A history of Walpole, New Hampshire, Volume I, Part 33

Author: Frizzell, Martha McDanolds, 1902-
Publication date: 1963
Publisher: Walpole, Walpole Historical Society
Number of Pages: 786


USA > New Hampshire > Cheshire County > Walpole > A history of Walpole, New Hampshire, Volume I > Part 33


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).


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457. CELLARHOLE: A short distance south of the old Starkweather place, toward the Stearns farm, there is a stone wall southeast from the road. In the corner by the road south of this wall is a cellarhole. The wall repre- sents the north line of the Stearns farm, so this cellarhole was evidently on the Stearns land. None of the Stearns' deeds make any reference to buildings here. That would be on land that Benjamin Bellows sold to Stearns 1785, but it may be on the corner that Elisha Eldridge sold to Stephen Stearns 1818.


Now for the east side of the road. In 1846 Otis Bardwell sold what seems to be this corner of land to Stephen Stearns. He had previously sold the land next east to Almira Starkweather. Benjamin Redington may have owned about 1792. Marsh may have owned about 1784, called the Marsh Lot, no deeds. Whatever there was is lost in antiquity.


458. STARKWEATHER CELLARHOLES: The plot where the buildings stood Benjamin Bellows sold to Ephraim Stearns around 1785; 1792 to Levi Stearns; 1794 to Samuel Chaffin of Acworth, he immediately to Elisha Eldridge. Elisha added more land, erected buildings, including two houses, cellarholes still here north of road. In 1833 he sold the farm to his son-in-law, Lemuel Starkweather, with the following provisions: The Eldridges were to occupy the house on the farm which she (Cynthia) selected before April 1 next; the chamber now finished in the larger house was to be for the use of whichever family had the smaller house; Lemuel will provide cut and split wood for one fire, in case of sickness for two fires; Lemuel to provide and keep for the use of Elisha and Cynthia two good cows to be cared for by Lemuel and milked whenever Cynthia desires and Elisha to have milk, butter, and cheese and calves produced by said cows; Lemuel to keep 5 sheep, Elisha to have wool and lambs produced; annually on or before Dec. 31 to have 200 1b. good pork, 20 1b. lard, 100 1b. good beef (in November) and 20 1b. tallow, said pork and beef to be cut up and put in the cellar of house occupied by Elisha, he finding barrels for same; 5 bu. good wheat or 200 1b. wheat flour, 7 bu. corn and 3 bu. rye (two latter delivered in December); to


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keep on the farm a horse, wagon, and sleigh for Elisha's and Cynthia's use whenever they desire; pay all expense of sickness and care; annually in December 15 bu. good apples or $5.00; 12 bu. potatoes, suitable quan- tity Garden sauce or $2.00; suitable boots and shoes and procure and deliver in June of each year a pig of from 5 to 7 weeks old.


The houses were gone by 1895-family died or moved away. There were barns south of the road as late as 1891. In 1931 the Walpole Water & Sewer Company bought the land south of the road. Land north of the road went out of the family 1878, probably logged, and now belongs to William Burrows.


Prentiss wrote: "For many years we carried on the Starkweather land, now (1942) owned by the Walpole Company, and covered with timber. I have mowed the old mowings by hand quite a number of times, and re- member when the house and barns were there, and going with my mother and visiting Mrs. Ashley Starkweather. She had silk worms, feeding them the leaves from the mulberry trees growing in the yard. There was a log house near the corner just north of the Starkweather place, and a family was living in it at that time."


459. DR. I. TUCKER BURR-(GILBERT ESTATE): The Gilbert Estate appar- ently included the Holland land, which was the south part of the Kilburn 100 acre lot, and the Thomas Sparhawk land north of North Road.


Dr. Abraham Holland, the third physician to settle in Walpole, came to town immediately after completing his studies at Dartmouth College and commenced practice 1779. In 1788 he purchased John Kilburn's farm on the Drewsville Road on the following terms: "the house where said John now dwells with an addition of one small room built thereto at my cost, the plott of ground north of said house which hath been oc- cupied as a garden and allow them privilege to get wood for fires, the produce of apple trees within said garden spot with addition of one apple tree by hog pen and another known by name of the butternut tree, a place to build a hog pen and use of water at the well and else- where and a dooryard for to lay wood in, egress and -gress to and from house aforesaid, liberty to pasture horse and cow in summertime paying for same, Abraham Holland promises above as long as John, Hannah and Mehitable choose to enjoy them personally."


Holland built the house, later altered by the Gilberts; 1823 to Daniel Brooks and removed to Newfane, Vt .; 1833 for $4000 to Lincoln Brooks; 1848 to Louisa Hayward; 1851 to her son John W .; 1866 for $5500 to


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Leonard B. Holland; 1869 to Major J. Britton; 1892 to Frederick M. Gilbert.


The Gilbert Estate also included that part of Thomas Sparhawk's tract north of North Road with the Sparhawk house on the Main Street corner.


The Gilberts first lived on the Wilson place on the plain. The story is told that Major Britton's son-in-law, Norman Schultz, came up from New York looking forward, after the noise and turmoil of the city, to a good night's rest. It was right in coonhunting season, and his friend T. N. Hastings decided to do something about that good sleep. Having recently killed two coons, he took the tails and dragged them round and round the Britton house in ever smaller circles. At ten o'clock he released his coon dogs.


From this property the Gilbert heirs sold the following: 1954 to Leslie Hubbard the east 341/2 acres, Hubbard building a house; 1955 to Dr. I. Tucker Burr the 6.84 acres east of the Drewsville Road, including the Gilbert house; 1955 to Thomas R. Spratley, engineer, the 8.64 acres east of Burr, including the cottage of the Gilbert estate. The Spratley property now belongs to Dr. Burr.


The barn burned Nov. 6, 1920.


460. IRA HUBBARD HOME FARM: In 1755 Benjamin Bellows deeded to John Kilburn 100 acres "being 4th Lot in number in the Middle Range of Lotts as laid out", that is, Lot #4 in the Ist Range of Hill Lots, and lying east of the road from Walpole Village to Drewsville (Hubbard Road).


John Kilburn in 1772 sold 50 acres across the north and east sides of the lot to his son John Jr., gentleman, for 20 sh., reserving "for myself during my natural life the use and improvement of about 2 acres of im- proved land within the aforesaid bounds lying east of my house where I now dwell. I also reserve to myself and heirs the privilege of getting timber and stone" and "privilege of passing ... with my team", allow- ing his son the same privilege on his land. From this it appears that John Kilburn's house was probably near the northwest corner of the portion he did not sell. That 50 acres on which he was still living, he sold to Abraham Holland in 1788. John Jr. sold his place to Levi Hubbard in 1791.


The Hubbard place also includes a 20 acre strip extending along the west side of the road for 100 rods, 30 rods deep. This Levi Hubbard


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bought of Samuel Trott for £80 in 1793, Trott had it from his father, Samuel, who bought it in 1779 from Ezra Carpenter for £30 16 sh.


The property is still in the Hubbard family, occupied by Ira Hubbard. The Hubbard house was built about 1800. A clock set in place then has never been moved.


461. BOOTH FARM: In 1849 William Bellows, son of Josiah, sold to Samuel Griffin 16 acres west of the Drewsville Road between Levi Hub- bard and John Bellows (formerly Thomas) for $640; 1865 Clarissa, widow of Samuel Griffin, to Dolphus Booth this farm and a 10 acre lot for $1900.


In 1922 Edwin and Lois Booth divided the property, Edwin having the home farm and Lois and Charles the cottage house and land in the corner next to the road, north of the Hubbard line.


Dolphus Booth was here sometime before he bought the place. The Booth buildings burned September 1877, fire first discovered in tobacco barn. The Richard Starkweather house was taken down to build the new house. The hill farm (#464) was sold to settle the estate when Edwin died.


462. CHARLES E. HEWITT: In 1925 Copley Amory sold the Bellows Home- stead Farm on Rt. 12 to Clifford L. Sturtevant and George Warwick, Jr. They sold the part east of the highway in 1925 to Charles E. Hewitt whose house is at the east end of the land near the Hubbard (Drewsville) Road.


463. WILLIAM I. PHIPPS: In 1950 Charles E. Hewitt sold the part of his land east of the Hubbard Road to Austin I. Hubbard; 1951 a building lot to William I. Phipps who built his house here.


464. BOOTH HILL FARM: This was known as the Sugar Place in 1771 when Benjamin Bellows sold to his son John. It lay north of the old road from south of William Phipps' house easterly to the Reservoir Road. There was a very old road (no town record) which turned more north- erly into this lot. John Bellows willed the farm, about 120 acres, "which Jesse Stearns lately lived on", to his son Roswell; 1813 to Samuel B. Dana and Thomas Bellows 2nd "farm on which John Osgood now lives". In 1820-1, Bellows & Dana having failed, most of this property came to Stephen Rowe Bradley; from him to Josiah G. Bellows; 1861 to James Hooper; 1865 35 acres to Andrew J. Hadley (Mary E.) of Boston and Ambrose Hadley (Angeline) late of 2nd Regiment R. I. Volunteers; 1866 to Adolphus S. Booth. In 1870 Booth bought the other 50 acres from Hooper and left the whole farm to his children. In 1922 Edwin Booth


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bought the rights of his brother Fred's heirs. In 1924 Edwin's widow, Mabel C., sold to Russell G. Graves.


This farm was not usually occupied by the owner. It was here that Richard Starkweather lived, "a farmer by occupation and a fine singer". William Kirkpatrick of Langdon was here at one time.


After Col. Benjamin Bellows and Theodore Atkinson divided the town between them in 1766, Bellows sold many of the lots, but he kept for himself the tract that extended northerly from Walpole Village to the Atkinson tract at the south end of Fall Mountain, and easterly from the Connecticut River to the Hubbard Road or thereabouts. When he died in 1777, he left this tract to his sons Josiah, Thomas, Theodore and John.


Josiah's strip included where he lived at the north end of Main Street. On the Turnpike (Rt. 12) his south line passed south of the present Wal- ter Kilburn place. His north line was north of the Mathers mill property. The Fessenden Farm (#43) had already been taken out.


Thomas had the homestead where his father had lived. His south line was north of the Mathers mill property, and his north line was south of the present Plumb farm buildings.


Theodore had from the Plumb buildings north to include the present Mack homestead.


John had the rest to the north, some of it before his father died.


465. HUBBARD HATCHERY (THE BELLOWS RIVER FARM): This was part of Josiah Bellows' share of his father's estate. His son William inherited the farm (see Bellows Gen. 114; 192-4) and probably built the house, south- west from the Mathers' place. He was a merchant at Drewsville with Ed- ward Crosby and also at the Brick Block in Walpole Village in the firm Bellows & Peck. William later took up farming here, until his removal to Cincinnati about 1852.


In 1854 James Hooper Jr. bought the place. He sold this farm 1865 to his brother Henry W. of South Charlestown; 1866 to his brother Charles; 1891 estate to his sister-in-law Mary L. Hooper (Mrs. James Jr.); to her son Warren and daughter Lucretia; 1905 to Charles Angier (Mary) who lived here; 1946 to Hubbard Farms. They built the hatchery. The old Bellows-Hooper house stands well west of old Rt. 12, east of the new road, and was used as headquarters during construction of the new Rt. 12.


466. CARL SMITH ESTATE: In 1927 Angier sold to Carl Smith an acre in the point of the road north of the cemetery, and Smith built the house here.


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467. MATHERS MILL AREA: In 1815 Josiah Bellows sold to Samuel Grant and Leonard Stone 20 acres of land along his north line. It included that portion of the high land south of R. N. Johnson's machinery sales rooms, where there is now the Quinlar sawmill and lumber yard; west to the east side of Josiah's meadow (about at the railroad now); south to what was the Charles Angier farm, now Hubbard Associates; east across the Turnpike (now Rt. 12); south of the Corey house and easterly to include that part of the mill pond south of Thomas Bellows' south line.


In 1818 Thomas Bellows gave them an indenture allowing them flow- age rights from his line in the mill pond north to his cartway 196 rods from the mill dam on the turnpike and the right to turn Sikes Brook near the Sikes place and to convey same in a channel through his land into said pond about 32 rods "so long as they shall keep and maintain a good and sufficient gristmill on or near where said gristmill now stands."


Leonard Stone was Maj. Grant's son-in-law, having married his daugh- ter Phebe in 1810. He is said to have been a carpenter, from 1818-9 he had a saddler's shop on the site of the library. They lived in Walpole 1813-23, in the Knapp house and the Gen. Bellows house. In 1823 his father hav- ing died, he returned to Watertown, Mass., to his father's farm (see Bel- low Gen. 130, 252-3).


In 1826 Bellows & Grant, who had a stand for cloth dressing, sold the 20 acres to Calvin Tarbell and Thomas Hurlburt. They divided the property, Tarbell apparently having the mills by the road and a house south of the mills (where Mathers' house is 1961). Next south of this house was the lane, still here, which led westerly to Hurlburt's clothing works. He had a house east of the road (Corey 1961).


In 1830 Hurlburt sold to Wm. F. Moore and Charles T. Wetherbee the clothing works, which they were then occupying, and a piece east of the -


highway which must have been the land with Hurlburt's house. In 1831 Moore sold his share to Gardner Phillips (son-in-law of Israel Wightman); 1835 to Wetherbee.


In 1830 Uriah Newton of Peterborough and Benjamin Newton of Ac- worth bought of Tarbell his mills and house, Benjamin selling his share to Uriah 1831. In 1837 he bought also Wetherbee's holdings west of the road.


In 1861 Uriah and Mary Newton made the property over to Henry J. and Elizabeth Day of Keene with an arrangement for their support for their natural lives. Day and Jonathan Turner seem to have been in part- nership, Turner having the house which stood south of the lane on the


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west side of the road. At this time there was a sawmill on the north side of the brook west of the road, and a gristmill on the brook near the west end of the lot, perhaps what had been the clothing works earlier. The dam stood near the east side of the new Rt. 12 under construction 1961, south of the Mathers house foundation. There appear to have been two mill ponds, one east and another west of the old Rt. 12.


Probably the Days were daughter and son-in-law of the Newtons. One may guess that they died before 1865, leaving a child Edward who, at age 7 in 1870, was living with the Newtons.


In 1865 Newton sold to Lyman D. Hurd and bought a place on the River Road below the village; 1868 to David Morgan and Royal Pul- sipher, Morgan to Pulsipher; 1871 to George Huntington; 1877 to Henry A. Willard; 1879 to Alonzo Jennings, to John Selkirk. He continued the saw and grist mills, and had a cider mill. In 1887 he built a capacious ice house.


In 1889 Selkirk sold his property here to Willis A. and Warren H. Col- burn. According to the news report when Willis died in 1913, their father had first operated the gristmill by the railroad, and later bought the sawmill property of Selkirk. The sons continued to operate after his death. They combined the ice business with it and were the first to establish regular ice delivery in Walpole.


In 1912 they sold out to Charles H. Slade and moved into the village; 1922 to William J. and Harold W. Mathers, still in the family, although the mills are all gone. In 1950 the Mathers sold 6 acres and the sawmill on the bluff north to Richard M. and Marjorie L. Bragg; 1953 Bragg estate to Milton A. Quinlar, now Quinlar Lumber Company.


468. HOUSE AT GRISTMILL SITE: On the west end of the lot north side of brook, where the old gristmill had stood, Elwin and Lottie M. Mathers built a house, having a right of way on the old lane which had led to the mill. This they sold in 1950 to Clinton and Joan A. Clay of Perkinsville, Vt .; 1953 to Clifton C. and Josephine Mae Chapman; 1957 to Wendell O. and Betty G. Darrell; 1958 back to Chapmans; to John A. and Agnes R. Mansur. Now (May 1961) the house has been removed to make way for the new Rt. 12.


CELLARHOLE SOUTH OF MATHERS: After Tarbell sold the mill property in 1830, he bought from Josiah Bellows a small piece of land south of the lane, which led to the mill on the west end of the mill lot, and built a house here. In 1836 he sold to Charles T. Wetherbee; 1837 to Calvin Tarbell then of Langdon; 1843 Tarbell then of Boston to David C.


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Thompson; 1844 to John A. Butterfield; 1848 to Jonathan H. Putney; 1852 to William Bellows (Freeman Roundy lived here); 1855 to Jonathan Turner (Almaria); 1858 to William Chappell. (Samuel Turner was living here and Jonathan had removed to Keene.) Day & Turner (probably Jonathan) had the gristmill in 1861.


In 1861 Chappell sold to Wilson W. Colburn; 1872 to John L. Hub- bard, to George Huntington, to Mary and Rosalov A. Howard. The house burned Monday morning, Oct. 6, 1884; sold Feb. 12, 1886, to John Selkirk. Has since gone with the property next north.


469. RAYMOND COREY: When Phillips sold the mill property, he seems to have reserved what is now the Corey house east of the highway south of the mill pond; 1847 to George W. Grant; 1849 to Henry S. Allen, 1/2 acre; 1886 heirs to Stephen V. B. Allen; 1945 his daughter Luella J. Allen Kilburn (Mrs. Arthur) to her granddaughter Mildred Corey (Mrs. Ray- mond).


470. MRS. ELWIN MATHER: On the north side of the brook, west of the road in 1839 Uriah Newton sold land with house to Joseph S. Farrington (Emeline); 1842 to Jacob A. Hunt; 1846 to Uriah Newton. Thus it came back to the mill property with which it is still connected.


THOMAS BELLOWS' SHARE FROM HIS FATHER'S ESTATE: Squire Thomas Bel- lows inherited his father Col. Benjamin Bellows' home farm in 1777 at the age of 15 years, and lived at the homestead his father had built in 1762.


The squire was somewhat peculiar in his ways, particularly due to an infirmity of speech. When a stranger once asked him the distance to Charlestown his peculiar nervous utterance was unintelligible. In his impatience, he blurted out, "Go 'long, go 'long, you'll get there 'fore I can tell ye."


At church he had a way of standing in his pew and counting those present-that is, the men. He was not content until he knew the reason for any absences, and the name of any stranger and from whence he came.


Dr. Bellows said of him: "I can see his tall and broad figure, with his white neckcloth and pepper-and-salt clothes, leaning over the pew at meeting, in time of prayer, with no affectation of closed eyes or special sanctity of visage, but with perfect respect to the occasion. He did not know how to put anything on."


"The Squire had a wonderful memory of dates and events, knowing the exact age of all his relatives and sometimes correcting those who tried to make themselves out younger than they were. ... As he drove about the town he would generally stop and speak with every person whom he met and sometimes ask them where they were


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going and what for. This habit occasionally called out an impertinent reply from strangers who did not know that it proceeded from kindness of heart. His townspeople confided in his good judgment and honesty. A voter, being asked on the morning of town meeting day whom he was going to vote for, replied: "I don't know. I haven't seen Squire Bellows yet." (Bellows Genealogy 90-98)


The squire was followed on the farm by his son Thomas. He prepared for the ministry and held several pastorates, but because of poor health retired to his father's farm, taking over the management in 1837. "Al- though he made his farm support his somewhat expensive household, and preserved his heritage unimpaired, he was too conservative in his meth- ods to become a successful farmer." He never married, and upon his death the ancestral home went in 1890 to the American Board of Foreign Missions.


Copley Amory bought the 350 acre farm in 1890. In the 35 years that he owned the place he undertook many varying projects: built reservoirs on the hill to the east to provide adequate water supply; planted an apple orchard on the slope from the east; laid out a golf course on the Hubbard Road; built a road across from his buildings to the Hubbard Road (now grown up); in 1899 built the stone water tub east of the highway opposite the old house; built the large barn east of the meadows, and the red barn east of the road, replacing a long string of dilapidated barns.


471. DAVID J. ALEXANDER-BENJAMIN BELLOWS HOMESTEAD: In 1925 Amory sold to Clifford L. Sturtevant and George Warwick, Jr .; 1926 to Jennie M. Ketcham of New York City, who operated as the Stagecoach Inn; 1934 to Savings Bank of Walpole; 1943 to Ralph N. Johnson all of the estate west of the highway and all land south of Hewitts on the east side; 1946 to Ralph N. Johnson from Hewitt the land south of the farm road.


In 1944 Johnson sold the main (or mansion) house to Dr. Harry Gold- man and Ruth V. A. Goldman; Feb. 1950 to George J. and Helen M. Audet; Dec. 1950 to David J. and Marie A. Alexander who maintained it as a nursing home until recently. It is now vacant.


West of Rt. 12 the house lots south of the main house were numbered beginning at the west end of the plateau and progressing northerly. Amory built the large barn here and the older houses in 1890. The town accepted the road here as a street in 1944. Johnson sold most of these houses or lots.


472. MARK B. HOWARD: In 1944 to Mark B. and Alice C. Howard. House built by Amory.


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473. LOUIS GOODRICH: In 1944 to Louis and Annie M. Goodrich. House probably built by Amory.


474. LOUIS GOODRICH JR .: Louis Goodrich sold to his son Louis Jr. in 1955. Louis Jr. built the house on what was a garden plot for #473.


475. CASWELL MENARD: In 1944 to Caswell and Virginia Menard. House built by Amory.


476. KENNETH E. JENNISON: In 1944 to Kenneth E. and Florence C. Jennison.


477. GEORGE A. FOGG: In 1944 to George A. and Helen S. Fogg.


478. JOSEPH KOPACZ: In 1944 to Joseph and Wilma J. Kopacz.


479. LLOYD E. BROOKS: In 1954 Joseph Kopacz sold house lot to Lloyd E. and Marilyn Kopacz Brooks. They built the house.


480. AUGUST R. SPECKMAN: In 1949 to August R. and Rosemary Speck- man.


481. KENNETH GUNNERSON: In 1948 to Julian H. and Janette S. Snow; 1948 to Henry P. and Matilda Narkiewicz; 1959 to Kenneth D. and Beverly Gunnerson.


482. RALPH N. JOHNSON: In 1948 to Claude A. and Flora Goodrich; 1950 back to Johnson.


483. DAVID B. WALLACE: In 1948 to David B. and Carolyn J. Wallace.


484. JAMES H. SMITH: In 1950 the Audets sold to R. N. Johnson the house lot north of the mansion. He gave it to his son Thomas F. Johnson who built the house; 1960 to James H. and Joanne C. Smith.


485. RALPH N. JOHNSON: The old building south of the mansion house is used by R. N. Johnson as headquarters for his extensive farm machinery business.


In 1925, Charles E. Hewitt, Jr., bought most of the Bellows farm on the east side of the road from Sturtevant and Warwick. Hewitt's primary interest was in the orchard, and he built his home near the Hubbard Road, facing toward the west. One bad season after another brought an end to the apple business here.


486. HARLEY SMITH: In 1934 Hewitt sold the land along Rt. 12 to John W. Good and in 1946 sold Good another section of land; 1946 to Charles


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S. and Leona Bain; 1950 to Harley and Jessica Smith. Good built the house. This has been carried on as a poultry and produce farm with a roadside stand, called "Westview".


487. HARLEY SMITH: Small house that is rented.


488. HICKS MACHINE: In 1951 Johnson sold 3.7 acres east of the highway at the south edge of the plateau to S. Trafford Hicks who erected a shop building and operates a machine shop here under the name of Hicks Machine, Inc.


MAPLEWOOD PARK


In 1948 a plan of house lots was made east of Rt. 12. Parallel with the highway, about midway of the field, Maplewood Avenue was laid out, and Maplewood Drive was laid out as a road passing around the north, east and south sides of the field. The town accepted the roads in 1962. Johnson began selling off the land, but in 1953 sold the remainder to James F. and Eleanor K. Bolles who have continued the development. 489. NASIF REALTY: A building was erected and leased to H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc., in 1953. Hood used the building as an egg processing plant and closed down in 1962 because of the drop off in local production of market eggs.


490. DANIEL T. RANDALL: In 1948 Johnson sold to Daniel T. and Blanche E. Randall.


491. PETER M. JANISZYN: In 1948 Johnson sold to Carlton L. and Dorothy Ethel Thurston; 1955 to Peter M. and Joan A. Janiszyn.




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