USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > Second report of the record commissioners of the city of Boston, containing the Boston records 1634-1660, and the book of possessions > Part 32
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¿. James Penn. In 1671 it fell by his will to James Allen, his nephew, who, later, added lot No. g, making a twenty-acre farm. He extended Chambers strect northerly. "Gleaner" thinks it certain that Allen thus owned a larger lot in Boston than any one else, excepting Blackstone. j. Edward Gibbons.
k. Alexander Beck, 1 acre, - a little marsh, " next Mr. Hough's Point ;" and described a few years before, when Beck was allowed to mow it, as in the new field, "near the place where Mr. Hough taffes boat."
H. 42. Richard Fairbank. [His lot No. 3, being four acres in the New Field, with George Burden and Henry Pease south, the river east, T. Oliver north, Isaac Addington, Alexander Beck, and James Brown west. - W.H. W.]
H. 43. Henry Pease. [Lamb places Pease's lot on the marsh at the point, crossing the end of the causeway which led over the mill-pond. - W.H. W.]
H. 44. Thomas Oliver. [His lot No. 2, being one acre and a half, with R. Fairbanks south, the marsh west, R. Carter south, as the description reads. - W.II.W.]
H. 45. Richard Carter. [Apparently, but the lot is not re- corded. - W.H.W.]
H. 46. James Brown. [His lot No. 3, being half an acre in the New Field with R. Fairbanks north, J. Allington (or Adding- ton) east, A. Beck west, Thomas Clark south. - W.H.W.]
H. 47. Alexander Beck. [His lot No. 2, being one acre in the New Field with Thomas Munt east, the water north, E. Gibbons south and west. - W.H. W.]
H. 48. Isaac Addington. [This lot is necessitated by lots H. 42 and II. 46. It is not on record. - W.H.W.]
H. 49. Thomas Clarke. [Not recorded, but mentioned in H. 46. - W. H.W.]
H. 50. Edward Gibbons.
H. 51. Thomas Munt. [These two lots are necessary, but not well indicated. - W. H. W.]
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MAP I, OR NO. 9.
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MAP I, OR NO. 9.
COPP'S HILL, OR THE MILL FIELD.
I. I. Christopher Stanley's pasture, which extended west to Salem street. and was defined on the other sides pretty nearly by Charter. Hanover. and Prince streets. He was a tailor, and left by will, 1646. the first bcquest to the town for the support of schools. (See N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., Jan. 1850, p. 52.) Stanley's widow, Susannah. married William Phillips, who con- firmed to her the house Stanley left her. " with the great pasture." (Register. Oct .. 1851. p. 447.) A northerly part of this lot passed, in 1665. through Richard Dumer, to John Hull, the mint-master ; and in 1683 he died. and his daughter Hannah and her husband, Judge Sewall. conveyed Hull street. in 1701-5, to the town.
[The map line cuts off the southerly part of this pasture, which is shown on Map K, or No. 10. - W.H.W.7
I. 2. Thomas Buttolph. [Apparently his fifth lot (see B. of P., p. 42). .. about half an acre, bounded with the causeway north- east. William Cox (i.e., Copp) north-west, the marsh south-west. He had other lands in Mill Field. (See Map K.) - W.H. W.]
I. 3. William Copp, shoemaker. A small cove made in sonth of him. with marsh stretching farther east. In his will, in 1669, he calls himself sick and weak ; a cordwainer by occupation ; and he leaves the enjoyment of the house to his wife, "Gooddeth." In his inventory his house, out-houses, orchard, garden, and land about the house are valued at £80. (See also Sewall Papers, ii., 408.) Not far from this point. and taking part of the property of the Gas Company, early in the next century Joshua Gee had a ship-vard. and he owned adjacent lands, which fell, in 1724, to his son Ebenezer (d. 1730). and finally wholly to Rev. Joshua Gee, who died in 1748. when the estate was divided according to a docu- ment which "Gleaner" calls one of the most important in the Probate Office.
[He had a house and half an acre in the Mill field, with the marsh south-west, Thomas Buttolph south-east, the river north- west. John Button north-east. Hence he had the corner lot. - W.H. W.]
I. 4. John Button. [One acre, with Charles river north, the marsh south-west, John Shaw north-east and south-east. - W.H.W.]
I. 5. John Shaw, who seems to have surrounded the wind-mill lot. There was a bluff here above the beach where the way run.
[His name is not among the possessors, but figures in the above description of Button's abutters. - W.H.W.]
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CITY DOCUMENT NO. 46. - PART 2.
I. 6. The wind-mill lot.
I. 7. Valentine Hill. Here, at Hudson's Point, was the ferry to Charlestown, and Francis Hudson, the ferryman, was allowed to wharf out here in 1652 " before his ground ; " and Thomas Broughton had a like privilege hereabout the same year ; and when this privilege was continued a year later, the expression is "to wharf or make a barrocadd before his land at Center Haven." Southerly from this point, on the brow of the hill, the town pur- chased of John Baker and Daniel Turrell, in 1659, the beginning of the present Copp's Hill Burying-ground, and in 1711 added a part of Judge Sewall's pasture, to the south-west. (Shurtleff, Desc. of Boston, p. 199 ; Gleaner Articles, No. 14.) Hull street adjacent was not paved till 1735, when Edward Pell and other abutters petitioned for leave to pave it.
I. 8. Nicholas Parker, 2 acres ; allowed to wharf out in 1651. He had built a house here before 1646, when a footway was laid out from it through the gardens to the " mill lane or street ; " and along the shore, in 1650, " a way of a rod broad" was laid out from the battery to the ferry. Well in from the shore in this lot, after Salem and Charter streets were laid out, on the westerly corner of them, there was a brick house which Daniel Turrell and Samuel Wakefield, with their wives, sold to Lady Phips in November, 1687. Only a few days before Sewall records that news had come of her husband being dubbed Sir William Phips at Windsor Castle. The Governor later added to the estate from adjacent lots.
[Parker had V. Hill north-west, the water north-east, T. But- tolph south-west and south-east. - W.H.W.]
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MAP K, OR No. 10. (122)
MAP K, OR NO. 10.
THE SOUTH-EASTERLY PART OF COPP'S HILL, FOLLOWING THE LINE OF NORTH AND COMMERCIAL STREETS.
K. 00. The remainder of Christopher Stanley's lot. I. 1.
K. 0. The remainder of Nicholas Parker's lot. I. 8.
K. I. Thomas Buttolph. [Apparently his lots Nos. 3 and 4, of 43 acres in the Mill-field, with the Bay north-east, N. Parker and V. Hill north-west, C. Stanley south ; also one acre compassed by Stanley's ground. - W.H. W.]
Christopher Stanley in 1644 was allowed to wharf near Winnis- simet ferry. Along this water front there were various ship-yards established later in the colonial and in the early provincial period. They appear in Bonner's map in 1722. Captain William Green- ough's yard was nearly opposite this lot.
K. 2. Edward (or Edwin) Goodwin. [House and half an acre, the Bay north-east, J. Sweet south-east, T. Buttolph north- west and south-west. - W.H.W.]
K. 3. John Sweet. [House and 1} acres, with E. Goodwin north-west, the Bay north-east, I. Grosse south-east, and C. Stanley south-west. Lamb's map makes Sweet's lot form two sides of a square enclosing Merry. Grosse, and Seabury, the water making the two other sides. This seems necessitated by the description of Grosse's two lots. which see K. 7. - W.H. W.]
John Sweet seems to connect in the rear with his other lot. Perhaps this was the lot Governor Bellingham was permitted to wharf before, in 1648, "if it did not prejudice the battery," when it was described as between Merry and William Winbourne ; and somewhere near was a house which Sampson Shore sold to Chris- topher Lawson in 1646, when he wharfed out before it.
K. 4. Isaac Grosse. [Apparently his third lot, with the Bay east. John Sweet north, John Seaberry south, Walter Merry west. - W.H.W. ]
K. 5. John Seabury. [House and garden, about half an acre, with Isaac Grosse north-west, the Bay north-east, W. Merry south- east and south-west. Winsor says this was first Merry's land, bought by Seabury in 1639, and then sold " successively to John Wilson and Alexander Adams in 1645, who was allowed, in 1646, to wharf out, maintaining along the shore a highway for a cart." - W.H.W.]
K. 6. Walter Merry, } acre, who built " a roof over the highway on the sea-bancke " to the annoyance of the selectmen ; and when Hanover street was extended in his rear, in 1644, he was allowed the cost of fencing on that side. He was ordered to keep a high-
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CITY DOCUMENT NO. 46. - PART 2.
way open on the shore sixteen feet broad, in 1646, and sold the property the same year to William Douglass, who in turn sold it to Henry Brown, mariner, in 1648, with what is called Anker's shop. The North Battery was built out here in 1646, and repaired in 1656.
K. 7. Isaae Grosse. [IIis second lot, the Bay and Jolin Sweet north, W. Beamsley south, the way west. Perhaps there was a little bend or cove here, as otherwise we should call the Bay east. Although Lamb's map makes a way from Savage's corner cast to Sweet's lot, none of the six owners between bound westerly on a way except Gross ; but, curiously, nearly all omit the west bounds. - W.H.W.]
In the provincial period not far from this spot stood the Saluta- tion Inn, which gave a name to an alley running by it, connecting Hanover with North street. John Brooking owned it, and his widow sold it, in 1692, to Sir William Phips. (Sewall Papers, i., 222.) John Scollay, hiring of Lady Phips in 1697, kept it. Samuel Green was the host in 1731. It became famous later, when William Campbell kept it, in 1773, and it was a rallying-place for the patriots.
K. 8. William Beamsley. [House and house-lot of about half an acre, the Bay east, I. Grosse north and north-west, Anne Tuttle south and south-west. - W. H. W.]
K. 9. Anne Tuttle. [House and garden, with W. Beamsley north, N. Bourne south, the Bay cast, and - (probably the west bound was left for farther search). - W.H.W.]
It was on the rear of this lot, on the lower corner of the present Clark and Hanover streets, that the New North Church was built in 1714, - a small wooden building, enlarged in 1730, and giving place to the present edifice in 1802. The land was then bought of Colonel Thomas Hutchinson for £455.
K. 10. Nehemiah Bourne, shipwright, who built here, in 1641, the " Trial," the first large vessel built in Boston. John Richards was using this yard in 1688. Bourne had come over in 1638 ; pre- viously living at Charlestown and Dorchester, had come to Boston in 1641. The " Trial" made her first voyage to the Azores and West Indies under the command of Thomas Coitmore. On her next voyage, to Bilboa and Malaga, she was commanded by Thomas Graves, and returned to Boston, March 23, 1643-44. Bourne went again to England, and served as major of a regiment in the Parliamentary army ; but was once more in Boston in 1645, returning to England the next year, and became rear-admiral in the Parliament's navy. There is an account of Bourne in N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., Jan., 1873.
[His house and garden had Capt. Hawkins south, the Bay east, Anne Tuttle north, "and on the north -," which last entry I sur- mise was for north-west or west, and never filled out. - W.H.W.]
K. II. Capt. Thomas Hawkins. [Apparently the lot sold him by Edward Bendall, 30th, 11mo., 1650. If so, it began 40 feet north from the lot that was R. Thompson's, and so to N. Bourne's,' running with Bourne's pales from the sea on the east to C. Stan- ley's rails on the west, the south line being parallel. - W.H.W.]
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APPENDIX.
Hawkins is supposed to have built the house, which became later the " Ship Tavern." which stood till 1866. John Vyal kept it in 1663, and it is associated with some stirring events. Hawkins's ship-yard was on the opposite water front, and he built here, as early as 1645, the ship .. Seafort," of four hundred tons. Haw- kins's inventory is given in N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., Oct., 1855. p. 343.
K. 12. Edward Bendall. [His third lot, with the Bay east, Capt. Hawkins north, and Lieut. Savage south. - W.H.W.]
Edward Bendall sold to Anchor Ainsworth, and subsequent owners were Joseph Phippeni, 1647, George Mitchell, John Baker. Baker's will is in N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., April, 1861, p. 124.
The way along the shore from the dock to Gallop's Point had been laid out " as it is beguu" in 1643, and in 1650 it appears that .. the way formerly granted of a rod in breadth from Gallop's Point to the Battery, being interrupted by Mrs. Hawkins her house, it shall turn up from the water side through Mrs. Hawkins her gar- den, and soe by Mr. Winthrop's house, between Major Borne's house and his garden, before Mr. Holiok's, to the Battery," - marking some changes in ownership.
K. 13. Thomas Savage. [House and garden, with the Bay east, C. Stanley west, E. Bendall north, and the lane south. This lane became Bennet street, and Scarlet's wharf was at its easterly end. - W.H.W.]
This, or another house on the spot, became, later, the "King's Head Tavern." which was burned in 1691, and rebuilt. Drake says that James Davenport kept it in 1755, and his widow in 1758 ; but in 1754, Davenport, who had kept the " Globe Tavern," peti- tioned to keep the .. Bunch of Grapes," formerly known as " Castle Tavern," near Scarlet's Wharf, which had been a licensed house for forty or fifty years. There is an account of Davenport in N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., 1879, p. 31. A little way from Bennet street, on the northerly side (it is shown on Bouner's map), stood the North Grammar School, erected in 1713. Recompenee Wads- worth was the first master ; and there is on the files of the city clerk an interesting testimonial to his fidelity, signed by Increase Mather and other ministers of the town.
K. 14. Edmund Grosse. His will, 1655, is given in N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., July, 1858, p. 273. He sold the lot to John Anderson, shipwright, in 1647. It seems to have been on this lot that Judge Edward Hutchinson later built him a house, which, late in the eighteenth century, became the "North End Coffee House." It was opposite this point that the principal wharf of the North End was later built, known first as Clark's Wharf, and subsequently as Hancock's, - Thomas Hancoek being the prineipal proprietor. [House lot, with the lane north, I. Cole south, I. Cullimer west, the Bay east. - W.H.W. ]
K. 15. Samuel Cole, house and garden; sold, in 1645, to George Halsall, who, in 1646, had liberty " to set down a eausey ten foot square, from his wharfe to low-watter marke, and that passingers shall come and goe free to it; " and shortly after he was permitted " to imploy a passag boatt betweene his wharfe and
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CITY DOCUMENT NO. 46. - PART 2.
the ships wher the ships rid, and is to take a penny for each per- SON."
K. 16. Isaac Cullimer had two lots, the other being K. 21. [I cannot reconcile myself to Lamb's method of marking out these lots with the two of Thomas Joy, and one cach of Richard Raw- lins and Thomas Clark. Without clear proof, I must doubt that these six lots were cut into such extremely irregular forms, when a much simpler arrangement will answer. Cullimer's east lot (No. 2 of his Possessions), according to the Book, has the bay south-east, C. Stanley north-west, Stanley, S. Cole, and the way north-east, Clark and R. Rawlins south-west. Here I suspect a mistake of "Rawlins " for "Thomas Joy." For Rawlins' lot (K. 18) has Joy (not Cullimer) on the north-east, and Joy's lot (K. 17) has Rawlins south-west and Cullimer north-east. Is it not probable that the perambulator overlooked Joy's strip, which inter- vened between Cullimer and Rawlins? - W.H. W. ]
K. 17. Thomas Joy. [His second lot, of onc aere, bounds with C. Stanley north-west, I. Cullimer north-east, R. Rawlins south-west, Mr. Clarke south-east. - W.H. W.]
Upon this lot William Clark (see the aceount of his family in N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., 1879, pp. 19, 226), a prominent merehant of the provincial period, well known in publie affairs, and not always fortunate in his private ventures, built and lived in a house which beeame famous. It stood fronting the square, very nearly where Prince street now comes into it, on the easterly eor- ner. It was next the residenee of Sir Charles Henry Frankland, the royal collector of customs. Further to the east, and oceupy- ing the spaee intervening between the converging streets, was the estate on which Thomas Hutchinson, about 1710, erected, with its front on Garden court leading from the square, the sump- tuous house in which the son, Governor Thomas Hutchinson, was born and lived. Sec Col. Henry Lee's paper on these and other old houses hercabouts, in Mass. Hist. Soc. Proceedings, Feb., 1881. A view of the Hutehinson house is given in the American Magazine, Vol. ii.
K. 18. Richard Rawlins. [House and garden of 12 aeres, with C. Stanley north-west, T. Joy north-east, Clarke south-east, I. Cullimer south-west (i.e., Cullimer's west lot, K. 21). - W.H. W. ]
Richard Rawlins, plasterer, probably bought of Peter Johnson, the Dutchman, in 1638 ; and when Hanover street was extended, in 1644, it took a part of his eorn-field behind his house, for which he was compensated. These had lands hereabout later : Thomas Clark, Mark Hands, Henry Lampray, Edward Breek, William Burnell, Henry Paine. George Dell, Thomas Ryder, -some of them doubtless sharing in the breaking up of Stanley's pasture.
K. 19. Thomas Clarke. [Warehouse and house lot. T. Joy north-west, I. Cullimer west (i.e., K. 21), I. Cullimer north-east (i.e., K. 16), and the Cove and T. Joy south (i.e., Joy's lot No. 1, K. 20). - W.H.W.]
Thomas Clarke is ealled of Dorehester, merehant, when in 1644 he granted a part of his land to Christopher Stanley, which part is
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APPENDIX.
perhaps the identical " p'cell of land lying neere to the water side," which Stanley named in his will, two years later, as a bequest, ·· for the maintenance of the free schoole," and which the town in 1649 sold to William Phillips. in consideration of 13s. 4d. " per annum forever, to the use of the schole." This Thomas Clarke was a prominent merchant, aud his inventory, in 1678, shows various estates in Boston. His shop goods are appraised at £756 ; the house where Elizabeth Steveus lives, £300; the oue Mr. Woodmansy lived in, £150 : orchard behind it, £100 ; land at lower end of the Common. £70; the house occupied by his sou-in-law, Thomas Baker, £75 ; the house Edward Shippen lives iu, £700.
K. 20. Thomas Joy. [One house and lot of about half an acre. and another house adjoining, with the Cove south-west, Thomas Clarke north-west, north-east, and south-east. Evidently just at the bend of the Cove. - W.H. W.]
Thomas Joy, carpenter. is called of Hingham, when, iu 1648, he bonded this estate to Major Savage. with its house. " near the new meeting-house in Boston." This second church is usually eon- sidered as built two years later, in 1650 ; aud in this last year a committee was appointed " to lay out the high wayes by the uew meetinge house." Mention is made of his cellar .. by the water side," in 1642 ; and in 1644, when it is said to be iu the highway. Perhaps this became the new house which, iu 1647, he sold to Bozoone Allen, of Hingham. with adjoining wharf. Allen calls himself of Boston in his will, 1652. (N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., July. 1851. p. 299.) Joy built the town-house, and in the final settlement in January. 1661. he received £680.
K. 21. Isaac Cullimer. [Evidently his first lot, with C. Stanley north-west, the Cove south-east, R. Rawlins north-east, F. Hudsou and B. Pasmer south-west. It will be noticed that Stanley makes the north-west boundary of Cullimer, Rawlins, Joy, and Cullimer. This was undoubtedly the line of the street, but whether at that date it was more than a cart-track does not appear. F. Hudson, the next westerly owner on the shore, bounds north-west on Wm. Hudson. who here joins Stanley. - W H. W. ]
K. 22. Bartholomew Passmore. [House and gardeu of about a quarter of an aere, with Francis Hudsou north-west, the Cove south-east. I. Cullimer north-east, J. Gallop south-west. - W. H.W.]
Passmore sold to John Sweet in 1650. It was here, on the corner of North and Richmond streets, that Nicholas Upsall kept the Red Lion Iun. and close here the devastating fire of Nov. 27, 1676, broke out in one Wakefield's house. Upsall's will is given in N. E. Hist. and Geneal. Reg., July, 1861, p. 251; aud an ac- count of him in Reg., January, 1880.
K. 23. Francis Hudson. [House and garden of about half an acre. with William Hudson, Sr., north-west, I. Cullimer north-east, B. Passmore south-east, J. Gallop south-west. - W.H.W. ]
K. 24. John Gallop was fined in 1636 for obstructing the high- way on the sea-bank with his . payles ;" allowed to wharf out in 1643 ; after his death, his widow Mehitabel, in 1649, conveyed a part of it to John Synderland. He signed his will (printed in
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N. E. Ilist. and Geneal. Reg., July, 1853, p. 227) by his mark. About on the line of this estate, a passage from the water front to the present Hanover street was opened, and in Bonner's map, 1722, is marked as Wood lane, the modern Richmond street. Near the present northerly corner on Hanover street, the New Brick Church was built in 1721, and stood till it was rebuilt in 1845.
[Gallop had "the way" north-west. - W.II.W.]
K. 25. Matthew Chaffie, ship-carpenter, house and garden ; sold in part to John Capen, of Dorchester, in 1649. Chaffie's lot ex- tended back to what was the end of Hanover street in 1643, when it was ordered that the way be continued further, two rods broad, " from the west corner of Matthew Chafeth's garden unto the little howse by the swamp," which Christopher Stanley had just bought of the town, "and from thence to the windmill as directly as the land will beare."
[Chaffie had Sampson Shoare south-west, and Thomas Meekins north-west. - W.H.W.]
K. 26. William Hudson, Sr., 5 acres ; sold to Thomas But- tolph, who again, in 1646, sold to Christopher Lawson, and Law- son sold it in part to William Phillips, who granted his purchase to his wife Susan for life ; and the rest was broken up into small lots, Richard Bennett and others holding it.
K. 27. Thomas Meekins. [Mentioned as an owner in Chaffie's reeord, but there seems to be no farther description. - W.H.W.]
Thomas Meckins hereabout. Beer lane was later cut through this region, and in 1735 Samuel Turrell and other abutters peti- tioned to have it paved. It is the present Parmenter street.
INDEX.
A.
Abbott, 95. Adams, 5, 70, 77, 123. Addington, 23, 116. Ainsworth, 21, 41, 125. Albany, 99. Albion, The, 69. Albion Building, 75. Alcock. 33. Allen, $1, 95, 116, 127. Alline, 80, 10%. Allington, 15, 116. Allison, 45.
Allistre, 40, 90. Amory, 65, 69, 80, 97. Anchor, 41, 46. Ankor, 41.
Anderson, 9, 12, 42, 125. Andros, 15, 93. Argier, 14, 83. Anker, 124. Arnold, 8, 63, 91.
{Aspinwal, 1. , Aspinwall, 2, 5, 6, 8, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, 2.1, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 33, 35, 37, 42, 45, 46, 47, 78, 83, 84, 89, 104.
· Astwood, 25. Atkinson, 77, 83. Anbrey, 90. Azores, The, 124.
B.
Back Bay, 61. , Bailey, 95. Bayley, 102. Baker, 46, 47, 63, 107, 120, 125, 127. § Balston, 64, 96, 107. Banlston, 17.
Bannister, “1. Bannister's Garden, 71. Barker, 30, 100. Barlow, 11. Barrell, 19, 19, 93. Bartol, 116.
Baster, 46. Bateman, 35, 87. Bates, 13, 1, 23, 79, 93. Battery, 125. Baniston, sce Balston. Baxter, 38, 77.
Bay, The, 1, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 21, 22, 29, 34, 37, 33, 45. 47, 64, 77, 123, 124, 125, 126.
Bayley, see Bailey. Beach, The, 67. Beamont, 44. Beameley, 7, 22, 25, 31, 70, 71, 124. ( Beck, 14, 15, 23, 25, 97, 113, 115, 116. › Becke, 1. Beek, 14. { Bel, 35. i Bell, 39, 80. ( Belehar, 33, 34. · Belcher, 33, 61, 63, 65, 100, 110.
Bellingham, 1, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16, 19, 20, 28, 39, 40, 44, 46, 61, 62, 69, 92, 96, 97, 112, 123.
Bendall, 2, 3, 8, 13, 16, 20, 21, 22, 47, 48, 94, 97, 104, 106, 111, 124, 125. § Bennet, 7, 16, 46. Bennett, 12S. Biggs, 1, 7, 14, 15, 25, 44, 46, 71, 96, 97, 115, 116. Bilboa, 124. Bill, 92. Billingham, 19.
Billings, 95. § Bishop, 21, 28, 36, 41, 47, 76, 107, 109.
Bishopp, 36.
Bishop Alley, 76, 80.
Blackborne, 83.
§ Blackston, 71.
Blackstone, 70, 76, 116.
Blake, 95.
Blantain, 65. ¿ Blantaine, 35, 37, 39, 80, 82. Blanton, 65.
§ Blot, 32. / Blott, 32, 85. Blue Anchor, 102. Blue Ball Estate, 109.
Blue Bell, 107.
Bomsted, 30, 47. Bonner, 70, 77, ST.
Boone, 102.
Borland, 95, 101, 109, 111.
Borman, 95.
Borne, 125.
Boston Common, 59, 67. Courier, 71. Museum, 99.
· Neek, 16. Theatre, 79.
Bosworth, 5, 7, 13, 15, 23, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 70, 71, 84, 85, 91. Bonrne, 7, 8, 34, 61, 87, 124.
Boutineau, 76.
Bowditch, 69, 112.
Bowdoin, 70, 112.
Bowen, 19, 35, 87. Boyee, 95.
Boylston, 95.
Bracket, 70. / Brackett, 24. Bradstreet, 91. Braintree, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 15, 18, 19, 21, 29, 31, 61, 86.
Brattle, 96.
Brazier's Building, 98. Breek, 126. Bridge, The, 90, 91, 107. Little, 91. Mill, 90. Swing, 95, 106. Bridgham, 26, 27, 83, 101. Brightman's Pasture, 80. Brimmer, 112. § Brisco, 33, 34, 35, 62, 63, 65. ¿ Briscoe, 63, 65. Bristol, 76. Bromer, 80. Bromfield, 63, 83, 95. House, 83.
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