USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > Memorials of the dead in Boston; containing exact transcripts of inscriptions on the sepulchral monuments in the King's Chapel burial ground, in the city of Boston. > Part 13
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HERE, next, was interred JOHN WINTHROP, the eldest son of the foregoing, who, in the year 1635, "settled a plantation upon the Long River of Connecticut, under powers from the Lords Say and Brook, and with a commission to be himself Governor of that plantation." He was not long after elected Governor of that colony, and subsequently obtained a royal charter from Charles II., by which the colonies of Connecticut and New Haven were united under one government. Of this colony he was chosen Governor for fourteen years. In 1676, " having gone to Boston (says Trumbull), to attend the Court of the Commissioners of the United Colonies, he was taken sick, and died there, on the 5th of April, and was interred in the same tomb with his father."
IlERE, again, was buried FITZ JOHN WINTHROP, the eldest son of the foregoing, who was born in Ipswich, Massachusetts, in 1638, but who afterwards lived with his father in Connecti- cut. He was an agent for the colony at the British Court in 1004, and, on his return, in 1608, he was chosen Governor of Connecticut, and was annually re-chosen, till his death. It was his fortune, also, to die in Boston, and to be buried in the same tomb with his father and grandfather. He died Novem- ber 27, and was buried December 4, 1707. At his funeral, a sermon was preached by Cotton Mather, to which Increase Mather wrote a preface, of which the following is an extract : "The Grandfather of the Gentleman, here spoken of, was the First Governour, that New England saw at the head of the Massachuset-Colony. Nor was there ever any Governour, a greater Blessing to the Colony. WINTHROP and COTTON (between whom there was the greatest intimacy) were the chief instruments in the hand of CHRIST, for laying the Found- ations, both of our Civil, and our Ecclesiastical Constitution. Ilis honorable Father never will be forgotten by the Colony of
:
311
Winthrop.
Connecticut : It was by his means, that their Charter was pro- cured for them. His name and worth was known in other lands as well as throughout New England. I had the happi- ness and honor of a special acquaintance with him ; to which there was added this agreeable circumstance, -that I was the only person in New England, who had part of my educa- tion in the same University where he had his many years before, namely, the Colledge of Dublin.
" It must be alwayes acknowledged, that this Son of that excellent person, did Patrissare, in respect of his Publie Spirit, and sedulous and successful Endeavours, to obtain a Confirma- tion of those priviledges for his Country, which his Father had obtained for them. And there was this addition to his Honorable Character (which ought to be every man's ambi- tion) That his last Dayes were his best Dayes."
HERE, also, was buried WAIT STILL WINTHROP, a younger brother of the foregoing, Chief-justice of Massachusetts, Major General of the forces of the colony, and sometime President of his Majesty's Council for the province, who died in Boston, November 7, 1717, in the 76th year of his age.
A sermon was preached on the occasion of this gentleman's death by Rev. Joseph Sewall, and another at his funeral by Cotton Mather. To the latter is appended the following euri- ous Latin epitaph :
EPITAPHIUM.
STA, Viator; Tumulumque mirare ; Et Lacrymis Publicis adde Tuas; Luge jacturam Publicam, Si sis pars publici. PALATIEM est hic Locus, non TUMULUS. Cinis tegitur hoc Marmore, Dignus Lapide Philosophorum tegi. Quatuor conduntur in hoe Tuinulo WINTHROPI; Qui vel Quatuor orbis partes ditare sufficerent. Ignorat Historiam Nov-Anglicanam qui hanc neseit Familiam :
312
@Winthrop.
Parvi pendet virtutem Universam qui hane non magni facit. Horum Ultimus hoc cometerium ingressus, WAIT WINTHROP, Armiger, Cujus hæc ultima Laus fucrit, Quod primos Nur-ANGLIE Honores gesscrit. Fuit, Ah, FUIT! NOV-ANGLORUM decus ac Tutamen; Lumen et Columen. MASSACHUSETTENSIS Coloniac Instructor Exereituum, Generosus, at Pacificus; Et qui pro patria et pro pace mori potuit. Provincia CONSILIARIUS primarius, cui prima fuit semper cura, Ne quid R. P. detrimenti caperet; Et in quo uno plures obierunt. JUDEX prætorius, Qui Justitiam atque Clementiam aequo coluit. Maximis Regionis perfuuctus Honoribus; Quos gessit Honores, Ornavit; Quos non gessit, meruit. Curu sinceritate PICS, Cum integritate PROBES;
Ingenii Calestis ac Modesti, Infra se omnia posuit, so infra omnes. Benignus erga cunctos, Erga Indigos ae Egenos Benignissimus. Ab eo nemo Injuriam accepit, etiam Inimicus; Nemini Inimicus fuit, etiam Injuriis Lacessitus. Ab eo miser nemo rejectus, Pauper nemo exclusus; Nemo unquam recessit iratus. MEDICINE Peritus; Qui Arcanis vere Aureis, et anro preciosioribus potitus; Queque et Hippocratem et Helmontium latuerunt, Remedia panacæasque Adeptus; Invalidos omnes ubicuuque sine pretio sanitati restituit; Et pene omnem Naturam fecit Medicam.
4
Qui jam sub hoe saxo dormit mortuus, Vivit in Cordibus multorum, imo millium, Quorum vitas prolongavit. WINTHEOPI merita cum WINTHROPO non funerabit Oblivio. Natus 27 d. XII m. 1041. Denatus 7 d. IX m. 1717. Annam Septuagesimum Sertum agens moritur, Cui mille Annorum Vitam Et plusquam Methusalemiticam, optarunt Quibus Vita chara, superstites.
It can hardly be credited that this epitaph was ever actu- ally inscribed on the family tombstone. Yet an old manu- script, believed to be in the handwriting of John Winthrop, F. R. S., the ellest son of the foregoing, and which contains the following translation of the epitaph, speaks of it, as will be observed, as having been " written in Latin on the Win- throp tomb." This old manuscript runs as follows :
" The following is the translation of an Epitaph written in Latin on the tomb belonging to the Winthrop family.
"STAND Traveller And Admire the Tomb, And to the Public tears add your own ; Bewail the public Loss, If of the public you are part. This place is a Prince's Court, Rather than a Tomb. This Marble covers dust Worthy to be enclosed in Gold. Four WINTEROPS He bnricil in this Tomb; Who were sufficient to enrich even the four quarters of the l'arth. He is unacquainted with the history of New England Who is ignorant of this family; And he has no regard to Universal Virtuo That does not highly value it.
27
311
winthrop.
The last of these Here Interred Was WAIT WINTHROP, Esquire, Whose last Honour was this, That he was Governor of New England; He was, alas! he was! Of New England the Glory aud defence The Light and Stay. MAJOR GENERAL of Massachusetts Colony, Of a noble yet peaceful Disposition And who for his Country and for peace could die. PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL for the Province Whoso chicfest care it always was, That the Commonwealth might receive no damage; And in whom many died. CINEF JUDGE,
Who paid an equal regard to Justice and Clemency. He went through the most honorable stations in the Government, And adorned the honours which he boro, Deserving those he bore not. A person of the most undissembled piety And unspotted probity, Of an Exalted yet Modest Genius,
Ile placed all things beneath himself, Ilimself beneath all Men. Benevolent towards all, And most so to the Pour and Needy;
Injurious to none, not even to Enemies. An Enemy to none, Even though highly provoked.
No unhappy person was by him rejected, Nor poor one refused admittance, Nor did any ever go away displeased. Ile was skilful in PuYsick; And being possessed of Golden secrets, Indeed more valuable than Gobl itself; And having obtained universal remedies, Which Hippocrates and Helmont never knew, All that were siek, wherever he came, Hle freely restored to Health;
......
..
315
Winthrop.
And made almost his whole study of Nature Subservient to Medicine. He that under this stone now sleeps in Death Still lives in the Hearts of Thousands, Whose Lives he has prolonged. The merits of Wixrunor with Him Oblivion shall not bury. Hlo was born the 27th day of December, 1611, Died the 7th day September, 1717, In the 76th year of his Age .* They who valne Life and still enjoy it
Wished bim a Thousand years continuauce here, An age exceeding that of Methuselah."
Among the more recent tenants of this tomb are the late HIon. Thomas Lindall Winthrop, for many years Lieutenant- Governor of Massachusetts, and President of the Massachusetts Historical Society, and his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Bowdoin Win- throp, and his elder sister, Mrs. Anne Winthrop Scars, the mother of Hon. David Sears, whose name is inscribed on the present tablet.
* The translator has clearly made a mistake in the dates of the birth and death, by not allowing for the Old Style, used in the Latin original, and agreeably to which the year commeneed in March. De- cember should be February ( 1611-2), and September should be Novem- ber. R. C. W.
316
Bromfield.
The following is a copy from the original grant of arms to William Bromfield, which bears date, as is seen below, the 7th year of Edward Sixth, which is A. D. 1553.
To all Nobles and Jentles, these Presente largess redyng, hering and seyng, Thomas Hawley, Clarencieulx, Principall herauld and kyng of arms of the sowth Laste and weste partes of this Realme of Englande, from the Ryver Trente South- warde, sendith dew and humble Commendacion and gretyng. Eqquyty willeth and reason ordenith, that men vertuous and of noble Courage, he by their merytes and good renown reward- ed, not alone by their persons in this Mortall lyfe, so brief and transitory, but also after them those that shall be of their bodyes desended, to be in all places of honor with other renowned, accepted and taken by certyne enseignes and demon- straneys of honor and noblesse. And forasmuch as William Bromefeyld of South Rayngham, in the Countye of Norff, gen- tillinan, is desended of an anntyent house beryng arms, and hath in the Kyngs Majestys warres, both in Fraunce and Seot- land, BLED himself so valauntly and manfully, that he is well worthy to have an augmentacion to his said Armes ; yet nev- ertheles he, uneerteyne under what sorte and maner his prede- cessurs have their CRESTE and tynture, not willing to do any thing that should be preculiciall to any gentillman of name and armes, hath desyred me, the said Clarencieulx kyng of armes, to ordeyne, assigne and set furth to his saide armes a creste dew and lofull to be borne. And therefore the sai.lo Chirencieulx sying his request so juste and reasonable, by the authorite and power annexed, attributed, geven and granted by the Kyng, our soverayne Lord,s Highnes to me and to my office of Clarencieulx kynge of Arines, by expresse wordes under his Majesty's most noble greate scale, have ordered, assigned and set furth to his saide armes an augmentacion with a Creste dew and lefull, to be borne, in maner hereafter folow- eth, (that is to say,) Sable, on a Chevron, Silver, three
317
Zaop Antros.
braunches of brome vert, budded golde ; on a Canton of the same, a spere-hedd, asur, the poynte bluddy, in the socket a truncheon of the spere broken ; on his healme on a wreth silver and geules a demy Tygre asur, the mayne and the Tayle flaxed silver, langned geules, tusked gold, holdlyng in his pawes a sworde hilted and pomeled silver, poriled gold, the blade broken, manteled geules, dobled silver, as more plainly apereth depieted in this margent.
To have and to holde to hym and his posteritie and they hit to use and enjoye forevermore. In witness I have signed these presents with hand, and sete thereunto, the SEALE of my armes, with the scale of my office of Clarencieulx kyng of Arines : geven & granted at London, the Xth day of Januarye, in the seventh yere of the reigne of our soveraigne Lorde Edward the Syste, by the grace of God Kyng of England, Fraunce and Ireland, defendler of the faithe, and of the Churche of England and Ireland under Christ the supreme hedd.
Par Moy Clarencieulx, Moy.
" Boston, May 20, 1852.
"SIR : Many years ago, in one of my rides with Rev. Mr. Greenwood, he told me an incident of the preceding day that interested me at the time, and some months later I becaine much more interested, from a fart that seemed to be uncon- nected with Mr. Greenwood's statement. After the Sabbath morning service, a stranger addressedl him, stating that in his childhood he attended that church ; that he had but recently returned to the country, and that his visit here now was to look after the place of burial of his family of oldl ; and that he de- sired Mr. Greenwood's kind offices in directing his proceed- ings. Mr. Greenwood told him that he was too feeble to attend to any duty of that sort, and called up the oldl sexton to do the needful duty. He found the family tomb in a very dilapidated condition, and examined it to the bottom, and
27*
318
Lady Andros.
repaired it as it now appears. This person was the son of Dr. Church, of undesirable Revolutionary memory, who had returned, with his fiumuily, and was a citizen of Northampton, in this state. On the bottom of the tomb is a slab, stating that " here lies the bones of Lady Anne Andros." I inquired of four of our most intelligent antiquarians if Gov. Andros lost his wife while governor here; their answer was, not that they ever heard of; and I then applied to my friend, Dr. J. V. C. Smith, to huut up the facts in the case .* He did so, and published them at the time; and they were highly inter- esting, as teachers and preachers to the hearts of all the living of this day. Here lies buried the representative of the high- est earthly grandeur known among us in 1686, and as much forgotten as the poor German emigrant who now lies buried at Deer Island.
Respectfully yours, " AMOS LAWRENCE."
" MR. BRIDGMAN."
* On Friday, Feb. 10, 1688, was held the funeral service over Lady Andrus, who was buried with all the state attendant on such occasions in England. There is something quite striking in the few words of Judge Sewall's description of what he witnessed of this ceremony. " Between 1 and 5 I went to the funeral of the Lady Andros, having been invited by the elark of the South Company. Between 7 and 8 (lychns * illuminating the cloudy air) the corpse was carried into the herse drawn by six horses, the soldiers making a guard from the gov- ernor's house down the Prison Lane to the South meeting-house; there taken out and carried in at the western door, and set in the alley before the pulpit, with six mourning women by it. House made light with candles and torches. There was a great noise and clamor to keep peo- ple out of the house, that they might not rush in too soon. I went home."
* Torches. Link has the same Greek derivation.
319
Benjamin Mountfort.
BENJAMIN MOUNTFORT,
Who is interred in this cemetery, arrived in Boston per ship Dove, from London, in 1675. Ile was brother of Edmund and Henry Mountfort, as is fully verified by the inscription on the grave-stone of the former, in the Granary Burial-place, dated 1690.
He was aneducated, intelligent and enterprising merchant. He was one of the founders of the " King's Chapel," of which he was warden in 1690 and 1696. In 1679 he was member of the " Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company." In 1680, in consequence of his being an Episcopalian, he was permitted by the "General Court " to purchase a lot of ground of Clement Grose, on which he built his warehouse, which was sold by his executors to Francis Boylston, which lot is now occupied by Messrs. Lane and Reed, at the foot of Peirce's Alley, opposite Fanueil Hall.
Connected with the reference to the property of Benjamin Mountfort, on the "Town Dock," is a copy of a Writ, issued against Moses Peirse, for cutting down the gates of the same.
COPY OF A WRIT AGAINST MOSES PEIRSE,
For cutting down the gate to the warehouse of Benjamin Mountfort, at the foot of Exchange Avenue, or Peirce's Alley, namely :
To the Marshal of Suffolk or his Deputy or Constable of Boston, - .
You are required, in his Majesty's name, to attach the goods, and, for want thereof, the body of Moses Peirse, and to take bond of him to the value of ten pounds, with sufficient security for his appearance at the next county court, to be held in Boston, then and there to answer to the complaint of Benjamin Mountfort, in an action of trespass ; for that the said Moses Peirse did clandestinely upon the third of October last past, in the night, and also a second time on the thirteenth of this month, cut down und break to pieces the gates of the said Mountfort, fastened to his house, situate in
320
Bulfinch.
Boston near the Town Dock, and also his fence ; whereby maliciously damnifying the plaintiff to the value of five pounds money, as shall appear, with all due damages ; and so make a true return thereof, under your hand.
Dated. Boston, January 24, 1682.
NATHANIEL BARNES, Per Curzcone, for the Town of Boston.
THE RETURN.
I have attached one chest of drawers, showed by Moses I'eirse to be his estate, and left a summons at his dwelling- house. JAMES MECS, Constable.
Boston, January 25, 1682.
(Copied.)
Attest. JAS. ADDINGTON, Clerk.
BULFINCH. Sve p. 2:1.
mebmor.
nia
-SADO:
nima : PROPICIOVR
2
ROBERTVS DE : MARMOR :
SAIAn
In the course of our an- tiquarian researches, we pro- cured the annexed cut. It represents an ancient flat recumbent gravestone in Bassenthwaite Church. county of Cumberland, Eng- land, bearing incised a cross- florée and sword, with this inscription in Lombardic characters, - " Hic jacet Robertus de Hehmor cujus anime propicietur Deus ; " --- that is, " Here lies Rob- ert de Hehmor, upon whose soul God have mercy."
The date of this stone is about the middle of the four- teenth century.
The following are the arms of different branches of the Hehmor, or llighmore, fam- ily.
Judrr.
A.
Adams, John, 275
Adams, John Quincy,
208
Adams, Lydia, 167
Adams, Samuel, 167, 2 5, 292
Adams, .William, 167
Allen, Elizabeth,
158
Apthorp, Susan, . 277, 251
Allen, Cilam,
138
Apthorp, Thomas, 280
Allen, John,
Allen, Mary, .
102
Apthorpe, Mary, 221
Allen, Nathaniel 155
Armour, Birch, 100
Alden, Willi.um, 102
Allen, Jonathan,
"Allen, Joseph, 201, 205
Allen, Moses, .
201
-
Avery, David, 301
Avery, Ebenezer, 303
Arery, Elizabeth, 304
303
Allyn, Matthew,
205
Amory, John, 229
Andros, Anne,
31>
Audros, Edinund, 12
Apthorp, Alicia, 2-0)
Apthorp, Ann, 250
Apthorp, Caroli, 135 !
Apthorp, Catharine, . 156, 250
Apthorp, Charles, 91, 186, 157, 27;, 2 7, 251
Apthorp, Charles Ward, 277
B.
Apthorp, Charlotte Augusta, 277
Apthorp, East, 278
Apthorp, Elizabeth,
Apthorp, George, . 186, 277, 2-1:
Baker, tiles, 220
Apthorp, Grizzelle, 186, 277
Baker, Luke, .
55
Authorp, Hannah, 277, 291 . Paker, Rebecca, . 112
Apthorp, Henry, 186, 2so : Balston, John, 115, 268, 263
Apthorp, James, 277, 280
Apthorp, John, 188, 276, 277, 280
Apthorp, John T., 273
Apthorp, Joseph, 186, 280
Apthorp, Rebecca, . 281
Apthorp, Robert, 281
Apthorp, stephen, 250
' Arsonnean, Pierre Remi, 202
Auchmuty, Robert, 222
Austin, James T., 103
Austin, Samuel, . 275
Allen, Solomon, . 205
Allen, Thomas, 204, 205, 206
145, 201, 205 -
Allen, William,
Avery, Hannah, .
Avery, John, 301
Avery, Jonathan,
. 301, 302, 303
Avery, Joseph, 303, 304
Avery, Margaret, 301
Avery, Mary, 35,303
Avery, Rachel, 303
Avery, Robert, . 302, 303, 304
Avery, William, 33, 301, 302, 363, 304
Bailey, Elizabeth, 293
Baker, Daniel, 112
Allen, Themas, Jr., 200
158
Althorp, William,
2×1
322
Balston, Mary,
264 ; Bennet, William, 54
Balston, Prudence,
264; Bibye, Simon, . 210
Ealston, Rebecca, .
121
Bill, Frances, .
Balston, Nathaniel, 121 Pill, Jonathan, 91
Balston, Rachel,
121 Binney, Amos,
217
Band, Mary, .
Binney, Barnabas, 217
Band, Nathaniel,
10
Binney, C. J. F., 218, 219
Band, William, .
164' Bianey, libbert,
217
Barnes, Ilopestill,
29 | Binney, Horace, .
217, 218
Parnes, Isabel,
51 Binney, John, 217
Barnes, *anbella, 131
Binney, Jonathan, . 73, 216, 217,
212
Y
-Barnes, Nathaniel, 48, 51, 131, 160
Binney, Martha,
Barney, Chloe, 294 1
Barrell, Joseph,
Barrett, Samuel, Bartlett, Hannah, 231
291
Binney, Stephen Hal
216
Bassett, Elizabeth,
270;
Black, Moses, .
Black, Rosanna,
Blackman, Benjamin, 41
Bayard, Robert, 80, 251;
Blackstone, William,
Beals, Saumel, 152:
Decham, John,
110, 111 | Blague, Mary, 170
Decham, Sarah, .
110, 111 | Blague, Nathaniel,
72
Decham, Esther,
110:
Blague, Neucomb, . 170
Beck, Mary,
51
Blake, Eliather, . 37
Beck, Menasseh,
51
Blake, Elizabeth,
219
Bell, Betsey, 27 2, 273
Blake, James, Jr.,
17
Bell, Daniel,
91, 2, 273
Blanchard. Caleb,
Bell, Edward,
272:
Blanchard, *a ** ,
C3
Bell, Frenees,
272
Blanchard, Edward,
Bleigh, Ann, 14
1,11, Johanna,
122
Blower, John,
Bell, John, .
73
Bell, Joseph,
273
Bollan, Francisca,
37
Bell, Naney, 2, 273
Bell, Sally, .
272
Bonne, Abigail,
Boone, Hapuab, 5, 1+4
Poone, John, .
105, 140
Bell, Thomas Crafts, 191, 272 Bordman, Elizabeth Henderson, 175
Bell, William, 272, 273
Bordman, William Hende 0, 175
Bell, William D., 191, 273
Borland, Anna V.,
Borland, Catherina Lloyd,
Benington, Cornelius, 132
Borland, James Lloyd,
Benington, Mary, 132
Borland, John. .
1,
Benington, Sarah, . 132 Porland, Leonard Vassal,
Bennet, Elizabeth, . 54
Borland, Margaret Vassal,
Bennet, Moses,
127 ; Porland, M. Woolery,
Bennet, Thomas,
54
Borland, Sarah, . 257
Baraes, James,
Farnes, Mary, .
48, 51, 131, 160
Binney, Margaret, 217
Binney, Mary, 217
Binney, Merey, 217
Binney, Thomas,
17
BatcheMier, Samuel,
230!
Bates, Mildred, . 57|
Blague, Judith, .
Belcher, Andrew,
200
Blake, James,
Bell, Hannah, 191,
273
Bollan, Unlielmi, 137
Bell, Samuel,
272, 273
Bell, Sarah, 191, 273 Bell, Thomas, . 191, 271, 272, 273 |Boone, Nicholas,
105. 11.0
Bemis, Isaac, . 61
Bollan, Frances,
-
323
Bowdoin, Elizabeth, 275 Brinley, Charles Henry, . . 223
1
Box, Ann,
308' Brinley, Deborah, 44, 225, 226, 227
Box, Elisha, 308 Brinley, Edward, 41, 226, 223, 280
Box, John, .
102, 303' Brinley, Edward Littlefield, . 224
Box, Lydia,
303 Brinley, Elizabeth, 221, 223, 225, 226
Box, Sarah,
308 308: Brinley, Elizabeth Henshaw, 45
"Boyer, Daniel, 283 Brinley, Elizabeth Parker, . 224
Boyer, Elizabeth,
283
Brinley, Emily Malbone, . . 226
Boyer, Katherine, . 2×3 ! Brinley, Francis, 44, 220, 221, 222, 223, 225, 226, 227
Boyle, Robert,
Bradford, John, . Bradford, William, 203
Brading, Elizabeth, 255 Brinley, Gertrude Aleph, . 223
Bradstreet, Mercy,
237
Brinley, Grisell,
220
Bradstreet, Samuel,
237 Brinley, Maria Louisa, 220
Brattle, Bethiah,
260
Brinley, Maria Margaret, 224
Bratile, Catherine,
23%
Brinley, Mary, 1,228
Brattle, Edward, 260:
Brattle, Elizabeth,
148, 259
260
Brinley, Putnam,
226
Brattle, Mary,
200
Brinley, Robert, 227, 275
Brinley, Rose, 220
Brinley, Sarah, 44, 226
Brinley, Thomas, 219, 221. 222,
223, 225, 226, 227
Brinley, Thomas Malbone, . 223
Brinley, Wentworth, . 227
Brinley, William,
. 221, 226, 230
Bridge, . 11
Bridge, Anna, 262
Bridge, Copia, 21:2
Bridge, Elizabeth, 197,262,263,204
Bridge, Ellen, 262, 261
Bridge, Lydia, 262
Bridge, Sarah, 262, 263
Bryant, *illiam, 50
Bromefeyld, William, 316
Bromfield, Abigail, 235, 258
Bromfield, Arthur, 255
Bromfield, Edward, 56, 180, 254,
255, 256
Bromfield, Elizabeth, 256
Bromfield, Henry, . 255, 256
Bromfield, John,
Bromfield, Mary, 256
Brimmer, Herman,
100
Bromfiehl, Thomas, 256
Brinley, Anne, .
Brinley, Catharine, , 297
Briuley, Catharine Putnam,
45,
Brown, John, 232, 233
Brown, Jonathan,
Brown, Lemuel, . 232
Brinley, Catherine Sophia, . 221
193
Brenton, Jahleel, 194
Brenton, William, . 193
Brewster, Deliverance, 50
Brewster, John, 56,77
Britnall, Joseph, 249
Brittman, Thomas, 49
Bryant, Esther, . 59
Bryant, Hannah,- 50
Bryant, James, . 59
Bryant, William, 50
Bridge, Thomas, 29, 197, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265
Bridgham, Joseph, 29
Brighah, Abigail, 101
Erighah, Joseph, 101
Brighah, Sarah, . 104
Brigham, Abigail, . 155
Brigham, Joseph, 1.54
Brigham, Sarah,
Brightman, Henry,
1 -
Bromfield, Sarah, 256
Bruintield, William, 254, 255, 316
Brown, Enoch, 123, 232
220
298 290 Brinley, Francis William, 22.1
Brinley, George, . . . 226,227
224 Brinley, Mary Gibbs, Brinley, Nathaniel, 227
Brattle, Katherine,
Brattle, Thomas, 148, 259, 260
Brattle, William,
259, 26#
Brenton, Govener,
Ender.
Box, Mary,
824
Endep.
Brown, Lois, 165 | Clap, Eleazer, 250
Brown, Lucy,
233 Clap, Elizabeth, 243, 244, 249, 250
Browu, Mary, 163 Clap, Esther, . 2.49
Brown, Nathaniel, 232 Clap, Ezra, .
219
Brown, Philemon, 232 Clap, George, 252
251
Brown, Thomas, 87
Clap, Hopestill, 247
250
Brown, Walter,
Bulfinch, Adino, . 281, 284
Bulfinch, Anna,
277, 251
Clap, Jonathan, 219
240
Bulfinch, Elizabeth, 277, 282
Clap, Nathaniel,
25]
Bulfinch, Hannah,
188
Bulfinch, John, .
189, 281
Bulfinch, Judith,
251
Bulfinch, Samuel,
281
Clap, Preserved, . 241, 217
Bulfinch, S. G., .
21
Clap, Prudence, 219, 250
Bulfinch, Susan,
187, 234
Clap, Richard, 250, 251
Bulfinch, Thomas, . 90, 187, 158,
Clap, Roger, . 64, 239, 247, 218, 251, 252
Burgess, Ebenezer,
Clap, Samuel, 238, 241, 250
Burgess, Mercy, 294 Clap, Sarah, 251
Burgis, Ebenezer, 130, 163
Clap, Submit, . 219
Burgis, Elizabeth, 130, 163
Clap, Supply,. 210
Burgis, Marcy, 130, 163
Clap, Susanna,
219
Burgis, Hehecea, 163
Burnton, Thomas,
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