Robert for Benjamin, in accordance with the later information obtained by Mr. Morse, this statement will doubtless be found strictly true. It was, at first, erroneously supposed that there was a Ben- jamin among the early settlers of Watertown, but it seems that a son of Robert, viz : Benjamin (2), hereafter referred to, was the " Benjamin Bullard" whose name is preserved in the early records of that town.
Robert Bullard (1) was unquestionably the aucestor of the Sutton family of that name. He was probably born about the year 1599, as it is a matter of record that he died in Watertown, April 24, 1639, aged forty.
He left a widow, Ann or Anna, and probably three child- ren only -a son Benjamin (2), and two daughters, Anna and Maudlin.
A curious piece of evidence in regard to the parentage of Benjamin (2), may be found in Dr. Bond's " Watertown Family Memorial," more particularly in his account of the discovery of a bond given by one Henry Thorpe, who .mar- ried the widow of Robert Bullard about November 25, 1639.
Benjamin (2), the only son of Robert and Anna Bullard, was probably born about the year 1630. From all the accounts handed down by his contemporaries, he seems to have been regarded a man of rare energy and force of character.
During a portion of his minority he resided in Dedham, being under the care of an uncle, probably John Bullard, a holder of land in that town. He was admitted a townsman at Dedham, January 11, 1655-'56, "which then implied a previous probation, a good moral character, and the age of twenty-one." His name appears in 1657-'58 in the list of those to whom land was to be assigned in Dedham, but having removed from Dedham about that time, he received none.
He was twice married ; first at Dedham, in 1659, to Mar- tha Pidge, and secondly to Elizabeth -, in 1677. About the time of his first marriage, he, with others, located a
75
594
FAMILIES OF THE
home on the north side of Bogistow Pond, in what is now the town of Sherborn. Here they continued to reside, dur- ing the rest of their lives, in a state of warfare with the savages, who then infested nearly all the early settlements in Massachusetts.
In the interesting account given by Mr. Morse, it is related that " they built for a garrison-house a spacious and regular fortress. It was superior to any similar structure on the then frontier." He further adds that "to this place of security our ancestors, for more than two generations, were accustomed to flee in times of alarm, and here no small num- ber of their children were born."
Benjamin Bullard was one of the signers of the first peti- tion for the incorporation of the town of Sherborn. In 1673 he sold his patrimonial estate in Watertown, and in 1674 he signed a second petition for the incorporation of Sherborn, soon after which the prayer of the petitioners was duly granted. He eventually became the proprietor of large tracts of land in Medway, Sherborn and Holliston, some of which have been retained in the family name down to the present day. He died in Sherborn, Sept. 27, 1689. He had by his first wife three sons and three daughters, and the same number of each by his second wife. In closing a most excellent tribute to his memory, Mr. Morse eulogizes the " great Puritan ancestor " of the Bullards, and records the fact that " he sleeps hard by the scenes of his toils and his perils. On the apex of one of nature's pyramids, whose base is laved by the Charles River, repose his ashes, in company with those of the founders of Sherborn."
Benjamin (3), second son of Benjamin (2), and Martha Bullard, was born March 1, 1670-71. He married Tab- itha -, about the year 1700, and had four sons, all born in Sherborn. He inherited lands or drew them in right of his father, in Holliston, in the northwest corner of Mendon, now a part of Milford, and in the territory west of Mendon, afterward known as Douglas. About the year 1739 he removed to the house of his son Benjamin, in Hol- liston, where he died about the year 1760, aged ninety. He seems to have been principally engaged in farming,
595
TOWN OF SUTTON.
although he was twice chosen tything-man, and repeatedly surveyor of highways, in the alteration and improvement of which he took great interest.
Benjamin (4), the eldest of four children of Benjamin (3), and Tabitha Bullard, was born in Sherborn, March 4, 1702-3. He settled in Holliston prior to 1727, and built his house a few rods east of the northeast corner of Milford. He married, first, Judith, daughter of Ebenezer Hill of Sherborn, November 9, 1727. They had eleven children- six sons and five daughters. He married for his second wife Ruth Hill, August 12, 1762, and died intestate in 1766.
Asa (5), eldest son of Benjamin (4) and Judith Bullard, was born in Holliston, July 10, 1730. He was admin- istrator of his father's estate, and inherited his homestead in the westerly part of Holliston. In the letters of admin- istration granted September 23, 1766, he is styled " cord- wainer." He was twice married; first to Hannah Jones, daughter of Eli Jones of Holliston (born August 6, 1734; died April 1762), by whom he had four children; and secondly, November 1, 1762, to Hannah Cook, daughter of Walter Cook of Mendon, by whom he had twelve children, eight sons and four daughters. He made his will December 17, 1802, and died prior to June 12, 1804, in Holliston, aged about seventy-four.
Artemas (6), M. D., the third son of Asa (5), and Hannah (Cook) Bullard, was born at Holliston, December 8, 1768. An interesting sketch of Dr. Bullard, prepared in 1854 by his son-in-law, Judge Barton of Worcester, was first published in 1855 in connection with Mr. Morse's gene- alogical work, heretofore referred to. To this sketch the writer is greatly indebted for many of the facts which he has freely incorporated into the following brief notice of his honored grandfather.
Dr. Bullard seems to have been the only one of his father's children who received a professional education.
About the time he became of age he commenced the study of medicine with Dr. John B. Kittredge of Framingham, and afterwards spent about two years in the office of Daniel Fiske of Oxford. Only a few years ago he was remem-
596
FAMILIES OF THE.
bered by the old people of Oxford as a "smart young physician whom they were desirous of having settled with them." On the twenty-eighth of August 1794, "with a small stock of medicines costing twelve pounds, and under a debt of like amount," he commenced the practice of his profession in Northbridge. . While he was a student of medi- cine at Oxford, he became acquainted with his first wife, Maria Waters, daughter of Ebenezer Waters, Esq., of Sut- ton, and a relative of Dr. Fiske of Oxford. They were married in Sutton, February 17, 1796. It is related of her that she was a " very worthy lady, but died without issue in about two years after her marriage, and now sleeps in the tomb of her father, in a private cemetery near West Sutton village. Upon this tomb is a monumental tablet, with many inscriptions commemorative of the family of her father." Mrs. Bullard was born August 6, 1769, and died June 6, 1798.
On the sixth of December 1798, Dr. Bullard married for his second wife Lucy, eldest daughter of Deacon Jesse and Anna Mason White of Northbridge, by whom he had ten children, three daughters and seven sons. After a residence of several years in Northbridge, during which he estab- lished an extensive practice, he was induced by his father-in- law, Esquire Waters, then advanced in years, to purchase his large and beautiful farm in West Sutton. He accord- ingly removed to Sutton in 1805, and thenceforward " his attention was divided between his profession and his farm."
About this period, according to the statements of his son- in-law, and " when military honors were not so cheap as at present," he was appointed, by Governor Strong, surgeon of the then local infantry regiment ; and in the year 1814 he was elected a fellow of the council of the Massachusetts Medical Society. Nothing was wanted to give him an eminent position in his profession but exclusive devotion to it. Dr. Bullard has been described as in person " some- what above the ordinary stature, of light, florid complexion, light blue eyes, nose strictly aquiline ; and, in short, as his surviving contemporaries say, a fine looking man. He possessed ardent feelings and great energy of character,
597
TOWN OF SUTTON.
united with a sound judgment. His integrity was proverbial, always doing exact justice to others, and expecting the same from them."
The residence of Dr. Bullard was upon a beautiful rise of land about half a mile south of the village of West Sutton. The mansion house, which is a very substantial and well preserved structure, was erected nearly a century ago. A magnificent elm, whose branches cover an area of more than three hundred feet in circumference, is still standing a few rods west of the house, and is one of the most conspicuous landmarks in the town of Sutton.
Many of the associations connected with the old farm on " Bullard Hill," are perhaps of too personal a nature to war- rant more than a passing allusion in this place. To the writer, who, as the doctor's eldest grandchild, was a frequent visitor at the old homestead, the venerable family residence and its many still beautiful surroundings will always pos- sess a peculiar interest-an interest second only to that felt by the surviving members of that large household of fifty years ago. It is gratifying to the writer to be able to add that a very considerable portion of the old farm is still retained in the family name, and that its ancient reputation for hospi- tality and good cheer are still preserved under the successful management of the present proprietor, a worthy grandson of Dr. Bullard.
The death of Dr. Bullard, which was probably instan- taneous, was occasioned by an accidental fall in his barn. It occurred on Friday, the sixth day of May 1842. His fune- ral was largely attended by his fellow townsmen and friends, and by many of his numerous relatives; the impressive funeral services being conducted by the Rev. Hiram A. Tracy of Sutton, and the Rev. David Holman of Douglas. His remains were buried in the cemetery at West Sutton, where a simple monument has been erected to his memory. A plain marble headstone, placed in the enclosure which marks the family burial lot, bears the following inscription : "Dr. Artemas Bullard; born at Holliston, Dec. 8, 1768 : died at Sutton May 6, 1842, aged 73."
598
FAMILIES OF TIIE
Lucy White, second wife of Dr. Bullard, and the mother of all his children, was born at Northbridge, May 5, 1778.
As heretofore stated, she was the daughter of Deacon Jesse White and Anna Mason, his wife, and was the eldest of eleven children - four daughters and seven sons. A minute account of her paternal ancestry, communicated by her son-in-law, Hon. Ira M. Barton of Worcester, in an article entitled "Sampson Mason, the Baptist and Dragoon in Oliver Cromwell's Army," appeared in the columns of the Historical and Genealogical Register for July 1864. In this carefully prepared and most interesting sketch, it appears that Mrs. Bullard was one of the direct descendants of Sampson Mason of Rehoboth, being a representative of the sixth generation from her noted ancestor, counting him as the first. Without going into details, it will be sufficient for the present purpose of the writer to give the following brief summary of the Mason pedigree. Of the thirteen children of Sampson (1), by Mary (Butterworth), the tenth child, Isaac (2), was the ancestor of Mrs. Bullard. He was a deacon of the second Baptist church in Swansey. His son, Hezekiah (3), who was the fifth of ten children, was the great-grandfather of Mrs. Bullard. The eldest son of Hezekiah (3), and Rebecca Martin, was Melatiah (4), who lived to be more than one hundred years of age. The oldest daughter of Melatiah (4), and Rebecca Miller, was Anna (5), (Mason), the mother of Mrs. Bullard. She was born at Rehoboth, November 4, 1755; married Deacon White, at Uxbridge, April 17, 1777 ; died August 20, 1839.
It is scarcely possible, within the limits of this brief sketch, to do full justice to the memory of Mrs. Bullard. In lieu, therefore, of a more elaborate tribute, the writer deems himself fortunate in being able to present a few extracts from the eloquent remarks made by her son-in-law, Henry Ward Beecher, at her funeral :
To this joyful coronation our beloved mother has come. All the days of her appointed years - years full of labor and duty- are accomplished; all her doubts are dispelled, all her anticipations realized; all she hoped for in her long and noble life, and far more than human hope can ever aspire to, is now her portion. We come to shed no bitter tears: we celebrate a triumph , not a defeat - a life perfected.
599
TOWN OF SUTTON.
Her children are gathered here, with her more immediate friends and neighbors, to pay the last honors to her lifeless frame. How sturdily, how nobly she lived; feeble, tender, but how enduring. Never strong, no one would have marked her for a long life. Well do I remember when first I saw her. I was then a lad in college. Even then I was struck by the energy of her character. I remember my impression then that she was weak in body, and liable to meet an early death. Who would have thought that she would survive that stalwart man, Dr. Bullard of Sutton! so full of the capital for a long and sturdy life. In body, as in mind, she was evenly organized. Hers was the strength of tenderness and gentleness, but underlaid by a quiet persistence of wonderful force. She was firm and steadfast for the right, wherever principle was involved; mild and loving, but with fixed habits of belief and thought, which kept her firm and true, even to sternness when occasion required. God taught her! With her vigor of character, it would have been easy for her to make shipwreck of happiness, linked as she was with that strong nature, her husband. It would have been easy for her to purchase peace by self-abnegation, by sinking herself; but she did neither. She made herself a power in her house, but she ruled by submission and love. She made her house a happy one; and a greater compliment can be paid to no woman. She elevated the name of wife and mother, by showing, in her- self, what it was possible for a woman to be.
Mrs. Bullard passed the last portion of her long and use- ful life at the house of her daughter, Mrs. Judge Barton of Worcester. She died in Worcester, December 15, 1869, aged ninety-one years, seven months and ten days. Her remains were placed by the side of her husband, in the cemetery at West Sutton, and the same simple monument marks the site of their resting place.
In giving some account of the descendants of Doctor and Mrs. Bullard, the writer has endeavored to make it as com- plete as possible in a genealogical point of view, and, at the same time, to embody such brief details of personal history as might be of interest to the general reader. For the sake of conciseness, however, he has sought to avoid the repeti- tion of names, as far as practicable, and to make use of such abbreviations as are customary in works of this kind.
Of the ten children of Dr. Bullard by his second wife, all of whom were living at the time of his decease, it may be proper to state, in a general way, that they were all well educated, three of the sons being graduates of colleges and ordained ministers, and two other sons being physicians. His three daughters all married professional men.
600
FAMILIES OF THE
The several children of Dr. and Mrs. Bullard, with their respective families in the order of their seniority, are as follows :
I. Maria Waters, born January 25, 1800, at Northbridge, and married November 11, 1823, at Sutton, by Rev. Edmund Mills, to Ira Barton of Oxford. Her husband, the late Hon. Ira Moore Barton of Worcester, first named Ira, was born at Oxford, October 25, 1796, and, in 1839, by act of the General Court, was authorized to take the additional name of "Moore" in memory of his revered maternal grand- mother, Dorothy Moore, and of his great-great-grandfather Moore, the first magistrate of his native town. He was a grandson of Dr. Stephen Barton, who was born at Sutton, June 10, 1740. Dr. Barton's father and mother, Edmund and Anna Flynt Barton, were married in Salem, April 9, 1739, and probably removed to Sutton soon afterward. Mr. Barton graduated with high honors at Brown University, in 1819, and at the Cambridge law school in 1822. He prac- tised law in Oxford from 1822 to 1834, and was representa- tive from that town during the years 1830 to 1832 inclusive. In 1833-'34 he represented the county of Worcester in the State Senate. He removed to Worcester in 1834, and in 1836 was appointed by Governor Everett judge of probate for Worcester county. In 1840 he was chosen one of the electors for president in the famous Harrison, or " log-cabin " campaign. He resigned his judgeship in 1844, and in 1846 represented the then town of Worcester in the legislature. Judge Barton continued the practice of his profession until 1849, when he visited Europe in pursuit of much needed rest and recreation.
Upon his return in 1850 he resumed his office practice only, finding leisure, during the intervals of business, for the indulgence of his literary, historical and antiquarian tastes. He was an active member, and for many years a Councillor of the American Antiquarian Society of Worces- ter. He died, very suddenly, at his home in Worcester, July 18, 1867. The writer may be pardoned if he feels constrained to add some extracts from the many tributes to the memory of his honored father.
601
TOWN OF SUTTON.
· "Judge Barton was distinguished for purity, simplicity and integrity of character; and as a public servant, in numerous offices of trust and responsi- bility, his conduct was marked by signal ability, fidelity and success. He was eminently the accomplished lawyer, the upright magistrate, the enlightened patriotic citizen ; and the community which, through a long and busy life, he has benefitted and honored, will hold in grateful remembrance his services and his virtues." He has been described as "a man of very striking personal appearance, with tall and commanding figure, fine head and Websterian eyes. He showed something of the Roman mould in his aspect, which was well reflected in his character."
The funeral of Judge Barton took place on Monday, July 22, 1867, from All Saints Church in Worcester, and his remains were interred at Rural Cemetery, where a massive marble sarcophagus, inscribed with the name, " Ira Moore Barton," has been erected to his memory. His widow, the worthy daughter of a noble mother, still resides in Worces- ter, surrounded by a large family circle of children, grand- children and great-grandchildren, and enjoying the confidence and respect of all who know her. May she be spared many years as a model example of unselfish, self-sacrificing, maternal love.
The children of Mr. and Mrs. Barton are: 1, William Sumner, A. M., b. at Oxford, September 30, 1824. He graduated at Brown University in the class of 1844; was admitted to the bar in 1846, and practised law in partner- ship with his father and Hon. Peter C. Bacon, until 1850. In 1853 he was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society of Worcester. He continued the practise of his profession in Worcester until June 1854, when he accepted a position in the Bank of Commerce, Boston, having his residence still in Worcester. In January 1872 he was elected treasurer of the city of Worcester, which office he continues to hold. He was m. first, at Worcester, April 4, 1849, by Rev. Alonzo Hill, to Anne Elizabeth, daughter of Samuel and Mary G. Jennison, b. at Worcester Feb. 7, 1827, d. Feb. 28, 1869, at Worcester. They had
(1) Mary, b. at Worcester, Sept. 29, 1853; m. at Worcester, April 11, 1872, by Rev. William R. Huntington, to Alfred Wadsworth Dana. They have four sons, Alfred Henshaw, b. in Berchtesgaden, Germany, Wm. Summer Barton and Charles Bates, both b. in San Francisco, and John Adams, b. in Santa Rosa. They now reside in Santa Rosa, Cal.
(2) Lucy, b. at Worcester, Jan. 7, 1856.
(3) Anna, b. at Worcester, April 20, 1858.
He was m. secondly, at New York city, Nov. 22, 1870, by Bishop Horatio N. Southgate, to Kate Almy, only dau. of Wm. and Jane B. Ellery. They have
(1) Wm. Ellery, b. at Worcester, Dec. 10, 1873, a namesake and great- great-grandson of one of the "signers."
(2) Edith Almy, b. at Worcester, Sept. 29, 1876.
76
602
FAMILIES OF THE
2. Anna Maria, b. at Oxford, April 21, 1826; m. at Worcester, Nov. 7, . 1849, by Rev. Alonzo Hill, to John Wm. Bigelow, son of John and Abigail Bigelow, formerly of Medford. They have had
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.