USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Saugus > Town annual report of the officers and committees of the town of Scituate 1898-1905 > Part 27
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
And the Selectmen order that the foregoing return be filed with the Town Clerk of said Scituate, to be presented to the inhabitants of said Town of Scituate for their accept- ance, at some future town meeting, duly held for that pur- pose.
In witness whereof the said Selectmen have hereunto set their hands, this twenty-second day of December, 1904.
JOHN J. FORD, WILLIAM H. VARRELL, JAMES W. TURNER, Selectmen of Scituate. A true copy. (Attest)
JETSON WADE,
Town Clerk. Feb. 14, 1905.
REPORT OF TOWN CLERK
MARRIAGES RECORDED IN SCITUATE IN 1904.
March 27, Henry Leonard Munnis, 41, of Norwell, and Berlada Laura (Carr) Shaw, 29, of Norwell, married by Arthur W. Cleaves at No. Scituate.
April 4, Ralph Bridges Frye, 26 of Scituate, and May Davie, 23, of Scituate; married by Albert Bryant at Scituate Centre.
April 6, Edmund Francis, 23, of Scituate, and Edith How- ard Thomas, 28, of Scituate; married by Arthur W. Cleaves at No. Scituate.
April 6, Michael O'Hara, 32, of Scituate, and Catherine Rooney, 25, of Boston; married by Rev. John J. O'Keeffe at Boston.
April II, Patrick C. Mitchell, 28, of Scituate, and Annie M. Bolan, 32, of Scituate; married by Rev. Wm. H. Mc- Donough at Cohasset.
May 29, Samuel A. Lester, 66, of Marshfield, and Jose- phine Turner, 38, of Scituate; married by Thomas H. Good- win' at Marshfield.
June 15, Charles F. Curran, 28, of Scituate, and Sarah Pauline Cole, 26, of Scituate; married by Rev. Wm. H. Mc- Donough at Cohasset.
June 22, James F. Fitzpatrick, 25, of Scituate, and Mary M. Davidson, 30, of Weymouth; married by Maurice Lynch at East Weymouth.
-88-
June 22, Fred T. Swift, 25, of Scituate, and Margaret J. May. 25, of Milton; married by William S. Kelsey at All- ston Heights.
June 28, Herbert Chester Sargent, 21, of Cohasset, and Ida Rushlow, 21, of Cohasset; married by Arthur W. Cleaves at No. Scituate.
June 30, John Brooks Robinson, 24, of Brookline, and Gertrude Russell Nott, 22, of Scituate; married by Arthur W. Cleaves at No. Scituate.
July 19, Charles Henry Pratt, 37, of Scituate, and Mertie B. Longfellow, 19, of Scituate; married by Nathaniel Sea- ver, Jr., at Scituate.
July 28, Everett R. Marsh, 29, of Scituate, and Mrs. C. Winnifred Dyer. 26, of Scituate; married by Rev. Frank Park at Cohasset.
July 31, William S. Richardson, 20, of Scituate, and Mar- garet Helen Corbett, 21, of Scituate; married by Albert D. Spaulding at No. Scituate.
August 7. Howard J. Bray, 21, of No. Hanover, and Fan- nie G. Burbank, 17, of Scituate; married by Frank Park at Cohasset.
September 8, Conrad Heinrich Jenson, 28, of Watertown, and Mary James Damon, 24, of Scituate; married by Albert Bryant at Scituate Centre.
October 2, William H. Litchfield, 50, of Scituate .. and Margaret Keef. 25, of Scituate; married by Rev. Wm. H. McDonough at Cohasset.
October 3. Levi N. Osborne, Jr., 29, of Norwell, and Leonora I. Martin, 17, of Scituate; married by Frank Park at Cohasset.
October II, Clement Jordan Prouty, 34, of Scituate. and Bessie Weston Clapp, 32, of Scituate: married by Arthur W. Cleaves at No. Scituate.
October 12, Arthur G. Locke, 23, of Boston. and Elsie
-89-
L. Stoddard, 20, of Scituate; married by Eben C. Stover at So. Braintree.
October 18, James S. Barry, 35, of Scituate, and Kath- erine C. Donovan, 30, of Boston; married by Francis S. Hart at Boston.
October 26, James E. Driscoll. 28, of Scituate, and Nina A. Robblee, 25, of Cambridge: married by Rev. Wm. H. McDonough at Cohasset.
October 31, Charles E. Doherty, 29, of Scituate, and Mar- garet E. Burke. 26. of Scituate: married by Rev. Wm. H. McDonough at Cohasset.
November 8, Henry Davis Damon, 24, of Scituate, and Edith, May Wade, 22, of Scituate: married by Thomas H. Goodwin at Marshfield.
November 16. Alfred B. Cole, 23. of Scituate. and Mar- garet F. Litchfield. 26, of Scituate; married by George A. Hathaway at Scituate.
November 16. Carl S. Trafton. 23. of Scituate. and Lucy Bell Torrance, 23. of Pembroke: married by Arthur W. Cleaves at No. Scituate.
November 20. Albert F. Clapp. 29. of Scituate, and Mary Keane. 29. of Scituate: married by Rev. Wm. H. McDon- ough at Cohasset.
November 23. John H. Purcell. 42. of Boston, and Mary G. (Boyle) LaRoche, 35. of Scituate ; married by Rev. Wm. H. McDonough at Cohasset.
. November 23. James H. Dwyer. 29. of Scituate, and Mary C. Doyle, 21, of Boston: married by R. J. Johnson at Boston.
November 23, James J. O'Hern. 34. of Scituate, and An- nie J. Quinn. 35, of Scituate: married by Rev. Wm. H. Mc- Donough at Cohasset.
November 24, Stephen S. Andrews, 24, of Scituate, and
-90-
Viola J. Brizzie, 23, of Lowell; married by Orville Coats at Lowell.
November 30, Harry Merritt, 24, of Scituate, and Nellie T. Lincoln, 25, of Scituate; married by Albert D. Spaulding at No. Scituate.
December 23, Herbert C. Bates, 23, of Scituate, and Bertha May Hobson, 17, of Scituate; married by Albert D. Spaulding at No. Scituate.
December 29, Charles L. Osborne, 27, of Marshfield, and Lillian B. Phillips, 40, of Marshfield; married by Thomas H. Goodwin at Scituate.
BROUGHT INTO TOWN FOR INTERMENT 1904.
,
DATE.
NAME OF DECEASED.
AGE. Y. D. D.
CAUSE OF DEATH.
PLACE OF DEATH.
Jan.
6
Clarissa F. Baliey
68
6
Brights disease
March
Daniel Sullivan
28
9
6
Internal obstruction
22
Hosea L. Nott
34
21
Acute endocarditis
28
Eva E. Hyland
59
5
4
June
8
Jesse L. Totman
62
Benjamin S. Beale
34
3
Heart disease
Oct.
1
Esther A. Hawthorne
46
1
General paralysis
1898.
Jan. 26
Mary Ann Wilbur Oct. 5, 1904, Interment
53
6 -
Cancer of colon
'Milton Boston Boston Abington Westboro Quincy Fall River
-16-
1
Marasmus Senile dementia
9
BIRTHS REGISTERED IN THE YEAR 1904.
DATE.
NAME OF CHILD.
NAME OF PARENTS.
MAIDEN NAME OF MOTHER.
Jan. 3
Marcia Eastman Lovering
Newton and Sadie
Spooner
5
Donald Allen Whittaker
Frank T. and Emily
Merritt Fratus
26
Helen Florence Andrews
Liswell
March 10
Lawrence Horace Jenkins
Touhey
14
Albertus Williams Jenkins
Jenkins
16
Barbara Curran
Bartholomew and Delia
Freeman
16
John Foster Burbank
George O. and Henrietta B.
Merritt
28
Rose Meuse
Dennie and Mary
May
10
May Alice Murray
Gideon and Victoria
King
15
Wilber
George A. and Florence M.
.
24
Kenneth Francis Bates
Frank S. and Winnet G.
Litchfield
June 16
Walter Brooks Pepper
Arthur and Elizabeth J.
Spencer
21
Julia Stanley
Thomas P. and Mary E.
Flaherty
21
Anna Hazel Stetson
William H. and Lillian E.
Murphy
30
Thomas Barry
James J. and Margaret
Wherity
July 3
6
William Robert Carmen Adair
Ross Westly and Elizabeth Maud
Carmen
14
Nelson Weymouth Wyman, Lee
Clifton B. and Edith A.
Weymouth
Aug. 1 4
Eva Leno Edelstein
Hyman and Ida
Charles L. and Ethel M.
Cook
15
Edwin Henry Gardner, Jr.
Edwin H. and Cecelia
Sweetser
18
William Patrick O'Brien
William L. and Katharine E.
White
22
Adelbert Leonard Olson
John and Gertrude
Carter
Sept. 11
Ruth Abbie Somers
Peter and Ethel
McElvenny
11
Irving Ghent Walling
George R. and Avis
Taylor
21
Albert George Marchant, Jr.
Albert G. and Annie
Patterson
29
William Tecumseh Sherman
Chester R. and Harriet F.
Clapp
Oct.
1 17
Mercy Elliott Cole
Henry S. and Maud T.
Elliott
20
Adella Reed Stenbeck
Harry T. and Mary W.
Prouty
Lucius L. and Hannah
Clapp
Nov. 5
30 Alberto Le Roy Bonney Sarah Lavina Jellows
Henry D. and Rose M.
Frazier
15 Annie A. Jellows
Moses H. and Margaret E.
Quinn
22 Ella Murretta Cole
Frank H. and Esther L.
Wroe
Dec.
18
16 Evelyn Clapp
Everett L. and Mary H.
Walling
-92-
George Stanley Vickery
Gordon and Gertrude
MeDonald Edelstein
4
Gladys Doane Vickery
Edward and Bertha
Osborne
Natalie Bush
Gloade
.
26
James Lyndon Liswell v
Antoine and Mary . Nellie Warren W. and Mary Ida
₱
Lyman Smith Richards
Ralph P. and
Webb
McDonald
: - 1903. .
March 22
Harold Dana Young
Frank. L. and Elizabeth C.
Jenkins Linchan
: May
25
William Thomas Shield, Jr.
William T. and Mary
April 9
Louisa Murphy
William H. and Ellen F.
11 Margaret Elizabeth Jellows
Henry D. and Rose M.
Ang.
8
Hilda Paulina Olson
Peter and Charlotta W.
Nov. 22
Mildred Whittaker
Warren I. and Annie
Hines
· Rose Hester Foley
John D. and Ida
Field
1901.
July 25
Olive Rosalie Jellows
Henry D. and Rose M.
Frazier
Attest: JETSON WADE, Town Clerk.
-93-
1
Ward" . Frazier į Johnson
DEATHS REGISTERED IN SCITUATE 1904.
DATE.
NAME OF DECEASED.
AGE. Y. M. D.
CAUSE OF DEATH.
PARENTS' NAMES.
Jan.
8
John Adams Merritt
77
1 20
Old age
9
Maria Curran
70
-
Broncho pneumonia
14
Fannie Danforth Wills
60 8
12
Brights disease
21
Patrick Murphy
84
Old age
21
Mary K. Murphy
78
5
Paralysis
Caleb W. and Abigail Jenkins
Feb.
4
John E. O. Prouty
63
11
Obsenre cerebral disease
12
Joanna Merritt
79
3
-
Consider and Betsy Stetson
15
Marion L. Bailey
63
2
27
17
Hannah M Hall
71
1
10
Paralysis
27
Hazel Esther Bates
2
Pneumonia
March
4
Harriet A. Murdock -
88
12
Cerebral thombosis
Barnabas Edson and Betsy Gurney
10
Caroline Damon
81
5 6 6 91991
23
Old age
April
16
Mabel Curtis Wilber
75
8
16
Epilepsy
May
15
Florence M. Wilber
28
6
18
Uremia
26
Cordelia S. Litchfield
87
7
Influenza
June
4
Charlotta W. Olson
29
3
Pulmonary tuberculosis
21
George H. Foley
3
3
Acute indigestion
21
John Devlin
80
Heart failure
26
Johanna Garney
85
Heart failure
26
Zenas H. Litchfield
80
2 23
Inanition dementia
July
Margaret O'Connor Nancy Jackson Charlotte M. King
80
8
12
11
Michael Pendergrast
52
Valvular disease of heart
26
Anna M. Sampson
74
10
27
Locomotor ataxia
Ang.
2
66
7
12 Chronic brights
5
Cholera infantum
8 27
73
80
4
11
Sept.
9
12 Chauncy Reed Walker
4
12 Edward Murphy
83
4
19 Mary Hagerty
74
-
1
36 8
-
Pneumonia
William Pendergast Robert Hall and Myra White John H. and Ellen V. Flynn Alfred and Harriet Crawford Warren W. and Mary Tonhy John Carson Thomas Manley and - Chesman S. Russell and Lottiella Tharby . John and Mary O'Brien John Lyons Lucius and Charlotte B. Pierce
-94-
Johnson Peter and Bridget Devlin Patrick J. and Mary Nce James Devlin
Ignatius Sullivan and Margaret Moriarty
23
8
Pulmonary tuberculosis Gastritis
Rolland and Elinor Ellms
10
16
22
Valvular disease of heart
James H. and Margaret Collier
15
3
21
Broncho pneumonia
31
Anna Kenney Alfred Cheney Jenkins John Carson Harriet E. Perry
75
Brights disease
Ichabod Spooner and Maria Sherman
19
Jesse W. Spooner
Elijah and Harriet Ford
31
Elijah T. Clapp
Israel Cudworth and Mabel Jenkins
Uremia
22
George A. and Florence M. McDonald James McDonald and Mary O'Donald Warren Studley and Mary Barge
Pulmonary tuberclosis
Annie E. Murphy
Cancer
William Ellms and Caroline Cook
Delatation of heart
Gastritis
Panl Mott and Lydia V. Vinal Jonathan C. Morrell and Sarah Hacket George H. and Mary Fratus
Martin. D. and Deborah Bailey Cowan
Lemuel Merrill and Mary Hoyt
John and Mary O'Brien
Thomas Kane and Monica Linehan
-
Enoch and Eliza Collier Dudley and Mary A. Gill
Dysentery Paralysis Cholera infantum Old age Cardiac failure
20 Albert Bryant
Sept. Oct.
22 Ellen Brown James B. Totman 6 Myra Minerva Paige George F. Kellogg
69 70
5
78
53
74
11
William H. Quinn
21
8 1
11 20 1
Sarah J. Marsh Addie F. Crane
31 i- 21
Nellie G. Sullivan
38
Nov.
4
John P. Gifflu
82
5
6
Ada Chubbuck Taylor P. Rundlet
64 9
Dec.
30 2
William T. Burrows
63
1 10
28
20
Annie M. Barry
61
28
George Austin Litchfield
37
5 12
30
Alice E. Weatherbee
5
5
24
Pluro pneumonia Meningitis
Charles and Lucy Ellms Benjamin T. and Eunice Otis ' Earl Newton and Myra Dean Charles and Arthusa Webster William and Julia Merritt Charles and = Halnan Samuel Cook and Sarah L. Whitcomb Joseph S. Litchfield and Annie C. Edwards John and Margaret Driseoll
Daniel L. and Emma Stackpole Taylor M. and Olive Treadwell Thomas J. and Betsy W. Vinal William and Frances D. Merrit James Gearin and Johanna Sullivan Otis and Lucinda Fuller John and Elizabeth E. Brown
-95-
merrill
16
William R. Wills
40
13 Disease of gall bladder Paralysis Disease of heart 23 Cerebral hemorrhage Phthisis Caneer General pyaemia Pulmonary tuberculosis Cerebral hemorrhage Selerosis of spinal cord
56
Nov. Oct.
29
31
11
Epilepsy and cerebral hemorrhage Cardiac failure Nephritis Cancer of the Stomach
Tumor
1 9 William F. Brown
-96-
SUMMARY.
Number of births in Scituate for the year 1904,
Males, 19
Females, I9
Births in 1903 and 1901 not before re- corded, 8
Whole number recorded for the year, 46
Number of marriage licenses issued, 3I
Number of marriages recorded, 34
Number of deaths for the year,
55
Males, 24
Females, 3I
Brought to town for interment,
8
Whole number recorded for the year,
63
Number of dogs licensed for the year, Breeder's license, I
I34
Amount, less Town Clerk's fees, paid into the County Treasurer, $351 00
ENROLLED MILITIA, MAY 1, 1904.
Number of citizens between the ages of 18 and 45 years liable to be called to perform military duty, 459
REGISTERED VOTERS IN THE TOWN OF SCITU- ATE, DEC. 31, 1904.
715
Males, Females,
JETSON WADE, Tor Clerk.
NOTE. ......
All persons are requested to report omissions or correc- tions in the births, marriages and deaths.
Blanks for the return of births will be furnished to those applying therefor, by the Town Clerk.
JETSON WADE.
38
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
School Committee
OF THE
Town of Scituate
FOR THE
Year Ending December 3 I
1904
Scituate 7
REPORT OF THE SCHOOL COMMITTEE
The School Committee of Scituate herewith present their annual report for the year 1904.
The past year in school matters has not been different from other years, the aim of the committee being to pro- mote the educational interest of the schools, which they can safely report prosperous and progressive through able super- vision and efficient teaching.
According to the school census there are 436 children between the ages of five and fifteen, 220 boys and 216 girls; 257 between the ages of seven and fourteen, 137 boys and 120 girls.
The number of pupils enrolled in the schools in Septem- ber was 466. a slight increase over the preceding year. Of the number 466 the distribution by grades will be readily learned from the following table :-
Jenkins School-
Grade I,
21
Grades 2. 3.
53 47
Grades 4. 5.
Grades, 6. 7,
5I
Grades 8, 9,
28
Hatherly School-
Grade I,
28
Grades 2, 3.
35
Grades 4, 5,
42
Grades 6. 7. 48
Grades 8. 9,
36
The High School registered.
58 pupils
The High Street School registered.
19 pupils
-100-
Our registers show a good degree of attendance, and we wish to thank the many who have labored with us to reduce the per cent. of tardiness and absence. We have not done what we hoped to do in the matter of compulsory attendance to those children who are in need of all the benefits to be had from a common school education, and from necessity will never receive more than that, and we appeal to the par- ents to urge upon their children the great need of doing better for the year to come without the unpleasant necessity of the services of the truant officer.
Only a few changes have been made in our corps of teach- ers. Mr. Robert W. Rice, principal of the Jenkins School for nearly two years, resigned his position at the end of the year in June. Miss Alice F. ,Clapp was promoted to the principalship. Miss Carrie W. Litchfield was transferred from the Hatherly School to the position made vacant by Miss Clapp, and Miss Percie Merritt was given Miss Litch- field's room. The other teachers remain the same. It was deemed advisable to have only three grades in the High Street School. The fourth grade has been conveyed to the Hatherly School and is giving good satisfaction.
The repairs and alterations on the Hatherly School, in part made necessary by the rapid increase in the number of pupils in grade one, were made during the summer vaca- tion. The two front recitation rooms, each 18 by 20 feet, were made into one room, 18 by 40 feet. by removing the partition between them. This makes a room that is all that could be desired for grade one. The walls and ceiling in the room have been tinted and whitened. as have also all throughout the building. In rooms two and three, six-inch columns have been placed to stiffen the floors above, and to Jessen the vibrations caused by any exercises in concert. like marching, gymnastics, etc. Last spring thirty-five loads of loam were carted and spread on the lawn, new sods were laid along the driveway. so that with the leveling given it the lawn is in fairly good order. It would be much im-
-IOI --
proved if sifted loam and a good top dressing could be put on it. We would ask the town at their annual meeting in March to appropriate a sum of money for the same. The Jenkins School has received two coats of paint on the out- side, and windows have been put into the toilet rooms. The ordinary repairs on the High and High Street Schools have been attended to. .
It will be seen that the committee has exceeded the appro- priation for public buildings. The amount asked for each year is what an estimate of expenditures is based on, and often times many things unforeseen arise, which come from circumstances beyond their control, and must be provided for.
A more detailed account of the condition of the schools will be found in the reports of the Superintendent and special teachers.
In conclusion, we would ask the parents to visit the schools as often as possible. Certainly they could see and hear much to interest them. They would become better acquainted with the progress and methods of the teachers of their children, and by their presence would help the teach- ers to realize the results they strive for. Let there be sympa- thetic relations between the school and the home, as they work for a common end.
The committee recommend an appropriation of $9.500 for general school purposes, $3,300 for transportation of pupils, $525 for flush closets in the Hatherly School, and $300 for the salary of the Superintendent.
Respectfully submitted,
JULIA E. WEBB, CLARA M. SKEELE. JOY K. GANNETT, JR.
December 31, 1904.
1
REPORT OF SUPERINTENDENT.
To the School Committee :-
The schools are in such an excellent condition that it gives me much pleasure to offer to you this, my tenth annual report.
Had it not been for the sickness in the north part of the town the statistics would have been even better than they are. As it is, and in spite of so much sickness, there is a good gain over the records of a year ago. There is evidence on all sides to show that the' schools are being better appre- ciated each year.
The so-called roll of honor shows that pupils are making greater efforts each year to be perfect in their attendance. Parents are showing a more effective interest in this very vital side of school life.
On the roll of honor one year ago there were eleven names of pupils who had not been absent during the entire year. This year there are seventeen such pupils. Last year there were twenty-eight pupils who had been present every day for two terms. There are fifty-five in that class this year. Again there were last year eighty-four who had succeeded in obtaining a clear record for one term; this year there are ninety-eight. A gain in each of the three divisions.
This increase of interest in the schools is not peculiar to any one locality. It is general. In fact, the per cent. of attendance shows it to be true of every school. In the last decade it has not been true until this year that every school has shown a substantial increase in the per cent. of attend- ance. That it is true now is indeed very gratifying and as it should be. That this may continue until Scituate is the banner town in Massachusetts is much to be desired and worth striving for.
,
-103-
There are many reasons for the enviable record made by the schools during the last year. Not the least of these reasons is the excellent system, of transportation. A large majority of the pupils are carried to and from school in warm coaches, quickly hauled over the different routes.
A second reason for the evident success and prosperity of the schools is the fact that there is not in town a schoolroom that is not attractive, far beyond what is ordinarily true of towns of equal size. The schools more and more vie with the homes. They are becoming more and more homelike.
The third and most important reason is that there is not a school in town which is not presided over by a faithful, earn- est and efficient teacher. Pupils during the last year have been imbued with the spirit of hard work, which they have followed with a zeal and enthusiasm never before equalled. This,-and I do not say it in idle flattery. but because it is true and ought to be said,-is entirely due to the excellent organization, management and teaching power of the teach- ers themselves.
Attention is once more called to the fact that there will be no class of 1906 to graduate from the High School, unless by a process of dividing the two upper classes some provis- ion is made.
There may be some in the present senior class who ought not graduate in June, who would be much benefitted by an- other year of study. There may be a few in the class of 1907 who would not be harmed by being advanced one year in the course. From the two groups a good class might be formed for 1906. I would recommend some such plan to your consideration in the hope that some way will be found to avoid a skip in the long and thus far unbroken line of graduations.
The system of penmanship recently adopted, although it has had so short a trial, has given evidence of its final suc- cess. No small contribution to this end was made by Mr. Whitehouse, the author of the system, who delivered a lec-
-
-104-
ture to the teachers at the Jenkins School on "How to intro- duce the system."
At present only three of the eight books of the series are in use, numbers two, four and six. Another year it is in- tended to use all the books, grade for grade.
A fire drill has been introduced in the Hatherly and Jen- kins Schools. By its use the pupils may all be sent from the buildings in one and one-half minutes. The time may never come when this will really be needed, but if it ever does come lives may be saved on account of the previous drill.
I would call your attention to the reports of the special teachers of music and drawing: to the High School report by Mr. Clarke; to the names in the roll of honor, and, lastly, to the statistics of attendance, all of which will be found on succeeding pages.
In conclusion I wish to thank your board for your cordial support, not only for the last year, but for ten years past. I am sincerely grateful also to the teachers of the town for their cheerful and hearty support, co-operation and sym- pathy in my work.
Respectfully submitted,
EDGAR L. WILLARD, Superintendent of Schools.
January 1, 1905.
-105-
ROLL OF HONOR.
Not absent for entire year --
Edith Agnew, Leslie Brown, Howard Cole, Helen Collier,
Roland Collier,
George Doherty, James Finnie,
Bertram Litchfield,
Howard Bailey, Lee Bryant, Irma Cole, Robert Collier, Allen Doherty, Mollie Doherty, Kate Flynn, Mildred Litchfield,
Harold Sylvester.
Not absent for two terms-
Grace Bailey,
Dorothy Barnes, Kate Bender,
Fred Clapp, Marion Cole,
Walter Crane, Henry Doherty, Catherine Dwyer, Andrew Fillmore, James Flynn, Matthew Gannett, Velma Henderson, Elizabeth Jackson, Leroy Litchfield, Ruth Manson, Nina Merritt, Alice O'Connor, Charles Orcutt,
Elizabeth Prendergast, Reed Prouty, Fred Stanley, Bertha Vinal,
Philip Bailey, Henry Bearce, Elizabeth Brake, Ralph Clapp, Alden Cook, Mary Cushman, Stanley Dorr, Gladys Elliott, Estella Fitts, Harriette Gannett, Lawrence Hayward, Katherine Hill, Ellen Litchfield, Lewis Litchfield, Elsie Merritt, Eileen Murphy, Nellie O'Connor, Edward Prendergast, Helen Prouty, Ruth Sampson, Xoa Vickery, Mary Vinal,
-106-
Lucy Walker, Isabelle Ward, Mary Webb. , Albert Whorf, Frank Wilder,
George Walling, Charles Webb, Martin Welch, Velora Whorf, Russell Wilder,
Howard Young.
Not absent for one term-
Lawrence Bailey,
Marion Bardin,
Samuel Bonney, Charles Brown,
Ralph Brown,
Bertha Clapp,
Frank Clapp, Harold Cole,
Roy Cole.
Ruth Curtis.
Arthur Damon,
James Dwyer,
Sanford Fitts,
Alice Garvin,
Edward Graham,
John Hill, Eva Jenkins,
Lottie Ring, Bernard Lée.
Ellwood Litchfield,
Frank Litchfield,
Marion Litchfield,
Patience Litchfield, Clara Longfellow, Ernest McNeill, Mildred Merritt, Francis Murphy, Julia Murphy,
Theodore Bailey, Olive Barnes, Bertha Brown, Frank Brown, Berni ~~ Clapp. Florence Clapp, William Clapp, Helen Cole, Sumner Crane, Bertha Cushman, Ethel Duffey, Leo Dwyer, Harold Gannett, Kate Gillis, Sarah Graham, Robert Hill, Mary Kane, Alice Lee, Allan Litchfield, Floyd Litchfield, Lizzie Litchfield, Parker Litchfield, Paul Litchfield, Joel Manson, Ruth McNeill, Marjorie Mott, Joseph Murphy. Madolin Murphy,
-107-
Robert Murphy, Robert Nichols, Ruth Northey,
Mary O'Hern, Harry O'Neil,
Edna Osborne,
Ella Osborne,
Marjorie Pratt,
Gertrude Prouty,
Allen Ransom,
Rena Roe,
Fred Sylvester,
Lola Totman,
Herbert Vickery,
Ella Vinal,
Stanley Wade,
Edward Ward,
Isabelle Webb,
Bertha Whittaker,
Bvron Wood.
Charlotte Young,
Florence Newcomb, Bruce Northey. Annie O'Connor, Walter O'Hern, Agnes Olson, Edwin Osborne, William Otis, Ralph Pratt, John Prouty, Bessie Richardson, Nettie Storey, Aubrey Totman, Beatrice Turpin, Eliza Vinal, Lawrence Wade, William Wade, Marie Ward, Sabina Welch, John Whorf, Myrtis Wood, Ethel Young.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.