USA > Massachusetts > Hampden County > Ludlow > Ludlow: a century and a centennial, comprising a sketch of the history of the town of Ludlow, Hampden County, Massachusetts > Part 17
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
NATHAN, b. October 8, 1788, m. Mary B. Look.
AMos, b. October 8, 1788, m. Susan Miller of Ludlow, d. January 31, 1871 ; (Nathan and Amos, twins, each lost a limb.) Amos had children-Abigail Waters, b. May 16, 1811, m. D. L. Atchinson ; Amos Hurley, b. January 20, 1814, m. Sarah Warner; Leonard Miller, b. August 19, 1815, m. Lucy Smith ; Susan Alvira, b. June 28, 1817, m. Avery Green ; Zadoc Porter, b. May 8, 1819, m. Lucia Chapin ; Flavius Josephus, b. November 11, 1821, m. Sylvia B. Alden, d. August 1864, at Andersonville prison ; Sarah Ann, b. June 4, 1824, m. Gordon M. Fisk; Adaline Eliza; b. July 19, 1830, m. Lyman S. Hills.
JONES .- (THOMAS, came from Wales. His son was Benjamin, whose son was also named Benjamin, the father of) STEPHEN JONES, b. in Somers, Conn., June 27, 1750, m. Lucy Cooley, December 22, 1779, came to Ludlow in 1799, bringing six chil- dren. One was b. in Ludlow, Lucy, d. July 15, 1808. Stephen m. Mrs. Mary Chapin of Springfield, September 27, 1811. She d. July 26, 1841. He d. January 2, 1828.
STEPHEN and LUCY JONES had children-Stephen, Levi, d. aet. 13 months, Lucy, Phebe.
LEVI went to Illinois. Had children-Mary, Susan, Parmelia, Simeon.
STEPHEN had children-Hannah, Annie, Amanda, Asenath, Dargo B., Catherine, Martha, Stephen Cooley.
SIMEON m. Mary Chapin, dau. of his father's second wife. Had children-Han- nah, Delia, David C., Henry S., Daniel, Daniel, Eliza, Parmelia, an infant, Saralı, Irene, Charles.
IN MEMORIAM. 193
CC. (See pages 90, 140.)
On the occasion of the death of Capt. Hubbard the following lines were penned by Hon. G. M. Fisk of Palmer :-
CAPT. HENRY A. HUBBARD .*
Comes there a mournful message, On wings of lightning sped, Thrilling the ear with sadness, Whispering, " He is dead !"
Brief is the touching story, How at his country's call, Went he forth in his armor, To conquer or to fall.
Bravely his comrades leading, -- On to the strife they go, Bearing the nation's standard To the soil of the foe.
Over the trackless ocean, Rounding the stormy capes, Where the hurricane dashes The sea in mountain shapes
Hearing the distant thunder, Seeing the murky smoke, Knows he the strife of battle Rages at Roanoke ?
Turns on his fevered pillow, Starts with commanding word ; Calls for his faithful comrades, Asks for his trusty sword.
" Onward all! to the struggle ! Charge ! the foe is near ! Mount to his frowning ramparts ! Plant our standard there !"
Wandering thus in fancy, He leads his comrades on ; Crushing the foe before him, Until the field is won.
Hushed is the din of battle, Hushed is the cannon's roar ;
*Died on shipboard, in Pamlico Sound, February 12, 1862, the fourth day after the battle at Roanoke Island.
25
194
APPENDIX.
And sleeps the young Commander,- Sleeps to awake no more.
Homeward they gently bear him, Over the foamy track,-
Anxiously hearts are waiting, Waiting the welcome back.
Sad, oh sad, is the welcome, That greets the soldier's bier ;
Voices are hushed in sorrow- Rapidly falls the tear.
Solemn the muffled drum-beat, Slow is the measured tread ;
Bearing the youthful captain, To his home with the dead.
Hark ! 'tis the parting volley, Firing over his grave !-
The last sad act is finished, And rests the young and brave.
" Come to the bridal chamber," Bind on the weeper's brow Laurel wreaths of the soldier, Twined with the willow's bough.
" Green be the turf above him ;" Peaceful his dreamless sleep ; Ever in fond remembrance His treasured mem'ry keep.
LUDLOW, February 23, 1862.
DD. (See pages 89, 90, 141.)
From detailed accounts of the life and incidents of the stay in An- dersonville, sent by parties who were there, we are permitted to cull brief selections :-
From Jasper Harris of Holyoke :- "The brigade including my regiment (16th Connecticut Volunteers) was captured April 23, 1864, at Plymouth, N. C., and taken en route for Andersonville, where our rebel guard told us was a splendid, shady camp, with plenty of new barracks for shelter. We arrived at the Andersonville station at dark on the evening of May 9. The next morning we were marched towards the stockade, a quarter of a mile away. Just before arriving at the main gate we came to a rise of ground from which could be seen the whole stockade, and most of the inside of it. I shall never forget the gloomy and depressed feeling with which I looked on the horrible sight. The
195
THE LUDLOW MARTYRS.
high log stockade was composed of straight young pines, cut sixteen feet long, hewn on two sides, the bark peeled off, and then the log sunk on end in a trench six feet deep, close together, leaving ten feet at least above ground on the inside. Cross-pieces were spiked to each timber horizontally, making a fence strong enough to hold cattle in- stead of men.
"Rations were issued daily, being drawn into the stockade by a mule team, and when divided and sub-divided furnished each man a pint and a-half of cob-meal and from two to four ounces of bacon. For a few days we received two common-sized sticks of cord-wood to be di- vided among ninety men.
" Grant's campaign had now commenced and soon more prisoners be- gan to come in. After a while came the Ludlow boys. The first man I met was Sergeant Perry, looking every inch a soldier, and in ex- cellent health. The next was Flavius Putnam, a new recruit, captured in his first battle. I always knew him as being a thoroughly good man when I lived in Ludlow, and exceedingly strong and quick in farm work, and always cheerful.
" If I should attempt to write a complete description of Andersonville and its horrors, of Wirtz, his guards and his bloodhounds, and all the sights and incidents which came under my own eye there and at other prisons during my eight months' stay, of the murders and robberies amongst our own men, of the hanging of six of them by a court of our own men,-it would fill the pages of a large book, while a part would be descriptive of such monstrous cruelty and so striking to sensitive minds that I am afraid it would not be believed if written."
From an account by James E. Perry of Adrian, Mich : "Just two weeks from the time we were captured found us marching into the re- nowned Andersonville prison pen. When introduced into that foul den of crime, wretchedness and sorrow, our hearts failed us, and we made up our minds for the worst, and we would rather have risked our chance with the regiment even in those bloody battles of the campaign of 1864. One-third of the men who occupied that vast charnel-pen lie buried there to-day.
" Willie Washburn died August 21, Daniel Pratt, August 22, Eben- ezer Lyon, September 11, Caleb Crowningshield, September 15, Hiram Aldrich, the latter part of September, John Coash, during the fall, Flavius Putnam, some time in September, Joseph Miller (not from Ludlow), and Albert Collins of Collins' Depot, during the summer. Putnam and Coash were admitted to the hospital and died there. I think it can be truly said that these men died of starvation, for we . received nothing that a sick man could relish or eat."
INDEX.
A.
PAGE.
ACKLEY, Samuel
20
ACRES, Henry
55
ACTION of Town on Centennial,
98
ADDRESS of Welcome, .
108
AINSWORTH, Benjamin
55
ALDENS,
37
ALDEN'S Sash and Blind Shop,
63
ALDRICH, H. W.
140, 195 194
ANDROS, Governor .
5
ANNIBAL, murder of
58
ANTE-LUDLOW,
1
ANTISEL, Perez
7
ARMORY at Ludlow,
2
ASSESSORS,
175
AUSTIN, Rev. D. R ..
72, 144, 145
B.
BANISTER, Rev. D. K. .
83
Rev. D. K., address of .
88
BAPTISTS,
31, 41, 48
BARBER, Ebenezer
7,126 ·190
66 Lewis
77
BARDWELL, Oramel
.. 29
BARKER, Ichabod .
130
BARTLETT, Jonathan
20,22
BEAR SWAMP,
16
BEEBE, Gideon
38
BEGORY, Cæsar
130
BENNETT, George
86
" Lyman
140
BIER, getting a
34
BLISS, Abel, and the tar,
7
BOOTH, Edwin
xvii, 147
Eliphal
.
53
ANDERSONVILLE,
66 Genealogy,
198
INDEX.
PAGE.
BOUNDARIES,
19,60
BOWKER, Noah
9,16
Boys in Blue,
· 140
BREWER Genealogy,
187
Isaac, Jr.
. 8, 10, 17, 29
BRIDGES,
. 15, 37, 61, 75, 85, 86, 138
82
BRIGGS, Hon. A. D.
150
BRIGHAM, L. H.
84
BROAD BROOK,
37
BROOKS, Edward F.
89, 140
BUCKLIN, Joseph .
64
BURR, B. F. .
190
66 Jonathan
8
Jonathan & Co.
38
Noadiah
130
BURROUGHS, Stephen
24, 31
BURT, Reuben
130
C.
CALKINS' chair shop,
. 63
CALL, Isaiah .
32
CAMELS, The .
62
CEDAR SWAMP,
. 6, 36, 75, 85
CEMETERIES,
34, 54, 75, 86
CENTENNIAL Actual,
107
Afterpast,
155
66
Committee,
. 98, 101
Concert,
154
Hymn, .
· 104
Prospective,
97
66 Storm,
102, 145
CENTER of Town,
20,29
CHAPIN, Hon. C. O.
151
Rev. D. E.
78
66 Genealogy
184
66 Col. Harvey
153
Rev. Joel
. xii, 130, 184
Rev. Nathaniel .
32
66 Oliver
9, 20
66 Rev. Peletiah
20,22
Shem
7,126
CHAPMAN, Augustus
140
Austin .
69
CHERRY VALLEY, .
10, 35, 92 130
CHOOLEY, Charles .
CHURCH, Early places, .
10
Congregational,
72
·
·
Hon. Chester W.
xiii
Genealogy, .
98
BRIDGMAN, Rev. Chester
199
INDEX.
PAGE.
CHURCH dedications,
52, 74, 78, 81 .
edifices, .
19, 30, 74, 78, 81, 85, 134, 136
40
first, and its pastor,
132
interests at Jenksville,
70,79
relations in town,
83
union movement,
44
CLAPP, Rev. W. A.
72
CLARK, George
59 J
" George R. .
98
Rev. Laban
32
Rev. Seth
31
CLOUGH, Ambrose .
97
66 Gaius
55
Genealogy,
192
Mordecai .
55
COASH, John .
140, 195
COLTON, Aaron
6, 17, 126, 130
Capt.
55
COMMONS,
5,6
CONGREGATIONALISTS,
31, 41
CONGRESSES, Provincial
20
CONTINENTAL MILL,
63
COOLEY Bridge,
62
Jacob
9, 22
COTTON, Edward
130
Gideon
55
" Cow PASTURE,"
17
CROWELL, Rev. Joshua .
44
CROWNINGSHIELD, Caleb
140, 195
CURRIER, Daniel D.
140
CUSHMAN, Rev. C. L.
. 82, 98
Rev. C. L. address of
108
D.
DAMON, Dexter
xvii
Peter .
35
DANIELS, David
31, 35
Nicholas .
59
Rev. W. H.
85
DAVENPORT, Rev. Mr.
22
DAVIS, Rev. Samuel
70,71
DAWES, Hon. H. L.
154
DEACONS, Congregationalist
172
DEANE, George H.
83
DEER Reeves,
7,17
DELEGATES,
36
DESERTERS, .
55
DISTILLERY, .
64
DISTRICTS, School .
34
.
establishment,
200
INDEX.
PAGE.
Dow, Lorenzo
58
DUTTON, Genealogy
191
Oliver
.
. 36, 130
E.
EAMES, Rev. Henry
49
EARLY Town meetings, .
128
EATON'S Mill
78
ECCLESIASTICAL Era,
40
EPITAPHS,
.
. 180
F.
FACING HILLS,
87
FARNUM, Joel
32
FAST day in 1813, .
45
FATHERS, The
138
FAY AND HANCOCK,
68
FEATS OF STRENGTH,
178
FERRY, Aaron
9,16
FINANCIAL exhibit of Centennial
157
FIRES, Forest .
87
FISK, Hon. G. M.
81
FISK's Woolen Mill,
78
FISK, Rev. F.
. 82, 134
Gordon M.
xvi, 193
" · Rev. Wilbur
. 51, 134
FLEMING, Rev. William
72
FLINT, Capt.
55
" FOGGUS, Doctor,"
76
FORDS,
61
FOSTER, Rev. Mr. .
70
"FRIDAY," Hermit
77
FROST, Elias .
52
Samuel
32, 44, 49, 58
FULLER, Edmund W.
86
66 Elisha
34, 58, 189
Elisha A.
73
Ezekiel
33, 44, 57, 130
Genealogy
188
Harry
58
Hon. Henry
153
Joshua .
8, 16, 22, 24, 25, 38, 126
130
Rev. Stephen
23
Young
189
FULLER's tavern,
33
FULLING mill,
63
FUND, Ministerial .
73
.
.
Zera
52
·
66 Lothrop ·
INDEX. 201
G.
PAGE.
GARDINER, Lemuel
55
GATES, Samuel
55
GLASS Works,
64
GOODALE, Jabez
130
GOVE, Rev. Mr.
50
GRADUATES, .
177
GUIDE-BOARDS,
36
GUN WORKS,
.
68
.
H.
HALL, Rev. William
. 79
HAMPDEN COUNTY,
57
HARRIS, Jasper
194
HASCALL, Rev. David
22
Timothy
77
HAWKS, Rev. Philo
72
HEARSE, .
54
HEARSE-HOUSE,
54
HEDDING, Rev. E.
44, 50, 134
HIGHER Brook,
. 16, 92
HIGHWAYS,
36, 37, 75, 85
HILL, Collins
33,166
HISTORIAN of the day,
146
HISTORICAL address,
124
HISTORY, town votes a
158
HITCHCOCK, Abner
. 8, 20, 128
Joseph
9, 16, 22, 130
Josiah
8
HOG-REEVES,
17
HOLDICH, Rev. Dr.
|78
" HOMESTEAD " notice,
157
HOPEFUL outlook,
142
HORSE company, .
55
HORSE-SHEDS
54
HOWARD, Rev. Bezaleel
26
66 John
55
HUBBARD, Elisha
26,35
66 Genealogy
189
66 John
9, 20
60 John, Jr.,
16
John P.
. 98, 100
Henry A.
140, 193
60 Titus
179
66 Warren
55
HUTCHINSON, GOV.
12
66. Rev. Mr. .
22
26
202
INDEX.
I.
PAGE.
INCITEMENTS,
93
INCORPORATION, act of
13
INDIAN Leap,
2, 86, 138, 159
77
Roaring Thunder,
2
INDIANS, Facing Hills tragedy,
3
purchase from
4
66 resorts of .
2, 159, 160
retreat of .
. 2, 138
INVENTIONS,
68
ITINERANTS, early .
·
51
J.
53, 64, 136
Washington
64
JENKSVILLE, M. E. Church 66 operatives,
69
JENNINGS, Beriah
9,16
66 John
xii, 26, 32, 33, 36, 38
Joseph
130
JOCELYN, Rev. A. .
49
JOHNS, Rev. Mr.
47
JOHNSON, John
130
JONES, Genealogy
192
Joseph
· 16,20
Stephen
. 44, 53
K.
KENDALL, Chester
55
Genealogy
189
66 Jacob
16
James
8, 16, 26, 29, 30, 126
Selah
55
KEYES, Timothy
26, 29, 64
KING, Samuel
87
L.
LABOR and its rewards, .
141
value in 1841,
57
LAMBORD, Rev. B. F.
50
LANDON, Rev. G. .
85
LATHROP, Rev. J.
26
LEE, Rev. Mr.
85
LEONARD, Hon. N. T.
152
LETTER, an old
€ 166
an old church
166
JENKS, Benjamin .
84
Orchard,
203
INDEX.
PAGE.
LITERARY address,
112
LOG cabins,
57
LOMBARD, bear story
38
David
130
Jonathan
8, 17, 126, 130
86
LONGEVITY of inhabitants, LUDLOW and Hampden,
18
Center post-office,
87
city,
35
Edmund
. 18, 126
66 England
17, 163
in the 18th century,
12
manufacturing company (1st.),
83
manufacturing company (2d), .
84
mills company,
84
New Brunswick
17
of to-day,
80
Roger
18
Vermont
17
LYMAN, Rev. T.
85
LYON, David
167
Ebenezer
. 89, 140, 195
Gad
27,167
Genealogy
191
LYONS, ·
M.
MANUFACTURING, changes by
66
first .
63
MASONIC,
76
MAYO, Rev. Warren
82
McDUFFEE, Rev. S. V. .
82
MCFARLAND, Charles
140
MCKINSTRY, Rev. J.
26
MCLEAN, Rev. A. .
45, 46, 50, 58, 59, 71, 134
98
McLEAN's mill,
38
MEETING House, 1st,
130
MEETINGS, first town,
16, 17
prelim. district METHODISM at Jenksville,
70, 85
beginnings of
31
66 second effort
49
METHODIST church,
82, 134
METHODIST ears of corn,
58
itinerants, .
41
legal society,
50, 71, 73
MEXICAN war,
· 77
MILITIA,
. 169
MILLER, Dr. A. J. .
xii, 130, 185
·
.
.
37
F. F.
10
204
INDEX.
PAGE.
MILLER brothers, .
86
Charles L.
187
Corner
6,35,56
Daniel
. 55, 73
Genealogy
185
George
130
Col. John .
85, 169
Joseph, 1st
7, 20, 16, 36, 38, 126
66 Joseph 2d
. 52, 130
Leonard
130
Rev. Simeon
· xvii, 81, 147 55 ·
·
Dr. W. B.
. 52, 147
MILLERISM,
MILLER's barn burned,
34
child hurt,
34
child's shoe,
39
MINEACHOGUE,
1, 2, 6, 9, 16, 17, 37, 77
MINISTERS, Congregational
171
Jenksville
172
M. E.
171
MODERATORS,
173
MOODY, Rev. Eli
47
John .
53
Sylvester
64
MORTUARY record,
75
MUDGE, Rev. Z. A.
78
MUNGER, Erastus .
55
N.
NAME, theories of .
17, 18, 163, 164 ·
NASH, Francis
55
Joel, mill
38
Julius .
55
" Dr. Sylvester
29
NEWELL, Mary B. .
146
NICK and Tarzy
59
NOON, Rev. A.
98, 100
0.
OAKLEY, ballad
169
OLDS, Samuel
33
Thirza,
59
ORCUTT, David
49
ORGANIZATION, petition for
11
and struggles,
127
OSTRANDER, Rev. Daniel
32
OUTWARD, Commons
. 17, 161
Sylvester .
William
178
72
205
INDEX.
P.
PAGE.
PAINE and Wright
. 32, 165
David,
31, 58, 130
Jedediah
. 32, 165
Jonathan
34
" PALMER Journal" notice,
156
PARISH, 1st Congregational
73
PARSONS, Adin
55
66
Elisha T.
73
9,17
Reuben
55
Robert
140
PEASE, H. M.
140
64
Simeon
54
Rev. William
44
PERRY, James E.
195
PETITION for celebration,
97
PHELPS, Rev. Abner
43
PHYSICIANS, .
177
PICKERING, Rev. G.
31
PIERCE, Zebinus
65
PLAN of work,
xviii
PLUMLEY, Elijah
179
PLUMLEY's saw-mill,
78
POEM at Centennial,
147
POND, Mineachogue Wood's
52
POSTMASTER'S, .
177
POTASH, Fuller's
63
POTATOES, value of
57
POTTS, A. O.
. 89, 140
POUNDS,
· 36
PRATT, Daniel Tyrus
. 38, 130
PRIEST, Rev. Zadoc
32
PROGRAMME of Centennial,
. 98, 103
PROMINENT men,
92
PROSPECTS of town,
66
PROVISIONS at Centennial,
100
PUTNAM, Abner
64
66 Flavius A.
140, 195
Genealogy
192
PUTT's bridge,
. 57,62
QUARTERLY meeting,
49
.
86
. 89, 140, 195
.
Ezra
Levi .
206
INDEX.
R.
PAGE.
RAYNER, Rev., Menzies
32
REBELLION record,
87
RED Bridge, .
75
REPAIRING old church, .
53
REPRESENTATIVES,
13, 36, 176
" REPUBLICAN, Springfield " notice
155
RESPONSIVE address,
· 112
REVIVALS, .
46, 70, 82, 85
REVOLUTIONARY war,
13, 21, 129
RIDDLE, a .
167
ROBERTS, Rev. Geo.
31
ROBINSON, Hon. G. D.
153
ROGERS, Rev. C. D.
72
ROOD, Asahel .
55
Joseph .
77
Zephaniah
35
ROOT, Amos .
55
Genealogy
190
Hezekiah
63
S.
SAMPSON, Rev. Mr.
50
SANDERSON, Rev. A.
74
SCHOOL committees, SCHOOL-HOUSES, .
35
matters, .
56
SCHOOLS, singing
35, 57
support of
34
SCRANTON, John.
31
Samuel .
. 30, 130
SELECTMEN, .
174
SETTLEMENT of town,
127
SHATTUCK, Veranus
. 55, 76
SHAY's rebellion, .
33
SHELDON, James ·
7,126
SHELL for dinner hour, .
39
SHELTER Rock,
10
SHERMAN, Rev. D.
78
SHINGLE swamp,
16
SICKNESS of 1814, .
46
SIKES, Abner
· 16, 20
66 Benjamin
7, 34, 38, 126
Benjamin, 2d,
56
Edward
86
Genealogy
184
Increase .
75
John .
. 8, 16, 26, 29
Reuben
179
.
.
.
176
207
INDEX.
PAGE.
SIKES, Theodore
. xiii, 73
SLATER, Samuel
64
SLAVE, a
7
SLow progress,
126
SMALL pox scare,
58
SMITH, Rev. Lemuel
32
66 Martin
55
Stephen H.
64
Stukely
65
SNELL, Rev. Mr.
23 90
SOLDIERS in rebellion,
66 in revolution,
130
" · in 1812,
55
SOLDIERS' monument, .
87
40
SPRINGFIELD, Athol and North-Eastern railroad, .
86
manufacturing company,
65, 67, 79 4
water works,
91
SQUIRES, Ezekiel
9,17
STEARNS, Hon. G. M.
152
STEBBINS, Mayor J. M.
150
S. B.
xvii
STEWARD, Rev. A.
14, 26, 27, 28, 31, 42, 123 23
STONE, Rev. William
12, 17, 19, 127
STORM, a thunder
77
STORRS, Rev. R. S.
26
SUB-COMMITTEES of Centennial
99
T.
TALBOT, Governor .
145
TAX collecting,
38, 168
TEMPERANCE record,
87
TEMPLE, Thomas
130
THORNTON'S Mill,
63
THURBER, Rev. Laban
43
TOASTS at Centennial,
145
TOLLAND circuit, .
32
" TOLLAND county press
notice, .
157
TOWN clerks, .
173
TOWN-HOUSE,
87
TOWN instead of district,
39
meetings, places for
30
" officers,".
16, 17, 38, 178
unity,
10
TOWN, who constitute a
1
TUCK, Rev. J. W. .
. 75, 146
Rev. J. W., address of
124
TUCKER, Rev. T. W.
50
SOURCE of civil institutions, .
original bounds,
STONY Hill, .
208
INDEX.
U.
PAGE.
UNDERWOOD, Rev. Mr. .
. 82
UNION church at Jenksville, .
85
" UNION," Springfield, notice,
. 156
VICE-PRESIDENTE at Centennial, .
107 VILLAGE opportunities, .
84, 136
W.
WALLAMANUMPS, .
. 1, 33, 37, 56, 61, 64, 78, 137
9
Zechariah, Jr.,
9
WARNING out,
36
WAR of 1812, ,
54
WARRINER, Isaac .
17
Israel
. 9, 17, 26, 35
WASHBURN, W. W.
140, 195
WESLEYAN praying band,
83
WESTERN railroad,
85
WHITE, Rev. L.
146
Rev. L. address,
140
WILDER, Moses
. 29, 130
WILKINSON, George
64
WILLARD, Rev. Joseph . WILLEY, Benajah
26
Joel
8,16
WILLIAMS, Rev. N.
26
WINSOR, R. H.
84
WOLVES,
38
WOOD and Merritt,
79, 83
WOOD, Charles F. .
55
Gordon B. .
55
" Harvey
55
WOODWARD, Rev. Aaron
23
WRIGHT, Abel.
44
Cyprian .
130
Rev. E. B.
47, 48, 72, 73, 74, 86, 147
66 murder, .
77
Z.
ZENITH of century,
66
#417
8,16
WARNER, Zechariah
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.