Town annual report of the officers of Wakefield Massachusetts : including the vital statistics for the year 1875-1881, Part 39

Author: Wakefield, Massachusetts
Publication date: 1875
Publisher: Town of Wakefield
Number of Pages: 956


USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Wakefield > Town annual report of the officers of Wakefield Massachusetts : including the vital statistics for the year 1875-1881 > Part 39


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Physical Exercises .- A short time each day should be spent in calisthenic exercises and marching. Special atten- tion should be given to secure easy, graceful and healthful positions.


The scholars in Franklin Primary and West Ward Prima- ry Schools will be fitted for the Second Intermediate School.


In the Franklin Intermediate and West Ward Intermedi- ate, for admission to the Second Grammar School.


In the East Ward, North Ward, Woodville and Green- wood Schools, for admission to the First Grammar School.


SAM'L K. HAMILTON, ) LUCIUS BEEBE, GEORGE W. ABORN, THEODORE E. BALCH, E. P. COLBY, WM. N. TYLER,


School Committee of Wakefield.


108


REPORT


OF THE


TRUSTEES BEEBE TOWN LIBRARY.


That " there is no royal road to learning " is as true now as when the expression first found utterance, and it is the dictate of wisdom that we impress our minds with the truth that on our own individual efforts we are dependent greatly for the social position we take in society ; and that if with the present facilities we do not acquire a fair education we need not blame " our stars but ourselves that we are under- lings." Looking upon those who, though engaged in a reg- ular occupation through life, are able to converse readily upon the various topics which interest mankind, or to quote with fluency passages from Scripture, from history, poetry, &c., we sometimes conclude that they possessed superior ad- vantages in their youth or in early manhood, whereas we ought rather expect to find constant development with con- tinued advantages, and enlarged experience, for that man must spend his time to little account, who plods along through many years without any perceptible acquisi- tion to his stock of knowledge. In looking forward we see so much before us to be attained that a feeling of discourage- ment sometimes takes possession of us, forgetting that we have to acquire but one new thought at a time, and that ob- stacles disappear as we approach them.


109


A remarkable example of perseverance in obtaining knowl- edge under difficulties is seen in the case of Elihu Burritt, whom Governor Everett styled " the learned blacksmith of Massachusetts." His parents were poor, so that his means of education were limited to the advantages of a district school, and on the death of his father, he was deprived even of those scanty means. Soon after his father's death, being then about fifteen years old, he apprenticed himself to a vil- lage blacksmith. He had an indomitable thirst for reading, which he sought to gratify at the public libraries. During the early part of his apprenticeship, as he tells us, it was necessary that he should devote every hour of daylight and portions of the evening to manual labor ; yet in that time he read a large number of historical works, and, with what as- sistance he received from an older brother, he obtained a familiar acquaintance with Latin and Greek, and then pushed on to conquests in modern languages. At the close of his apprenticeship he labored at the anvil eight hours in the day -spent eight hours at the Antiquarian Library at Worcester, and the remaining eight hours he devoted to repose. So great was his desire for knowledge and his determination to ob- tain it, that at the age of twenty-seven years he was able to read with facility upwards of fifty languages. It may be said that this is a very extraordinary case, and so it is, but it is somewhere said : " What man has done, man can do." Let us hear what Mr. Burritt said of himself: "None of my brethren and kindred ever thought that I had any particular genius as it is called. I never thought so myself. All that I have accomplished, or expect or hope to accomplish, has been and will be by that plodding, patient, persevering pro- cess of accretion which builds up ant-heaps, particle by par- ticle, thought by thought, fact by fact. And if ever I was actuated by ambition, its highest and furthest aspiration reaches no further than the hope to set before the young men of my country an example in employing those invaluable fragments of time called ' odd moments.'"


110


Few, if any, in this community probably will ever equal in attainments this learned linguist, but every youth among us. has as good opportunities as he had, but want of love for study, and lack of energy to overcome obstacles, keep many a one dreaming of that which he would gladly possess, but which he has not the fortitude to pursue and make his own. Who cannot devote one hour in twenty-four to mental cul -. ture ? And this would be equal in the amount of time to ten weeks annually in school. Formerly apprentices were lim- ited to six weeks schooling in winter, which was all they re- ceived through the year, yet many of them so improved their fragments of time that they took their places with the learned and honorable. One may read much however without a pur pose in view except to be entertained ; but to study with a desire to improve the mind, to acquire useful knowledge, and to master the sciences, is a task less easily performed, and requires a vastly stronger effort of the mind and will.


When Edmund Stone, a distinguished mathematician of the last century, was about eighteen years old, he was ob- served by the Duke of Argyle with a Latin copy of New- ton's Principia in his possession. Having himself a taste for the sciences, the Duke entered into conversation with him, propounding many questions, and being surprised at the readiness and accuracy of his answers, asked him how he came by a knowledge of all these things? Stone replied : " A servant taught me ten years since to read. Does one need to know anything but the twenty-four letters in order to learn everything else that one wishes ?"


May the youth of our town reflect on what has been ac- complished by others under the most forbidding circum- stances, toiling both days and evenings for a subsistence - without teachers, without money, and without the favor of friends-and may they find new incentives to quicken their zeal, and to prompt them to more determined efforts in making the most of their time, their energies and their tal- ents, in providing for the intellectual part of their being.


111


For the coming year the Trustees recommend an appro- priation of three hundred dollars in addition to the dog tax."


Respectfully submitted,


EDWARD MANSFIELD, Chairman,


T. E. BALCH, Secretary,


C. W. EATON, Treasurer, LUCIUS BEEBE,


THOMAS WINSHIP,


JOHN M. CATE,


CYRUS WAKEFIELD,


HARRIET N. FLINT,


S. O. RICHARDSON,


F. P. HURD,


H. H. SAVAGE,


AZEL AMES, JR.,


GEO. H. TEAGUE,


Trustees.


112 FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE LIBRARY.


Beebe Town Library in account with C. W. Eaton, Treasurer of Trustees.


·


Cr.


By balance from last year, $ 2 80


Town Appropriation,


300 00


Dog taxes, refunded Town by County,


234 84


Interest on Flint Fund, ·


60 00


Interest on Hurd Fund, .


20 10


Donation from S. K. Hamilton, Esq.,


10 00


Sale of old books and papers, .


2 02


Sale of Catalogues, 8 80 ·


Fines collected, ·


39 50


$678 06


Dr.


To cash paid V. E. Marsh, Librarian, . $275 00


for new books, 320 78


repairs of books, 38 25


covering paper, . ·


11 90


express charges and postage, 5 78


sundries at library,


6 32


printing and advertising, .


8 00


Balance on hand,


12 03


.


$678 06


Respectfully submitted,


CHESTER W. EATON,


Treasurer of Trustees.


113


LIBRARIAN'S REPORT.


Total number of volumes in the Library, 7,003 Added by purchase within the year, 254


donation from Lucius Beebe, Esq.,


37


C. E. Flint, .


17


66 Hon. Selwyn Z. Bowman, 4


66 Mr. Jotham Aborn, 6


66 66 State of Massachusetts, 5


66 Newton Public Library, 1


Exchanged for Town History, Number added in each class :


Theology, Class 1, 12


Mental and Moral Science, ·


2, 13


Political and Social Science, ·


3, 10


Natural Sciences,


4,


12


Medical Science,


5,


8


The Arts,


6,


24


Language and Literature,


7,


34


History,


8,


19


Travels, etc.,


9, 25


Biography,


10, 43


Poetry,


11, 7


Fiction, ·


13, 118


325


Persons having signed the By-Laws, . 146 Number of accounts on which books have been charged, 722 Number of books re-bound, 152


discarded,


58


Whole number of books delivered,


25,167


Greatest number to one account,


211


Average number delivered each day, . 215 .


66 66 hour, 43


VICTORINE E. MARSH,


Librarian.


WAKEFIELD, March 19, 1881.


1


114


BOOKS ADDED TO THE LIBRARY SINCE PUBLICA- TION OF LAST ANNUAL REPORT.


THEOLOGY .- CLASS 1.


CLASS. NO.


Adventures in Patagonia-Missions. Coan


1 319


Alaska, and Missions on the North Pacific Coast. Jackson


320


Garden Graith. Smiley


325


"Human Race" and Other Sermons. Robertson 329


Lord's Prayer. Gladden 323


Observations Concerning the Trinity, etc. Edwards 322


Religion of China. Legge 326


Story of the Last Days of Jerusalem. From Flavius Josephus


328


Thoughts on Great Mysteries. Selections from Faber 318


True Story of the Eoxdus of Israel. Brugsch-Bey


321


Two Worlds are Ours. Macmillan 324


Young Folks' Bible History. Yonge 327


MENTAL AND MORAL SCIENCE .- CLASS 2.


CLASS. NO.


Brain and Mind. Drayton and McNeill


2 171


Duties of Women. Cobbe


178


Hints for Home Reading. Miscellaneous Contributors


174


History of European Morals. Lecky. 2 Vols.


175


How to Enjoy Life. Cornell 169


173


Letters, &c., to Young Girls and Young Ladies. Selected from Ruskin 168


Might and Right. Selections from Gladstone


170


My College Days. Tomes


172


On the Threshold. Munger


176


Self-Culture. Clarke 177


Woman's Work and Worth. Adams 167


John Ploughman's Pictures. Spurgeon


115


POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE .- OLASS 3.


CLASS. NO.


Certain Dangerous Tendencies in American Life, and Other 3


Papers. Harrison 10


Chinese Immigration. Seward


Eleventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of La- bor-1880. 9


36


Fifth Annual Report of the Board of State Charities-1869. 7


Massachusetts Public Documents-1879. 4 Vols. 6


"New Views on Ireland." Russell 118


Tenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics of La- bor-1879. 8


NATURAL SCIENCES .- CLASS 4.


CLASS. NO.


Beef Bonanza. Brisbin


4 199


Boys' and Girls' Book of Science. Strahan


'204


Half Hour Recreations in Natural History. Dixon


197


Keeping One Cow. 198


Mind in the Lower Animals. Lindsay. 2 Vols.


200


Natural History of the Strait of Magellan. Cunningham 206


Poetry of Astronomy. Proctor :: 205


Popular Science Monthly. Vol. 15. Youmans 1201


66 16. 202


66 66 66 17. 203


Transformation of Insects. Duncan 207


1


MEDICAL SCIENCE .- CLASS 5.


CLASS. NO.


Certain Conditions of Nervous Derangement. Hammond 5 86


Headaches-Their Nature, Cause and Treatment. Day


- 84


Health and Health-Resorts. Wilson


81


Mouth and Teeth. White 79


Our Homes. Hartshorne 80


School and Industrial Hygiene. Lincoln 85


Sea-air and Sea-bathing. Packard 1. 82


Kin in Health and Disease. Bulkley 83


116


¡THE ARTS .- CLASS 6.


CLASS. NO.


Adjutant General's Report for Year Ending, 1865.


6 195


Agriculture, Board of. 3rd Annual Report of the Secre- tary-1855. Mass.


182


6th Annual-1858.


183


66


7th


1859.


184


8th


1860.


185


66


66


9th


1861.


186


18th 66


1870.


187


23rd


1875.


188


66


" 24th


1876.


189


" 25th


1877.


190


66


66


" 27th


1879.


191


Art Suggestions from the Masters. (comp.) Carter


Census of Mass, for 1875. Agricultural Products and Property.


Easiest Way in Housekeeping and Cooking. Campbell


Farm Homes-In-doors and Out-doors. Leland


179


Hamersly's Naval Encyclopedia-1881.


197


180


181


Servant Girl Question. Spofford


201


Success with Small Fruits. Roe


178


United States Army and Infantry Tactics. Upton


196


What Girls Can Do. Browne


199


LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE .- OLASS 7.


CLASS. NO.


Anecdote of Public Men. Vol. 2. Forney


7 445


Browsing Among Books. Woolson


431


Catalogue of Mass. State Library-1880.


428


Class Catalogue of Newton Free Library-1880.


432


Cervantes-Foreign Classics. Oliphant Chips from the White House. (com.) Chaplin Critical Essays and Literary Notes. Taylor


444


436


Dealings with the Dead. Sargent. 2 Vols.


437


Early Spring in Massachusetts. Thoreau


446


Four Centuries of English Letters. (ed. and arr.)


Scoones 421


German Thought. Hillebrand


443


Johnson's Lives of the Poets. (ed) Arnold


442


" 13th


66


1869-80-(Conn.)


192


21st 66 1879-(Maine.)


193


198


194


200


Massachusetts Agricultural Transactions for 1851. 66 66 1852.


438


117


Gæthe's Mother; Correspondenee. (trans.) Gibbs 7 427 Life, Poems and Stories of Fitz James OBrien. (cd) Winter 439


Life, Stories and Poems of John Brougham. (ed) Winter 440


Legends of the Old Plantation. Harris


424


My Southern Home. Brown 434


My Wayward Pardner. Holley 433


New England Bygones. Arr


435


Principles and Portraits. Bartol


415


Reminiscenees of a Journalist. Congdon


429


Sketches and Reminiscences of the Radical Club. Sargent Students' Shakespearc. Fox


423


Study of Shakespearc. Swinburne


441


Tramp Abroad. Clemens 430


Truc Manliness. Selected from Hughes. Brown 422


Young Folks' Cyclopedia of Persons and Places. Champlin 426


HISTORY .- CLASS 8.


CLASS. NO.


Advance and Retreat. Hood


8 387


Army Life in Russia. Greene 390


Century of Dishonor. Jackson


400


Curious Myths of the Middle Ages. Gould


386


Egypt. Clement 393


403


History of the Administration of John De Witt. Geddes History of our Times. Vol. 2 McCarthy


$91


" Boxford. Perley


398


" Creation. Haeckel. 2 Vols. 396


389


Invasion of the Crimea. Vol. 4. Kinglake


397


Modern Greece. Jebb 388


Old Times in the Colonies. Coffin


399


Origin of Civilization and Primitive Condition of Man. Lubboek


395


Story of the United States Navy. Lossing. 402


Pre-historic Times. Lubbock 394


Young Ireland-1840-1850. Duffy 401


" the English People. Vol. 4. Green


425


118


GEOGRAPHY, TOPOGRAPHY AND TRAVELS. - CLASS 9.


CLASS. NO.


Across Patagonia. Dixie


9 556


Around the World with Gen. Grant. Young. 2 Vols.


539


Boy Travellers in the Far East. Knox 551


Breton Folk. Blackburn and Caldicott 558


Concord Guide Book. Bartlett 540


Drifting Round the World. Hall 554.


Exploration of the World-Navigators. Verne


547


From Hong-Kong to the Himalayas. Clarke


550


Gazeteer of the World-1880. (ed) Lippincott


555


Gleanings from Pontresina. Arnold


537


Holland and its People. Amicis


549


Holiday Rambles.


536


India. Fuedge


541


Isles of Summer; Nassau and fhe Bahamas. Ives


557


Marco Polo ; His Travels and Adventures. Towle


552


New Colorado. Hayes


543


On the Rhine. Miscellaneous Authors.


545


Our Australian Cousins. Inglis


544


Outlying Europe and the Nearer Orient. Moore


542


Recent Travel in Bible Lands. De Hass


538


Summerland Sketches. Oswald


546


Unbeaten Tracks in Japan. Bird. 2 Vols.


553


Zigzag Journey in Classic Lands. Butterworth


548


Reminiscences of Thomas Carlyle. (ed) Froude


628


Reminiscences of an Idler. Wikoff


603


Rossini and His School. Edwards


632


Women of Christendom. Charles


618


Woodworth. Myers


623


Sir William Herschel. Holden


624


Schubert. Frost


633


Sister Augustine, an Old Catholic. Translated from the German. 634


Sketches of Illustrious Soldiers. Wilson


627


BIOGRAPHY .- CLASS 10.


CLASS. NO.


Memoir and Reminiscences of Gov. Andrew. Chandler


10 620


Diary and Letters of Madame D'Arblay. (ed) Woolsey. 2 Vols. Life and Letters of Horace Bushnell


602


605


. Elihu Burritt. Northend 593


Recollections and Opinions of an Old Pioneer. Burnett 598


119


Divine Guidance. Memorial of Allen W. Dodge. Dodge 10 631 600


Bunyan. Froude


Byron. Nichol 613


William Ellery Channing. Brooks


595


Reminiscences of Channing. Peabody


596


Life of William Ellery Channing. Channing


597


Chaucer. Ward


594


Cowper. Smith


604 .


Eminent English Liberals. Davidson


617


Monsieur Guizot at Home. De Witt


622


Memorials of Frances R. Havergal. Havergal


607


Life of Winfield Scott Hancock. Goodrich


610


Charles D. Helmer. Helmer


609


Sir William Herschel. Holden


624


Records of William M. Hunt. Angell


621


Studies of Irving. Essays.


601


Ladies of the White House. Holloway


625


Memories of My Exile. Kossuth


606


Sir Edwin Henry Lanseer. Stephens


612


Montezuma. Seelye and Eggleston


615


Poets' Homes. Gilman and others.


626


Sister and Saint-Jacqueline Pascal. Weitzel


619


Life and Letters of J. H. Raymond. Lloyd


630


Sir Joshua Reynolds. Pulling


611


Sister Dora ; a Biography. Lonsdale


599


Six Life Studies of Famous Women. Betham-Edwards


614


St. Simon. (ed) Oliphant


608


Henry B. Smith : His Life and Work. Smith


616


Adam Smith-I723-1790. Farrar


629


POETRY,-CLASS 11.


CLASS. NO.


All Round the Year. Goodale


11 215


Ballads and Other Verses. Fields


214


King's Missive and Other Poems. Whittier


216


Iron Gate and Other Poems. Holmes


210


Poems. Arnold 212


Thou and I. Tilton


209


Ultima Thule. Longfellow


211


Wild Roses of Cape Ann and Other Poems. Larcom


213


120


PROSE FICTION .- CLASS 13.


CLASS. NO.


Adirondack Stories. Deming


13 2069


Among the Thorns. Dickinson


2076


Beauty's Daughters.


2074


Beleaguered City. Oliphant


2057


Ben-Hur; a Tale of the Christ. Wallace


2117


Bricks Without Straw. Tourgee


2096


Brigitta. Auerbach


2108


Captain Fracasse. Gautier


2051


Charity, Sweet Charity. Porter


2132


College Days at Oxford. Adams


2101


Crusoe in New York, etc. Hale


2080


Daphne. "Rita


2068


Day of Fate. Roe


2104


Don John. No Name Series


2146


Dorcas. Craik


2088


Elsie's Widowhood. Finley


2064


End of a Coil. Warner


2097


Endymion. Beaconsfield


2138


.


Ernestine. Von Hillern. 2 Vols.


2147


Experience of a Barrister. Warren


2079


Fair Haired Alda. Marryat


2107


Famous Victory.


2079


Five Little Southerners. Porter


2137


From Madge to Margaret. Winchester


2085


Grandissimes. Cable


2095


Greatest Heiress in England. Oliphant


2087


Great Expectations. Dickens


2090


Glimpses Through the Cannon Smoke. Forbes


2103


Hal ; a Clodhopper. Round


2052


Heart of It. Stoddard


2053


Head of Medusa. Fletcher


2127


Hopeless Case. Fawcett


2070


How I Found It. North and South.


2115


Ilka on the Hill-top, etc. Boyesen


2193


Irene, the Missionary.


2061


Leaden Casket. Hunt


2149


Lenox Dare. Townsend


2140


Little Dorrit. Dickens


2091


Lost Casket. Boisgobey


2141


Lost in a Great City. Douglas


2142


Louisiana. Burnett


2060


Love and Life. Yonge


2109


121


Loyal Ronins. Translated from the Japanese.


13


2152 2058


Magnum Bonum. Yonge


Margarethe. Juncker


2093


Marion Scatterthwaite. Symington


2129


Mary Anerley. Blackmore


2093


Mary Marston. Macdonald


2143


Man Proposes.


2073


Missy. Wilson


2059


Mother Molly. Peard


2148


Mrs. Beauchamp Brown. No Name Series


2065


Mudfog Papers. Dickens


2086


My Marriage


2128


Nature and Humanity-Little Classics. (ed) Johnson


2135


New Race. Raimund


2067


Odd or Even? Whitney


2062


Off on a Comet. Verne


2130


Oliver Twist. Dickens


2089


Pictures from Ireland. McGrath


2144


Ploughed Under; Story of an Indian Chief.


2153


Pushing Ahead. Rand


2077


Rodman, the Keeper, etc. Woolson


2054


Rue's Helps. Drinkwater


2063


Russian Romance. Poushkin


2126


Salvage. No Name Series.


2082


Sebastian Strome. Hawthorne


2056


Silver Medal. Trowbridge


2124


Sisters. Ebers


2072


Steam House. Verne


2151


Stillwater Tragedy. Aldrich


2094


Stories and Romances. Scudder


2106


Stories of the Sea. (ed) Hale.


2136


Sunrise. Black


2150


Tragedy of the Unexpected. Perry


2071


Troublesome Daughters. Walford


2081


Trumpet Major. Hardy


2131


Two Miss Jean Dawsons. Author of Janet's Service.


2116


Uarda. Ebers. 2 Vols.


2055


Undiscovered Country. Howells


2075


Village Commune. De la Rame (Ouida)


2145


Washington Square. James


2118


Wellfields. Fothergill


2110


White Wings. Black


2084


Wrecked on a Reef.


2102


122


JUVENILE STORIES.


Aboard the Mavis. Markham


13 2099


Boys' and Girls' Book of Travel and Adventure. Strahan


2134


Christmas Morning. Diaz


2121


Clover Beach. Vandegrift


2098


Down South. Adams (Optic)


2125


Eastward Ho! Farrar


2066


Fairport Nine. Brooks


2120


Guernsey Lily. Woolsey. (Susan Coolidge)


2133


Jack and Jill. Alcott


2113


Japanese Fairy World. Griffis


2122


Mr. Bodley Abroad. Scudder


2092


New Bed-time Stories. Moulton


2105


Peterkin Papers. Hale


2114


Roy's Dory at the Seashore. Rand


2112


Shakespeare's Stories Simply Told. Seamer


2111


Strong Arm and a Mother's Blessing. Kellogg


2119


Twin Cousins. Clarke (Sophy May)


2123


Worse Boy in Town. Habberton


2100


STATISTICS


FROM


TOWN


CLERK'S REGISTER.


Births Registered in the Town of Wakefield in 1880.


No.


Name of Child.


Sex.


Date of Birth.


Names of Parents.


Occupation of Father.


Polisher.


1


John Henry Kenney.


Male


January 3 ....


Henry and Mary Ann (Donnelly).


2


Mattie Wellman Young


Female


4 ....


Wesley and Sarah F. (Wellman).


Carpenter. Laborer.


3


Bertie Lionel Brown ...


.


66


·


10 ....


Warren A. and Endora D (Bradley).


Toy boat maker. .


5


Wilbur Lamont ...


.


Chair-maker.


6


Styleman Jordan Simpson


Moulder.


7


Nettie Lena Savage.


Female . ..


..


26 ...


John and Sarah (Cullen).


Laborer.


8


Sadie Toomey ..


Male .


.


Mason.


10


Mary Elizabeth Morgan . ...


Female ...


28. . . .


Reuil P. and Carrie V. (Snowdon) ...


Salesman.


12


Eleanor Louise Darling ..


Shoe-dealer.


13


Ellen Maria Sherin.


Male .


...


8 ....


George D. and Emma H. (Varney) ..


Laborer.


16


James Thomas O'Connor.


Male .


11 ....


James and Mary (Galvan).


Laborer.


17


Daniel Callahan ..


Female ..


...


22 ....


Arthur P. and Ida M. (Wiley).


Chair-maker.


18


Edna Crocker Linnell ..


Shoe-maker.


19 20


Charles ()'Hara.


Overseer in factory.


21


John William Stout ..


Clerk.


22 23 21


William Ahlert ..


9. .. . Michael and Mary (Minnehead)


Junk-dealer.


25 Elizabeth Holden ..


Watch-maker.


Lucy Bell Hamilton.


. 18 .. . . Christian E. and Emma (Barbour).


Laborer.


28 Patrick Joseph Landers. .... .


Canvasser.


29 Grace Lillian Hudson.


Machinist.


30


Che ter Lowell Prentiss .


Male ...


April


4. . . .


J. Herman and Annie M. (Roberts).


Chair-maker.


31 Walter Irving Mears ...


Laborer.


32


Patrick Francis Butler.


Travelling Agent.


33


Louie Cassidy ..


Laborer.


34 Nellie Maria Maloney ..


Grocer.


35 Alice Hayford Sheldon ..


66


May


Horse-dealer.


36 Harley Coburn Wright ...


Male


. 3 .... William H. and Jennie M. (Gillis) ·


Needle-maker.


37 Charles Herbert Cutter . ....


.


38 Willie Gross Whitford


.


5 .... |J. Clarence and M. Jennie (Gross).


Laborer.


·


11 ....


George T. and Lizzie M. (Sterling). ..


21 ....


James F. and Mary E. (Eagon).


21. . ..


William F. and Augusta A. (Brown).


27 .. . Henry O. and Marilla M. (Ricker)


Butcher.


9


John Henry Mitchell


28. . . . Hugh and Mary (Orpin) ...


Carrie Ellen Buzzell.


Banker.


14 15


Berenice Dunbar Emerson.


Female.


.


February 4. .. . David HI. and Mary H. (Evans) .. 5 ... . Francis and Ellen (Foley). 8. . .. William and Emma H. (Hutchinson).


Grocer, Shoe-cutter.


124


. Male . .


..


·


·


.


66


...


.. .


Laborer.


George Arthur Bennett.


.


March 4. . . [William and Elizabeth (Dacy) .


Laborer.


Female . .


..


17 .... Charles R. and Maggie (Mahoney) ..


Clerk, Custom House.


26 27 Chester Emile Rahr


Male .


29 .... John and Margaret (Welch).


31. . . . Albert J. and Lizzie L (White).


9. .. . S. Alonzo and Annie J. (Perkins) ...


20. . . . Edward and Mary (Desmond) ...


·


.


27 .... Henry L. and Mary A. (Mullen) ..


Female .


28 .... John and Maria (Healey) .


2 .... Otis E. and Lois J. (Smith) ..


Stove-fitter.


24 .... Charles and Margaret (Kirby).


25 ....


Richard and Myra (Russell).


27 .. . . Charles and Estella M. (Young)


Charles Archer Stockbridge.


22 ... . Daniel and Katie ( Wallace).


22 ....


George A. and Sarah F. (Eames).


Albert Eames Bessey.


.


William Marland Griffin


..


( ....


James W. and Mary S.(Green) ...


Male


Albert Francis Bracket ...


Chair-maker.


·


.


.


29. . . . Samuel and Jane (Froton).


.


Female


4. . . . Amos F. and Lucy J. (Oliver) ...


39 [William Lowell Gray . Nellie M. Deming . .


Male


. May


Female . ·


·


Male ..


·


Female ... .


10 .... Charles W. and Mary L. (Taylor) ...


Annie Lonise Gorden ..


... .... . .


43 Charles Sullivan


Male 66


.


11. .. . John and Hannah (Linnane) ...


44 John Loughlin.


45 Mary Eliza Doucett ...


Female .


12 .... Jolin S. and Margaret (Froton).


46 47


Arthur Elliot Bucknam .. . .


66


...


..


49 Amos Carroll Preston


Female . ..


23 .... Silas H. and Annie M. (Gordon).


24 .... William H. and Alice W. (Beckford).


52


Marian Grace Johnston.


. ....


25 .... Thomas G. and Mary Ann (Shaughnessy)


54


Charles Leo Weiscopf ..


Male ·


25 .. .


Leopold and Amy (Drake) ..


....


55 Michael Roach ..


......


.....


Female .. ....


28 ... . Thomas D. and Carrie A. (Haywood).


Carpenter.


57 58


Mercy May Whittemore


.


. .


29 .... William L. and Charlotte (Wood).


Farmer. .


59 Marian Rogers.


Charles Robert Wait ..


Male


31 .... Robert P. and Maria E. (Temple) .


Henry and Kate (Crozier) ..


Printer. Boot and Shoe-maker.


125


62 63


May Eliza Gammons.


. .


9. .. .


Herbert W. and Mary A. (Armstrong). Cyrus W. and Emma G. (Jenkins) ...


64 65 Louise Brown Corey ..


Male


... .


Female . ...


17 ... .


William and Mary (Connell).


68


Florence Ella Roach


.


Lena May Eager ..


.


Rosa May Hicks. .


27 .. ..


Thomas and Annie (O'Connell)


Coachman.


Hattie Lonise Lassell


July


6 .... Charles A. and Mary A. (Green).


Teamster. Tailor.


Laborer.


James Barry.


Male ..


Female ....


....


Bertha Hamburgher ...


27 ...


...


31 .. ..


Henry and Ella (Hayes).


Salesman.


Winnie Lonis Finney .


Male


.


.


......


.


. 15. . ...


Simon and Fanny (Doucett) ..


Shoe maker.


23 .... Lyman B. and Alice N. (Nourse) ..


Mechanic


83 Arthur Lyman Hawkes


Male


...


66


...


7. ... ) William H. and Mary L.(Lowell) ...


|Carpenter.


8. . . . Charles B. and Nellie E. (Morgan). 10 ... . Patrick and Mary A. (Fineran) ...


Furniture Dealer. Coachman. Trader. ·


Basket-maker.


Laborer. Laborer. Carpenter.


13. . . . Osborn E. and Lizzie (Deacon).




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