USA > New Hampshire > Merrimack County > Northfield > History of Northfield, New Hampshire 1780-1905: In Two Parts with Many Biographical Sketches and. > Part 43
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Second Generation.
JOSEPH HANCOCK, also a Revolutionary soldier, was b. in 1759. He lived on a part of the homestead. He m. (first), Polly Heath and (second), Susannah Page of Sanbornton Bridge. He d. on a visit to the West, March 2, 1831. His name is on the first tax list, where he is assessed £30. He had 10 children.
GEORGE HANCOCK, b. 1749, was the owner of much land along the Winnipiseogee River and erected the first saw and grist mill at San- bornton Bridge before the war.
It occupied the site of the present Elm Mills Woolen Company's plant and had the peculiar dam spoken of elsewhere. He was pre- paring to erect another at Meredith when he d. very suddenly of spotted fever at the age of 50. Through some delay or trickery the property was lost to the family, but was always called the "Hancock
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GENEALOGIES.
Mill." There was a grist mill below and a sawmill above, where Miller Glines and his wife were in charge at the breaking out of the war. (See Glines gen.) Mrs. Hancock was Sarah, dau. of William Williams. (See Williams gen.) She d. Jan. 14, 1800, at the extreme age of 100, wanting less than a month of 101. She had been 60 years a widow. They had eight children.
JOHN HANCOCK, b. 1791; m. Dorothy Sanborn of Sanbornton and had 10 children. He was a tanner and was always called "Tanner John" to distinguish him from others of the same name. His youngest son, Benjamin, resides on the home place near the Orphans' Home.
ABAGAIL HANCOCK became the wife of Colonel Shepard of Canter- bury.
KEZIA HANCOCK was the first wife of Capt. John Clough. They had no children.
JOHN HANCOCK resided near Webster Lake on the Andover road. He m. (first), Naomi Sweatt and had a dau., Naomi. Mrs. Hancock d. July, 1806. He m. (second), Nov. 16, 1806, Mrs. Miriam Purmate Ellis and had two sons and two dau.
DOROTHY HANCOCK m. Charles Noyes of Canterbury.
ALICE HANCOCK m. - Perkins and lived near her brother, John, on Webster Lake. An unmarried son, David, and maiden sister, Polly, lived long in the home and are remembered still for their quaint sayings.
Third Generation. (Children of George and Sarah Williams Hancock.)
SALLY HANCOCK m., Dec. 12, 1799, Capt. Michael McCrillis and had three children. (See McCrillis gen.)
HANNAH HANCOCK, b. 1782; m. Capt. Thomas Simonds. (See Simonds gen.)
ELIZABETH HANCOCK, b. Sept. 26, 1780; m. Benjamin Knapp. They had one dau., Susan. (See Knapp gen.) Mrs. Knapp d. June, 1859. The dau., b. July 24, 1799, d. Oct. 12, 1876. Mr Knapp was expected home from a trip to the West but never came.
HENRIETTA HANCOCK d. at 16.
GEORGE HANCOCK was instantly killed a few days previous to his wedding day. He was said to have been the most promising young man in town.
JOSEPH HANCOCK d. of spotted fever at the time of his father's death in 1799.
LIEUT. WILLIAM HANCOCK, b. Jan. 19, 1786; m. (first), Polly Cross and resided on the lower intervale. They had one child. Mrs. H. d. and was buried under the pines in the old Cross burial place, beside the brook. He m. (second), Feb. 26, 1818, Sally Wentworth Rand and had five children, none of whom were b. or lived in town. The family removed to Mill's Corner, now Uplands, on the second marriage. The
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HISTORY OF NORTHFIELD.
children were: John; Ann Elizabeth, wife of Daniel Ingalls of Uplands; George Henry; Mrs. Sarah Brown, and Joseph.
WILLIAM WILLIAMS HANCOCK, son of the above, was b. in N. July 12, 1807; m., May 6, 1833, Nancy Brown of Franklin, and lived there. He was a carpenter. They had 10 children: Mary Jane, wife of Francis W. Pearson; Caroline, wife of James Keniston of Andover; Arthur, who d. at 16; Enoch Brown Hancock, who lived in Nevada; William Grover; Parker Cross; Nancy E .; Frank K., who resided in Franklin; Henry Augustus, who d. at 20; and Abby Susan, wife of Frank L. Morrison of Franklin Falls.
(Children of John and Naomi Sweatt Hancock.)
NAOMI SWEATT HANCOCK, b. March 8, 1800; m. . Glines and d. Dec. 16, 1823, the family record says, of nervous putrid fever.
(Children of John and Miriam Ellis Hancock.)
JOHN HANCOCK, b. Jan. 4, 1808, was killed, Sept. 10, 1823, by falling on the teeth of an upturned harrow. An artery was severed and he d. of hemorrhage.
CYNTHIA HANCOCK, b. Feb. 12, 1811; d. at the home of her niece, Mrs. David Tibbetts, in N. Dec. 14, 1876.
HANNAH HANCOOK, b. March 28, 1814; m. - Bennett of Hill and had one dau. She lived at the Centre for many years but d. at her daughter's house on Bay St., the result of a fall, Dec. 30, 1895.
HARBISON HANCOCK was a farmer on the home place near Webster Lake. He was b. May 7, 1817, and d. there July 7, 1863. He m. Ada- line McConnell and had two children: John of Franklin Falls and Hattie, wife of Frank Sanborn. They occupy the original farm. The former m. Martha B. Woodbury and resides on Willow Hill, Franklin Falls. They have a son, Winfield Scott, employed at Sulloway's Mill.
(Children of Joseph and Polly Heath Hancock.)
JOHN HANCOCK m. Elizabeth Lyford, lived on the Peverly farm and had many children. Tiring of N., he walked the whole distance to Illinois to select a new home. He returned and removed his family. The family tradition says that he drove an ox team the entire dis- tance. He was a noted bee hunter and perhaps varied his trips with little side excursions in this line. They settled near Peoria. The children all settled in the West.
JACOB HANCOCK, b. 1796; m. (pub.), May 18, 1821, Judith Wyatt (see Wyatt gen.) and lived on a part of the home farm. They had a son and two dau. Both d. there, she in 1881, and he in 1858.
GEORGE HANCOCK, ' b. 1800; m., Dec. 6, 1825, Susan Forrest, b. at Canterbury, 1803. They resided first on what was called the Hicks lot but later built new buildings across the road on a part of the Blanchard farm, where they lived and he d. July 3, 1867. She d. at the home of her dau. in Sanbornton Sept. 22, 1878.
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GENEALOGIES.
CHARLES HANCOCK m. Betsey Manuel and lived on the banks of the Merrimack and had three children. Mr. Hancock d. Nov., 1847. She m. (second), Leavitt Knowles. The children, Albert, Alonzo and Mary Ann, do not reside in N.
JESSE HANCOCK m., Jan. 11, 1835, Ann Chase of N. and lived on the Capt. Haines farm. They had two children. He d. March 5, 1842. She m. (second), Jonathan Scribner.
KEZAR HANCOCK removed to the West with his brother, John, where he m. and had children.
SUSAN HANCOCK, b. 1791; m. Joseph Gerrish, b. 1784, and had a large family. She d. Nov. 26, 1849. He d. May 25, 1851. (See Gerrish gen.)
POLLY HANCOCK m., Oct. 9, 1806, Josiah Philbrick of Sanbornton Bridge and had two sons and five dau. She d. July 21, 1861. He.d. June 16, 1859. (See Philbrick gen.)
SALLY HANCOCK, b. April 7, 1794; m., Oct. 2, 1820, Morrill S. Moore, b. Oct. 29, 1798. (See Moore gen.)
WILLIAM HANCOCK lived on the Intervale farm later owned by the Manuels. He m. Hannah Haines and had a family of two. He d. Aug., 1846. His children were: Clara and Orrin Jerome.
Fourth Generation. (Children of Jesse and Ann Chase Hancock.)
ANNETTE HANCOCK, b. July 8, 1837, was a student at the New Hamp- shire Conference Seminary and later at Mt. Holyoke Seminary. After some years of teaching in the West, she m., Jan. 8, 1862, Joseph Hill, a merchant of Tilton, and had four children. (See Hill gen.) She united with the Congregational Church at Franklin while a teacher there and later removed her membership to the Tilton Church.
ELDRIDGE GERRY HANCOCK, b. Dec. 4, 1840; m., Nov. 7, 1863, Jennie L. Griffith of Peoria, Ill., and settled as a farmer in Vermillion County, removing in 1881 to Paxton, Ill., where he was interested in a tile manufactory. He removed in 1887 to Arkansas City, Kan., where he d. Dec. 2, 1889. They had two children, Annette, who m. Glines W. Thurston, an inventor of valuable mechanical appliances, and Francis Claire, who d. at four years.
(Children of William and Hannah Haines Hancock.)
CLARA A. HANCOCK m., 1858, James B. Straw of Manchester, where they always resided. He was city auditor for many years. He d. in 1900 (?) and she d. in 1903, leaving a dau., Gertrude, who lives in Manchester.
ORRIN JEROME HANCOOK, b. Dec. 11, 1866, was educated at Franklin Academy and New Hampton Literary Institute and became a Baptist clergyman, filling pastorates at Belmont and Newton. Mr. Hancock is now located at Old Orchard, Me. He m. Mary A. Rumery of Man- chester and had two sons, one of whom, Edward Henry Hancock, was
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HISTORY OF NORTHFIELD.
educated at the State College, Durham, and is now a teacher there. An- other son, William Jerome, is a teacher in the Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. A dan., Eva Mabel, d. in Infancy.
(Children of George and Susan Forrest Hancock.)
ALVIRA HANCOOK, b. Sept. 2, 1827; m., Dec. 29, 1844, Joseph Robinson of Sanbornton, b. Dec. 9, 1817, where they were farmers for many years. Later they removed to Lowell, Mass., where he d. suddenly Nov. 20, 1893. They had two children, Alfred A., a grocer of Lowell, and Susan, now widow of the late Elvin Greeley of Exeter. Mrs. Robinson resides with her son in Lowell.
HORACE HANCOOK, b. at N. Sept. 26, 1880, went West and there m. and had a family. He is still a farmer in Groveland, Ill.
(Children of Jacob and Judith Wyatt Hancock.) (All b. at N.)
SMITH HANCOOK, b. 1821; m. (pub.), April 7, 1857, Jerusha Canfield Sewall, b. 1821. He d. May 2, 1897. He was a farmer on the home-" stead and had three children. She resides with her dan. in Franklin.
MARY HANCOOK, b. 1887; m., 1850, Frank Lynch of Manchester, where · she d. in 1867, leaving two sons, who removed to New York City with their father.
OLIVE HANCOOK, b. Feb., 1829; m., Oct. 8, 1852, John Handal Proctor of Franklin, where he d. in 1870. He was a fine musician, being a leader and instructor of many bands. She survived many years, dying in 1895. They had one son, Edward, who d. at eight years. They are all buried at Canton, Mass.
Fifth Generation. (Children of Smith and Jerusha Canfield Hancock.)
#
WILLIE HANCOOK, b. Sept. 18, 1856; d., at Methuen, Nov. 19, 1881. MABEL HANCOOK, b. March 18, 1863; d., March, 1864.
NELLIE GRACE HANCOOK, b. Oct. 19, 1870; m., Henry W. Gardner of Portsmouth, May, 1891. They reside on the homestead with her mother. Their buildings were destroyed by fire in 1902, but since rebuilt.
(Child of Hannah and - Bennett.)
CAROLINE BENNETT, b. at Franklin, 1845, had her name changed to Hancock. She m., March 23, 1875, David C. Tibbetts (see Tibbetts gen.) and resided on Bay St. He d. there July 8, 1895. She m. (sec- ond), Dec. 14, 1897, Samuel Gilman and d. Jan. 23, 1904. She was a devoted churchwoman and was an invalid for many years. .
HANCOCK II.
There are others of the name that I fail to connect with the family of Jacob.
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GENEALOGIES.
WILLIAM HANCOCK m., May 3, 1812, Polly Gibson and had a son, Pepperell, and a dau., Martha, who became the wife of William J. Fortier of Franklin and who was murdered by an insane neighbor.
I find, also, on the records the following names:
ISABELLA HANCOCK m. Walker Buswell (pub.), Sept. 14, 1821.
JACOB HANCOCK, b. Nov. 30, 1805.
THOMAS JEFFERSON HANCOCK, b. Jan. 21, 1807.
DAVID BEAN HANCOCK, b. July 22, 1810.
BETSEY BEAN HANCOOK, b. May 10, 1814.
JUDITHI HANCOOK m., Dec. 11, 1897, Reuben Blanchard. (See Blan- chard gen.)
The children of the above William were doubtless b. in N. but none remained here.
JACOB HANCOCK, d. Sept. 10, 1824, aged 45.
MARTHA HANCOCK, d. May 8, 1860, aged 60.
HANNAFORD or HANAFORD I.
JOHN HANAFORD was a shoemaker at the Cross settlement on the in- tervale, with a shop on the site of the William Plummer residence. He m. (first), Cordelia Russell and had three sons. He m. (second), Feb. 16, 1804, Azuba Glines of N. and had a son and dau.
Second Generation. (Children of John and Cordelia Russell Hanaford.)
BENJAMIN JOHN HANAFORD, b. Oct. 20, 1787; m. Jane Sanborn of East N. and resided on the main road. They had four children. She d. Dec. 6, 1808. He m. (second), Nancy Flanders and had a son and a dau. She d. Dec. 6, 1868.
JABEZ. HANAFORD m. Ruth Noyes and settled in Boscawen. They had one dau., Ruth.
AMOS C. HANAFORD, b. at N. May 12, 1797; m., Feb. 3, 1820, Hannah C. Lyford, b. 1800. He bought the home of the late William Williams on the main road, where their nine children were b. She d. Sept. 3, 1850. He m. (second), Sept., 1852, Mrs. Sarah Fifield of Tilton and went there to reside. Both d. there; she, Aug. 11, 1880; he, Feb., 1872. He was a man of literary taste and was always interested in the events of the day. He had a deep Christian experience and was a devout Meth- odist.
AZUBA HANAFORD m., May 18, 1844, Ebenezer Carter of Canterbury, whose home was on the site of the old Canterbury Fort.
WILLIAM G. HANNAFORD m. Mary Jane Kenison, a neighbor. He was a shoemaker, a carpenter and a farmer at Oak Hill. She d. there Dec. 16, 1870. They had two children. He d. at the home of his dau. at Concord, Nov. 15, 1889.
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HISTORY OF NORTHFIELD.
Third Generation. (Children of William and Mary Jane Kenison Hannaford.) PARKER HANNAFORD. (See portrait.)
PARKER W. HANNAFORD Was b. in N. Sept. 18, 1845. He obtained his education in the public schools and at the New Hampshire Conference Seminary. His father being a carpenter, he naturally worked into that trade and followed it until he was more than 30 years old. In 1878 he entered the employ of the Maine Central Railroad Company at Augusta, Me., at the passenger car repair shops, where he remained until Jan., 1881. He then spent five years in the pattern department of the Manchester Locomotive Works, returning to Augusta to the same department, where he remained until 1890, when he was promoted to the general superintendency of the car department, a position he now bolds at Waterville, Me. He m. in 1865 Mary A. Upton of Bow.
MARY A. HANNAFORD, b. 1855 at N .; m., March 26, 1879, Alfred A. Lake of Canterbury. She was educated at the New Hampshire Con- ference Seminary and was a faithful teacher previous to her marriage. Mr. Lake is a locomotive engineer, with a home in Concord.
(Children of John and Jane Sanborn Hanaford.)
MARTIN REUTER HANAFORD, b. 1808, was drowned when a young man. JOHN HANAFORD, b. May 6, 1817, worked a while at Tilton and then removed to Colebrook, where he m. and had two sons. He went to California and later to the mines in Idaho. He d. in Ohio. His wife and two sons now reside in Texas.
(Children of John and Nancy Flanders Hanaford.)
NANCY JANE HANAFORD d. in girlhood.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HANAFORD was in Company D, Fourth Regiment (see Boys in Blue) and d. at Beaufort, S. C., March 18, 1864.
(Children of Amos and Hannah Lyford Hanaford.)
(All b. at N.)
ALVAR HANAFORD, b. 1830; m. Caroline Follansby and had three dau. She d. at N. Sept. 4, 1886. He has since been much in Call- fornia, having been six times across the continent. A dau., Sarah, d. in infancy.
SAMUEL GRAY HANAFORD, b. in 1828; m. Lucy Hanaford of Boscawen. He was a carpenter and contractor. They have two sons, Russell and Fordyce. The former m. Clara Sanborn of Franklin and the latter, Kate Holbrook of Vermont. They all reside at Northumberland.
JEREMIAH L. HANNAFORD Was b. in 1824 and educated at the old academy under Prof. Dyer H. Sanborn, the Conference Seminary at Tilton and the Conference Seminary at Newbury, Vt., from which he
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PARKER G. HANAFORD.
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GENEALOGIES.
graduated in May, 1845. He was ordained in 1851 by Bishop Hamline. He filled many appointments for more than a quarter of a century. He m. Caroline C. Brainard of Barre, Vt. He d. Jan. 1, 1897, at Mel- rose, Mass.
MARY ELIZABETH HANAFORD, b. 1827; m., July 20, 1846, Ezekiel C. Ferrin of West Concord, and had five children: George L., who resides in Newport, R. I .; Mary Frances, who d. in Colorado in 1898; Susie C., who resides in Malden; and two d. in childhood. Mrs. Ferrin d. May 25, 1863. -
SUSAN GRAY HANAFORD, b. Aug. 4, 1830; m. Lyman Sawyer of West Concord, where both d .; she, June 11, 1904; he, Sept. 27, 1898. Mrs. Sawyer was a teacher before her marriage. She was educated at the New Hampshire Conference Seminary. They had one dau., Gertrude H., of West Concord, an enthusiastic Sunday-school worker.
CORDELIA RUSSELL HANAFORD, b. 1832; was twice m. (first), to George W. Bartlett of Gilford and had one son, Rufus H., now of Worcester. She m. (second), Caleb Wells of Tilton and had a son, George B., who resides at Franklin Falls. Mr. Wells d. in 1895. She was a teacher in N., Lake Village and elsewhere, and was educated at the New Hamp- shire Conference Seminary.
REV. CHARLES HARDING HANAFORD, b. Feb. 4, 1834, studied for the ministry at the New Hampshire Conference Seminary and the Bib- lical Institute at Concord. He began to preach at an early age and has filled many and important charges. He m. Jennie A. Nason of Springfield and they have one son, Fred A., who resides at South Lancaster, Mass., and one d. in infancy. He is now acting secretary of the Massachusetts Anti-Saloon League at Boston.
Fourth Generation.
(B. at N.)
MARIA SWETT HANAFORD, b. 1839, was a popular teacher at Andover and elsewhere. She m., 1868, James Wilkins of San Francisco, Cal., and resided at Denver and in California. He was a hotel keeper and was for a time connected with the Cliff House at the Golden Gate, San Francisco. She d., 1883, at Tucson, Ariz. She was an honored and prominent member of the Episcopal church and active in its charities. A bright scholar and excelled in mathematics. She was a good neigh- bor and an interested member of several fraternal societies, as she was in everything that pertained to Christian citizenship.
FLORA HANAFORD, b. at N., 1847; d. at Boston, where she was em- ployed, April 21, 1870.
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HANAFORD II.
JOHN A. HANAFORD came to N. from Newton, Mass., about 1850 and bought the John Chase farm on High St. He had two dau., b. at New- ton. He d. Aug., 1876, aged 65. She m. (second), Mr. Cutter of Bed- ford, Mass. After his death she returned to N., where she d. in 1900.
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HISTORY OF NORTHFIELD.
Second Generation. · MARIA A. HANAFORD, b. at Newton; m., Aug. 27, 1857, John F. Leigh- ton. (800 Leighton gen.) She d. June 5, 1886. They had three chil- dren.
ENCKA HARATORD, b. at Newton, Mass., 1858; d., April 24, 1871.
HAZELTON.
REY. BENJAMIN HAZELTON Was b. in Hebron Nov. 7, 1789. He was one of the pioneer traveling Methodist ministers, preaching in various places, among which were Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. He m., May 1, 1820, Elizabeth Folger of Nantucket, b. Sept. 23, 1799, a dau. of Hon. Walter Folger.
They settled in N. about 1832. They had eight children. He was a farmer and preacher in the west part of the town, later buying the farm now owned by Captain Wyatt on Zion's Hill. In 1865 they ro- moved to Chicago, where both d .; he, Feb. 6, 1870; she, Jan., 1872.
Second Generation.
ELIZA F. HAZELTON, b. at Mansfield, Mass., Feb. 19, 1821; m. Hiram Glines, a farmer of N., (pub.), April 10, 1842. (800 Glines gen.)
BENSON C. HAZELTON, b. at Summinett, Mass., Jan. 23, 1823, was a photographer in Boston, Mass., where he d., 1892.
MARY F. HAZELTON, b. at Marlboro, Mass., March 9, 1825. She d. at N. Jan. 15, 1848.
BENJAMIN FRANK HAZELTON, b. at Falmouth, Mass., March 19, 1827. He d. at Chicago, Ill., July 12, 1893.
FRANCES D. HAZELTON, b. June 22, 1830; m. Joseph L. Sargent (pub), April, 1851. She d. Oct. 10, 1860, at N.
WILLIAM C. HAZELTON.
WILLIAM C. HAZELTON Was b. Nov. 14, 1832, at N., where his early life was spent. He attended school for several terms at the New Hampshire Conference Seminary. Later he taught school in Andover, Canterbury and in his native town. Following the advice of Horace Greeley he went to Illinois. Here he engaged in farming and teaching until the breaking out of the Civil War, when he enlisted as a private in the Eighth Illinois Cavalry. Soon after the organization of the regiment he was appointed orderly sergeant, in which capacity he served for 18 months, when he was promoted to lieutenant and later was made captain of his company.
The regiment served in the Army of the Potomac and the subject. of this sketch took part in some 30 engagements. He had two horses shot from under him and was himself slightly wounded at the battle of Beverly Ford. He was among the first of the Federal troops to reach Gettysburg and often recalls the joyous welcome of the people of that city as they crowded the streets to shake hands with the bronzed and dusty troopers.
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GENEALOGIES. .
Enlisting in Sept., 1861, Captain Hazelton was mustered out of the service with his regiment in July, 1865. Purchasing a small farm near Chicago, he has since resided there. As the city grew in extent his farm was taken into the city limits and subdivided into building lots and is now known as Forest Glen, one of the suburbs of that city. Soon after returning to his farm, Captain Hazelton was appointed school treasurer for the township, which office he held for 15 years. He was m. in 1863 to Fannie M. Morrill of Canterbury and has been blessed with a family of seven children, four of whom are now living. Ellen, the oldest dau., is m. to W. V. Nicol, a fruit farmer in Michigan. Hugh, the only son living, is a graduate of Illinois University and is now an electrical engineer in New York City: Josephine, the second dau., is also a graduate of Chicago University, and is m. to Prof. E. D. Grant of the Michigan College of Mines. Jessie, the youngest dau., is a graduate of the Northwestern University School of Music and is the only child who has not yet left the parental home.
JOSEPHINE B. HAZELTON, b. in N. April 14, 1836, was educated at the New Hampshire Conference Seminary and was a teacher. Later she removed to Illinois, where she m. Benj. Allen and since her husband's death resides at Arlington Heights. She has one dau.
HORTENSE HAZELTON, b. in N. Dec. 9, 1840, and d. at their home on Zion's Hill June 23, 1858.
HAYWARD.
PORTER M. HAYWARD came to N. in 1883. He was b. at Concord March 4, 1857. He m. (first), in 1878, Emma B. Glover, b. at Pena- cook April 12, 1859, by whom he had one son. She d. March 14, 1882. He m. (second), Nov. 3, 1883, Flora M. Cross (see Cross gen.) and had two children. He m. (third), Nov. 24, 1898, Lenora Dearborn. (See Dearborn gen.) He was employed at the Lord Bros. Manufac- turing Company's for 11 years and later at the Carter Mill, where he is fireman and watchman. He resides at N. Centre.
Second Generation.
CHARLES E. HAYWARD, b. at Canterbury Feb. 14, 1879; m., June 20, 1896, Annie E. Dearborn. (See Dearborn gen.) They have four children. He is employed by the Elm Woolen Mills Manufacturing Co. and resides on Park St.
FRED and MAUD HAYWARD, the former b. April 20, 1885, and the lat- ter in 1889, reside with their mother on the Joseph Smith place on the Bean Hill road.
Third Generation.
EMMA HAYWARD, b. Oct. 19, 1897. EARLE HAYWARD, b. March 5, 1900. PEARL E. HAYWARD, b. June 17, 1902. LESTER W. HAYWARD, b. Jan. 16, 1904.
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HISTORY OF NORTHFIELD.
HEALEY.
ELLIOT HEALEY came to N. from Raymond and lived on the John Hanaford place. He moved to Alexandria, where he d. at 80. He had four sons and a dau., but one of whom resided in N.
Second Generation.
ISAAO H. HEALEY, b. at N., 1813; m. (first), Cynthia D. Stevens and had a dau., Annette. He m. (second), Maria M. Clark of Newbury, Vt., b. April 5, 1823, and had two sons and a dau. He d. Jan. 12, 1890. She resides with her dau. on the Oak Hill road.
Third Generation.
JAMES C. HEALEY, b. at Alexandria March 27, 1851; m., Sept. 25, 1877, Orissa Bean of South Boston and had one son. They removed to Fargo, N. D., in 1881, but returned to Nashua in May, 1892, where they have since resided.
MINNIE C. HEALEY, b. at Alexandria March 3, 1848; m. (first), at Norfolk, Va., March 7, 1865, William J. Sanborn of Bristol. They had one son,. Charles M. Sanborn, b. July 25, 1867, now of Minneapolis, Minn. She m. (second), Alpheus Keniston of N. and resides on the homestead.
ELLIOT C. HEALEY, b. at Alexandria, 1858; m., Nov. 25, 1880, Emma J. Glines of N. and resided for some years at Tilton, later removing to Concord, where she d. Oct. 24, 1892. They had one dau.
Fourth Generation. (Children of James and Orissa Bean Healey.)
ROBERT HEALEY, b. at N. July 21, 1879; d., at Nashua, Jan. 26, 1902. BELLE M. HEALEY, b. June 6, 1884, at Fargo, N. D. BLANCHE M. HEALEY, b. May 29, 1886, at Fargo.
(Child of Elliot and Emma Glines Healey.) GLADYS HEALEY, b. at Concord April 22, 1891; resides at Lowell, Mass.
HEATH I.
IBAAO HEATH was b. in Andover in 1795 and moved to N., on the Gerrish road, in 1826. He and his brothers, David and Joshua, cleared the 100 acres of the original farm of a heavy growth of wood and timber. ' It often took three or four days to burn up the immense logs. He later became sole owner and lived and d. there in 1863. He m. Sally Gove, b. 1779 at Deerfield, and d. 1870.
Second Generation.
DAVID GOVE HEATH, b. at Andover near the head of Webster Lake. He m., Nov. 8, 1837, Sarah L. Moore of Canterbury. He erected a
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