USA > Maine > Androscoggin County > Livermore > History of the town of Livermore, Androscoggin county, Maine : from its inception in 1735 and its grant of land in 1772 to its organization and incorporation in 1795 up to the present time, 1928 > Part 17
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1850 Sept. 9 Road from Reuben P. Brown's to county road to Jay.
1851 Mar. 3 Road from Mitchell field East to S. H. Becklar's.
1851 Mar. 3 Discontinued road by M. E. parsonage near Cat Corner.
1851 Mar. 3 Road from Elijah Fisher's East to county road.
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1851 Aug. 19 Road from school-house No. 10 to Bradford's.
1854 Oct. 2 Road from school-house No. 16 to Aaron Jackson's.
FRESHETS
1838
Ice freshet, west side of Jay bridge carried away. In this freshet Asa Goding lived on the Kilfoyla farm, and he hauled his wife and children in an oxcart, in the night, to higher ground.
1846 Mar. 27
Freshet. Saw mill, grist mill, carding mill, Kim- ball's store swept away, and Pettingill's store and Moody house moved off foundations at Livermore Falls. Ice planed off knoll which was east of landing of Barton's ferry.
1869
Pumpkin freshet.
First Bridge.
By the efforts of Col. Huntoon a stock company was formed in 1859 and a wooden bridge erected con- necting the towns of East Livermore and Liver- more. A man committed suicide by jumping off this bridge.
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March 12, 1871, this bridge was carried off by an ice freshet and Caleb Smith immediately bought up the stock and replaced the bridge with another wooden structure in 1872.
1886 Jan.
6 Ice went out of every river in Maine. Saw mill and turning mill and machine shop carried down river at Livermore Falls. Wire cable across Hill- man's Ferry broken.
1896 Mar. 2 Ice freshet, which swept the last wooden bridge down river, and piled it up a mass of wreckage on Pettingill's Island.
This same year the towns united and the present iron bridge was erected and opened for traffic before snow came. The cost of the bridge was $13,100. Length from pin to pin 315 feet and one inch. Surface length, 322 feet and 414 inches. East Livermore paid $6,810.77 and cares for 167 feet and 71/8 inches. Livermore paid $6,289.23 and cares for 154 feet and 91/8 inches. Cost of abut- ment on Livermore side, $3,500.00. Cost of filling abutment, $476.75. The base of the Livermore abutment was drawn back eleven feet and four inches from the base of the old abutment.
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THE COLD YEAR OF 1816
Jan. was mild.
Feb. was mild with a few cold days.
Mar. was cold and windy and then mild.
Apr. was warm but grew colder and was like winter at close.
May was cold, corn killed, replanted and again killed.
Ice formed an inch thick, birds frozen.
June colder than May, snow ten inches deep in some places, fruit blighted and robins frozen to death, corn killed except on hills.
August was cold, ice half-inch thick.
Sept., first two weeks warm, then frosty and cold.
Oct. colder than usual.
Nov. cold with sleighing.
Dec. pleasant.
Corn of 1815 sold for seed in 1817 from $2.00 to $3.00 per bushel. Wheat the same, flour eight and ten cents per pound.
1817 crops bounteous.
HEIGHTS ABOVE SEA LEVEL
From the origin of the Androscoggin river to tide water at Brunswick is 150 miles, with a fall of 1256 feet. Height above tidewater of points on river or railroads: Danville Junction, 180 feet; Auburn Depot, 210 feet; Lewiston Depot, 212 feet ; Leeds, 260 feet; Mechanic Falls Depot, 270 feet; E. Livermore Depot, 360 feet; Rumford Falls at its brink, 600 feet; Bear Mountain, 1265 feet.
SABATUS
Rev. Paul Coffin, in his Memoirs, tells of an interview with "Sabatus," an Indian Chief, in which the Indian states that Norridgewock means Stillwater. Merocomecook, same as Rocomeco, semi-circle of water. Megunticook, waves dashing against each other. Wessurmumscot, clay stream. Madamascontee, many little alewives. Pemmaquid, point of land running into water. Magahunta, the Devil. Chinus, God. No. 1 was Temple. Goshen, Vienna. Tyngtown, Wilton. Titcombtown, Anson. Pennycook, Rumford. Lit- tleborough, Leeds. Hook, Hallowell. Cobbosseecontee, Gar- diner, Sudbury. Canada, Bethel. Piggwacket, Fryeburg.
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CYCLONES
I have heard old people tell of a cyclone that passed over the vicinity of the Norlands in the year 1818 and lifted the roof of the school-house, which at that time stood on the westerly side of the road. The school was in session at the time and William Coolidge, who was one of the scholars, said that the first intimation they had of anything unusual, the westerly roof lifted enough to show daylight and imme- diately shut down.
And again the 3d of July, 1892, after a warm, showery forenoon, a cyclone started in the town of Buckfield, passed over Bear Pond, the Norlands and, scaling the top of Brad- bury Hill, dipped down onto the Atwood farm, uprooting apple and forest trees, tore the roof off the ell of the house, swept a carriage house and contents easterly across the road and smashed it onto a stone wall, and swinging across the valley, with a motion that made one think of an elephant's trunk feeling for a wisp of hay, levelled a stable on the Fred Merrill farm, occupied by Frank Lindsey, and as it crossed the river lifted tons of water on to the intervale and sweeping up to Haines Morrison's swung one of his barns entirely off its foundation. The last heard of the whirling, roaring, tunnel-shaped black cloud, was in the town of Vienna ..
SCHOOL-HOUSES, ANCIENT AND MODERN Dis. No. 1 school-house was at the four corners of the road at the foot and on the westerly side of Butter Hill.
Dis. No. 2 school-house stood very near the cemetery at Brettun's Mills, but in 1915 a new house with double rooms was built on the road leading to Canton.
Dis. No. 3 school-house was at the foot of the Columbus Alden Hill until moved to its present position in 1908.
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Dis. No. 4 school-house is still standing midway between T. S. Goding's and the foot of the Bickford Hill.
Dis. No. 5 school-house was near the junction of the E. R. Boothby road and that running northerly and southerly through South Livermore, but alas for the old red school-house in which so many lyceums have been held, it now serves as a horse- shed for the Advent Chapel nearby.
Dis. No. 6 school-house stood just north of Job Chase's house, but this little red school-house, in which the writer studied his first primer under the excellent teaching of Daniel Lara, fell into dis- use and a new house was built a few rods farther to the north.
Dis. No. 7 school-house is used for a town office.
Dis. No. 8. In 1927 a new double-room school-house was built at North Livermore, superseding all others.
Dis. No. 9 school-house stood very near and just north of the house of Worcester B. Cole, on the easterly side of the road a half-mile south of the J. H. Bigelow place. It was succeeded by a new double-room house at Livermore Center in 1900.
Dis. No. 10 called the "Bush school-house," still stands as a summer residence, at the junction of the Nor- lands and Gibbs Mills roads.
Dis. No. 11 had the only brick school-house in town, built in 1832, and served as such for 35 years when a wooden structure was built about 50 rods to the south on land of George Gibbs ; this, too, has disappeared like many others. The brick house stood very near where the barn of N. A. Hinds
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now stands. I remember hearing Charles Otis Thompson tell of a terrible thrashing that William Wilson gave Jacob Haskell, because he couldn't spell bureau. Lewis M. Wing was one of the teachers in this school-house and George C. Wing of Auburn, learned his lessons in the primer here and steadily rose from the front to the back seat.
Dis. No. 12 house is still intact but used for a dwelling house.
Dis. No. 13 school-house was the poorest, as such, of any in town. It stood very near to the junction of the Tollawally with the Strickland Ferry road and was burned in 1889:
Dis. No. 14 school-house stood just north of the home of F. A. Leavitt, but when the house was built at Liv- ermore Center, it was abandoned and is now the stable of the Jason Fogg place.
Dis. No. 15 school-house was on the Neison road and it was called the Nelson district, but it was abandoned in 1891.
Dis. No. 16 school-house is still standing at the junction of the A. W. Jackson road with the Goding Hill road. It is stripped of its seats and is unoc- cupied.
Dis. No. 17, called the Union school because pupils from the town of Jay as well as those from Livermore, attended. It stood about 100 rods south of Jay line on the road leading from North Livermore to Jay Bridge. It was the only school-house with the tiers of seats rising from the teacher's desk to the back side that the writer ever saw. It was abandoned in 1888.
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OLD SCHOOL-HOUSES
The first school-house in town stood in the angle made by the junction of the Fish meadow and Cat Corner roads, nearly opposite to the cellar of the Maj. Fish house. It is an interesting fact that "Lyceums" were held in this house.
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Another school-house, and some accounts give it as being first, stood in the dooryard or on the foundation of the house at Gibbs Mills, now owned by L. L. Riggs. It is handed down to us that Henry Bond taught school in this house.
A school-house stood in the Wyman cemetery and bricks of the chimney can still be seen. It was burned after an exciting school meeting, under suspicious circumstances.
Another school-house stood on the easterly side of the road and at the south-west corner of the J. T. Lyford farm. This, too, was burned under the same circumstances as the one in the Wyman cemetery.
Another stood not far from the river just south of the Caleb Smith house and in 1851 it was moved to No. 12 and can still be seen.
A school-house at one time stood half way from the J. H. Bigelow house, southerly to the brook.
The first school-house at North Livermore stood on the north side of the road, and in the garden of L. M. Pike. It had two fireplaces and any gathering for social benefit was held here. Once when Horace Gould wanted to teach a singing school, a meeting was held in the school-house and the three Baptist Deacons sat as a committee to decide on his qualifications, which, to his relief, were favorable.
TRADITIONS ABOUT THE PONDS OF LIVERMORE AND DEATHS BY DROWNING
Round Pond was first known as Stinchfield Pond, and tradition has it that at one time an early settler, out duck hunting in his canoe, was kicked out and over by the dis-
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charge of his gun, which now lies at the bottom of the pond. The greatest depth of water in this pond is fifty-six feet. Mrs. Ida Merrill Morse was accidentally drowned in this pond Aug. 20, 1916. 1.
Long Pond is one mile and ninety-six rods long and is constantly lessening in length, by sediment washed down by "Puddle Dock" brook. But one death by drowning is known, a son of G. W. Hanscom, on July 4, 1867. The greatest depth of water in this pond is twenty-eight feet.
Bartlett's Pond, near the center of the town, is smaller than the above mentioned, although of considerable size. Its area was determined by Nelson Fuller, as twenty-eight acres. Seven cases of drowning are recorded as taking place in this body of water. The first, a daughter of Daniel Lovewell, who lived nearby, attempted to cross the lower end, near the outlet, on the ice in the late spring. In 1817 three boys were drowned in this pond. One was Nathan Monroe, a son of Abel, one was a Folsom, and the third unknown. In 1825 a young man by the name of Bicknell lost his life in this pond. And again in 1922 Matti Yakso and Rireka Hiekkinen, two Finlanders, accidentally lost their lives by drowning.
There is one other pond in town, a large and beautiful sheet of water near Brettun's Mills, formerly called Turner's Pond. I made diligent inquiry of several old people as to its name and their belief was that a man by the name of Turner was drowned in this pond. Menzious Bryant, aged nine, a son of David, was drowned in this pond in 1855. His body not being immediately found, a cannon was brought from Wilton to be discharged on the shore, under the impression that the body would rise to the surface at the report. His body being finally found rendered this proceeding unneces- sary. A girl by the name of Stella Lewis drowned herself in this pond in 1888. The old sheepskin map of the town, calls this beautiful sheet of water, "Ramshead Pond."
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Ebenezer Campbell, b. 1805, was drowned at the upper dam of the mill stream in 1821.
John Doe was drowned at the lower dam of the mill stream April 25, 1902.
There is a small pond on the westerly brow of Hamlin Hill that has no inlet. It is about a hundred rods long and from its clear, spring-like waters many edible fish are caught. In this pond, called Nelson Pond, Charles H. God- ing, b. 1816, son of Spencer Goding, was drowned.
POWDER HOUSE AND POUND
A round brick powder house with a conical roof and plas- tered on the inside, was built in 1807, as a magazine for the powder and bullets, furnished by the town for the old-time militia. It stood on the south side of the road, easterly from Dea. Livermore's house, and in a stone wall running northerly and southerly. It was nearly demolished in 1862 and only those who did it, can tell the reason. The founda- tion can still be seen.
Notwithstanding a vote of the town, to build in some other place, a pound was built on the old road leading west- erly from the house of G. A. Gordon, past the south end of Long Pond, to the Waters Hill road. Its high stone walls are still standing and only the old road leading easterly from the foot of the pond as far as the pound is discontinued.
"STORIES TOLD BY THE FIRELIGHT"
They were all seated around the open fire and their faces beamed with the expectation of an evening spent in story telling. Aunt Dorcas wiped her spectacles and said that one evening when she lived in Sumner, she was sitting alone, in a room, the ceiling of which had been covered with old. fashioned split board laths, but not plastered. They were troubled with rats, and on this particular night they were romping overhead and one old fellow stopped just over my head and his tail dropped through a crack and hung down full length. Silently I arose and with my shears cut his tail
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off smack and smooth to the hilt. Such a scampering and squealing I never heard and for more than a year not a rat was seen or heard. Then Albion said, "Did you ever hear of Roberts' white-eyed beans? Well! Drake clerked for Gus Coolidge and Roberts stepped into the store one morn- ing and said, 'I want a quart of white-eyed beans!' Drake took the quart measure and went into the back room where all such things were kept. Pretty soon he came back and said, 'Augustus, I can't find a white-eyed bean anywhere!' and Gus replied, 'White beans, you darn fool.'"
Then Tom spoke up and said, "That isn't half so good as when Gus Wills was asked what the man's name was who had just moved into his house, and he answered, 'His name's Hartford and he's from Sumner, or his name's Sumner and he's from Hartford, and I'll be dumbed if I know which.'" And then Aunt Fannie, who delighted in hearing these stories, said that when the toll bridge spanned the Andro- scoggin river, people, in the winter time who were obliged to cross, anxiously awaited for the ice to become firm enough to hold loaded teams with safety. One time, people
Baldwin Apples of Livermore
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on foot had crossed, but no team had ventured to do so. One morning a stranger drove up to the crossing and inquired of Wint Hinds, who was near, "If it was safe to cross?" and Wint said, "I guess so. Elder Wyman has just gone over, and if it will hold him, the Devil can go." Then William, who thus far had remained silent, stroked his chin whiskers and said, "Did you ever hear of Sam Parks? He was in company with Dea. Sanders, when they had a trip-hammer shop at Gibbs Mills, but sold out and went into trade at Liv- ermore Falls. He was a good mechanic, but without his guiding hand, the machinery would not work well. The Deacon and his son-in-law, Alonzo, would go into the shop and pump the bellows and it would squeak, 'Where's Sa-a-a-m, where's Sa-a-a-m?' and Alonzo would start the trip-hammer and it would say, 'Behind the counter selling rum. Behind the counter selling rum' (accenting every other syllable) ."
Uncle Ira said, "I wish we could hear a true story !" and Tom said, "I'll tell you one and I can vouch for every word of it, for I was there." It was when we worked repairing the roads under the Highway District system. We were working on the old discontinued road from Bartlett's Cor- ner westerly to the Bog brook; the hill of which was often in bad condition. Bartlett had a large sized, steel-plated wooden plow which we were using, drawn by three pairs of oxen, with Bartlett at the handles, and Frank Sawtelle and myself riding the beam and down hill, too. You can imagine the furrow that this outfit made. Bartlett was credited on his highway tax, with 25 cents per day for the use of this plow. He also had brewed in a large iron kettle, enough beer to fill a three-gallon jug; made from boxberry, winter- green, spruce twigs, a little yeast, a handful of hops and a small bag of corn. This he brought on to the road and was willingly credited with 25 cents more on his tax, for this delicious, cooling drink. It was a very warm day and Perry Stevens, the Surveyor, seated himself in the shade of the
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bushes by the side of the road and fanned himself with his straw hat. Blind Ransom Norton, who lived in this dis- trict, could work out his tax by following along the gutter and by feeling the loose stones with his hands, throw them out ; one of these hit Stevens on the head and over he went, to the alarm of everybody. Well; we got over that incident and were all busy working when, crack! went something, and Norton had ruined the jug, placed in a shady spot, with another stone. Bartlett demanded 25 cents more credit on his tax. It was unanimously agreed that he was entitled to that sum. The next day, it was learned that when Bartlett took the kettle of beer off the crane and set it on the floor to cool, that one of his children accidentally sat down in it."
George B., who had laughed heartily at these stories, said : "Very near to my birthplace lived a queerly mated couple, who eked a living somehow or other, by fishing, picking berries or spinning. Their hut-like house stood on the west bank of "Nigger Brook," which bears this name because the man was a negro by the name of David Too, and his wife was an Indian squaw. David died in 1859 and as the town gave them assistance, his wife asked the selectmen to give her a pint of camphor to rub on David's face until his burial. This they did, but instead of David's face being embalmed by the use of camphor, she drank it all. The third day after, she was with David."
Uncle Joe, who until this time had remained quiet, said : "Will you allow me to speak a word?" Every one said, "Why ! yes, Uncle Joe, tell us a good story !" "'Taint much of a story," said Joe, "but once I was doing sumthin' or other by the side of the road, and two men rode up and asked me if I had a horse to sell. I told 'em yes, but he was up in the paster on the hill and I didn't believe they wanted him. They said, 'Why?' And I said, 'he had three outs! They wanted to know what they were! I said one of them was, he was terrible hard to ketch when out to paster, and they said that was nothing, for they always kept their horses in
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the stable. ' Then they wanted to know what t'other fault was and I told them he always stuck his head clear in the water up to the winkers, when you watered him in a tub side of the road. They didn't seem to think that was anything bad, then they asked what the other fault was, and I said I couldn't think just then! Strange! for I thought on't a minute ago. Funny ! I can't think on't! And they said, 'We're going further on to see a horse and when we come back, mebby you'll think what it is.' Bimeby they come back and said, 'Have you thought what that other out is?' and I said, "Twas funny, but you hadn't been gone two minutes afore I thought what 'twas!' They said, 'Tell us;' and I said, 'He ain't good for nothing, after you ketch him!'"
Uncle Job, who through all this story telling had shown his uneasiness by shrugging his shoulders and twirling his cane, spoke up and said, "Now I will tell you a patriotic story. During the Rebellion, patriotism ran high in Liver- more; even the boys caught the enthusiasm and named their sleds after some popular soldier hero. One young man who outspokenly showed his sympathy for the South, cut the name of Jeff Davis on his sled. One day he visited No. 7 Dis- trict school and brought this sled. When the school was dis- missed, he was greatly surprised and angered to find the board seat on which the name was cut, missing, and of course laid the theft or trick to the school boys, which they all denied, telling him that Henry B. Bradford had passed by the school-house breaking the road with two pairs of oxen, and just as likely as not, he had committed the das- tardly outrage; so the next time he met Henry, he laid the misdemeanor to him. Henry said, 'I didn't do it, but if I had been going to school I would have done it!" Aunt Ruth said, "Don't that sound just like Henry !" Charles O., whose boyhood days had been spent in Livermore, said : "I used to visit Uncle Israel's boys and on one of these occa- sions, William Drew told me that the day before Adoniram Brown called there and wanted a mug of cider. Uncle
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Israel told William Drew to give him a drink and Adoniram, after taking two or three swallows, clasped his hands around the mug and looking up, said: 'This is nour- ishing. This is nourishing.' Before I came home, Uncle Israel asked me if my father had a good crop of corn. I told him, yes. He said that he did. And a good crop, too, and that it was a fine rich color ; yallar as gold. Then Aunt Dorcas said that she knew a family in Sumner that saved the longest corn cob as a backscratcher, until the next husk- ing time."
Cyrus, who until now hadn't spoken a word, said: "When Frank was down to Hallowell, he heard Billy Wilson tell of a hunting experience that he had when he went up to Dead River, last fall. He sighted a five-pointed buck about two hundred yards away, and taking careful aim, he drew a bead on him. He saw the dust fly just in front of the buck and to his antonishment he dropped in his tracks stone dead, and not a mark or sign of a bullet could be found on the buck. Now, what killed him?" Albion's head went up and laughing heartily, he said, "That's easy to explain. The bullet struck the ground just in front of the buck, glanced upward into his nostril and down into his interior and the buck died of appendicitis."
Uncle, Abijah, who never said anything but what hit the nail on the head, told of his neighbor Woodman, who prided himself on his ability to outhoe and hoe corn and potatoes better than any other man. He said that Wood- man, who had a stiff leg, and his son, Elisha, were hoeing potatoes, and Woodman crticised Elisha's work, saying that at the second cultivating a great difference would be seen in the growth of weeds in the rows that he hoed and in those hoed by Elisha. Woodman cut notches in a rail of the fence opposite to the rows that he had hoed and as he thought, unbeknown to Elisha. At some convenient time, Elisha turned the rail end for end and at the next hoeing, lo and behold, the rows opposite to the notches on the rail showed
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the most weeds. Woodman leaned on the rail and casually looked anywhere but at the marks. Elisha asked him, "Father, what 'reyou looking at?" Woodman replied, "O, nothing." Once Benjamin worked for him hoeing, and Ben said "he never would again, for Woodman dragged his stiff leg on one side of the row and only hoed the other and no man living could keep up with him."
Aunt Fannie said : "I'll tell just one more story. You remember that when Seth D. Washburn sold his place at North Livermore, he gave people the impression that he intended to remove out of the State. Well! his friends would ask him where he thought he would locate, and to all such questions he would answer the name of that hot place that we know so very little about. One day, Aunt Jane was walking past the Washburn dooryard, intending to call on Lucinda, and seeing Seth in his shop door, she stopped and said in her soft, smooth voice, 'Mr. Washburn ! I hear that you are going to the place from which no one ever returned and I wish, when you get there, that you would write to me, telling what you find and what you see!' Quick as a flash Seth replied, 'You needn't worry. You needn't worry. You'll know plenty soon enough yourself.'"
Uncle John, who could tell many stories about the pioneers of Livermore, said "That when he was a young man, there was a religious excitement in the south end of the town, in which people would become insensible and fall down to the ground and have a view of Heaven and Hell. One such, afterwards describing what he saw, said 'That the Methodist, Baptist, Advents and Spiritualists were all in Heaven,' whereupon Jonathan Morse asked, 'Did you see any Universalists there?' and the answer was, 'No, not one.' 'Ah!' Jonathan replied, 'you didn't look into the parlor, then.' "
And for the first time, Uncle Alanson spoke, saying : "All is, that's enough for the present. Let me tell you some- thing that is true. One fall, I made calculations to go to
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Hallowell with a load of farm produce and I arranged every- thing so as to start at two o'clock in the morning. The night before I greased the wooden axles of my wagon, in the door- yard, right where I intended to load, in the morning, and, as I thought, replaced all the iron linchpins. I started as I intended and at Hallowell exchanged my load for such things as the family would need for the coming winter. When I arrived at the Lowney corner, on my way home, one of the wheels came off. I replaced it and searched about for the missing linchpin, but was unable to find it, so I walked and watched the wheel continually, until I reached home about midnight, leaving the wagon in the yard. In the morning I found the linchpin on the ground, right where I left it the night before when I greased the axles. In those days the axles were pitched so that the wheels run on and and stood under." Then some one said to Stearns, "You used to sing in the choir! Give us a song !" Stearns said, "If I did, I guess it would be 'Homeward Bound,' " and then those old faces that I knew so well, faded from view, and their voices grew fainter and fainter; the fire flickered on the hearth, and there was darkness.
And so my task is ended. Had I delayed in the collection of these records until the present time, much of it would have been an impossibility, for the lips of those who could tell us the unwritten secrets of our history, are closed for- ever. If I should dedicate this book to those who helped me in the undertaking, the names of Reuben Fuller, John Campbell, Laura Phillips, Abby Monroe Faxon, L. M. Wing, Sarah Hinds, P. S. Gibbs, Samuel Fuller, Russell B. Hersey, H. B. Bradford, Fanny Smith, J. D. Thompson and Peter Morrill Leavitt, come to me in grateful remembrance.
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William Campbell 170
Elijah Livermore 169
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Winslow 159
Elijar Livermore 15.8
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D. Haven
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Elijah Livermore 101
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Major Fuller 100
Major Fuller 79
Elijah Livermore 76
William Campbell 55
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William Babcock 35
Elijah Live 30
H.Coolidge 98
Moses Stone 81
T. Coolidge E. Harrington 14
Cap. Denny 57
William Clark Gen. Larned 51
- Cap. Fuller 36
John Willington 29
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Samuel Sawin 82
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First Minister 37
I.Fish 28
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Elijah Livermore 69
John Graham 62
Elijah Livermore 47
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Asa Hazeltine, 25
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James Kittle 24
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Cap Denny 61
E.Marshall 48
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Thomas Chase
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