USA > New Hampshire > Carroll County > Tamworth > The Tamworth narrative (New Hampshire) > Part 26
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Elwell, Lucy: worked at father's mills, 132; recalls featherbed laundry, 136; recalls circus elephants, 151; de- scribes Henry Hodgkins at Brick School, 159
Emery, Elder: regarded as builder of Chocorua church, 217
F
factories: South Tamworth, 171 fairs: features, 150; trotting races, 151- 52
family homesteads: early, 66
farming basic, 134-35
farmlands South Tamworth, 175-76
featherbed laundry, 136 Female Cent Society, 94-96
female teachers effective, 159 fence-viewer, duties of, 79 Ferncroft Inn, 253 field-driver, duties of, 79 Finley-Cleveland families, 196, 199 Finley, John Sr., 197-98 Finley, John Jr., 306 first roads into Tamworth, 29
First World War, 291-92
flax: breaking, swingling, 133
flour: three grades of, 122 Folsom, David: nailmaker (1770),
205; parts for Hudson River chain, 207
Folsom, Colonel Levi, 179 forest fires, 245-46
Fowler, Deacon Oliver: quarrel with David Gilman, 93; on committee (1792) to Parson Hidden, 87
Fowlers Mills District school: 1865 report, 158
Freewill Baptist Church, 86
Friends Meeting-House, 283
G
geographical features Tamworth area, 15-16
Gerrish, Henry: directions given re- garding Tamworth survey, 42-43; his report on boundary, 43-44
Gilman, Benjamin: fulling mill pro- cess described, 123
Gilman, Colonel David: dispute with Oliver Fowler, 93; presented with George Washington's sword, 179
Gilman, Colonel Jere: altered Burton lines, 51, 52
Gilman, George Ed: excerpts from his register at Willow Inn, 144-45, 151
Gilman, Israel: dissenter, 90
Gilman, Joseph: shingle-making ma- chine, 123; tavern owner, 144
Gilman, Mary Jane: postmaster 40 years, 144
Gilman, Sanford: his house base for lumbermen, 124
Gilman family: name associated with Tamworth village, 64; members mentioned, 16, 41, 53, 66, 86, 95-98 passim, 114, 178
Gilmanton: parent town many Tam- worth settlers, 66
Glass Blowers, annual visits, 151 Gorges, Sir Ferdinando, 12
government by petition, 38
H
Hackett, Hezekia: good shot, 66 Hackett Hill District school: 1865 report, 154
Harte, Charles Rufus: settles chain links legend, 206-08
Harvard professors: many of, among summer buyers, 226
hatcheling, 133
Hayford family: name associated with Chocorua, 64; members of men- tioned, 87, 95, 129, 275 Hayfords'-in-the-Fields, 275
329
Head, James: name appears on Brad- ley's affidavit, 50; early settler, 60; homestead located, 65
Hemenway Reservation, 277 Hersey, James: survey map by, 45
Hibbard Hill: source of name, 246-47 Hidden, John: excerpts from Carroll
County Map subscribers notebook, 278-80
Hidden, Mrs. Samuel: prime mover Female Cent Society, 94
Hidden, Parson Samuel: influence on Tamworth people, 2-3; unanimously chosen preacher, 86; letter of ac- ceptance, 87; youth, 100-104 passim; ardor of, 100, 107; description of, 101; ordination, 102-03; revivals conducted by, 106-08, 109; number of sermons phenomenal, 109; cam- paign against illiteracy, 109-10; founded Social Library, 113-117; efforts in schools, 152-53
Hidden, Sarah: tribute to Hannah Chick, 158
Hidden family: name associated with Tamworth village, 64; homestead, 278
Hill & Waddell: first big lumber operator, 128
Hodgkins, Henry: teacher for 64 years, 159-60
Hodgkins, T. B., account-book medi- cinal liquors, 142-43
hog-reeve: duties of, 79
household improvements from 1823, 84
house raisings, 104-05
Howard, David: one of three found- ers Chocorua, 202-03
Howard, James: shoemaker, 212, 214 Hubbard District School: 1865 report, 154 Huckins, Laura: teacher, 164
Hudson River chain links legend, 205- 07
hundredth anniversary Parson Hid- den's ordination, 111-12 hunting as a sport secondary, 138 husking bees, 152
I
ice skating, 132 identification marks: cattle, 78 indentured servants, 237-38
Indian: tribes of New Hampshire, 19- 20; way of life, Pequaket, 21-22; white man's heritage from, 22-24 Indians: Pequaket, 14; settlers' treat- ment of, 15, 20-21; at war, 21 Inns, 145-46, 253, 275, 275-76 interior decoration: changes in tastes for, 147
Iron Works District school: 1865 re- port, 154
Iron Works Social Circle. See Benev- olent Association
J
Jackman, Richard: one of 4 first Tam- worth settlers, 65
Jackson District school: 1865 report, 156
James, Henry: famous walk, 224-25 James, Professor William, 224 James, William, 225
Jewell, Bradbury: one of selectmen (1778) complaining to General Court, 40; discovers Birch Intervale, 189; early settler Stevenson Hill, 235-37 passim; first wife Ruhamah, 236; second wife, Ann Elizabeth, 236-37, 252; move to Birch Inter- vale, 237; children to Caleb Brown's school, 242; fights forest fires, 245- 46
Jewell family: members mentioned, 65, 86, 95, 188, 189, 237, 238 Juniper Lodge, 275-76
K
Kilham family: artists, 200-01
Kimball family: Newton, proud of his mittens, 131; his son Melvin brought up in mills, 131-32; Elmer, ice-skater of note, 132
L
land grants: carelessly bestowed, 12; confusion in, 25
Land Ordinance of 1785, 39 leather-sealer: duties of, 79 levees, 152
linen: steps in making, 133
liquor license holders, 141-42
Locke, Benjamin: and his mill, 128; raises a barn, 128-29
logging on Bearcamp River, 167-68 logrolling, 67
330
Lombard, Julia: her part in hydro- electric plant Wonalancet, 258; kennel Chinook breed sold, 262 Lord, Wentworth and brother: pion- eers of South Tamworth, 166-67 lumber drives: Harry Berry reminis- ces, 168
lumber-sealer: duties of, 79-80
M
mail routes established, 76-77 maple sugar product, 176
Marston Hill District school: report, 155
1865
Mason, Captain John: and New Hampshire patent, 12
Mason, Larkin: recalls Parson Hidden in church, 105; recalls same in school work, 109-10; director School District Number 9, 155-56; infused life in South Tamworth Methodist Church, 177, 186; family, 181-82; responsibility for Town House, 182-183; state agent Union Army, 183-84; chairman Ordination Rock Centennial, 185; genial storekeeper, 186
Mason family: name associated with South Tamworth, 64; members mentioned, 25, 66, 86, 87, 93, 95, 134, 141
Masonian Papers: samples, 28-34 Masonian Proprietors: terms made in town grants, 26; 28-34, passim
masting, earliest industry, 71-73 masts for King's navy: principal wealth believed in at first, 26; the murdered mast, 73
mast ships, 72
mealbag mittens, 131
Medar, Timothy: one of selectmen (1778) complaining to General Court, 40; first town clerk, 77; on committee to Samuel Hidden, 87; charter member, Social Library, 114; avid reader, 116
medical ignorance, 83 Merrill, Samuel, 212
Methodist meetinghouse interior, 105- 06
millers: in Tamworth, 123-32 passim; in South Tamworth, 168-71
mills: Arthur Wiggin's spool mill biggest, 113; saw and grist dove- tailed operations, 122-23; all types
at South Tamworth, 167-71; in Chocorua, 210-11 Moody, Ed: dog driver, 268 money system in New Hampshire, 73- 74
Morse, Professor Edward Sylvester, 229
Moulton, Colonel Jonathan: control- led Tamworth allotments, 28, 39; accused of false play, 51-52; youth, 54-55; protest against being ousted from office, 55-56; Tamworth's re- lations with, 56-57; fattened ox, 57; warning published against, 57; ad- vertises for Irish settlers, 58; and the Devil, 58-59; chief agent in get- ting Tamworth chartered, 61; slow in complying with Tamworth's re- quest for preacher, 86
Moulton, Richard: in charge of dogs Third Byrd Expedition, 268
Mountain District school. See Cold River
N nails: machine made, 205 naming of Tamworth, 60, 62
Nealley District school: 1865 report, 154-55
New England Forestry Foundation, 277
New England rum, 140-41
New England Sled Dog Club, Inc., 257
Nickerson, Ezra: bearer of Chocorua legend, 17
Nickerson, John Henry: boarding- house keeper with his Aunt Cla- rinda, 222; zealous for Chocorua Library, 230
Nickerson, Reverend Joshua, 86
Old Home Day (1906), 199 O
Old Home Week: various parades in, 149-51
old houses: story-and-a-half survivals, 28; ghost exorcized General Moul- ton's house, 58; Mark Jewell's called very first house, 65; Captain Enoch's Tavern, now Dr. Remick's office, 143; Joseph Gilman's, 144; Larkin homestead, 182; Emery farm- house moved by oxen, 222-23
Old Meeting-House Hill District school: 1865 report, 154
331
old newspaper items, 36-38 ordination Samuel Hidden, 102-03 Ordination Rock inscriptions, 103 origin Chocorua community, 202-03 oxen: used in building stone walls, 68; handling of, taught from father to son, 69; names for, 70; yokes for, 70; indispensable in masting, 71, 73; in early roadbreaking, 148-49; 40 used in hauling church, 183; probably for fishing up ore, 204; dragging anchors from Tamworth Iron Works, 208
P
Page, Arthur: last blacksmith, 65
Page, Edgar, recalls lumbering days at Hill & Waddell's, 128
Page, John M .: family struck by typhus, 83; member Social Library, 114
Page, Lucy: outstanding craft worker, 135
parents' control over children's earn- ings, 159
Passaconaway (Sachem), 19-20, 23
passenger pigeons: trapping of for food, 138
Paugus, Indian chief: psychological effect of his death, 21
Paugus Mills, 125, 126-27 Peak House, 146
pearlash. See potash
Pease District school: 1865 report, 155 peddlers, 147-48
Pequaket: Indian way of life at, 21-22 Perkins, True: salt of the earth, 212
petition: Sandwich and Tamworth men, for proper wagon road, 30; 1796, to settle lines between Tam- worth, Eaton and Burton, 40-42; 1808, of Eaton and Burton, resi- dents, 45-46; of Tamworth residents (1809), 46-47; of Sandwich residents (1809), 47-48; of Tamworth citi- zens for a preacher (1778), 85-86 petitioners in boundary disputes: mo- tives of, discussed, 52
petitions: impressiveness, 41
Philbrick, David: one of 4 first Tam- worth settlers, 64
Philbrick, Stephen: best known of the name, 64; dissenter, meetinghouse site, 90
Philbrick District school: 1865 report, 158
pitchpine tree: featured in boundary disputes, 42-44 passim; confusion caused by, 45
place names: origins of, in New Hampshire and Vermont, 61-62; variants in spelling, 62-63
Plains District school: 1865 report, 157
planting, Birch Intervale, 237
Plumer, Governor William: criticism of Jonathan Moulton by, 54-55
population: rise of, in Tamworth vil- lage, 122
postrider's job not easy, 76-77
potash: Chocorua riverside industry, 209-10
pound needed for stray animals Tam- worth area, 78
President Cleveland: association with Finley's, 196; fishing enthusiast, 198- 99; cribbage with John Boyden, 199; memorial wall, origin of, 199- 200
prices: bricks for Bradbury Jewell's house, 65; rum and tobacco (1780's), 74; postage (after the Revolution), 76; a yard of cloth (1800's) from customer's wool, 79; hauling hay and use of horse (1800's), 84; In- dian corn, rye, and wheat (1794), 91; rent of pews (1794), 91; sheep- skins (1796), 115; passenger pigeons, Colonial times on, 138; liquor (1855), 143; board per guest Trout- dale Inn (1800's), 146; private school tuition (1800's), 164; coffins (1800's), 169; spruce gum, 177; moving meetinghouse (1850's) 183; early room rent at Hanover, 192; a cord of bark (1870's), 209; potash (1870's), 209; various, in Merrill's account-book 1840's, 212-213; per ton of hay (1803), 237; tuition fees (1809), 242
professors received philosophically by natives, 229-30 Prohibition: state, 142
proposed sites for Tamworth meet- inghouse, 88-90 passim
Proprietor's Clerk a profitable job, 28 punishments in schools, 158-59, 162
Q quilting bees, 152; money earned for making a quilt, 220
332
R
railroad: travel from Boston, 172; stage coaches deserted for, 175
regional attractions: mountains and lakes a lure, 4-5; autumn foliage, 6 Remick Brothers: fourth generation in store, 137
Remick, Enoch: first sheriff Carroll County, 136
Remick family, 84, 87, 94, 95
revivals: great source of church mem- bership, 106-08
Revolutionary War: informality of fighting, 285, 287; Tamworth men, 286, 287; financing of the army, 286; First New Hampshire Regiment formed, 288; poor provisioning, 288-89; muster days, 290
Rich, Edgar: story of murdered mast, 73
"ride and tie," 92 River Road. See Route 25
road-breaking, winter: old style, 148- 49; rollers, 149
roads, early: South Tamworth, 167- 172
Rollins, Dr., photographer, iris grow- er, 276
Route 25: development of, 172. See Dudley, John
rum, various uses of, 143
Runnells, J. Sumner: teacher at Brick School, 157; tinted photo lost and regained, 215; beloved in Chocorua for his gentle handling of the Church, 218; Huldah, his wife, 219 Runnells, Sumner: private secretary Governor Merrill, 212; his daughter Alice, 212; President Pullman Co., 221
Rust, Henry: letters regarding John Dudley's road, 29, 30
S
St. Andrews-in-the-Valley, Episcopal, 178
salaries: seldom paid Reverend Shaw of Moultonborough, 59; Parson Hidden voted money instead of produce, 91, 102; lapse in, 108; Elder Runnells' (1880's), 218
"sale work,": wages earned in, 137- 38; introduced sewing machine, 137; specialization in, 138
Salter, William, 225
Sanborn, John: bear hunter, 271-72
Sandwich: fortunate location of, 65; church organized in, 92
schools: 1865 report, 153-65; conflict between pupils and teachers, 158; punishments, 158-59, 162; short terms, 161; pupils' ages, 161; cur- riculum, 162; heating systems, 162; improvements in, 163
school tuition fees in 1838, 153
Scudder family: establishments of in Chocorua, 222-23
screw auger: invented at Tamworth Iron Works, 205
Second World War: personnel from Tamworth, 292; war bond record, 293; U.S.S. Batfish, 293; Battles of Kula Gulf, 293-94
Seeley,Milton: dog food formula in- vented by, 262; purchase of Chinook Kennels, 262; maintenance of elec- tric plant, 265; training of dogs, 265-66; death, 266
sense of sin strong in every church member, 107
settlers: altruism, 2-3; early sources food, 15-16, 138; treatment of In- dians, 15, 20-21; places of emigra- tion, 25; inducements offered to, 26, 28; houses raised by, 27-28; land ownership often not clear, 27; de- pendence upon animals, 79
sewing machine. See "sale work"
Shaw, Reverend Jeremiah: petitions Proprietors, 59
sheep: soil damaged by grazing, 67; universal to 1900, 134
shoemaking, 135-36
Siege of Wolves, 139-40
site of Tamworth meetinghouse: final vote, 90; location described, 104 skiing, 5
Smith, Ralph: recalls Paugus Mills, 125, 127; recalls Old Home Week, 150. See frontispiece
"snubbing down," 125-26
Social Library: books circulated by, 3, 115-16; Samuel Hidden's daybook for, 113; rules and membership, 114-15; cost of maintenance, 115
South Tamworth: family names asso- ciated with, 64; pioneer settlers, 166-67; a thoroughfare, 166-67; mills in, 168-70, 171; taverns along coach route, 173-74; liquor licenses, 175; post office annals, 179
333
South Tamworth Consolidated school, 164-65
South Tamworth District school: 1865 report, 155-56; assortment of teach- ers at, 156
South Tamworth Industries, 170
South Tamworth Methodist Society, 177-78
spruce gum: gathering of, 177 Steele-Twitchell homestead, 276
Stevenson, Augusta: 190, 192-93
Stevenson, Thomas: on committee to
Parson Hidden (1792), 87; started Stevenson settlement, 189-90
Stevenson family: members of, 95, 190 Stevenson Hill: first settlers on, 188; early officers of, 189
Stevenson Hill District school: 1865 report, 154
Stevenson house, 190-91
stone walls: building of, 68; present waste of, 69
storekeepers: Daniel Little, 75; Tam- worth village, 136-37; True Perkins, Merrill Brothers, and Fred Moore at Tamworth Iron Works, 212-13
stores: barter system in, 136; early, South Tamworth, 171-72; Choco- rua, 212-13
summer buyers, 222-229
summer people: stimulus to business, 5; impact in Tamworth area, 221 Superintending Committee of Schools: duties of, 153
surveys: early ones careless, 27; haz- ards of, 39-40; creation of gores by, 40
Sweetzer's Guide: 17, 19-20, 243-44
T
Tamworth: as it must have appeared to explorers, 13-16; terrain of, de- termining factor in nature of set- tlers, 2; "firsts," 2-3; experience of, different from other New England towns, 3-4; population doubled in summer, 5; variety of topography in its five communities, 63-64; fortu- nate location of, 65-66; meeting- house issue (1792-94), 88-91; tavern license holders, 141-42; inns, 145-46 Tamworth Cent Institution. See Fe- male Cent Society
Tamworth Charter: stipulations as to settlers, 26-27; area covered by, 38;
grantees of, 60, 324; chief agent in securing, 61. See Appendix
Tamworth Foundation, 304-06
Tamworth Garden Club, 303-04
Tamworth High School, 164 Tamworth Inn, 145
Tamworth Iron Works: location of
foundry, 203; limonite ore, 204; products made at, 204-05
Tamworth meetinghouse: Town Rec- ord excerpts concerning, 88-91; taxes for, 91
Tamworth Outing Club, 308-09
Tamworth Temperance Society: terms of membership, 96-97; a pow- erful influence until Prohibition voted, 98-99
Tamworth Visiting Nurse Associa- tion, 306-08
Tamworth Woman's Club, 302-03
Tamworth village: family names asso- ciated with, 64; mills, 122-130 pas- sim
tannery: Goodwin's at Chocorua, 208- 09; trees barked for, 209
Tasker, John: indentured servant Bradbury Jewell, 237
tavern license holders, 141-42
taverns: evolution of, into hotels, 143- 44
Teachers Institute, 161
teacher's life: woodchuck served often, 194
teachers of particular note, 159-64 passim
temperance: changes wrought in Tam- worth by 1840, 98; town efforts to maintain, 141-42
Tewksbury, Wesley: and his oxen, 271
Thoreau's impressions of Tamworth, 144
Tilton, Elbridge: golden anniversary party, 234-35
Tilton, Ira: water mill on farm of, 129 Tilton family: name associated with Wonalancet, 64
timber: a constant heritage, 4
tithingman: duties of, 80 tow cloth, 38
Town House: decided on for Tam- worth village, 121; erection of, 182- 83; mentioned, 78, 79
334
town meeting: experiment in pure democracy, 38; held in private houses, 78; decision concerning Town House, 121; only 2 candi- dates first meeting at Birch Inter- vale, 189
town poor, treatment of: Clough fam- ily case an example, 80; auctioning of paupers, 81; sample bill rendered to town for pauper care, 81; poor farm, 82; tax abatement, 82
Town Records: original books de- scribed, 77; sampling of contents, 78-82 passim
Tozzer property, 276-77
traffic rules, early, 78
trails: Chinook, 68; Old Mast Road, 72-73; Passaconaway, 124, 252; Tom Wiggin, 129; Liberty, 146; Whittier Ski, 174; McCrillis, 239; Whiteface, 252; various ski, 308-09; Brook Path to Wonalancet Falls, 244
training of dogs at Wonalancet for Antarctic expeditions, 259, 265-66, 267
traveling circus: thrills of, 151
trotting races, 151-52
turkey drives, 140
Twitchell-Steele homestead, 276
U
"Uncle Paul" Ross: his opinion of wolves, 139; and Professor William James, 139
undercutting, 67-68
Usher, Hezekiah: grantee of Mason territory, 12
V
Village District school: 1865 report, 157. See Brick School
Vittum, Edmund, 173
Vittum incident with General Moul- ton, 55
Voris Herb Farm, 282
W
wages earned: for preaching, 59, 91, 102, 218; driving cattle, 71; farm- hands, 74; a midwife, 74; sometimes paid in services, 74; postriders, 76; the first constable, 78; paupers "set up for vendue" for the town, 80, 81; common laborers (1793), 89; carpenters (1793), 89; (1796), 116;
caretaker Tamworth meetinghouse, 91; in kind, by miller (1700's), 122; examples of in 1700's, 135; various forms of "sales work," 137-38; teachers (1821), 159; contrast of, between early days and 1827, 161; (1800's) at card mill, 171; example of, by children, late 1800's, 179
Walden, Arthur: boyhood, 233-34; pranks, 255-56; trips to Alaska, 256, 264; first dog team, 256-57; books written by, 256, 262-63; skill in racing dogs, 257-58; kennels run by, 257-58; Chinook, his dog, 257-58, 259, 260-61; powerhouse and saw- mill projects, 258; first Byrd expedi- tion, 259-61; kennels sold, 262; yarns told by, 263; building projects, 263- 64; death, 264; author's last recollec- tion of, 264-65
Walden, Kate Sleeper: central figure in growth of Wonalancet, 232-33; purchase of farm, 234; initiates chapel 241, 250-51; boardinghouse featured in Sweet- zer's Guide, 243-44; introduces idea of recreation as a business, 244; share in preserving Wonalancet watershed, 249-50; initiates Wona- lancet Outdoor Club, 252; phone in- troduced by, 253; hostess at winter parties, 254-55; marriage to Arthur Walden, 256; death, 264; author's last recollection of, 264-65
Walden, Reverend Treadwell, 233, 251
Walker, Walter: mailman for 22 years, 270-71
wampum, 22
Washburn, Sally: first child born in Tamworth, 66
water power mills, 129 weather aspects: Tamworth area topography advantageous, 6; hurri- canes, 14, 146, 247; heavy snows, 14, 149, 216; "cold years," 108-09, 121, 246; lightning, 121, 245; flood of 1869, 130; freshets, 131, 204; colder winters, better maple syrup, 176; Elbridge Tilton, weather prophet, 235; earthquakes (1940), 284
weaving endless in every early house- hold, 134
335
Weed, Henry and Orlando: spokes- men for Burton in boundary dis- pute, 40
Weed, Henry: associate James Blais- dell in Iron Works enterprise, 202; one of three men who held many offices, 203; inventor screw auger, 205
Weed, Orlando: Proprietor's Clerk, Sandwich, 28; first settler Sand- wich Addition, 39; Proprietor's Clerk, Burton, 39
Welch, James: account of his father's cattle, 69-71; recalls Dicey's Mills, 124-25; describes trapping passen- ger pigeons, 138; recalls turkey drives, 140; High Sheriff Carroll County, 180; fishing anecdote with President Cleveland, 198
Wells, Mrs., Christmas party, 171
Wentworth governors in New Hamp- shire: role in naming of towns, 61; Benning, 26, 61, 63; Sir John, 61, 63 White Mountain Camps, 295-97
White Mountain National Forest: story of purchase of Wonalancet watershed (1913-14), 247-50
Whittier, John G .: constant visitor, 174
Wiggin, Arthur: entered summer boarder business, 145
Wiggin, Thomas S .: trail cutter and singer, 129, 252
Williams, Dr. Francis: x-ray author- ity, 177
Willow Inn Register: excerpts from, 144-45, 151
winepress at Chocorua, 211 winter carnival, 150
winter parties at Walden's, 254-55 women not extravagant, 214
Wonalancet: family names associated
with, 64; first called Poverty Flats, 235; probable first school of, 241- 42; topographical advantages, 246- 47; settled largely by shipbuilders, 247; changes in population of, 247; 1883 hurricane and purchase of watershed, factors in end of large- scale lumbering at, 247-50; first tele- phone, 253-54; first golf course (1898), 254; interesting summer homes and owners in, 268-70
Wonalancet, Indian chief: withdrew his people, 20
Wonalancet Chapel: restoration, 241; incorporation, 250-52
Wonalancet Outdoor Club: trails kept up by, 73, 252-53
workhouse: early management of led to abuses, 82
writers and professional men of dis- tinction in Chocorua, 227-29
yarn spinning meant walking miles, 133 Y
336
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