The record of the town meetings, and abstract of births, marriages, and deaths, in the town of Dedham, Massachusetts, 1887-1896, Part 7

Author: Dedham (Mass. : Town); Hill, Don Gleason, 1847-1914
Publication date: 1896
Publisher: Dedham, Mass. : Transcript Steam Job Print.
Number of Pages: 1461


USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Dedham > The record of the town meetings, and abstract of births, marriages, and deaths, in the town of Dedham, Massachusetts, 1887-1896 > Part 7


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52


Article 13. Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars for repairs of cemeteries in Dedham Village and West Dedham, to be distributed as follows, viz .: For Brookdale Cemetery, $500 ; for Old Cemetery, Dedham, $350 ; for West Dedham Cemetery, $125.


Article 14. Voted to authorize the Tax Collector to charge 6 per cent on all taxes not paid Nov. 1, 1888.


Article 15. Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of twenty-five thousand two hundred dollars for the payment of sala- ries of School Teachers and Superintendent of Schools the ensuing year, and that three hundred dollars of the said amount be used for Evening Schools, and three hundred dollars of said amount be for Sewing Teacher.


Article 16. Voted to appropriate the sum of forty-seven hundred dollars for repairs and care of the school houses and for fuel and supplies for the same, and that this amount be paid from money in the Town Treasury.


Article 17. Voted to appropriate the sum of fifteen hundred dollars for School Stationery and Text Books, the same to be paid from money in the Town Treasury.


Article 18. Voted to appropriate the amount received from other towns for scholars attending the public schools in Dedham, for contingent expenses of the public schools.


Article 19. Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of forty- five hundred dollars to pay for water for hydrants and public buildings, required by the contract with the Dedham Water Company.


Article 20, Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of five hundred dollars for chemical and physical apparatus for the High School.


Article 21. Voted to raise and appropriate under this article for general repairs of the Highways, $8000 ; for Sidewalks, $1000; for Culverts, $1000; and for Bridges, Railings, Lumber, and Labor, $500-making a total of $10,500.


Article 22. Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of five hundred dollars, to complete the grading of the road-bed adjoin-


£


52


ing the land of Amory Fisher and heirs of C. Capen in Dedham Woods.


Article 23. Voted to accept a new street, as laid out by the Selectmen, leading from Court street to Washington street, through land of Francis Marsh, and raise and appropriate there- for the sum of $400. (See report of laying out in Highway Book.)


Article 24. Voted to appropriate the sum of three hundred dollars to complete the widening and straightening of Elm street, and that the same be paid from the Town Treasury.


Article 25. Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of two hundred dollars to provide proper culverts, gutters, or other means, to drain the water from that part of East street which is located between the Railroad Bridge and Washington street, and put that part of said street in thorough repair, and construct a sidewalk on one or both sides of the same.


Article 26. Voted to appropriate the sum of four hundred dollars to widen High street between Pearl and Washington streets, as ordered by the County Commissioners, and that the same be paid from the Town Treasury.


Article 27. Voted to instruct the Surveyors of Highways that no person shall be employed as Superintendent of Streets unless he shall give his time and services to the duties of that office, exclusive of any other business or calling, while he con- tinues to hold said office.


Article 28. Voted that action on this article be indefinitely postponed.


Article 29. Voted to accept the provisions of the . Public Statutes, Chapter 27, Sections 64, 66, 67, 68, 70, 71, 72, and 73, and Statutes of 1883, Chapter 203, relative to the election of Selectmen, Assessors, and Overseers of the Poor.


Article 30. Voted that the Report of the Committee on Streets, Drainage and Sewerage be accepted, and that the balance which remains due to Percy M. Blake, engineer, be paid, upon the certificate of said Committee that his contracts have been fulfilled; and also that amounts due for printing report and mounting plans be paid, and that the sum of $1630 be granted therefor. (See report on file.)


Article 31. Voted that the report and maps prepared by


.


53


Percy M. Blake, as to sewerage and drainage of the town, be referred to a committee consisting of the Committee heretofore having charge of the subject, and Howard Colburn, Frederick D. Ely, Nathaniel Smith, and Thomas H. Wakefield, with instruc- tions to further investigate, and when the Committee shall have reached a conclusion as to what should be done in the premises, report the same to the Town.


Article 32. Voted that the Town indefinitely postpone the consideration of this article.


Article 33. Voted to pay Charles O. Haynes $100 for ser- vices rendered in arresting and securing the conviction of William H. McGrory for burglaries committed in Dedham in 1886 and 1887, and that the said sum be taken from the town treasury.


Article 34. Voted that the subject matter of this article be referred to the Selectmen, with full power and authority to act, either by sale of the land or by filling the pond.


Article 35. Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of eight hundred dollars, being two hundred dollars for land and six hun- dred dollars for building to be used for the storage of all tools and materials used in the repairs of the Highways, etc.


Article 36. Voted to raise and appropriate the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars to purchase two hundred feet of hose for the use of Norfolk Engine, No. 6.


Articles 37 and 39. Voted to take up Article 39 in connec- tion with Article 37, and under these two articles it was voted that the Selectmen be authorized to locate and construct hydrants and fix the price to be paid therefor, during the term of the pres- ent contract with the Water Company, on lines of pipe constructed or to be constructed during the present year.


Article 38. Voted to locate a hydrant on the old line of pipe near Mr. Theron Ames' house on Village avenue, and to raise and appropriate the sum of $80 for the same.


Article 40. Voted that action on this article be indefinitely postponed.


Article 41. Voted that action on this article be indefinitely postponed.


Article 42. Voted that action upon this article be indefi- nitely postponed.


54


Article 43. Voted that action upon this article be indef- initely postponed.


Article 44. Voted to change the name of Spring street to Dwight street.


Articles 45, 46, and 52. Voted to take up articles 46 and 52 with article 45 .. Voted that the subject matter of these articles be referred to a Committee of three, to be appointed by the Mod- erator, who shall be authorized to take into consideration the naming of streets, and make report to the town of their recom- mendation for its action, and the Moderator appointed as that Committee, Elisha Greenhood, Henry Smith, and Don Gleason Hill.


Article 47. Voted that action on this article be indefinitely postponed.


Article 48. Voted that action on this article be indefinitely postponed.


Article 49. Voted that the subject of this article be referred to the Selectmen, with full powers to act.


Article 50. No reports being presented, no action was taken under this article.


Article 51. Voted to authorize the Selectmen to instruct the Superintendent of Streets to pay the men employed upon the Highways $2 per day, and that a day's work constitute nine hours.


Article 53. The report of the Town Clerk with regard to printing the Records was presented, and it was voted that said report be accepted and its recommendations be adopted, and the amount called for, to wit : $700, be raised and appropriated therefor.


The Report was as follows :


TOWN CLERK'S REPORT ON PRINTING THE RECORDS.


At the Town Meeting in April, 1887, I submitted a report upon the work of printing the early records of Births, Marriages, and Deaths, and the cost ($1036) of the book printed, showing that the deficiency in the cost above the appropriation ($850) was paid from the proceeds of sales, leaving a balance from receipts of sales, in my hands, of about $60. Since that report was made, about seventy-five more books have been sold, netting about $75-making $135. Upon my recommendation in that report, the Town voted that the Town Clerk be permitted to use the money received from the sale of this first volume to prepare a second, to consist of such records in the various Parishes of the


£


£


55


Town as may be of public interest, or may supplement the first volume. I think the amounts received from the sale of the first volume will be sufficient to prepare the manuscript (exclusive of index) of the second for the printer. It will contain much valuable matter supplementary to the first book, and put in permanent form records and historical information which are liable to destruc- tion (the records of one Parish having already been destroyed), and will fill up many blanks which now appear in the Town Records. The result of the recent researches made in England, for the Dedham Historical Society, at considerable expense, is placed at my disposal for this volume. It contains much that is of interest relative to our early settlers, never before printed ; and just here let me say that last year the Town, by vote, gave to this Society fifty copies of the first volume of printed records to use for exchanges for the benefit of its library, and with these copies a large number of very valuable local his- tories and genealogies has been added to its library. As this is especially an educational institution, which certainly is destined very soon to be of much value to the people of the town, particularly to the advanced scholars in our High School, by inciting an interest in historical studies, through the medium of prizes, etc., which the Society will give, I would ask and recommend that when this Society desires copies of the books published by the Town, to exchange for histories and genealogies, that the proper officials of the Town, having the custody thereof, be authorized, in their discretion, to furnish the same to it. .


In view of the fact that a citizen of the Town, an unassuming woman, in leaving so much of her estate by her will to establish a fund for the benefit of the worthy poor, and also so much to the literary institutions of the Town, has thus, by far, surpassed all former public benefactors of the Town, it seems proper that there should be some memorial to her memory, and I would there- fore respectfully recommend that this second volume of records be dedicated by the Town, in fitting language, to the memory of Hannah Shuttleworth, and if possible, that it contain her portrait.


I think the sum of seven hundred dollars will be sufficient for this pur- pose, and I would recommend the Town to raise and appropriate that amount to publish the second volume of records, to be disposed of in the same manner as the first, and from the proceeds of these volumes to pay any deficiency in cost, above the appropriations, and to account therefor to the Town.


Respectfully submitted, DON GLEASON HILL, Town Clerk.


And, on motion, the meeting was dissolved.


Attest : DON GLEASON HILL,


Town Clerk.


/


56


NOVEMBER ELECTION.


TOWN MEETING WARRANT.


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.


[TOWN SEAL. ]


NORFOLK, SS. To any Constable of the Town of Dedham, in said County, Greeting :


You are hereby required, in the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. to notify and warn the inhabitants of said Town of Dedham, qualified to vote for State officers, to assemble at Memorial Hall, in said town, on Tuesday, the sixth day of November next, at seven o'clock in the forenoon, then and there to give in their votes for :


Fourteen Electors of President and Vice-President of the United States.


One Representative to Congress from the Ninth Congres- sional District.


Governor of the Commonwealth.


Lieutenant-Governor of the Commonwealth.


Treasurer and Receiver General of the Commonwealth.


Secretary of the Commonwealth.


Auditor of the Commonwealth.


Councillor for the Second Councillor District.


Attorney General of the Commonwealth.


Senator for the Second Norfolk District.


Register of Deeds for the County of Norfolk.


Treasurer for the County of Norfolk.


Register of Probate and Insolvency for the County of Norfolk.


One County Commissioner for the County of Norfolk.


One Representative to the next General Court for the First Norfolk Representative District.


All said votes to be on one ballot.


And the polls may be closed as early as four o'clock in the afternoon of said day.


Hereof fail not, but make return of this warrant, with your


57


doings thereon, unto the Selectmen, on or before said day and time.


Given under our hands, and the seal of said Town, at Ded- ham, aforesaid, this twenty-fifth day of October, A. D. eighteen hundred and eighty-eight.


HOWARD COLBURN,


PHOMAS P. MURRAY,


DON GLEASON HILL, ALFRED HEWINS,


GEO. W. WEATHERBEE,


Selectmen of Dedham.


On the foregoing warrant the following return was made :


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.


Norfolk, ss.


DEDHAM, Nov. 5, 1888.


By virtue of this warrant, I have notified and warned the legal voters of the town of Dedham to meet at the time and place, and for the purposes specified in said warrant, by posting attested copies thereof in each of the postoffices in said town, and in thirty other public places in said town, seven days at least before the day of said meeting, and by causing an attested copy thereof to be published twice before the time of said meeting in the Dedham Transcript, a newspaper published in said town.


JOHN DEAN, Constable of Dedham.


COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.


Norfolk, ss. At a legal meeting of the inhabitants of the town of Dedham, in said County, qualified as by the Constitution required, to vote for civil officers, holden at Memorial Hall, in said town, in accordance with the foregoing warrant, on Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, being the sixth day of said month, in the year one thousand eight hundred and eighty- eight, for the purpose of giving in their votes for :


Fourteen Electors of President and Vice-President of the United States.


One Representative to Congress from the Ninth Congres- sional District.


Governor of the Commonwealth.


Lieutenant-Governor of the Commonwealth.


58


Treasurer and Receiver General of the Commonwealth.


Secretary of the Commonwealth.


Auditor of the Commonwealth.


Councillor for the Second Councillor District.


Attorney General of the Commonwealth.


Senator for the Second Norfolk District.


Register of Deeds for the County of Norfolk.


Treasurer for the County of Norfolk.


Register of Probate and Insolvency for the County of Norfolk.


One County Commissioner for the County of Norfolk.


One Representative to the next General Court for the First Norfolk Representative District.


All the ballots given in therefor were sorted, counted, and recorded, and declaration thereof made, as by the Constitution is directed, and were for the following persons, namely :


For Electors-at-Large.


George D. Robinson, of Chicopee, had 681


,


William F. Draper, of Hopedale, had · 681


John Boyle O'Reilly, of Boston, had 542


George M. Stearns, of Chicopee, had .. 544


For an Elector for District Number One.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


John H. Reed, of Barnstable, had 681


Thomas C. Day, of Barnstable, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For an Elector for District Number Two.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


George E. Freeman, of Brockton, had ·


681


Bushrod Morse, of Sharon, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For an Elector for District Number Three. Whole number of ballots. 1231


Halsey J. Boardman, of Boston, had 680


Nathan Mathews, Jr., of Boston, had 544 ·


Blank ballots, 7 ·


-


59


For an Elector for District Number Four.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Elijah Mertain Hatch, of Boston, had 681


Matthew Keaney, of Boston, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For an Elector for District Number Five.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Henry J. Wells, of Cambridge, had 681


Charles H. Taylor, of Boston, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For an Elector for District Number Six.


Whole number of ballots,


1231


Horatio Wellington, of Boston, had . 681


Henry Bradlee of Medford, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For an Elector for District Number Seven.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Francis Norwood, of Beverly, had ·


681


James F. Dean, of Salem, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For an Elector for District Number Eight.


Whole number of ballots,


1231


Charles U. Bell, of Lawrence, had 681


John C. Sanborn, of Lawrence, had 544


Blank ballots,


,


6


For an Elector for District Number Nine.


Whole number of ballots,


1231


Charles Q. Tirrell, of Natick, had


681


William Aspinwall, of Brookline, had 544


Blank ballots,


.


6


For an Elector for District Number Ten.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Frank P. Goulding, of Worcester, had .


681


Edward W. Lincoln, of Worcester, had


544


Blank ballots,


6


-


1


++ : 60


For an Elector for District Number Eleven.


Whole number of ballots, .


1231


Chester C. Conant, of Greenfield, had 681 Frederic S. Coolidge, of Ashburnham, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For an Elector for District Number Twelve.


. Whole number of ballots, 1231


Elisha Morgan, of Springfield, had 681


Walter Cutting, of Pittsfield, had 544


Blank ballots,


6


For Representative to Congress from the Ninth Congressional District.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


John W. Candler, of Brookline, had . 677


Edward Burnett, of Southborough, had 550


Blank ballots,


4


For Governor of the Commonwealth.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Oliver Ames, of Easton, had 671


William E. Russell, of Cambridge, had 541


Blank ballots,


19


For Lieutenant Governor of the Commonwealth.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


John Q. A. Brackett, of Arlington, had 694


John W. Corcoran, of Clinton, had 531


Blank ballots,


6


For Treasurer and Receiver General of the Commonwealth.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


George A. Marden, of Lowell, had


692


Henry C. Thacher, of Yarmouth, had 533


Blank ballots,


6


For Secretary of the Commonwealth.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Henry B. Pierce, of Abington, had 691


William N. Osgood, of Boston, had 533


Little Tommy Murray, 1 :


Blank ballots,


6


61


For Auditor of the Commonwealth.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Charles R. Ladd, of Springfield, had 691


William A. Williams, of Worcester, had, 534


Thomas Welch, 1


Blank ballots,


5


For Councillor for the Second Councillor District.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Arthur W. Tufts, of Boston, had 686


George O. Wentworth, of Stoughton, had 536


Alice D. Stockton,


2


Blank ballots,


7


For Attorney General of the Commonwealth.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Andrew J. Waterman, of Pittsfield, had ·


693


Samuel O. Lamb, of Greenfield, had . ·


533


· Elisha Greenhood,


.


·


4


For Senator for the Second Norfolk District.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Enos H. Tucker, of Needham, had .


691


Charles T. Duncklee, of Brookline, had 534


Blank ballots,


6


For Register of Deeds for County of Norfolk.


Whole number of ballots,


1231


,


John H. Burdakin, of Dedham, had 1223


Blank ballots, 8


For Treasurer for the County of Norfolk.


Whole number of ballots,


.


1231


Chauncey C. Churchill, of Dedham, had


657


Ferdinand F. Favor, of Dedham, had 562


Daniel Cobb,


1


Blank ballots,


11


For Register of Probate and Insolvency for the County of Norfolk ..


Whole number of ballots,


1231


Jonathan Cobb, of Dedham, had


1225


Blank ballots,


-6


.


1


Blank ballots,


·


£


62


For County Commissioner for the County of Norfolk,


Whole number of ballots, 1231


Melville P. Morrell, of Hyde Park, had 618 Don Gleason Hill, of Dedham, had 602


Blank ballots, .


11


For Representative to the next General Court for the First Norfolk Representative District.


Whole number of ballots, 1231


George C. Stearns of Dedham, had 668


Howard Colburn, of Dedham, had 550


Blank ballots,


13


The Selectmen appointed Augustus B. Endicott and Edward L. Burdakin as tellers to aid them in receiving, sorting and counting the ballots, and said tellers were duly sworn by the Town Clerk before entering upon their duties.


On motion, the polls were closed at 4.15 o'clock P. M.


In receiving said ballots, the check list prepared by the Registrars of Voters was used, also the ballot box (called the Standard) approved and provided by the Secretary of the Com- monwealth, and all the ballots cast were deposited in said box.


The ballot box register showed the whole number of ballots cast (1231) twelve hundred and thirty-one, and the same number of names appeared checked upon the check list.


Certificates of said ballotings, signed by the Selectmen and attested by the Town Clerk, were sealed up in open town meeting. The ballots as cast into the box by the voters were duly sealed up in an envelope, and placed in the custody of the Town Clerk, and the check list used was also sealed up, and both were certified to on the envelopes containing the same, by the Selectmen, and then, on motion, the meeting was dissolved.


Attest :


DON GLEASON HILL, Town Clerk.


The Clerks of the Towns of Dedham and Norwood, in the County of Norfolk, comprising the Norfolk Representative Dis- trict number one, at their meeting held at Memorial Hall, in said Dedham, on Friday, the sixteenth day of November, A. D. 1888,


63


at twelve o'clock noon, said day being the tenth next after the day of election, made out under their hands the following complete return of all votes cast for Representative to the General Court in said District as follows, to wit :


Whole number of votes cast, nineteen hundred and eight (1908). George C. Stearns, of Dedham, had ten hundred thirty- six ; Howard Colburn, of Dedham, had eight hundred fifty-eight ; Charles Congdon, of Norwood, had fourteen.


DON GLEASON HILL, Town Clerk of Dedham.


FRANCIS TINKER, Town Clerk of Norwood.


65


The following is a list of the BIRTHS recorded in Dedham for the year 1888 : -


Date of Birth.


Name of Child.


Names of Parents.


Birthplace


|Birthplace of Father. jof Mother.


Jan. 1


Frederick W. Ward


Charles M. and Mary T.


Rindge, N H Ireland


1


Alice Olive Phillips


George A. and Ellen M.


Norwood


Mansfield


1


Inez A. Bonnemort


Elijah W. and Cora E.


Dorchester


Dedham


3


Margaret A. Stimson


Frederick J. and ElizabethA. Dedham


Boston


4


Morrell Hines Browne


Frank F. and Mary A. Michael and Mary


Boston


Boston


5


Mary Ann McGowal


David W. and Harriet B.


England


England


9


Eleanor M. Bennett


William and Elizabeth


England


NovaScotia


10


Dana Favor Carleton


John E. and Mary T.


Brookville Me. W Roxbury


Me.


19


Henry McGowan


Michael and Ellen


Ireland


20


Harry Roy Hamilton


Edward F. and Susan L.


Franklin


Boston


28


Robert Gallagher


Patrick R. and Margaret V.


Charlest'n


Walpole


28


Alice Malvina Rose


Benjamin and Cora


New York Ireland


Dedham


John F. H. Forrest


Foxboro'


St.John, NB


. 20


Mary Ellen McAuliffe


Dedham


Norfolk


21


Willie Hein


Hermann and Selma


Germany


Germany


25


Katherine B. Starr


William and Mary A.


Ireland


Ireland


26


Daniel R. Beckford, 3d Daniel R Jr and Jeannette L Charlest'n


Scotland


Mar. 3


William J. Hartney


Thomas P. and Mary J. James H. and Nellie F.


Dedham


Somerville


6


Agnes Clinton


Wrenthamn


Boston


10


George Close


John and Mary


England


Ireland


11


Eleanor Quincy


Henry P. and Mary


Boston


Boston


15


Paul Kieber


Oscar and Mary B.


Germany


Germany


15


William Hartnett


Dedham


Norfolk


24


Lucy Eleanor Hall


Ireland


Dedham


25


Eleanor Tuttle


Weathers-


Apr. 5


Margaret P. Jackson


Robert S. and Nellie M.


Goshen, NY Weston, Vt.


5 Henry Joseph Conlon


Peter J. and Julia E.


Dedham


Boston


6


Edward J. Sweeny


Jeremiah and Katie V.


Ireland


Dedham .


Feb. 6 18


Edward Ferry


Edward and Mary


England


Ireland


9 | Amy Dorothy Reeves


Orrington


Worcester


Marcus A. and Georgie A. Daniel J. and Mary J.


.


George and Margaret A. Richard and Agnes George S. and May


Wallingf'd Ct. field, Ct.


.


£


66


Date of Birth.


Name of Child.


Names of Parents.


Birthplace Birthplace of Father. |


of Mother.


April 6


Nellie Weschrob


Amiel and Mary


Germany


Charlest'wn


7


Mary Vincent Lynch


Stephen F. and Mary Adolph and Agnes Hugh and Nellie L.


Germany


Germany


8


William P. Hayes


William J. and Maggie J.


Ireland


Ireland


Katharine Gaffney


James J. and Mary


Dedham


Conn.


9 11 Ellen Maria Conlon


Dennis and Mary


Dedham


Boston


14


John Thos.McGuinness Daniel and Catharine


Ireland


Ireland


14 Henry R. Humphrey


Henry D. and Lena R.


Roxbury


Gloucester Md. Frostburg,


27 Harold Taylor


Wiliiam A. and Theresa


England


W.Roxbury


May 10


Arthur Emil Benke


Henry and Emma


Germany


Germany


15 Mabel Cook


E. M. and Annie


Nantucket


Ireland


19


Elizabeth Nolan


Andrew J. and Elizabeth J. John P. and Mary A.


Littleton


Chelsea


21 Louis Hein


Oscar L. and Bertha


Germany


Germany


27 James W. Thompson


Michael and Mary A.


Hanover


Braintree


28 Rose McLane


John J. and Maria J.


Dedham


Boston


29


Charles Henry Malpus


George H. and Mary A.


England


England


June 10 Alice M. Callahan


Daniel and Mary


Ireland


Ireland


10 Harold Chester Wood


John H. and Bertha E. Joseph and Bridget


Hingham


Ireland


12 Louise Henning


Oscar and Natalie


Germany


Boston


13 Olive Kane 13 Warren Elliot Fuller


Edgar W. and Arletta N.


Saco, Me. Md.


Me.


15 Eliza Jane Shriver


Baltimore,


Boston


16 Maud Haley


Dedham


Scotland


17 Ellis Laurie Yatman


James O. and Martha E.


England


So. Hadley


18 May Louise Annis


18 Elsie Marion Ross


28 Jozeph Ward Baker


Charles D. and Rachel




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