The Pilgrims of Boston and their descendants: with an introduction by Hon. Edward Everett, LL. D.; also, inscriptions from the monuments in the Granary burial ground, Tremont street, Part 21

Author: Bridgman, Thomas, b. 1795
Publication date: 1856
Publisher: New York [etc.] D. Appleton
Number of Pages: 480


USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Boston > The Pilgrims of Boston and their descendants: with an introduction by Hon. Edward Everett, LL. D.; also, inscriptions from the monuments in the Granary burial ground, Tremont street > Part 21


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David.


- John


Thomas. Stod- Simeon. dard.


Mary Stoddard, = Wm. Bowes = Ann Whitney, Nicholas m. 30 Oct. 1769. Ob. 9 May,1774. æt. 35.


Bowes, m. & set- tled in America.


Eliza. + Lucy. Lydia. Dorcas. Mary.


John Hancock, = Dorothy Quincy, Esq., styled "Governor ; " one of the Chiefs in the American Rev- olution, and President of the


1


Eben. Two Han- daus. cock. .


Sarah. All ob. cœl.


Mass., mer- chant, b. 3 Dec. 1734. Ob. April, 1805,at Lon- don, Eng.


of Boston, dau. of Widow Abigail Whit- ney. Mar. 22 Dec.1761. Ob. 2 Jan. 1762. s. p.


cousin to John Quincy Adams, Ambassador to England. [After- wards mar. Capt. Scott, whose d. by a former mar-


-


THE GRANARY BURIAL GROUND.


first Congress


which signed the famous Declaration of Independence. Had a son who d. young. Ob. 1793, æ. 55.


riage, I believe, was wife to young Eben. Hancock.]


1


Sarah Stoddard, still living in America un- married, 1854.


Others, who died


s. p.


William Bowes, Esq., b. at = Harriet Troutbeck, dau. and Boston, 15 Oct. 1771; 1 heir to Rev. John Troutbeck. Born at Boston, 1 Oct. 1768, and died in England, 14 Jan. 1851, æt. 82. lived in England and died near London, 10 June, 1850, in his 79th year.


Sarah Bowes, b. at Boston, 31 Jan. 1773, and died in England, 1 July, 1850, un- married.


Thomas, died


young.


NOTE .- Sarah Stoddard, William Bowes and Sarah Bowes, were proved about 1840, before the courts of law at Boston, only re- maining heirs to one Susannah Jacobs, who died about 1750.


Emily Bowes, b. 1806. Cul., Cambridge, b. 1808. Cœl.


1 Edmond Elford Bowes, M. A. of Trin. Arthur Bowes, ) All born and now b. 1813. ý living in England.


* In the will of Nicholas Bowes, he leaves to his wife one third of his estate, to be taken out of a debt due from her brother Jona. Remington, Esq. ; leaves a double portion to his eldest son William; names his son Nicholas and daughter Dorcas as minors ; and men- tions his niece Dorcas Hart (or Hunt) and his sister-in-law Abigail Bowes, to whom he leaves an estate formerly her late husband Whitwell's, in Black Horse Lane, Boston .- From a Friend in Boston.


+ ELIZABETH Bowes, ob. col. 29 Jan. 1787; buried at Shirley. LUCY, m. Rev. Jonas Clark of Lexington, ob. 6 April, 1789-issue : 1. William, eldest son ; 2. Jonas, 2d son, living at Wells and mar. Sarah Watts, July, 1789 ; 3. Peter, mar. a dau. of Col. Hamilton of Berwick, about 1791-2; 4. Thomas; 5. Henry ; 6. Mary, eldest daughter, mar. Rev. - Ware, minister at Hingham, 30 March, 1739 ; 7. Elizabeth, 3d daughter, mar. Rev. - Fiske, who succeeded Mr. Cooke in the ministry at Meenotomy, June, 1789; 8. Lucy, 2d dau ; 9. Lydia, 4th dau. about to be married in 1789 to Rev. -- Green, Minister at Medway ; 10. 11. 12. three others ; at Great-Plain, (Hingham); 3. Lydia ; 4. Elizabeth ; 5. William ; 6. Rebecca ; 7. Thomas Sullivan ; 8. Sarah. DORCAS, married John Hill. MARY, ob. col .--- From Family Letters .- Genealogical Reg.


-


389


HANCOCK.


-


1


390


THE GRANARY BURIAL GROUND.


BATTLE MONUMENT AT BLOODY BROOK.


ERECTED


AUGUST, 1831.


ON THIS GROUND


CAPT. THOMAS LATHROP, AND


EIGHTY-FOUR MEN UNDER HIS


COMMAND, INCLUDING


EIGHTEEN TEAMSTERS FROM


DEERFIELD, CONVEYING STORES


FROM THAT TOWN TO HADLEY, WERE


AMBUSCADED BY ABOUT 700 INDIANS, AND THE CAPTAIN AND SEVENTY-SIX MEN SLAIN, SEPTEMBER 18TH, 1765, (OLD STYLE.) THE SOL- DIERS WHO FELL, WERE DESCRIBED BY A CO- TEMPORARY HISTORIAN AS A CHOICE COMPANY OF YOUNG MEN, THE VERY FLOWER OF THE COUNTY OF ESSEX. NONE OF WHOM WERE ASHAMED TO SPEAK WITH THE ENEMY IN THE GATE.


'AND SANGUINETTO TELLS YOU" WHERE THE DEAD


"MADE THE EARTH WET AND TURNED" THE UNWILLING WATERS RED.


THE GRAVE OF THE SLAIN IS MARKED BY A STONE SLAB 21 RODS SOUTHERLY OF THIS MONUMENT.


GRAVE


OF


CAPT. LATHROP,


AND


MEN SLAIN


BY THE


INDIANS,


1675.


LATHROP.


THE preceding monument stands thirty or forty rods southerly from the Congregational church. South-easterly from the monument is seen Sugar-loaf Mountain, a conical peak of red sandstone, about six hun- dred and fifty feet in height. In 1835, the 160th anniversary of the destruction of Capt. Lathrop and his men was commemorated in this place. The Hon. Edward Everett, Governor of Massachusetts, was appointed orator for the occasion, and General Epaphras Hoyt, of Deer- field, was appointed to make the address at the laying of the corner stone for the monument. About six thousand persons were present on this occasion. Governor Everett delivered his address under a walnut


392


THE GRANARY BURIAL GROUND.


tree. About forty years after Capt. Lathrop and his men were killed, a rude monument was erected to their memory, but the different occupants of the soil removed it so many times that it was a matter of uncertainty where he or his men were buried. In 1835, the committee of investi- gation, guided by the tradition of some aged people, found the spot where he and about thirty of his men were interred; the grave was just in front of the dooryard of Stephen Whitney, Esq., and about twenty feet north-west of his front door. Their bones were in a state of tolera- ble preservation, but fell to pieces on exposure to the air. " A grave, probably containing the bones of the ninety-six Indians who were slain on that day, was likewise found by accident about the same time, nearly one hundred rods west of the road leading from Bloody Brook to Con- way, by Mr. Artemas Williams, and a little more than half a mile south- west of the grave of Lathrop."


The monument is six feet square, and about twenty feet in height ; it is constructed of marble, by Mr. Wood, of Sunderland. On its completion, an address was delivered at its foot by Mr. Luther B. Lin- coln, of Deerfield.


"For the distance of about three miles, after leaving Deerfield meadow, Lathrop's march lay through a very level country, closely wooded, where he was every moment exposed to an attack on either flank; at the termination of this distance, near the south point of Sugar- loaf Hill, the road approximated Connecticut River, and the left was in some measure protected. At the village now called Muddy Brook, in the southerly part of Deerfield, the road crossed a small stream, bor- dered by a narrow morass, from which the village has its name; though more appropriately it should be denominated Bloody Brook, by which it was sometimes known. Before arriving at the point of intersection with the brook, the road for about half a mile ran parallel with the morass, then, crossing, it continued directly to the south point of Sugar- loaf Hill, traversing what is now the home lots, on the east side of the village. As the morass was thickly covered with brush, the place of crossing afforded a favorable point of surprise. On discovering La- throp's march, a body of upwards of seven hundred Indians planted them-


393


LATHROP.


selves in ambuscade at this point, and lay eagerly waiting to pounce upon him while passing the morass. Without scouring the woods in his front and flanks, or suspecting the snare laid for him, Lathrop arrived at the fatal spot; crossed the morass with the principal part of his force, and probably halted to allow time for his teams to drag through their loads. The critical moment had arrived-the Indians instantly poured a heavy and destructive fire upon the column and rushed furiously to close attack. Confusion and dismay succeeded. The troops broke and scattered, fiercely pursued by the Indians, whose great superiority enabled them to attack at all points. Hopeless was the situation of the scattered troops, and they resolved to sell their lives in a vigorous strug- gle. Covering themselves with trees, the bloody conflict now became a severe trial of skill in sharp shooting, in which life was the stake. Dif- ficult would it be to describe the havoc, barbarity, and misery that ensued; 'fury raged, and shuddering pity quit the sanguine field,' while desperation stood pitted, at ' fearful odds,' to unrelenting ferocity. The dead, the dying, the wounded, strewed the ground in all directions ; and Lathrop's devoted force was soon reduced to a small number, and resist- ance became faint. At length, the unequal struggle terminated in the annihilation of nearly the whole of the English; only seven or eight escaped from the bloody scene, to relate the dismal tale; and the wounded were indiscriminately butchered. Capt. Lathrop fell in the early part of the action. The whole loss, including teamsters, amounted to ninety.


Capt. Mosely, who was at Deerfield with his company, between four and five miles distant, hearing the musketry, hurried on to the relief of Lathrop, but it was too late; he found the Indians had done their bloody work, and were stripping the dead. Rushing on in close order, he broke through the enemy, and, charging back and forth, cut down all within the range of his shot. After several hours of gallant fighting, the savages were compelled to seek for safety in the surrounding swamps and forests. Lieutenants Savage and Pickering greatly distinguished themselves by their skill and bravery. Just at the close of the action, Major Treat, of Connecticut, who, on the morning of this day had marched


394


THE GRANARY BURIAL GROUND.


towards Northfield, arrived on the ground with one hundred men, con- sisting of English, Pequot, and Mohegan Indians, and shared in the final pursuit of the enemy. Capt. Mosely lost but two men in the various attacks, and seven or eight only were wounded. The loss of the Indians in the various attacks of the day was estimated at ninety-six, the greatest proportion of which fell in the engagement with Mosely. On the approach of night, Treat and Mosely proceeded to Deerfield, where they encamped for the night, and the next morning returned to the field of slaughter to bury the dead. The day after this disaster, the Indians appeared at Deerfield, on the west side of the river in that town, and displaying the garments they had stripped from Lathrop's slain, made demonstrations of an attack on the fortified house, which then contained a garrison of only twenty-seven men. The commander held out delusive appearances of a strong force,-caused his trumpet signals to be given, as if to call in additional troops, which so intimidated the Indians that thew withdrew without making an attack. This post, however, was afterwards abandoned by the garrison, and the place was soon after destroyed by the enemy.


BARNABAS LATHROP, son of the following, was born at Scituate in 1636, and settled in Barnstable. He married Susannah Clark in 1658. He was an assistant of Plymouth, and one of the first councillors of Massachusetts after its union with Plymouth under the charter of Wil- liam and Mary, in 1692. He died at Barnstable in 1756, aged seventy- nine. John, the first minister of Scituate and Barnstable, was educated at Oxford, and was a clergyman in Kent County, and in London. Ar- rived at Plymouth from England in 1634, and soon settled at Scituate, from whence he removed, October 11th, 1639, to Barnstable, and died November 8, 1653. His sons were : Thomas, who settled in Barnstable ; Samuel, in New London, 1648; Joseph, in Barnstable; Benjamin, in Charlestown; Barnabas and John, both at Barnstable. Of his daughters, were Jane and Barbara. Many of the Rev. John Lothrop's descend- ants have written the name Lathrop, of whom there appear fifteen on the catalogue of the different New England Colleges, whose names have


395


LATHROP.


this orthography. The true spelling of the name of the minister, as written by himself, appears to be Lothropp .- See 2. Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc. i., 173.


Thomas, Salem, freeman 1634 ; member of the Ar. Co., 1645 ; repre- sentative, 1647, 1653, and 1664, was one of the founders of the church in Beverly, 1667; representative of Beverly, 1672 to 1675, four years ; was many years captain, and sustained that office in Phillip's war, when, with more than sixty of his men, he was killed in battle near Deerfield, 18th September, 1675. Increase Mather calls him a courageous com- mander. He left a wife, Bethiah, but no children .- Farmer.


John Lathrop, the first minister of Scituate and Barnstable, Mass., was educated at Oxford, and was an Episcopal minister in Kent. About 1624 he renounced his Episcopal orders, and was chosen the successor of Henry Jacob, who in 1616 became the pastor in London of the first Independent or Congregational church in England, but removed in 1624 to Virginia, where he died. The congregation met in private houses. In April, 1632, the bishop seized and imprisoned 42 of them : 18 es- caped. Mr. L., after an imprisonment of two years, obtained liberty " to depart the kingdom." Mr. Canne succeeded him. With about 30 followers he came to New England in 1634. He removed from Scituate to Barnstable Oct. 11, 1639, and died Nov. 8, 1653. He was meek, humble, learned, and faithful. His successors were Walley, Russell, and Shaw. He left several sons and daughters ; his son, Samuel, who set- tled at Norwich, Conn., was the ancestor of those who bear the name in Connecticut, New York, and Vermont. Mr. L. wrote his name Lo- thropp ; Morton wrote it Laythrop; some of his descendants in Ply- mouth County still write it Lothrop, as the word is pronounced in Mass., but it is generally written Lathrop. A descendant at Norwich, Dr. Joshua L., died Oct. 29, 1807, aged 84. Two of his letters to Governor Prince are in 2 Hist. Col. i. 171.


Joseph Lathrop, D. D., minister of West Springfield, Mass., a de- scendant of the preceding, was the son of Solomon and Martha L., and was born at Norwich, Conn., Oct. 20, 1731. After the decease of his father in 1733, his mother removed to Bolton. He graduated at Yale


396


THE GRANARY BURIAL GROUND.


College in 1750, having first made a profession of religion. Becoming the teacher of a school at Springfield, he studied theology with Mr. Breck, and was ordained August 25, 1756, and was pastor 63 years. In 1819, Mr. Sprague was settled as his colleague. He died Dec. 31, 1820, aged 89. His wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Capt. Seth Dwight, of Hat- field, died in 1821. His son has been President of the Senate. He stood as the patriarch of the congregational churches : no minister was more respected and venerated. He was as eminent for candor and char- ity, as he was devout and holy in life. As a writer he was remarkably perspicuous, plain and useful. His publications were numerous and more extensively known, than those of any contemporary theologian of this country. They consisted of sermons, six volumes of which were pub- lished during his life, on various subjects, chiefly practical. After his death an additional volume was published, accompanied by a memoir of his life, written by himself. This autobiography is remarkable for its simplicity and candor. His sermons were published, 2 vols. 1796; 1 vol. 1806 ; 5 vols. 2d edit. 1807-9 ; and a volume of discourses on the Epistle to the Hebrews, 8vo. 1801. He published also the following sermons : on the death of R. Breck, 1784; of Dr. Gay, Suffield ; of Dr. G.'s wife, 1796; of Mrs. Whitney, 1800; of Rev. Mr. Atwater, 1802 ; of four young women drowned at Southwick, 1809; at a thanksgiving relating to the insurrection, 1786; the perspicuity of the Scriptures in American preachers, 1791; four discourses on baptism, 1793; on the dismission of Mr. Willard of Wilbraham, 1794; on American inde- pendence, 1794; at a thanksgiving, 1795 ; a century discourse for the town ; to children, 1796; God's challenge to infidels, at a fast, 1797; at a fast, 1798 ; also, 1803; also 1808; at the ordination of Mr. Ball, 1797; of Mr. Bemis, 1801; of E. D. Andrews, 1807; of Thaddeus Osgood, 1808; century sermon, 1800; at the dedication of Westfield Academy, 1800 ; before a missionary society, 1802; on leaving the old meeting-house ; dedication of the new, 1802; two discourses on the Sab- bath, 1803 ; two on the church of God, 1804; on old age ; on suicide, two sermons ; on the drought ; on the opening of the bridge, 1805 ; on Christ's warning to churches ; on the consulting of the witch of En-


397


LATHROP.


dor; on the solar eclipse, 1806; warning to beware of false prophets, 1811.


John Lathrop, D. D., minister in Boston, a great grandson of John L. of Barnstable, was born in Norwich, Conn., May 17, 1740, and was one of ten sons. He graduated at Princeton College in 1763, and soon afterwards became an assistant to Mr. Wheelock in his Indian school at Lebanon. He was ordained May 18, 1768, at the Old North Church, Boston, where the Mathers were ministers. In 1779, his society having united with Dr. Pemberton's, of the New Brick Church, their own church being demolished by the enemy, he became the pastor of the united so- ciety, called the Second Church. He died Jan. 4, 1816, aged 75. He was an officer of various literary and charitable societies. He published the following sermons : soon after 5th March, 1770 ; on early piety, 1771 ; at the artillery election ; at the thanksgiving, 1774 ; on 5th March, 1778; on the death of his wife, Mary L., 1778; of S. West, 1808 ; of his wife, Elizabeth L., 1809; of J. Eckley, 1811; of J. Eliot, 1813; at the or- dination of W. Bentley, 1783; on the peace, 1784; before the Humane Society, 1787; catechism, 1791; Dudleian lecture on Popery, 1793; before the Fire Society, 1796 ; at the Thursday lecture, 1797 ; at Brat- tle street, 1798; on the fast, 1799 ; on the commencement of the 19th century ; before the Society for Propagating the Gospel; before the Fe- male Asylum ; at Milton, 1804 ; at the thanksgiving, 1808 ; at the same, 1811; a birthday discourse, 1812; at the fast, 1812; on the law of re- taliation, 1814; on the peace; history of the late war, 1815 .- Park- man's Serm.


John Lathrop, son of the preceding, was born in Boston, 1772, and was graduated at Harvard College in 1789. Having studied law, he settled at Dedham ; but soon returning to Boston, he devoted himself to literary and social indulgence with Paine, Prentice, and others, neglect- ing his profession. Embarking for India, he lived at Calcutta 10 years, teaching a school, and writing for the journals. In 1809 he returned and engaged in the business of teaching, and gave lectures on natural philosophy. In 1819 he proposed to publish a work on the manners and customs of India. He went to the South, and delivered lectures. At


-


398


THE GRANARY BURIAL GROUND.


last he obtained a place in the post-office. He died at Georgetown, Jan. 30, 1820, aged 48. Improvident and destitute of foresight, his talents scarcely procured him subsistence. He published an oration July 4, 1796 ; speech of Canonicus, a poem, Calcutta, 1802; the same, Boston, 1803 ; pocket register and free-mason's anthology, 1813 .- Spec. Amer. Poetry, ii. 101-108.


INDEX.


Abraham, Nathan, 208. Adams, John Q., 72. Adams, Isaac, 30. Adams, John, 82. Adams, Thomas, 184. Adams, Thomas, 282. Adams, John Quincy, 130. Allen, James, 19. Alden, Ruth, 126. Allyn, Samuel, 34. Alline, William, 186. Allen, Hannah, 19. Allen, James, 20. Allen, Elizabeth, 19. Allen, Silence, 64.


Allen, Jeremialı, 77. Allen, Martha, 283.


Allen, Elizabeth, 281. Amorý, William, 71. Amory, Simon, 178. Amory, Thomas C., 71. Amory, Rebecca, 67. Amory, Jonathan, 67.


Amory, S. H. L., 71. Amory, John, 46. Amos, Mary, 209. Andrews, Samuel, 282. Andrews, Thomas, 209. Andrews, S. S., 22. Andrews, George, 238. Andros, Edmund, 2. Anthony, Samuel, 119. Apthorp, Charles, 215. Archer, Elizabeth, 50. Armitage, John, 118.


Archibald, Aaron, 75. Ashton, John, 153. Ashley, Ann, 197. Attucks, Crispus, 174.


B


Bacon, Rev., 55.


Bacon, John, 60. Barlow, Henry, 169.


Badouin, Pierre, 2. Barrett, Humphrey, 384. Barrett, Benjamin, 384. Barrett, John, 11. Babcock, Adam, 117. Baldwin, Thomas, 161. Baldwin, Thomas, 180. Bates, Isaac C., 35. Bates, Mehitable S., 35. Brazer, Mary, 28. Bassett, Mary, 185. Bass, Gillam, 124. Bass, Moses, 123. Bass, Susannah, 313. Bass, John, 126. Baxter, Joseph, 8.


Bailey, John, 20. Bayly, John, 320. Baker, Letitia, 64. Ballard, John, 12.


Ballard, Mary, 242. Ballard, Dorcas, 243. Butolph, Nicholas, 42. Belknap, Mary, 65.


Belknap, Andrew, 13. Belknap, 63. Belknap, Jeremy, 103. Belknap, Mary, 103. Belcher, Governor, 68. Belcher, Josias, 111.


Belcher, Jonathan, 219.


Belcher, Governor, 56. Bethune, 66. Bethune, George, 73.


Bean, Joseph, 123.


Bean, Horace, 123.


Bean, Mary, 124.


Ball, John, 316. Bender, Barbary, 211.


Bellingham, Richard, 15. Berry, Withers, 78. Bell, Miriam, 32. Blake, Edward, 154.


Blake, Edward, 11.


Blake, George, 364.


Black, Samuel, 77.


Blagden, Rev. 55. Blood, John, 138. Blanchard, Joshua, 63.


Blanchard, Jedediah, 101.


Bemmes, Samuel, 62. Binny, Stillman, 118. Birrey, Joseph, 169. Binny, Barnabus, 119. Binney, Horace, 119. Binney, Edith, 122.


Binney, C. J. F., 119. Bird, Mary, 217. Brooks Joshua, 148.


400


INDEX.


Brooks, John, 38. Bingham, Benajah, 52. Brown, Elisha, 162. Browne, Mary, 370. Brown, Mary, 61. Broomfield, Edward, 13. Broomfield, 56. Brattle, Thomas, 317. Brattle, 56.


Bradbury, Charles, 302.


Brad, William, 109.


Bradish, Sarah, 188. Brocklebank, Captain, 218. Brewster, Oliver, 111. Bradley, Thomas and


John, 52.


Butler, Pierce, 265.


Butler, Edward, 272.


Butler, Mary, 274. Butler, Benjamin, 265.


Butler, Simeon, 274.


Bodman, John, 133.


Boynton, Edmond, 108. Bowes, Arthur, 387. Bowdoin, James and fam- ily, 17.


Bowyer, James, 181.


Boynton, Sarah, 243.


Boyer, Susannah, 258.


Bourn, Medateah, 9.


Bowen, Elizabeth, 73.


Bowrman, Joan, 39. Butler, Eliza, 268.


Butler, Amos, 265.


Butler, Mary Ann, 272.


Butler, Lewis, 272.


Butler Family, 260.


Bumstead, Sarah, 9.


Bumstead, Thomas, 9.


Bumstead, Thomas, 8.


Bumstead, Edward, 156. Bumstead, Thomas, 156. Burt, Sarah, 378. Burt, William, 337.


Burt, Joan, 125.


Bush, Jotham, 177.


Burr, Elizabeth, 314. Bullard, Jabez, 21. Beebe, James W., 313.


Butolph, Mary, 42.


Byles, Sarah, 175. Byles, Josias, 175.


C


Cabot, Sebastian, 195. Cabbott, George, 193. Cabbot, John, 194.


Cabbott, George, 10.


Cadwell, James, 174. Caldwell, Robert, 158. Caldwell, Elizabeth, 158. Campbell, Sally, 255. Campbell, John, 5. Campbell, Sally, 179. Carter, Mary, 51. Carter, Ruth, 114.


Carr, Patrick, 174. Callam, Abigail, 51.


Carrick, John, 78.


Carsell, Mary, 321. Child, John, 200. Childs, Timothy, 201. Child, Ephraim, 201.


Child, Jean, 200.


Child, John, 320.


Child, Robert, 200.


Cheever, Wm. D., 32.


Cheever, Wm. D., 209.


Chickley, John, 190.


Chickley, Richard, 80.


Chapman, Jonathan, 174. Cotting, Uriah, 11.


Chambers, Charles, 164.


Chauncey, Charles, 130.


Clark, Enos, 311.


Clark, John, 108.


Clark, Frederick, 306.


Clark, John, 174.


Clark, John, 185.


Clark, Mary Ann, 66.


Clark, Luther, 311.


Clark, Christian, 306.


Clark, Geo. A., 312.


Clark, Temperance, 312.


Clark, Thomas, 313.


Clark, Luther, 312.


Clark, Arthur and fam- ily, 307.


Clark, Frederick, 184.


Clark, Mary, 203.


Clark, Peter, 306.


Clarke, Katharine, 306.


Clark, Elijah, 312.


Claghorn, Wm., 98.


Colesworthy, John, 314.


Colesworthy, John, 30. Colesworthy, Gilbert, 206. Coolidge, Cornelius, 158 Coffin, Wm., 68.


Cotton, 56. Cotton, John, 25.


Cotting, Uriah, 46. Cotting, Amos, 46. Codman, Robert, 358.


Codman, Henry, 72. Cobham, Deborah, 184.


Cobham, Mary, 278. Cowel, John, 48. Cowel, Hannah, 254. Conell, Benjamin, 167. Coleman, Benjamin, 108.


Coleman, Benjamin, 121. Cowel, Hannah, 48. Coverly, Wells, 11.


Compton, William, 24.


Cook, Sophia, 312.


Cook, Edwin C., 189.


Colson, Mary, 133.


Colesworthy, John, 303.


Cordis, William, 338.


Connigham, Ruth, 186.


Crisp, Sarah, 107. Crus, Thomas, 77. Cruikshanks, Alex'r, 171.


Croskeys, Joseph, 67. Crawford, John, 258.


Crawford, Thomas, 160.


Cushing, Thomas, 13.


Cushing, Thomas, 214.


Cushing, Samuel, 76.


Cushing, Peter, 353. Cushing, Thomas, 12.


Cushing, Albany, 121.


Cunningham, Mary, 8.


Cunningham, E. L., 73.


Cunningham, Jos. L., 73. Cunningham, John, 38. Cunningham, Andrew, 11.


Cunningham, Andrew, 8.


Cunningham, Andrew, 145.


Cunningham, Mary, 145.


Cumming, Mr., 60. Cumming, Rev., 55.


Cutler, Ruth, 135. Cutler, James, 71.


Cutler, Ruth, 50.


Curtis, Charles P., 367.


D


Davis, Jonathan, 72. Davis, J. Amory, 72.


Davis, Francis, 72.


Davis, Amory, 72.


Davis, Edward A., 72.


Davis, Daniel, 96. Dashwood, Samuel, 199.


Dana, Francis, 83. Dalton, Peter, 111. Dalton, M., 9. Davenport, John, 55.


Daille, Seyre, 134. Deblois, Thomas A., 71. Deblois, Stephen, 71.


401


INDEX.


Deblois, John A., 71. Demming, Jane, 63. Demming, Honorah, 63. Demming, Mary, 62. Demming, Joseph, 64. Demming, Samuel, 63. Demming, David, 62. Demming, Hannah, 64. Decoster, John, 221. Decoster, John, 301. Decoster, Sarah, 221. Dexter, J. M. 99. Dexter, Samuel, 83. Dexter, Aaron, 71. Deshon, Moses, 241. Deshon, Persis, 241. Deverex, Patrick, 78. Delano, Jeremiah, 65. Dicks, Samuel, 53. Dix, Samuel, 79. Derby, John, 32. Derby, John, 208. Dickinson, Josiah, 188. Dickson, William, 316. Dibble, Ezra, 302. Dillaway, Samuel, 65. Dolbeare, John, 303. Dolliver, Peter, 303. Downing, John, 40. Downing, John, 206. Dooley, Eleazer, 65. Dogget, Noah, 186. Doane, Jane, 367. Dorr, J. H. and S., 152. Draper, Samuel, 279. Draper, Deborah, 241. Draper, Lorenzo, 158. Draper, Richard, 159. Draper, Lydia, 159. Drowne, Samuel, 173. Dudley, Thomas, and fam- ily, 23.




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