USA > New Hampshire > Strafford County > History of Strafford County, New Hampshire and representative citizens > Part 26
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Buffum and John H. Burleigh organized the Newichawannock Woolen Company, at South Berwick, Me., and in 1862 he was one of the organizers of Great Falls Woolen Company, and became its treasurer and general manager. He also owned a felt mill at Milton, and was partner in the wool- pulling establishment of L. R. Herron & Co. of Berwick, Me. He was a stockholder and director in the Great Falls Manufacturing Company from 1877 till his death.
Mr. Buffum was town clerk in 1843. 1844; moderator from 1848 to 1857, and selectman in 1846, 1871 and 1872. He was Representative in the Legislature of 1861 and 1862. State Senator in 1877 and 1878; he was president of the Senate in his second year, being the first Strafford county man to be thus honored as presiding officer. In 1880 he was delegate to the Republican National Convention at Chicago. The reader does not need to be informed that Mr. Buffum lived a very busy life; he was not only a very busy man, but a very able and successful one.
Mr. Buffum's wife was Charlotte E. Stickney, daughter of Alexander H. Stickney of Great Falls. They were married January 26, 1853. Their three sons-Edgar S., Harry A. and David H .- all grew up and became worthy and successful business men.
Capt. Isaac Chandler was born in Windsor, Conn., September 22, 1811. He received a common school education, and commenced work in a cotton factory at Ludlow, Mass., when he was sixteen years old. When he was nineteen he left there and came to Great Falls (Somersworth) in 1830 and engaged in covering rollers for the Cotton Manufacturing Company; his pay was twenty-two cents a day, and during the first year, at that, he laid by forty-nine dollars and seventy-six cents. He was then promoted to the mule-room, receiving a few cents more a day; he soon mastered that work and they set him at work mule-spinning, and he soon by far exceeded the efficiency of the old workmen, who tried to bluff and bother him. In 1835 he was placed in charge of the belt and roller shop, which position he held for a long series of years.
A young man who could save forty-nine dollars in a year on a salary of twenty-two cents a day, as he did, was sure to succeed; that saving charac- teristic ruled in his financial affairs all through life. He possessed financial foresight which led him to make investments in Government land in the West as opportunity presented. He began this practice as early as 1833. and kept it up and received large returns on his investments.
Notwithstanding he was connected with the mills, he found time to do lots of other things. He commanded a militia company four years and won his title of captain. In his mature years he was a director in the Great Falls
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National Bank; vice-president of the Somersworth Savings Bank; director in the Great Falls & Conway Railroad; one of the founders of the village library; Representative in the Legislature in 1851; for thirty years he was member of the school committee and was a powerful force in keeping the schools of the town a little ahead of other towns in educational methods. As school committeeman he soon made up for his own lack in boyhood education by making himself familiar with all the text-books used in all grades of the schools, so far as the English language was concerned. There was nothing stingy about Mr. Chandler's character or habits; he was a benevolent man, but he chose to be his own judge of how to spend his money on charity; he never turned the worthy poor away empty; on the contrary, he sought them out when they did not seek his aid.
Mr. Chandler's wife was Elizabeth Downing Furber, daughter of Wil- liam and Alice C. Furber. They were married November 26, 1837. Their children were: Mary Eliza; Charles Furber; Arabella; and Albert F. The sons were educated in the Somersworth schools and went West when young men, where they became successful business men and useful citizens in the communities in which they lived.
CHAPTER XXV HISTORY OF ROLLINSFORD (I)
ORIGIN OF TIIE NAME, THE FARMERS
Rollinsford adjoins South Berwick, Me., from which it is separated by the Salmon Falls river. Up to July 3, 1849, its territory was a part of Somersworth and its history, chiefly, to that date has been given under the head of Somersworth. Since it was incorporated as a separate town it has continued to flourish and progress in a manner very creditable to its citizens. It has always been regarded as one of the best farming towns in New Hampshire, and its early reputation in this respect has been maintained by the farmers of the present century; they are up to date in every farm improvement. The Rollinsford Grange is one of their latest institutions and it is one of the best in the state, and none better in the county. They have a fine hall in which to hold their meetings, both officially and socially; in fact, it is the social center of all interests outside of Salmon Falls village, which latter is made up largely of foreign elements that work in the mills.
The old, native Somersworth stock is as vigorous as at any time in its history. Many of the families on the farms can trace their ancestry back to the immigrant settlers of Old Dover, of which Somersworth was a parish. In their Grange meetings they discuss all the new questions of the day and keep up the old traditions of historic interest. It is a pleasure to ride on the various good roads in the farmning district and look at the elegant and well kept farm buildings, and gaze over the broad, smooth fields in the grow- ing and the harvest seasons of the year. If one wants to get a fine view of Rollinsford farms, the best place to get it is from the upper balcony of the Sawyer Memorial Observatory on Garrison Hill, the east part of which hill is in this town.
When Rollinsford was incorporated in 1849, the petitioners asked that it be so named, as the Rollins family was one of the most numerous and most prominent in the town. Of course, there were others equally promi- nent, but not so numerous. They owned large farms; they held important
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official positions from time to time, Judges, Representatives, Senators. Hence the origin of the name of the town.
ITS VARIOUS INDUSTRIES
Otherwise than farming, the chief industry of Rollinsford is the manu- facture of cotton goods at Salmon Falls village. The postoffice of the town is Salmon Falls, lience a great many persons take it for granted that is the name of the town. It is a very ancient name, dating away back to 1634, or earlier ; it may be so far back as the founding of Dover, and was so named because for ages before the white men came here the salmon fish used to come up this river in great "schools" from the salt water of the Pascataqua and Newichawannock rivers to get into fresh water to lay their spawn to hatch a new lot of salmon annually. It was precisely the same here as it is now in the Columbia river and other rivers of the western United States and Alaska. The salmon fish kept up this annual work in springtime until they were shut out from getting to fresh water by dams across the fresh water rivers at Quamphegan Falls and Cochecho Falls after 1640. When the fish could not get to the fresh water they ceased coming up the salt water rivers and became extinct in the waters along the New Hampshire and Maine coasts. They could not continue existence without the annual migra- tion to fresh water. An abundant supply was kept up for Dover fishermen until about 1640. So, of old, these falls in Rollinsford were called Salmon Falls, and the Indians had their spring fishing there for ages before the Englishmen built a log house on the bank of the river.
There was a saw mill at the falls at an early period, but the water power was not used to any extent until the Salmon Falls Manufacturing Company was incorporated, June 17, 1822. The incorporators and pioneers in this work were James Rundlett, Jeremiah Mason, John Haven and others; the General Court of New Hampshire empowered them to carry on the manu- facture of cotton, woolen and other goods at Salmon Falls in the town of Somersworth. They began work by erecting a mill where No. I now stands, for the manufacture of woolen cloth, and ran it with varying success until August 7, 1834, when it was totally destroyed by fire. This stroke of bad luck was very discouraging to the owners, and the political situation at Washington rendered it uncertain what prospect of success there might be if they rebuilt the burned walls, but two years later, August 26, 1836, the stockholders held a meeting and voted to rebuild; after the building was erected there was a difference of opinion among the managers as to what they should manufacture, woolen cloth, as formerly, or cotton cloth; this
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disagreement blocked all progress until 1844, when a number of Boston capitalists got hold of a controlling interest in the property of the corpora- tion; among these enterprising men were Abbott Lawrence, Amos Law- rence, William Appleton and others who had become interested in the mann- facture of cotton goods in other sections of New England. They put in the best machinery that could be bought in England and in due time had the mill manufacturing heavy cotton drillings and sheetings. The venture proved a success, to such a degree that four years later, in 1848, they built another mill of sixteen thousand spindles, and they increased their capital stock from $500,000 to $1,000,000. This No. 2 mill was 360 feet long, 60 feet wide and five stories high. The business prospered up to the beginning of the Civil war. A large village had grown up in Rollinsford, which changed the conditions of the town, socially and financially. A new class of people had come in. Of course, during the war, when cotton was scarce and high priced. the mills could not do much.
July 8, 1864, the company sustained a heavy loss by the total destruction by fire, of No. 1 mill, agent's house, machine shop, cloth room and other property. In the spring of 1865, when the managers saw the end of the war was near, and they could be assured of a good supply of cotton, they commenced to rebuild No. 1 mill in larger proportions, and put up brick wall three hundred and sixty-three feet long, fifty feet wide and five stories high, in which they installed 15,000 spindles, and business began to boom, and has been kept generally good ever since. They had been so prosperous that in 1876, by judicious alterations and improvements, the number of spindles was increased from 31,000 to 54,304. In connection with the mills they have a large picker house, a machine shop and a cloth room and a cotton house. Various improvements have been made since 1876, old machinery being displaced for that which is up to date in doing rapid and economical as well as first class work in cotton manufacture.
The company not only built the mills, but they practically built the village around it. They put up good houses for their help to live in; they laid out streets, and lent a helping hand to the town in various ways. All this was in the line of progress, but it reduced the prosperous village of Old Somersworth, at Rollinsford Junction, to a hamlet of prosperous farmers, and brought to an end the Parish of Summersworth, that was full of good works of worthy, high-minded, industrious men and women. The old church at the junction gave place to the new Congregational Church, which was organized May 1. 1846, with Mr. Samuel J. Spalding as pastor, which has done good work ever since. Mr. Spalding served as minister to June 9, 1851; among his successors are E. E. Atwater, 1852-1857: D. B. Bradford,
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1858-1862; S. F. Robie, 1866-1870; Selah Merrill, 1870-1874; George W. Christie, 1878-1880; R. G. Woodbridge, 1880-1890.
The Protestant Episcopal Church started in holding services in the vil- lage in 1830 under the supervision of the Rev. Henry Blackaller, who was then preaching at Great Falls. Services continued to be held in halls there, from time to time, until "Christ Church" was organized in February, 1831; their church edifice was dedicated July 24. Services were held quite regu- larly up to 1846, since when there have been very few services, at irregular intervals, owing to a change in the class of population.
A Methodist Episcopal Society was organized in the village in August, 1849, with twenty-four members and the following board of stewards: Thomas Foye, J. W. Worster, Foster Wilson, Orange Page, Amasa Fitch, N. G. Clary and R. C. Fernald. The society never erected a meeting house, but held services in halls, and the Episcopal Church when not in use until 1862, when the war had so prostrated business that the supply of the pulpit could not be maintained. Since then a union was established with the Con- gregational Church. Among those who served as pastors were Reverends Henry Drew, James Thurston, Samuel Budle, Byron Mark, Silas Green, Eliazer Smith, Simeon P. Heath and J. B. Holman.
The Roman Catholics erected an edifice for worship in 1857, near the present passenger station in the Salmon Falls village. The cost of the large brick building was about ten thousand dollars; the membership then was about six hundred. The first priest was the Rev. Michael Lucy, who served until 1865. He had under his charge also the Catholics at Great Falls, hold- ing services at both places each Sunday. He was succeeded by the Rev. Patrick Canovan, who was the priest over the church until 1870. His suc- cessor was the Rev. John Sullivan; next was Rev. William Herbert, whose successor was the Rev. Francis X. Bouvier, who was followed by able priests to the present day.
The Salmon Falls Manufacturing Company has had very able men for agents to manage its mills. Their names are as follows: James Rundlett from November 21, 1822, to July 14, 1823; Ebenezer Ball from August 21, 1823, to January 1, 1825; Joshua W. Pierce from January 1, 1825, to May 14, 1844; Pliny Lawton from May 14, 1844, to July 14, 1854; Varnum A. Shedd from July 14, 1854, to April 2, 1859; Joshua Converse from April 20, 1859, to July 15, 1875; O. S. Brown from July 31, 1875, until his death in 1904. His successors were Charles H. Plumer, one year ; J. P. Lewis, eight years; present agent, L. W. Omaley. The results of the management by these men were highly creditable to them and satisfactory to the stockholders,
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who have received good dividends during the larger part of the years the company has been in existence.
SOMERSWORTH MACHINE COMPANY
The Somersworth Machine Company has a foundry and machine shop about one-third of a mile down the river from the factory mills. This was established at an early period after the mills were in running order and supplied a long felt want, not only for the mills but also for all the business interests of Strafford county, as also of York county, Maine. For many years past it has been under the very efficient management of Edwin A. Stevens, Esq. About seventy-five men are employed and all sorts of castings are made, as business of the community may demand. For many years the manufacture of stoves was a specialty.
BANKS AND BANKING
There are two banks in the village, the Salmon Falls State Bank, and the Rollinsford Savings Bank. The former was incorporated as a state bank July 3, 1851, with a capital of fifty thousand dollars, divided into five hundred shares of one hundred dollars each. The first meeting was held September 15, 1851. William H. Morton was chosen cashier and held the office continuously, until his death in 1898. His successor, who had been assistant cashier for a number of years, was John Q. . A. Wentworth, who has held the office continuously to the present time. The bank commenced operation on the first day of January, 1852, and it has always been conducted in a sound and successful manner. The directors first chosen were: Hiram R. Roberts, Augustus Rollins Pliney Lawton Samuel Hiedden, John Tyler, Humphrey S. Watson and Oliver Lord. Mr. Roberts was elected president and held the office until his death in 1876. He was succeeded by his son, Joseph Doe Roberts, who holds the office at the present time.
The Rollinsford Savings Bank was incorporated by the New Hampshire Legislature in 1850, one year after the town was incorporated, and it com- menced operations soon after it was incorporated. The officers chosen by the incorporators were: President, Hiram R. Roberts; vice-presidents, Joseph Doe and Pliney Lawton ; trustees, Francis Plumer, William H. Mor- ton, John Woodman, Horace Barber, Robert C. Fernald and Charles T. Stewart ; secretary and treasurer, Justus D. Watson. In 1855 William H. Morton was chosen secretary and treasurer, which offices he held until his death in 1903. His successor was John Q. A. Wentworth, who has held
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the offices to the present time. On the death of President Hiram R. Roberts in 1876, Mr. Edwin A. Stevens was elected his successor, which office he holds at the present time.
On July 1, 1855, the deposits were $70,463; in July, 1877, the amount had increased to above $800,000. In the winter of 1877-78 there occurred a large depreciation of the resources of savings banks in general throughout New England, owing to the failure of western securities; Rollinsford bank suffered with the rest, hence the bank commissioners ordered the deposits of the bank to be cut down 25 per cent, which was done. But in a few years the affairs of the bank were managed so well that the cut down was restored to the depositors. Since then the bank has continued to prosper; the amount of its deposits at the present time is more than $734,539.04.
RAILROADS
The Boston & Maine Railroad has about four miles of road in Rollins- ford, from the Dover line at Garrison Hill to the east shore of the Salmon Falls river. It is double tracked and in every way in first class condition. There are two stations, one at Salmon Falls village, the other at Rollinsford Junction, where for a great many years was the center of business in Old Somersworth. At Rollinsford station is a branch track of about two miles and a half to Great Falls, the center of the city of Somersworth, where it connects with the Great Falls & Conway Railway for all northern points in New Hampshire. This latter road has about one mile of track in Rollins- ford, connecting with the eastern branch of the Boston & Maine at Conway Junction in Eliot, Maine. This road connects with the Portland & Ogdens- burg road at North Conway. In the touring season of each year there is an immense amount of travel through this town to the White Mountain region. The branch road from Somersworth gives the citizens of that city ample connection with all points south and west.
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CHAPTER XXVI
HISTORY OF ROLLINSFORD (II)
MILITARY RECORD
Although Rollinsford is a small town, and at the beginning of the Civil war in 1861 its total population was a little over 2,000 inhabitants, of whom 752 were males, men and boys, it did valiant service for the Union cause, as the following list of soldiers it furnished clearly shows. The following is a list of the men mustered into the United States service under the call of July 2, 1862, and subsequent calls, and assigned to the quota of Rollinsford, and to whom the town paid bounties, and was reimbursed in part by the amount affixed to each name, as awarded by the commissioners for the reimbursement of municipal war expenditures, appointed by the Legislature under the act of July, 1870 and 1871.
The commissioners took no cognizance of men who enlisted and were mustered in previous to the said call of July 2, 1862.1
John D. Mahony, Co. A. 4th Regt. ; Feb. 10, 1864; re-enlisted.
Charles E. Colcord, Co. C, 4th Regt. : Feb. 17, 1864; re-enlisted.
Daniel Murray, Co. K. 5th Regt. ; Dec. 7. 1863.
August L. Litchfield, Co. F. 7th Regt .; Feb. 28, 1864; re-enlisted.
Patrick H. Maguire. Co. F. 7th Regt. ; Feb. 29, 1864; re-enlisted.
Peter W. Morandy, Co. F. 7th Regt .: Feb. 29, 1864; re-enlisted.
Webster Miller, Co. F. 7th Regt .; Feb. 29, 1864; re-enlisted.
Thomas Ford, Co. F. 7th Regt .: Feb. 29, 1864: re-enlisted.
James Murphy, Co. I. 7th Regt. ; Feb. 28. 1864: re-enlisted.
Enoch Tebbets, Co. C, oth Regt .: Dec. 7, 1863.
Albert H. Perkins. Co. C. 9th Regt .: Dec. 8, 1863.
Albanois Worster, Co. C. 9th Regt .; Dec. 8, 1863. Michael Hogan, Co. F. roth Regt .; Sept. 16. 1862. James O'Brien, Co. F, Ioth Regt .; Sept. 16, 1862. John Liddon, Co. F. 10th Regt .: Sept. 16, 1862.
John Handlin, Co. F, 10th Regt .; Sept. 16, 1862.
Patrick Croger, Co. I. 10th Regt .; Aug. 20, 1862.
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Henry Downing, Co. I, 10th Regt .; Aug. 4, 1862. Charles W. Abbott, Co. E, Ioth Regt .; Sept. 1, 1862. James Coulter, Co. I, 10th Regt .; Aug. 23, 1862. Henry Redan, Co. B, 11th Regt .; Dec. 18, 1863. Frank Davis, Co. B, 1Ith Regt .; July 29, 1864. James McCluney, Co. D, 12th Regt .; Dec. 11, 1863. Thomas O'Brien, Co. D, 12th Regt .; Dec. 11, 1863. Thomas Kingley, Co. D, 12th Regt .; Dec. 11, 1863. Benjamin Williams, Co. D, 12th Regt .; Dec. 11, 1863. Thomas Douley, Co. D, 12th Regt .; Dec. 11, 1863. William Davis, Co. D, 12th Regt .; Dec. 11, 1863. Alonzo F. Curtis, Co. D, 9th Regt .; July 30, 1864. James Dorrity, Co. D, 9th Regt .; July 30, 1864. Edward Flannigan, Co. D, 9th Regt .; July 30, 1864. James Thompson, Co. D. 9th Regt .; July 30, 1864. George B. Brown, Co. D, 9th Regt .; July 26, 1864. Joseph Wentworth, Co. D, 9th Regt .; July 26, 1864. Michael McLaughlin, Co. D, 9th Regt .; July 28, 1864. James M. Thompson, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. George F. Shedd, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. James M. Pierce, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Levi J. Bradley, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. John M. Dore, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. N. B. Chapman, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. William H. Sythes, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Albion K. B. Shaw, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. William H. Aspinwall, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Charles B. Averill, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Ira A. Bedell, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18. 1862. David W. Bodge, Co. B. 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Richard Doherty, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. John Drew, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. John A. Dawson, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Franklin Grant, Co. B. 13th Regt .: Sept. 18, 1862. Charles E. Hartford, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. James O. Hanscom, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. John Hanscom, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. James F. Hayes, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. David Hodgdon, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Albion A. Lord, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862.
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William E. Lord, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. John McKinsey, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. David McGroty, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Charles H. C. Otis, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. William C. Powers, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. John Pendham, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Smith C. Page, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. William H. Peckham, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Orrin Rollins, Co. B. 11th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Orenzo Rollins, Co. B, 13th Regt .: Sept. 18, 1862. Reuben Randall, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. William F. Staples, Co. B, 13th Regt. ; Sept. 18, 1862. Charles B. Saunders, Co. B. 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Albert C. Thompson, Co B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Henry C. Willard, Co. B, 13th Regt .: Sept. 18, 1862. Horatio H. Warren, Co. B. 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Joseph Wiggin, Co. B, 13th Regt .; Sept. 18, 1862. Thomas Wentworth, Co. B, 13th Regt .: Sept. 18, 1862. Elisha E. Dodge, capt. Co. B. 13th Regt .; Sept 27, 1862 Frank J. Courson, Co. B, Ist Cav. ; March 28, 1864. Joseph H. Currier, Co. B, Ist Cav .; March 25, 1864. James McGregor, Co. B, Ist Cav .; March 26, 1864. Nelson C. Eastman, Co. B, Ist Cav. ; March 26, 1864. John S. Powers, Co. B, Ist Cav .: March 28, 1864. George A. Webster, Co. I, Ist Cav .; March 23, 1864. George H. Steele, Co. K, Ist Cav .; March 18, 1864. Luke R. Russell, Co. G. H. Art .; Sept. 4, 1864. Gilman Knight, Co. G, H. Art .; Sept. 4. 1864. John H. Sanbern, V. R. C. : Dec. 17, 1863. Charles N. Adams, U. S. A .; Feb. 9. 1864.
Frank Stanley, Ang 9, 1864. Richard Stanley, Aug. 9. 1864.
William Dorman, Ang. 21, 1864.
Charles Kermin, Aug. 2, 1864. George Williams, Aug. 2, 1864.
William L. Lane, Aug. 2, 1864.
Amos W. Pike, Ang. 2. 1864: substitute. John O'Neil, Aug. 17. 1864. James Sharracks, Sept. 8, 1864. Henry Hemp. Sept. 8, 1864.
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Frank S. Mildraw, Sept. 6, 1864.
Pierce B. Buckley, Sept. 6, 1864. Lewis Gerold, Sept. 6, 1864. Thomas Morrity, Sept. 7, 1864. Michael Medden, Sept. 7, 1864. Robert Carr, Sept. 7, 1864. William Williams, Sept. 17, 1863.
Charles Smith, July 3, 1863.
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