USA > New Hampshire > Hillsborough County > Hudson > History of Hudson, N.H., formerly a part of Dunstable, Mass., 1673-1733, Nottingham, Mass., 1733-1741, District of Nottingham, 1741-1746, Nottingham West, N.H., 1746-1830, Hudson, N.H., 1830-1912 > Part 39
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He came to Nottingham-later Nottingham West- about 1740. He was first assessed here in 1741, and for the last time in 1780, and consequently was a citizen of this town for forty years.
He was the first resident Hudson physician of whom there is any record. He probably practiced medicine con-
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PHYSICIANS
tinuously during those forty years. He was the first in- habitant of this town to hold a commission as Justice of the Peace, being appointed to that office in 1747.
October 21, 1740, in consideration of three hundred and sixty pounds lawful money, Joseph Snow conveyed to Ezekiel Chase, one hundred acres of land in the south part of Nottingham, on the Merrimack River, a short distance from where the province line between New Hampshire and Massachusetts was established in 1741. He was one of the Hudson selectmen for nine years, moderator of annual town meetings eleven years and was town clerk.
Priscilla, his wife, died February 22, 1768, in her fifty- ninth year. Some time after this event he married for a second wife, Elizabeth -.
Ezekiel and Elizabeth Chase conveyed the farm of one hundred acres, which he bought of Joseph Snow in 1740, to Samuel Pollard, August 9, 1773. Deed recorded Vol. 10, page 79, Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds.
March 26, 1779, they conveyed to John Pollard fifty- four acres of land with buildings, lying near the former tract and on the Ferry road, with two adjoining tracts.
Dr. Chase was not assessed in Nottingham West after 1780, and no further record in any way relating to him can be found. Undoubtedly he removed from town about that time.
DR. JOHN HALL
Dr. John Hall was a resident of this town in 1779 and 1780. Little is known of him. His residence was with or near that of Captain Samuel Marsh, about one and one- fourth miles north of Taylor's Falls bridge on the River road.
There is a record of the birth of children of John and Alice Hall: John, born February 26, 1779; Thomas, born February 21, 1780.
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HISTORY OF HUDSON
DR. JOSEPH GRAY
Dr. Joseph Gray came into town about 1782, and was assessed here until 1792. He resided on "Hills Row," near what later became the Warren Hills farm. We find re- corded the births of children of Joseph and Lucy Gray: Lucy, born February 5, 1785; Joseph, born February 9, 1788. He appears to have had a former wife, as there is a record of the birth of Henry, son of Joseph and Susan Gray, May 27, 1783.
DR. APOLLOS PRATT
Dr. Apollos Pratt practiced here in 1803 and 1804. In this town, March 15, 1804, he married Sally Wason, who was probably the daughter of Samuel and Margaret Wason, born March 24, 1778, and twin sister to Hannah, who died young. There is no further record of him.
DR. PAUL TENNEY
Dr. Paul Tenney was born in Rowley, Mass., April 11, 1763. On November 2, 1790, he married Sarah Gibson, born in Pelham, September 26, 1767. He came into this town as early as 1789, and followed his vocation here for over thirty years. For two years he lived near the Joseph Blodgett place on the Lowell road. Afterwards his resi- dence was at Hudson Center on the south side of the Pel- ham road, and at the place later owned by Dr. James Em- ery, and now, 1912, the home of Henry C. Brown.
He owned quite a large farm. His children were: Noyes, born September 26, 1791, died January 30, 1853; Kimball, born April 18, 1793, died August 16, 1832; Daniel, born June 15, 1795, died November 20, 1840; James, born June 25, 1798, died May 30, 1842; Paul, born March 1, 1802, died December 9, 1842; Silas, born September 4, 1805; Franklin, born January 17, 1808.
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PHYSICIANS
His wife, Sarah, died October 25, 1818, at the age of fifty-one. December 2, 1819, he married Sally, who was the daughter of Elijah and Miriam Hills, and who was born in this town, April 13, 1774. Dr. Tenney died April 6, 1821, and was laid in a tomb he had constructed near his residence, where his first wife and several of his children were also placed. This is the only tomb in Hudson.
He was a man of intelligence and ability, and a physi- cian of skill.
DR. NATHANIEL P. MARSH
Nathaniel Peabody Marsh, son of Jonathan and Betsey (Sawyer) Marsh, was born in Nottingham West, August 20, 1791. He studied medicine with Dr. Paul Tenney, and be- came an educated physician as early as 1817. He settled in Bow, N. H., where he practiced his chosen profession with good success for a brief period. He died of consump- tion December 17, 1819, at the age of twenty-eight years. "A man of much promise and much lamented."
DR. DANIEL TENNEY
Dr. Daniel Tenney, son of Dr. Paul and Sarah (Gib- son) Tenney, born in Nottingham West, June 15, 1795, studied medicine with his father and became a practitioner in this town before his father's death in 1821.
He resided for a time in the John Strickland house, later known as the Pease house. He continued to prac- tice his profession here until after 1831, when he removed to Derry, where he continued to practice until his decease. This occurred very suddenly in Boston, April 6, 1840, under most distressing circumstances.
DR. DUSTIN BARRETT
Dr. Dustin Barrett, son of Isaac and Roxanna (Marsh) Barrett, was born in this town in 1794. He became a prac- ticing physician in his native town about 1817. He mar-
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HISTORY OF HUDSON
ried, June 8, 1826, Hannah Chadwick, of Bradford, Mass., and died June 1, 1831, aged 37 years. He is said to have been a physician of much skill. June 2, 1823, John Fos- ter conveyed to Dustin Barrett, physician, seven acres of land a short distance east of the town house, upon which he built a house. This house has had the reputation of always having been occupied by physicians.
Dr. Barrett was its first occupant, and after his de- cease, Dr. Daniel Tenney was its tenant. Dr. Henry M. Hooke was its occupant from about 1843 to 1848, when Dr. James Emery for a time lived there. September 21, 1854, Mary E. Barrett, daughter of Dr. Dustin Barrett, of Bradford, Mass., conveyed it to Dr. David O. Smith. Dr. Smith occupied it as his home until his decease, February 15, 1906. The family of Dr. Smith still reside at the old homestead.
DR. ELIJAH COLBURN
Elijah Colburn, son of Zaccheus and Rachel (Hills) Colburn, born in this town, September 8, 1795, was gradu- ated at Harvard Medical College with the degree of M. D. in 1823.
He began his professional life as a physician in his native town, but as early as 1825, permanently settled in Nashua Village, then a part of the township of Dunstable, containing about one thousand inhabitants. The name of Dunstable was changed to that of Nashua, January 1, 1837.
Dr. Colburn was one of the first physicians to estab- lish himself in the new and growing village of Nashua, and is said to have been the first to travel with a horse into the adjoining towns, including that of Hudson. He had a long and useful career.
As a physician and surgeon he was among the very best at that time in Nashua. He married, June 22, 1826, Sarah Belknap, of Framingham, Mass. He died in Nashua, January 13, 1881.
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PHYSICIANS
DR. ZACCHEUS COLBURN
The youngest son of Zaccheus and Rachel (Hills) Col- burn, born January 5, 1801, also became a physician in Hudson, where he continued as a practitioner for several years. Previous to 1840 he removed to Manchester, N. H., where he settled permanently, and where it is said he acquired an extensive and successful practice, which he followed for many years. He died in Manchester.
DR. HENRY M. HOOKE
Dr. Henry M. Hooke came to Hudson Center several years after the decease of Dr. Barrett, probably near 1843. He remained here, where his practice gave general satis- faction, until about 1848, when he removed to Lowell, Mass., and died very suddenly soon after.
DR. JAMES EMERY
Dr. James Emery came into this town as a physician as early as 1848. He was a young man about twenty-six years of age. His experience as a physician at that time was necessarily quite limited. His wife was a daughter of John Goodspeed of Litchfield.
In 1849, he purchased the Dr. Paul Tenney buildings, with twelve acres of land, at Hudson Center, which he continued to occupy as his home for many years. He be- came popular as a physician and acquired an extensive practice here.
He continued to practice his profession with good suc- cess, until about 1879, when by reason of failing health he was compelled to retire. He died September 30, 1880, aged 58 years and three months. He left no surviving children.
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HISTORY OF HUDSON
DAVID ONSLOW SMITH
David Onslow Smith, only child of Alvan and Patty (Robinson) Smith, was born November 12, 1823, at Not- tingham West and died February 15, 1906, aged eighty-two.
He studied at Nashua Literary Institute and at Pink- erton Academy at Derry, New Hampshire. For several years he taught public and private schools in his own and neighboring towns with great success. In 1850, he gradu- ·ated from Harvard Medical School with honor, winning the prize offered to the student passing the best examina- tion in surgery.
After graduation he settled in Hudson in the same year, and soon had a large practice. He married, August 30, 1855, Mary Hannah Greeley, born October 30, 1832, and died in Hudson, December 27, 1867, daughter of Reu- ben and Joanna C. (Merrill) Greeley of Hudson. He set- tled in the Dr. Dustin Barrett house, situated a short dis- tance east of Hudson Center, which he purchased Septem- ber 21, 1854.
They had five children, all born in Hudson: Minnie Eugenie, born June 5, 1856; Edmund Greeley, born Au. gust 10, 1857, died March 29, 1869; Martha Robinson, born July 21, 1859; Herbert Llewellyn, born January 9, 1862; Henry Onslow, born December 18, 1864. He married (second) Hannah P., daughter of Luther and Polly L. (Smith) Haselton, born in Hudson, September 20, 1835.
Dr. Smith was a physician deeply skilled in the vari- ous branches of his profession. He was always studious, very industrious, and never allowed himself to neglect his patients.
His large, long-continued practice extended largely into the adjoining towns of Pelham, Windham and London- derry.
Greatly interested in music, he taught singing schools in several towns, and for a number of years served as con- ductor of a chorus recruited from several surrounding
HERBERT L. SMITH, M. D.
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PHYSICIANS
towns. He also composed considerable music of merit. In early manhood he held the office of captain in the state militia. In politics he was a Republican and was a mem- ber of the constitutional convention of 1889.
DR. HERBERT LLEWELLYN SMITH
Dr. Herbert Llewellyn Smith, eldest son of David O. and Mary H. (Greeley) Smith, was born in Hudson, Janu- ary 9, 1862. He completed his preparatory course in 1878, by graduating from the Nashua high school and went from there to Dartmouth College, from which he graduated with the class of 1882. He afterwards entered Harvard Medi- cal School, where he received the degree of M. D., in 1887.
During his years of student life he assisted in the pay- ment of his expenses by teaching the village school at Hanover, 1882-1883, and by teaching English and short- hand writing in the Boston high school, 1883-1887.
In 1886-87, he was house surgeon in the Boston City Hospital, assistant superintendent of that institution in 1887-89, and acting superintendent a portion of that time.
Entering the practice of medicine in Boston, in 1889, he was professor of surgery in the Boston Dental College, from 1889 to 1896, and surgeon to out patients and assist- ant surgeon to the Boston City Hospital from 1890 to 1896. He studied in London, Paris and Vienna, in 1891-92; was secretary of the Suffolk District Medical Society from 1891 to 1896; secretary of the Boston Medical Association from 1892 to 1896; professor of clinical surgery in Tufts Medi- ical School in 1885-1896, and made special study of frac- tures of the elbow joint and devised a method of treatment, which has since been used extensively in hospital practice and recommended by authorities.
While at the hospital he invented apparatus and in- struments now in general use. In 1896, after an attack of pneumonia, his health failed and he was obliged to give up work for a year, and remained during that time at the old home in Hudson.
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HISTORY OF HUDSON
He opened an office, in 1897, in Nashua, and has since then been engaged in practice there, where he has taken high rank in both medical and surgical circles.
He has been a member of the Massachusetts Medical Society, the New Hampshire Medical Society, the Ameri- can Medical Association, the New Hampshire Surgical Club, and the Nashua Medical Association. He is a mem- ber of the staff of the Nashua Emergency Hospital and St Joseph's Hospital. In addition to attending to the numer. ous and exacting demands of a large practice, he has pre- pared and published various medical papers, including those on original operations for fractures of the elbow joint and cleft palate.
Dr. Smith is a member of Hudson Lodge, No. 94, In- dependent Order of Odd Fellows, Nashoonon Encamp- ment, and Canton A., of Nashua. He is a member of the Ancient York Lodge, No 89, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons; Meridian Royal Arch Chapter, No. 9; Israel Hunt Council, No. 8; St. George Commandery, Knight Tem- plars; Edward A. Raymond Consistory, thirty-second de- gree, of Nashua, and Bektash Temple, Ancient Arabic Or- der Nobles of the Mystic Shrine.
Dr. Herbert L. Smith married in Charlestown, Mass., September 24, 1890, Charlotte S. DeWolfe, born in Charlestown, April 22, 1867, daughter of Lewis E. and Louisa (Graves) DeWolfe. .
The children of this union have been: Theodora Lottchen, born in Vienna, Austria, January 18, 1892, and died in Charlestown, February 18, 1899; David Onslow, born in Boston, November 22, 1893; Llewellyn DeWolfe, born in Nashua, April 18, 1898; Marion Louise, born in Nashua, February 3, 1900.
DR. HENRY ONSLOW SMITH
Dr. Henry Onslow Smith, youngest son of Dr. David O. and Mary H. (Greeley) Smith, born December 18, 1864, is the only resident practicing physician in this town at
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this time. After a thorough education at Dartmouth Col- lege and Bellevue Hospital Medical College of New York, followed by a year's service as resident physician in a New York hospital, he began practice under the oversight and guidance of his father in 1888, at the age of twenty-four years.
His practice from the first has increased and improved gradually but steadily until the present, when it is quite extensive in this town, and also in several of the adjoining towns.
He is a member of the New Hampshire Medical Soci- ety, and the American Medical Association. He has been a trustee of the public library since it was established and has been its treasurer from the first. He is a director of the Nashua Protestant Orphanage Association. He is a member of Hudson Lodge, No. 94, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Nashoonon Encampment, and Canton A., of Nashua. He has been a useful member of the board of health for sixteen years and has been its chairman for the greater part of the time, and is still acting in that capacity. He is also a member of the school board, which office he has held for several years.
September 4, 1889, he married Marcia A. Deering of Waterboro, Maine. He and his wife reside near his father's homestead. They have one son, Deering Greeley Smith, born in Hudson, June 5, 1896.
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CHAPTER XXXIX
VOTING LISTS OF HUDSON
The first printed check list used at any election in this town was at the annual town meeting, March 10, 1874.
For many years prior to that date the law provided that :
The selectmen shall lodge with the town clerk, and shall also cause to be posted up in one or more public places in the town, an alphabetical list of all the legal voters therein, fifteen days at least prior to any meet- ing for the choice of state or county officers, representatives in congress, or electors of president and vice president.
The selectmen shall be in session, at some convenient place, for so long a time as shall be necessary, within three days next preceding any such meeting, for the purpose of correcting said list; and one session shall be for two hours at least on the day before the opening of the meet- ing.
Notice of the times and places of holding said sessions shall be given upon said lists at the time of posting up the same.
The selectmen shall hear all applications for the insertion of the name of any person on said list, or the erasure of any name therefrom, and may examine the party or any witness thereto, upon oath, which may be administered by any member of the board.
They shall insert the name of every legal voter omitted, and erase the name of every person not a legal voter.
Previous to 1874, these check-lists had been written by the selectmen. When the check-list was printed for the first time in that year, at an expense of six dollars, some of the town's leading citizens considered it a piece of extravagance, and predicted that it would never be re- peated.
However, it proved to be much more convenient for the clerk when checking the names of voters, and saved considerable time, permitting the business of the meeting to be completed at an earlier hour than formerly. The many names filled much less space in print than when
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VOTING LISTS OF HUDSON
written, and could be more quickly identified and checked by the clerk. Hence no written check-list has been made or used in this town since that time.
CHECK-LIST FOR 1874
Allen, William H.
Andrews, Gilman
Andrews, George G.
Andrews, Robert A.
Annis, Parker B.
Annis, William P.
Atwood, David
Baker, Alexis
Baker, John H.
Barrett, James
Barron, Alden H.
Barron, Solomon R.
Batchelder, Mark
Belknap, Andrew J.
Bennett, Marcus F.
Berry, Daniel M.
Berry, John W.
Berry, Edward F.
Berry, George W.
Blake, Joseph H.
Blanchard, Silas M.
Blodgett, Austin
Blodgett, Elmer H.
Blodgett, Warren
Blodgett, Augustus F.
Blodgett, Nathan M.
Blood, John
Bowers, Benjamin S.
Bowles, Prescott
Burleigh, Freeman
Burleigh, Marcellus
Burnett, James
Burnham, Amory
Burnham, John A.
Burns, David
Burns, Luke
Butler, Henry W.
Butler, Moses
Buttrick, Clifton E.
Brewin, Barnard
Caldwell, Robert D
Caldwell, Nathan
Caldwell, Thomas
Caldwell, George E.
Campbell, Bradford
Carlton, Joseph G.
Carnes, James Chase, John
Chase, Benjamin D.
Chase, William F.
Chase, William H.
Chase, Nathaniel
Chase, Samuel
Cheney, George
Choate, Joseph
Clement, David
Clement, David, Jr.
Clyde, Samuel W.
Coburn, James M.
Colburn, Paul
Colburn, George P.
Colburn, Isaac
Colburn, Henry T.
Case, George F.
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HISTORY OF HUDSON
Colburn, Newton
Colburn, Daniel A.
Connell, Tobias
Connell, Philip
Connell, John
Connor, John
Corliss, James
Corliss, James N.
Corliss, Austin D.
Corliss, Daniel P.
Cross, William G.
Cross, Hiram
Cross, Levi E.
Cummings, Nathan
Cummings, Hiram
Cummings, Enoch
Cummings, Frank A.
Cressey, Charles A.
Cutter, James
Dane, Charles F.
Dane, John O.
Davis, George H.
Davis, Joseph
Donahoe, Timothy
Donahoe, Francis P.
Donnelly, Owen
Doughty, George L.
Durant, George W.
Durgin, James A.
Dutton, John E.
Eaton, Alfred
Eaton, James A.
Emerson, Arthur S.
Emery, James
Ford, Thomas J.
Ford, Timothy S.
Ford, James
Ford, William R.
Ford, Moses B.
Ford, David C.
Ford, James C.
Fox, Henry J.
Fuller, Joseph
Fuller, Benjamin
Fuller, Cyrus
Fuller, Lorenzo
Gage, Daniel T.
Gage, Daniel
Gillis, John
Glines, George A.
Glover, Andrew M.
Glover, Warren
Gowing, Samuel
Gowing, George T.
Gowing, Edwin S.
Greeley, Stephen D.
Greeley, Jackson E.
Greeley, Samuel
Greeley, S. Augustus
Greeley, James C.
Greeley, Daniel M.
Greeley, John
Griffin, Rufus K.
Grover, Asaph
Groves, Robert
Guyon, Henry M.
Hamblet, Wilbur
Hamblet, Eli
Hamlett, Alvin
Hamlett, Horace J.
Hardy, Joseph
Harris, Albert
Harris, Myron W.
Harvey, Edward
Haselton, George W.
Heath, Jeremiah
543
VOTING LISTS OF HUDSON
Heath, Henry W. Hill, Warren
Hill, Thomas
Hill, Justin E.
Hill, Abijah
Hill, F. Augustus
Hill, Granville
Hill, Robert D.
Hill, Osgood
Hill, Alonzo
Hill, George E.
Hills, Henry H.
Hills, Alden
Hills, George W.
Hills, Albert J. F.
Hills, Silas
Hills, Edwin E.
Hills, Arthur F.
Hills, Rossill F.
Hills, Clifton M.
Hills, Joseph A.
Hodgman, John S.
Hopkins, J. W.
Hoffman, George Hull, James
Hunting, Silas
Hutchins, Alonzo G.
Ingersoll,
Jaquith, George D.
Joy, Lemuel T.
Kelley, William
Kelley, John H.
Kelley, John
Kelley, Bernard J.
Kidder, Benjamin H.
Kuhn, George W.
Lenahan, Thomas
Lenahan, John
Leslie, William H.
Lewis, William F.
Lewis, Harvey G.
Marsh, Hiram
Marsh, Otis R. Marshall, Frederick O.
Marshall, Henry
Marshall, Albert H.
Marshall, George W.
Marshall, John B.
Martin, Elisha Martin, Dwight E.
McCoy, James
McDonald, George
Melvin, Frank P.
Melvin, Tolford D.
Melvin, William Merrill, James B.
Merrill, William T.
Merrill, Henry A.
Merrill, George E.
Merrill, William
Miller, William W.
Miller, William D.
Miller, Franklin P.
Millet, James Morrison, Augustus R.
Morrison, Samuel
Newcomb, Charles H. O'Neil, Michael Pollard, Joseph F.
Morse, Nathaniel M. O'Connell, Michael Poff, Peter Powell, John W.
Marsh, Walter H.
Martin, Elisha A.
Merrill, Benjamin A.
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HISTORY OF HUDSON
Putnam, John P.
Putnam, Moses A. S.
Richardson, Elijah
Ripley, Alfred C.
Robinson, John B.
Robinson, Simeon
Robinson, Frank P.
Robinson, Lucius F.
Robinson, Henry C.
Robinson, Alphonzo
Ryan, James
Sanford, John
Sanford, Wilmot P.
Sanford, Hamlin B.
Sargent, Dana
Sargent, William F.
Senter, John L.
Senter, Charles E.
Senter, Simon A.
Senter, Eliphalet
Shaw, James H.
Shea, John
Simpson, Samuel
Simpson, Samuel R.
Smith, Samuel
Smith, Alvan
Smith, Obadiah F.
Smith, Henry
Smith, Kimball
Smith, Dustin B.
Smith, Samuel, 2d
Smith, Daniel
Smith, Daniel B.
Smith, John C.
Smith, Frederick F.
Smith, Isaac N.
Smith, William H.
Smith, Andrew J.
Smith, Reuben P.
Smith, George.A.
Smith, David O.
Smith, Edgar L.
Smith, Norris
Smith, Martin
Smith, Henry F.
Spalding, Charles W.
Spalding, Reuben
Spalding, Jacob F.
Spalding, Benjamin
Spear, Thompson
Sprake, Oliver
Sprake, Jonathan
Stearns, Ephraim
Steele, Frederick
Steele, S. Alpheus
Steele, Charles,
Stewart, Robert S.
Sullivan, John
Tandy, Ezekiel
Taylor, Reuben
Taylor, William H.
Templeton, Ira
Thomas, Tyler
Thomas, Wellington H.
Thompson, Martin V. B.
Thompson, John M. Tolles, Lucien M.
Thorning, James C. Towle, William H.
Towns, Joseph W.
Trow, George W.
Trow, Richard
Turner, John
Walton, James D.
Walton, Waldo P.
Warren, Adams F.
From Photo by C. E. PAINE TAYLOR'S FALLS BRIDGE, CONCRETE, 1910
545
VOTING LISTS OF HUDSON
Watts, Hugh
Webster, John
Webster, Nathan P.
Webster, Kimball
Wentworth, Nathaniel
Wheeler, Josiah K.
Wiggin, A. C.
Willard, Peter E.
Willoughby, Mark
Willoughby, Edwin
Wilson, Franklin
Wilson, George H.
Wilson, J. Frank
Winn, John
Winn, J. Sylvanus
Winn, Rufus E.
Winn, Paul T.
Winn, Joseph
Winn, Amos
Winn, William F.
Winn, Ira E.
Wood, Charles
Wood, George W.
Wood, George S.
Wryn, John
Wyles, William W.
Wyman, Elbridge
Young, Israel W.
Young, John P.
The list contained three hundred and twenty-one names, of which two hundred and eighty-four cast a ballot, leaving thirty-seven that did not vote at the meeting mentioned.
CHECK-LIST, 1909
This list, used at the town election, March 9, 1909, contained three hundred and eighty-four names-sixty-three more than the list of 1874, thirty-five years before-an in- crease of about nineteen per cent. On this list are found forty-nine names that were on the list of 1874, or about fifteen and one-half per cent in thirty-five years.
Abbott, George H.
Abare, Wilber L.
Ackerman, William G.
Ackerman, William H.
Adams, Prescott A.
Andrew, Arnold
Andrews, Howard A.
Andrews, Robert A.
Andrews, William A.
Andrews, Arthur S.
Annis, Joseph F. Baker, John H. Baker, John J. Baker, Oswald P.
Baker, William W.
Barker, Eugene L.
Barker, Carl E.
Barron, Irvin E.
Barry, Lawrence M.
Bassett, Charles H.
Bassett, Joseph E. Batchelder, Allen H.
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HISTORY OF HUDSON
Batchelder, Reuben
Belevich, Alexander
Bell, C. P.
Blanchard, Henry W.
Blanchard, Edgar F.
Blodgett, Harry D.
Blodgett, Augustus F.
Blodgett, Austin J.
Blodgett, Elmer H.
Blood, George F.
Blood, William J.
Boyle, John H.
Boynton, Herbert L.
Boynton, John E.
Bradley, Allen E.
Brown, Henry C.
Brown, John E.
Brown, Alvin S.
Bruce, Elias A.
Buchanan, George H.
Burneche, Annide
Butler, Henry
Butler, Albert S.
Butler, Henry C.
Butler, George F.
Buttrick, Leander C.
Buttrick, Clifton E.
Buttrick, Caldwell
Caldwell, George E.
Campbell, Bradford
Campbell, Charles E.
Campbell, William H.
Campbell, Osman S.
Campbell, Frank E.
Campbell, Carl H.
Chamberlain, Cornelius W.
Chandler, Bradish L.
Chapman, Frank M.
Chase, Charles H.
Chase, Samuel
Chase, William
Cheney, George
Clark, George M.
Clark, Henry
Clement, David
Clement, Elmer D.
Clement, Harry E.
Clifford, Patrick
Clyde, George W.
Coates, James G.
Cobb, Bert H.
Cochran, Frank B.
Colburn, Daniel A.
Connell, Frank A.
Connell, Robert T.
Connell, Philip J.
Connell, Harry J.
Connell, Otis R.
Coombs, Walter R.
Coombs, Elmer L.
Corliss, Alonzo
Cote, Philip H.
Cram, John F.
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