USA > New Hampshire > Hillsborough County > Antrim > History of the town of Antrim, New Hampshire, from its earliest settlement to June 27, 1877, with a brief genealogical record of all the Antrim families > Part 76
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).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78
" Nor pain, nor grief, nor anxious fear Invade thy bounds. No mortal woes Can reach the peaceful sleeper here ! While angels watch the soft repose."
This notice of one man is allowed to be thus lengthy, because this one man had so much to do with shaping the character of this town; coming here at the age of twenty-three, growing up with this people, having so wide an influence over their social, educational, and religious affairs,
756
GENEALOGIES.
being a marked man for counsel in all this part of the State, being favor- ably known in New England, and leaving impressions that are good and strong to this hour, - it is proper that he have unusual space and notice. Let it not, however, be inferred from this honest praise, that Mr. Whiton was a faultless man. He felt and deplored his imperfections. He spoke of them with sadness, on the bed of death. But they were not conspic- uous. People saw his virtues rather. In him, the good was overwhelm- ingly in the majority. In purity and saintliness, he was, at least, a leader among men! Mr. Whiton's work in Antrim was a great work. It will stand grandly in the day of God. There was no noise about it, and not much glory of this world. He labored under many geographical difficul- ties, and his field was one that demanded vigorous thought and earnest effort. It was no place for ease or dreams. To be sure, he was backed by noble men and godly women. He commanded a strong army, - but he must be at the head ! Brave, faithful, patient, undiscouraged, he led the way for forty-five years ! Another generation has grown up since his departure ; but his memory is sacred and precious to us all ! Many aged people, in all parts of the land, once living here, speak to-day of Dr. Whiton with reverent love ! His praise is everywhere ! And now he and his flock are together; wherever the good are, there are they. And it is fitting that the last public tribute he may receive on earth should close with the memorial lines of his gifted daughter, Mrs. Richards : -
"Sainted father ! now no longer Will thy counsel and thy prayer Guide our lonely, weary footsteps O'er life's pilgrim way of care. Oh, the loss! how much we feel it! That thy voice, so mild and sweet, Now no more will call upon us Blessings from the mercy-seat!
" Now the insatiate grave encloses Thee - dear father - shepherd, guide - And thy form in peace reposes, With thy flock on either side! Near, thy dear old church is standing, Pointing to thy home of rest; While its shadow almost presses On the turf above thy breast !
"Here thy warning voice has echoed,. Here thy welcome face appeared; Beds of death and hearts of sorrow Often comforted and cheered! But no more upon these hill-tops Will thy beauteous feet appear ; Never more thy hand so gentle Wipe away the falling tear!
-
757
GENEALOGIES.
" But, instead, thy song of rapture Through immortal arches thrills ; And thy crown with gems is sparkling, Gathered from these rock-bound hills. Father, - all thy toil is over, Life's rude conflict now is past ;
All earth's griefs and cares and watchings End in heavenly rest at last! "
Mrs. Whiton, his honored wife, was born Aug. 2, 1783. She was a fee- ble child and had fits, for which her parents tried everything without avail, and finally small-pox was recommended. She had that disease in a mild form, and never had a fit afterwards ! Mrs. Whiton thus alludes to it in her reminiscences written in 1856 : -
" Accordingly, when I was thirteen and a half years old, I was inocu- lated for it; . . was carried to a log house, father having secured the attendance of a physician who took his family in; also Mrs. Chace, the minister's wife, who took her children ; also an excellent nurse, who was pious, as the physician said the small-pox would kill or cure."
The following from the same source speaks of her life in Antrim: -
" October, 1808, the 18th of the month, we were married and set off for Antrim. The first person to whom I was introduced was good old Dea. Aiken, who was standing on the brow of the hill near his house. . The South Village, at that time, was small, houses low, but three or four two-story houses in it. One of the number was Esquire Hopkins's [Arthur Miller's], where we boarded six weeks. On the 5th of December, we went to our house [Eben Bass place].
up behind Mr. Whiton. At nine o'clock I walked up to Stephen
. I rode and went down to sweep my house.
Paige's and asked for lodging. I then took a hemlock-broom We slept on a bed on the floor in the chamber where I could look out through the crevices of the roof and see stars. When night came my goods had not arrived, but supper must be got. I set out a new wash-form for a table, boiled some pork, made a cup of tea, spread my rude table with the best I had, and we thus partook of our first meal.
" Here my trials commenced. I was a minister's wife, the first that had ever resided in the town. Of course I was a mark to be shot at. Every minute action was noticed and remarked upon. Some thought I was too dressy. I wore white and prints, while the dress of my neigh- bors was of home manufacture. One remarked I was a mighty lady but she would not knuckle to me ! . . . The first winter I spent in Antrim (1808) we were treated with much attention after the farmers ' went below,' as they called it, and procured their stores for the year. Our invitations to visit were frequent. I was a stranger to the customs in town. .
.. . Their practice was to invite their neighbors, - a sort of party ; when assembled, a waiter was passed round filled with tum- blers, each one containing raw rum and brown sugar, with tea spoons to eat the' sugar. The afternoon would be spent socially, and before nine
758
GENEALOGIES.
o'clock, or perhaps a little later, the guests would be invited to take their seats at a loaded table, - roast turkey, fowls, potatoes, onions, pickles, apple-sauce, toast, various kinds of pies, doughnuts, and cake, with a good cup of tea. Being unaccustomed to Thanksgiving dinner in the evening, my stomach not strong enough to bear it, I went home almost every night about sick. . We had no wood except green hemlock, no stoves used in that day, and of course an open fire-place. .. . . It was then the practice for ministers to keep a sort of tavern for their brethren in the ministry. They would go two or three miles out of their way to pass the night with a minister to whom they were entire strangers. . In the spring of 1812 we put up the front part of our house [Eben Bass house], which stood a year without a room finished. In the spring of 1813 the lower rooms and front entry were finished and furnished.
I found it more difficult to rock the cradle of age
than infancy. My immediate family were all spared to me, - no break for forty-eight years; we lived in Antrim for forty-four years with much harmony. . . Mr. Whiton [at the close of his pastorate, Jan. 1, 1853] urged them to settle a gospel minister, and by all means keep united, and do it immediately after his dismission took effect. He was then applied to to go to North Ashburnham, and he labored there till the latter part of February, . came home for a visit, -
received an invitation from Bennington to labor there,
com-
menced in Bennington the first Sabbath in March. . . . The inhab- itants [of Antrim] were pious, intelligent, and well calculated to make a minister comfortable in his profession ; some of them being so well read, that they could and often did volunteer their advice to their youthful pas- tor. It seemed strange to me, having been taught to look up with great reverence and confidence to a minister of the gospel. When I was a child you could not appeal to higher authority : but, alas ! at the present day, the hat is not raised, the bow and courtesy not made ; and if you can get by a child without its running against you, esteem yourself fortu- nate. While I was boarding at Esquire Hopkins's (1808), they made a party on our account. Their front room was well filled with guests, - men and their wives. The men came in, dressed in plain homespun cloth, with a colored silk handkerchief on the neck for a cravat, every one of them except Dea. Baldwin's father, who wore a white one. But little attention was paid to dress, by male or female. The object was to work for a living."
Mrs. Whiton was a most excellent woman, and was greatly loved by the people, and, indeed, by all that knew her ; yet she was generally understood to stand a little on her dignity, when she first came to this town. This arose from the fact that she was diffident, and was unac- quainted with the ways and manners of a country place. In the first year of Mr. Whiton's ministry they were invited to a remote part of the town to marry a couple. They found a large company of guests, and, all being in readiness, the ceremony was soon over. Mrs. Whiton hap- pened, just then, to notice one woman who seemed to be quite alone, so she went and sat down by her, and commenced conversation; spoke of
759
GENEALOGIES.
the pleasant occasion, the large company, the pleasant looks of the bride, etc. The woman, not knowing to whom she was speaking, responded very freely, and then added : "They say Mr. Whiton has just brought his wife to town. I've never seen her, but they say she is a mighty lady; why, she wouldn't speak to common folks like you and me !" Mrs. Whiton was a lady in the best sense of that word. In her place, her suc- cess was not less than her husband's in his place. She was prudent, genial, lively, a good scholar, full of sympathy for the afflicted, attractive in person, and an earnest Christian, - in short, a model wife for a minis- ter. She took great interest in every good work, and deserves great praise. Her life was of the kind not to be written in history, but there are few who have fulfilled their mission with more dignity and more suc- cess, - all which the records of another world will show clearer than those of earth. But this much is written of her, as the preceding sketch is of him, as a tribute, which their long and useful lives seemed to require at our hands.
The children of Rev. Dr. John M. and Abby (Morris) Whiton are as follows : -
1. JAMES MORRIS, [b. Nov. 9, 1809; m. Mary E. Knowlton of Boston, and was many years a merchant in that city, being called a " Christian merchant." He was an energetic mem- ber of the old South Church. On retiring from successful mercantile pursuits he moved to Plymouth and became superintendent of the Boston, Concord, and Montreal Rail- road, and in that place and office suddenly d. March 22, T 1857, but a few months after his father, leaving chil- dren : -
Rev. James Morris, Ph. D., (b. in Boston, April 11, 1833 ; graduated at Yale College in 1853 ; m. Mary E. Bartlett of Brooklyn, N. Y., May 1, 1855; taught Worcester High School one year, was rector of Hopkins Grammar School, New Haven, ten years, pastor at Lynn, Mass., ten years, and principal of Williston Academy, Easthampton, two years. Is now pastor of Congregational Church, Newark, N. J. He received the degree of Ph. D. from Yale College in 1861. He is distinguished as a writer and author, the following being among his publications : " Hand-book of Latin Lessons," published in 1860; "First Lessons in Greek," 1861; "Is Eternal Punishment Endless ?" 1876 ; " Six Weeks' Preparation for Reading Cæsar," published 1877. He has children : Mary Bartlett, James Bartlett, and Helen Isabel.)
Mary E., (m. Charles F. Washburne of Worcester, Mass.)
760
GENEALOGIES.
Charlotte, (wife of Rev. Walcott Calkins of Buffalo, N. Y., now of Newton, Mass.)
Miriam B., (wife of Henry B. Opdyke of New York City. ) John M., (of Plainfield, N. J.)
Grace, (wife of Rev. Washington Choate, late of Manchester. )] 2. ELIZABETH D., [b. March 7, 1811 ; m. Rev. Josiah Ballard of Carlyle, Mass., in 1835. Mr. Ballard was b. in Peterbor- ough, graduated at Yale in 1833, was settled in Nelson, and afterwards in Carlyle, Mass., where he d. Dec. 12, 1863, aged 57. Mrs. Ballard d. Aug. 10, 1862, and their bodies were among the first buried in our lovely Maplewood ceme- tery. She was a woman of rare abilities, and ever cher- ished a great love for her native Antrim. She left two children : -
Edward Otis, (b. in Nelson, April 19, 1837, and is now a mer- chant in Boston.)
Catherine S., (now Mrs. Emery B. Smith of Melrose, Mass.)]
3. HELEN D., [b. July 8, 1814 ; m. Prof. Cyrus S. Richards of Meriden, and d. in 1860. She was a woman of dignity and grace and a devoted Christian. Her children are : -
Helen M., (wife of Rev. Geo. P. Herrick, missionary at Con- stantinople.)
Rev. Charles H., (b. in 1839 ; settled as pastor of the Congre- gational Church in Madison, Wis.)
Abby, (wife of Rev. Frank Woodbury of Rockford, Ill.) Willie H., (now living in Texas. )]
4. ABBY M., [b. May 31, 1817; m. Charles P. Whittemore of Bennington, July 29, 1841, who d. in 1874.]
5. MARY C., [b. Feb. 20, 1819 ; m. 1st, George C. Duncan of this town, Nov. 3, 1841, who d. in 1855. She m. 2d, John M. Taylor, son of Andrew Taylor, and nephew of Dea. John Taylor, May 14, 1857; and d. Nov. 10 of the same year, aged 38.]
6. JOHN MILTON, [b. March 7, 1821 ; m. 1st, Fidelia Wilson of Nelson, who d. in 1860, leaving five children. He m. 2d, Mary J. Hartshorn of Franklin, Conn., in 1862. He was in trade awhile in Stoddard, also at Antrim Center, and now resides in Norwich, Conn. His children are as follows, all but the last two being the children of his first wife': -
Henry Albin, (b. in Stoddard, June 25, 1845.)
John M., (b. same place, June 4, 1848.)
761
GENEALOGIES.
Helen M., (b. same place, Jan. 9, 1852; m. Edward B. Wood- worth of Concord, September, 1875.) Frank H., (b. in same town, May 26, 1854.)
Mary Fidelia, (b. in Warren, July 10, 1859. ) George Morris, (b. in Marlborough, Mass., Dec. 4, 1863. )
Abby Morris, (b. June 13, 1866, in Boston. )]
WHITTEMORE.
The name has been spelled in a variety of ways, as Whytemere, Whit- more, Whitmere, Whitamor, Whatmore, Whittemore, etc. There is ample proof that these are all of one stock. It is said that Shakspeare's name was spelled ten different ways while he was living ; and it would take a man of numbers to count up the variations since the poet's death ! An individual called " John " was knighted on the field for valorous con- duct in England in the year 1230, and received a tract of land called " Whytemere," or " white meadow." Hence he was called "Lord John de [of] Whytemere." The " de " (or of) was dropped about 1475. The family lived in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, England, though branches appear elsewhere, as in Shropshire, etc. An old record found in London in 1871 makes the line as follows : -
1. John de Whytemere.
2. Philip de Whytemere ; died in 1300.
3. John de Whytemere ; died in 1365.
4. Richard de Whytemere; died in 1386.
5. Richard de Whytemere.
6. Richard de Whytemere ; died in 1442.
7. Thomas Whytemere ; died in 1483.
8. Richard Whytemere ; died in 1504.
9. Richard Whitmore ; died in 1595.
10. William ; and Thomas, who died in 1617, leaving, among others, a son Thomas. This last-named was the ancestor of the Whittemores of America. He was born about 1594 and died in 1660. He and his wife Hannah were married in England, and they had five children when they came over in 1642. He settled in Charlestown, Mass. (that part now Malden), and had in all twelve children. His will was proved June 25, 1661. The second, or nearly the oldest child, was John, baptized in Hitchin, England, Feb. 11, 1638 ; married, first, Mary Uphamn of Wey- mouth, Mass. ; second, Mary Miller. From these descended the Whitte- mores of Pembroke, Lexington, Mass., Rindge, and many others. Na- thaniel, another son who came over with his father, Thomas, settled in Spencer, Mass., and was ancestor of the Peterborough Whittemores. A younger brother was ancestor of Hon. E. S. Whittemore of Sandwich, Mass., and others. Many branches of this large family have come to honor. The parish register of Hitchin, England, speaks of the father of the American Thomas thus : " Apr. 26, 1617 was buried Thomas White- more Sen. widower, who by his will dated the 5th of May 1613 gave £20 to trustees for the best sort of poor people in Hitchin."
1
762
GENEALOGIES.
The Whittemores of Greenfield and Antrim descended from Daniel Whittemore, another son of the first Thomas this side the water. He was two or three years old when his father settled in Charlestown, Mass. This Daniel married Mary, daughter of Richard Mellen of Charlestown, March 7, 1662. They had five children, of whom one was John Whitte- more, born Feb. 12, 1664-5. This John married Ruth Bassett and had nine children. Benjamin, a son of John and Ruth, married Sarah Ken- dall in Boston, Dec. 10, 1723. She came from Woburn, Mass. They had eight children, one of whom was Benjamin, Jr., who was born Oct. 9, 1724, married Hannah Collins April 28, 1746, and died in Greenfield, Jan. 10, 1798. The oldest child of Benjamin and Hannah (Collins) Whitte- more was Maj. Amos, who was born near the close of 1746. We have no record of the place or date of his birth. He settled in Greenfield in 1771, or earlier, but did not get the deed of his land there till early in 1772. Maj. Amos Whittemore married Molly Taylor of Milford. Was perliaps the leading man in Greenfield for fifty years. His descendants are numerous. Some of them occupy the old first settlement of the major to the present day. His wife was aunt to Mrs. Ira Cochran of Antrim. She died Nov. 27, 1837, aged ninety-two. Maj. Amos died Aug. 18, 1827, aged eighty-one. They had a large family of children. Those who reached mature years were as follows : Collins, who married Mehitable Fuller, and settled on the place in Hancock where his son, Hiram Whitte- more, recently died ; Asa, who married Hannah Burnham of Greenfield, and lived and died in Hancock ; Amos, who married Polly Savage, lived in Greenfield, and was father of Amos, Alfred, and John of Bennington ; Benjamin, who married Deborah Perry, lived and died in Bennington, and was father of Charles P., Timothy of Boston, Emily, Francis M. Whit- temore, and others ; Polly, who married Paul Cragin of Greenfield ; Bet- sey, who married Dr. Moses Marslı ; Jacob, of Antrim ; William, noticed below ; and Abram, who married Martha Marshall and died on the old homestead in Greenfield. His son, Marshall Whittemore, Esq., now occupies the same. Maj. Amos came to Greenfield from Nottingham. He held the rank of major in the Revolutionary army ; but I am not able to learn much concerning his military record. On one occasion he received orders to march the next morning. But he was wofully short of pantaloons at that time, and knew not what to do. Nevertheless, after consultation with his blessed wife, Molly Taylor, he went to the barn, though now three o'clock in the afternoon, and sheared a sheep ; and from the wool his wife carded, spun, wove, and made up a pair of pants, ready for the morning's march ! Who says that woman isn't equal to anything ?
HON. JACOB WHITTEMORE, son of Maj. Amos and Molly (Tay- lor) Whittemore, was born in Greenfield, Oct. 12, 1780, and died in An- trim, Oct. 14, 1860. The name Jacob appears occasionally in the family, there being one or two among the grandchildren of Thomas who came over. Jacob who came here married Rebecca Bradford of Hancock. She was a sister of Rev. E. P. Bradford of New Boston. He came here and located on the Philip Riley place in 1809, and remained there till
763
GENEALOGIES.
death. Was a vigorous and able man. He had all manner of town offices year after year. Was representative of Antrim in 1818, 1819, 1838, 1839, and 1840. Was also high sheriff under Gov. Pierce. Was one of the judges of the court of common pleas. Was a man of good address, smooth, genial, and having a multitude of friends. His children were : -
1. DR. JACOB P., [b. May 16, 1810. After the district school, he was under the instruction of B. F. Wallace at the Branch, and then pursued his studies at Hopkinton Academy. Began the study of medicine at the age of twenty, but failing health compelled the relinquishing of it for a time, and he went into a store in Amherst. Afterwards he went into trade for himself at Hillsborough Bridge. But failing in business, he again took up the study of medicine, and re- ceived his degree at Dartmouth College in 1844, being thir- ty-four years of age. He then took the practice of a physi- cian in Gilmanton one year, and in the autumn of 1845 he settled in Chester. There he had a large and laborious practice for nineteen years, and had a great hold upon the esteem and affection of the community and the adjoining towns. He then, for the sake of an easier practice, sold out and moved to Haverhill, Mass., where he continued an ac- tive and " beloved physician " till his sudden death, June 17, 1873. He was a genial, pious, and noble man, and had many friends. All that was mortal of him was laid in Ma- plewood cemetery, Antrim. Dr. Whittemore m. Eliza Coch- ran of Antrim, Oct. 29, 1835. He left three children : - Frances M., (b. Dec. 16, 1836, in Hillsborough ; m. Charles E. Robinson of Concord, and resides in Jamaica Plain, Mass.)
Dr. James H., (b. in Hillsborough, June 15, 1839 ; studied medicine with his father, and with Prof. Dixi Crosby of Hanover. Took his degree of M. D. from Dartmouth Col- lege in 1862, after which he studied in the hospitals of Lon- don and Vienna. On return he was connected several years with the McLean Asylum, Somerville, Mass. He is now the resident physician and head of the Mass. General Hospital, Boston. Has risen fast and has a very honorable record in his profession.)
Mary T., (b. in Chester, April 12, 1849.)]
2. MARY T., [b. Dec. 12, 1811 ; m. Charles D. Robbins of Hills- borough in 1861.]
764
GENEALOGIES.
3. WILLIAM B., [b. May 22, 1814; m. 1st, Lucretia Dinsmore of Francestown ; 2d, Fanny Mills of Deering. The first wife d. February, 1861, leaving three children, named below. Mr. Whittemore lived chiefly at Hillsborough Bridge, and d. there May 9, 1876 Was often put in the highest offices by the people of that town. A genial and upright man.
William H., (b. in Antrim, June 5, 1845 ; d. in Hillsborough, May 25, 1865.)
Capt. Jacob B, (b. Dec. 9, 1851 ; was chosen captain of the Carter Guards, Hillsborough; has just been promoted to paymaster of the regiment ; lives on the farm of his grand- father, Hon. Jacob Whittemore )
Mary Ellen', (b. Nov. 4, 1853. )]
4. REED PAIGE, [b. Sept. 4, 1816 ; m. Sarah E. Dodge, daughter of John and Betsey (Dinsmore) Dodge of Bennington, Feb. 10, 1842. Received the homestead from his father. Has filled many places of trust at the call of his townsmen. Was representative in 1857 and 1858. Has been ten years, selectman. His children are thus : -
Charles A., (b. Jan. 23, 1843 ; m. Anna Woodbury, grand- daughter of Dr. P. P. Woodbury of Bedford, and lived on the farm with his father some years ; has children, all b. in Antrim : Arthur P., b. Oct. 27, 1870 ; Edwin J., b. June 22, 1874; and William R., b. April 19, 1877.)
George R , (b. May 21, 1845; m. Helen Grimes of Hillsbor- ough ; moved with one child, Henry E., to Boston, where he is now in business. )
Maria C., (b. March 19, 1848 ; m. Rodney Smith of Hillsbor- ough. They lived in Boston some years, but now live in Hillsborough.)]
5. HENRY D., [d. Aug. 24, 1825, aged 5.]
6. JOHN B., [d. Aug. 14, 1825, aged 2.]
WILLIAM WHITTEMORE, brother of Hon. Jacob, came to Antrim about 1807, and put up a store (now Gibson house, South Village) in which he traded for a few years, was succeeded by Miller and Caldwell, and moved back to Greenfield, where he died in 1876, aged ninety-four. His memory was remarkable, and he was a model of a genial, cheery, old- style gentleman. He married Lydia Collins Day. His adult children were:
1. WILLIAM H., [m. Sylvia Hayward, and lives in Peterborough. ] 2. MICHAEL A., [unm.]
765
GENEALOGIES.
3. LEONA C., [m. Horace Hopkins of Francestown.]
4. GEORGE J., [m. Lizzie Clement, and lives in Greenfield.]
5. ALMIRA P., [m. J. B. Dane, and lives in Hancock. ]
6. CORNELIA E., [m. Henry H. Duncklee, proprietor of Green- field Hotel.]
COLLINS WHITTEMORE, son of Collins and Mehitable (Fuller) Whittemore of Hancock, and grandson of Maj. Amos, was born Dec. 27, 1794, and died March 31, 1868, after great and long-continued suffer- ing. He married Ruth Jacobs of Carlyle, Mass., May 25, 1820; came here on to the Amos Blanchard place in 1841, where he resided till death. His children were : -
1. FRANKLIN J., [d. in childhood.]
2. SARAH R., [b. Jan. 31, 1828 ; m. E. R. Russell of Nashua, May 19, 1846 ; d. Sept. 20, 1847.]
3. HELEN M., [b. July 27, 1832; became second wife of E. R. Russell of Nashua, Nov. 16, 1848.]
4. JOHN J., [b. Aug. 5, 1835 ; m. Sarah G. Spalding of Nashua, Oct. 3, 1872 ; is a druggist in that city ; was one of the donors of the vestry at the Center.]
5. MARY C., [b. Nov. 20, 1840 ; m. John B. Woodbury of An- trim, May 28, 1861.]
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.