The history of Dublin, N.H. : containing the address by Charles Mason, and the proceedings at the centennial celebration, June 17, 1852, with a register of families, Part 57

Author: Dublin (N.H.); Leonard, L. W. (Levi Washburn), 1790?-1864; Seward, Josiah Lafayette, 1845-1917; Mason, Charles, 1810-1901
Publication date: 1920
Publisher: Dublin, N.H. : The Town
Number of Pages: 1212


USA > New Hampshire > Cheshire County > Dublin > The history of Dublin, N.H. : containing the address by Charles Mason, and the proceedings at the centennial celebration, June 17, 1852, with a register of families > Part 57


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 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97


LOT 11.


No. 1. Hearse house. No. 2. Dublin Lake Club, 1901. No. 3. - George H. Col- ony, lake cottage, 1892.


Burton C. Russell, 1910.


No. 4. - Clesson E. Gow- ing, lake cottage, 1894. No. 5. - - Milton D. Mason, lake cottage, 1894.


No. 6. - Henry D. Allison, lake cottage, 1894.


No. 10. - Walter Ban- croft of Gardner, Mass., lake cottage, 1890.


Heirs of Walter Bancroft.


No. 7. - Miss Susan Up- ham, 1896, sum. res.


No. 8. Prof. Raphael Pumpelly, 1883, sum. res. No. 9. Prof. Raphael Pumpelly, owner, 1883. Thomas Handasyd Cabot, sum. res.


LOT 12.


No. 9. Col. Thomas Went-


worth Higginson, 1890, sum. res.


Prof. Kenneth Brown, 1915, sum. res.


No. 3. - On former Phillips farm.


George W. Gleason, owner, 1882. Mrs. Mary A. (Mrs. J. S. C.) Greene of Boston, owner, 1882.


Henry C. and Belle Greene, owners, 1900.


Summer tenants.


Edmund Channing Stowell, M.D., now of Jaffrey, was a tenant here for several sea- sons. No. 2. - On former Phillips farm.


George W. Gleason, owner, 1882. Mrs. M. A. (Mrs. J. S. C.) Greene of Boston, owner, 1882.


Joseph Lindon Smith, 1889, sum. res.


No. 1. - Same changes of own rship as No. 2. Summer cottage owned by J. L. Smith, 1889. No. 4. - On old Phillips farm. G. W. Gleason, owner, 1882. Mrs. M. A. (Mrs. J. S. C.) Greene of Boston, owner, 1882. Hamilton Osgood, M.D., owner, 1882.


Mrs. Mary A. Buck, sum. ten. Fiske Warren of Harvard, Mass., sum. ten. Miss Rebecca Appleton Cald- well of New York, N. Y., 1913, sum. res.


No. 5. - On old Phillips farm.


637


OCCUPANTS OF LOTS


G. W. Gleason, owner, 1882. Mrs. M. A. (Mrs. J. S. C.) Greene of Boston, owner, 1882. Hamilton Osgood, M.D., owner, 1882.


Edward Burnett of Providence, R. I., 1902, sum. res. Miss Agnes G. Troup of Provi- dence, R. I., 1912, sum. res. Hon. Josiah Quincy, sum. ten., 1916. No. 6. - On old Phillips farm.


G. W. Gleason, owner, 1882.


Mrs. M. A. (Mrs. J. S. C.) Greene of Boston, owner, 1882. Henry C. and Belle Greene, owners, 1900.


Henry Pemberton of Philadel- phia, Pa., 1900, sum. res. Mrs. Quincy A. Shaw, Jr., of Boston, 1915, sum. res.


No. 7. - Richard Phillips, original farm homestead, 1782.


George W. Phillips. Richard Phillips, 2d. William Phillips.


George W. Gleason, owner, 1882. Mrs. Mary A. (Mrs. J. S. C.) Greene of Boston, owner, 1882.


House taken away.


No. 8. - On old Phillips farm. G. W. Gleason, owner, 1882. Mrs. M. A. Greene, owner, 1882. Henry C. and Belle Greene, owners, 1900.


Widow of Prof. Henry B. Hill was a tenant for several seasons.


Summer tenants.


LOT 13.


No. 3. Miss Mary Amory Greene of Boston, sum. res. Summer tenants: No. 4. - Abbot H. Thayer, legal and sum. res., 1903. Abbot Thayer's Studio. Studio of Miss Gladys Thayer. Gerald H. Thayer, legal and sum. res. No. 2. - Alexander Scott. Eli Morse. Thaddeus Morse.


Thaddeus Morse, Jr. Heirs of Thaddeus Morse, 1882. Widow Sarah A. Peele of Bev- erly, Mass., 1885, sum. res. Daniel A. Dwight of Boston, 1887, legal and sum. res. Mrs. Fannie D. Clark, 1914, sum. res. Clark farm house.


Almon A. Baldwin, res. Lawrence E. Welch, res. No. 1. - Old grist-mill, formerly operated by Thad- deus Morse.


LOT 14.


No. 7. Peter Morse. Peter Morse, Jr. Nathan Whitney, 1868. Livingston Stone of Charles- town, N. H., 1868, sum. res. Mrs. Sarah A. Peele of Boston, 1885, sum. res.


Mrs. Jane P. Hunnewell of Boston, 1886, sum. cottage. Mrs. Daniel A. Dwight of Bos- ton, 1897, rented to summer tenants.


Mrs. Fannie D. Clark of Bos- ton, 1914, rented to summer tenants. No. 1. - On former P. Morse farm.


638


HISTORY OF DUBLIN


Livingston Stone, owner, 1868. Miss Anita E. Wheelwright of Boston, 1885, sum. res. Mrs. Emma B. (Mrs. J. G.) Chapman of St. Louis, Mo., 1897, sum. res.


John Laurence Mauran of St. Louis, Mo., 1915, sum. res.


No. 2. - Miss Mary Lion- berger of St. Louis, Mo., 1900, sum. res.


No. 3. - Chapman farm house.


Robert C. Woodward, res.


No. 4. On former P. Morse farm, also largely on former T. Morse farm.


James O. Josselyn, 1872. Bartholomew W. Taggard of Boston, 1880, sum. res. Hon. Ethan Allen Hitchcock, of St. Louis, Mo., Secretary of the Interior under Mc- Kinley and Roosevelt, 1896, sum. res.


Arthur Lyman, of Boston, sum. ten.


Thornton Kirkland Lothrop of Boston, 1911, sum. res. Mrs. John L. Mauran, owner, 1915.


Howard Elliott of New Haven, Conn., President of the N. Y ., N. H., & H. R. R., sum. ten. No. 5. - Cottage owned by heirs of Mrs. J. G. Chapman. Summer tenants: No. 6. - On former P. Morse farm. Livingston Stone, owner, 1868. George W. Gleason, owner.


George E. Gilbert, as trustee under the will of George L. Foote, late of Cambridge, Mass., 1888.


Miss A. E. Foote, sum. res.


George L. Foote, sum. res. No. 8. -- Ernest F. Hender- son's studio.


No. 9. - Ernest F. Hender- son of Boston, 1902, legal and sum. res.


No. 10. - A summer cot- tage owned by Ernest F. Henderson.


Summer tenants.


LOT 15.


No. 1. Land owned by Liv- ingston Stone.


Mary Shreve Hutchinson of Boston, 1900, sum. res.


Prof. John Osborne Sumner of Boston, married Miss Hutchinson.


LOT 16.


No. 1. Thomas Morse. John Morse. Jesse Morse.


Francis Shattuck, 1858, from Groton, Mass.


Everett Kendall, 1867, from Boylston, Mass.


Daniel Fiske, owner, 1869. Charles W. Fiske, 1870.


Livingston Stone, owner, 1885, from Charlestown, N. H.


Various short term tenants.


Widow Louise Amory, owner, 1909, of Boston. Dublin Lake Club, 1910.


They have golf links here.


LOT 17.


No. 1. John Knowlton, 2d, 1789.


Silas Knowlton, 1830. Asa Knowlton, 1876.


Frank A. Whitcomb, res.


No. 2. - Knowlton's char- coal kiln.


639


OCCUPANTS OF LOTS


LOT 18.


Not settled.


LOT 19. No. 1. Joseph Barrett. William Rollins. Abel Stevens. Henry Heard. Ebenezer Perry. William Shattuck, owner, of Groton, Mass.


William A. Shattuck, owner, 1852, of Groton, Mass. Non-resident owners; house taken away.


LOT 20.


No. 1. - Samuel Williams. Abijah Williams. Josiah Bemis. Benjamin Page Hardy. Asa Knowlton, owner, 1869. House taken away.


Thomas Lewis. Site of his house not located on map. No. 2. - Daniel Symonds. Lemuel Wheeler. Jacob Hart. Joel Hart. House disappeared long ago.


LOT 21.


No. 1. Elias Hardy. He was the only occupant of this house site, and moved to Walpole in 1842. No house here now. No. 2. - Thomas Hardy, 1784.


Moses Hardy, 1816. Cyrus E. Hardy. William Spaulding, 1856. Mr. Spaulding left in 1883. Non-resident owners since. House in ruins.


No. 3. - Thomas Wake- field, 1778.


Cyrus Wakefield. David Hart. Jesse Knowlton. Jason Phelps.


Mr. Phelps moved to Potters- ville in 1846. This house was burned soon after.


LOT 22. .


No. 1. Capt. John Stone. John C. Stone. Amos Robbins, res.


Levi Felch of Groton, Mass., owner, 1856.


Non-resident owners.


House long ago removed. John Davis lived on this lot, in a house not located upon the map.


RANGE VI


LOT 1.


No. 2. William Thornton, 1752. He was the first settler of Dub- lin. A monument has been placed to mark the site of his house.


No. 1. - Abijah Richard- son, Jr., 1818. Samuel A. Richardson, 1877.


Mrs. Augustine Wood, owner, 1877. Luke F. Richardson, owner, 1898. Clifton E. Richardson, 1900.


LOT 2.


No. 3. Isaac Appleton. David Appleton, 1845. John Twitchell, res. Frank M. Twitchell, 1869. Horace G. Wood, owner, 1879.


Mrs. Luke F. Richardson, owner, 1880. Malachi Richardson, owner, 1881.


640


HISTORY OF DUBLIN


Mrs. James A. Hannaford, by will, 1887.


Mrs. Julia A. Tenney of An- trim, owner, 1902.


Mrs. Emily A. Hannaford, res. Everett M. Hannaford, 1915. No. 1. -- Luke Richardson. Augustus T. Woodward and John M. Taggard, both of Marlborough, 1853.


Albert Clark.


Francis A. Spaulding, from Hancock, 1866.


Widow Orinda Spaulding, 1901.


Charles F. Appleton, owner, 1908.


Frank E. Willis, res.


Arthur T. Appleton, 1912.


Mr. Appleton retains the own- ership, but has moved to Massachusetts.


No. 2. - A saw and grist- mill erected by Luke Rich- ardson, and owned and oper- ated by the owners of the house at No. 1. It was not used by the Appletons and is not now standing.


LOT 3.


Not settled. It was owned by the Appleton family, who have occupied lot 4.


LOT 4.


No. 1. Joseph Eaton, 1781. Francis Appleton, 1786. Jesse Ripley Appleton, 1849. Charles F. Appleton, 1904. Arthur T. Appleton, res. Various short term tenants in a part of the house. A building belonging to the Dublin Electric Co., sold to the Ashuelot Gas & Electric Co., now leased to the Keene Gas & Electric


Co. Not located on the map.


LOT 5.


No. 1. Henry Strongman. Richard Strongman. James Rollins. John Millikin. Salmon Wood, died, 1842. Benjamin Learned, res. Augustine Wood, died, 1892. Widow Elizabeth R. Wood, died, 1900. Curtis A. Wood, M.D., died, 1902.


Widow Ida L. Wood, died, 1903. Ralph C. Wood, 1903. George H. Preston, res. Albert A. Preston, res.


LOT 6.


No. 3. William Strongman. Joseph Rollins, Jr. John Dixon, res. Timothy Warren, res.


Isaac Greenwood, res.


Israel Maynard, res. Thomas Sherwin, res. Mrs. Asenath Greenwood, res. William Allen Greenwood, owner. Horatio Greenwood, 1852. George Franklin Bond, 1854. Thomas Fisk, assignee, 1870. Stephen O. Hawkins, 1870, from Ashuelot. Mrs. George F. Bond, 1870. Abial M. Hawkins, 1898, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Mrs. William C. Wyman, 1899, of Brookline, Mass. Louis Cabot, 1903. Heirs of Louis Cabot. Short term tenants. Ernest A. Gay, res.


No. 2. - East side of house.


641


OCCUPANTS OF LOTS


Jackson Greenwood. Samuel Twitchell. Volney Wilder, 1837.


Widow Lucy Gowing, 1838. Ira Crombie, res. Jonas H. Brooks. George Wood, res. Sylvia Twitchell, res. Betsey Twitchell, 1853.


Estate of Betsey Twitchell, 1878. James G. Piper, owner, 1880. House has disappeared. Non-resident owners. No. 2. - West end of house. Cyrus Piper. Jackson Greenwood. John Wilder.


William Burns. Widow Hannah Burns, 1842. Miss Hannah Burns.


Nathaniel Holt, married Han- nah Burns. David Burns, 1871, by will. Estate of David Burns.


Mrs. Reuel Brigham, 1873. James G. Piper, 1880.


The house is gone.


Non-resident owners. No. 1. - Isaac Greenwood, 1781. Joshua Greenwood. Joshua Greenwood, Jr. Jonas B. Piper, Jr. Albert A. French, 1874, of Gill, Mass. Charles S. Bryant, 1879. Fred. A. Pierce, 1885. Robert A. Walker, 1909.


LOT 7.


No. 8. Site of Joseph Thurs- ton's blacksmith shop. No. 6. - Dr. Samuel Ham- ilton. John Saunders, blacksmith.


Daniel Boutell, res.


Josiah Greenwood, res. Almerin Gowing, 1853.


Elbridge Joseph Gowing, 1866. Almerin Gowing, 1873.


George A. Gowing, owner, 1880. Clifford Gowing, 1886.


William C. Strong, res.


Robert C. Woodward \ owners,


Charles P. Paige 1916.


Frank E. Holden, res., upper flat.


Charles P. Paige, res., lower flat.


Lewis C. Case, res., lower flat.


No. 5. - Deering Farrar. Reuben Muzzy.


Ebenezer B. Wallingford.


William Stanley, res. Cyrus Piper, owner.


Mrs. Abigail Twitchell, res.


Elbridge Joseph Gowing, 1866.


William Darracott, 1873.


Mrs. Elmira Coggswell, 1878.


Heirs of Mrs. Coggswell, 1894. George T. Beal, 1900.


Addie M. Beal, 1910, on the death of her father.


Frank E. Willard, res. Fay E. Armstrong, 1915, res.


- Near the preceding build- ing stood a small store for many years. The last mer- chant there was Cyrus Piper. The following is the list of merchants who did business in that store. Dr. Samuel Hamilton. William F. Pulsifer. Henry Whitcomb. Cyrus Piper.


No. 4. - Nathan Whitte- more. Dr. Moses Kidder. Dr. Stephen H. Spaulding. Dr. Asa Heald, who built the


642


HISTORY OF DUBLIN


fine three-story mansion now standing on the site, in 1827, which he used for a tavern. Joseph F. Hay, res. Joseph Morse, res.


Oliver Whitcomb, res.


Charles H. Heald succeeded to the estate, on the death of his father, Dr. Heald, in 1874. Mrs. Lucy P. Rice, 1895.


George W. Preston leased the tavern for a time, calling it the "Monadnock House."


Henry R. Leffingwell, 1898, who called it the Leffingwell Inn.


George W. Gleason, owner, 1909.


Walter E. French, owner since 1914, who calls it French's Tavern.


No. 3. - William McNey. Asa Norcross.


James Rollins.


Nathan Whittemore.


John Millikin.


Moses Marshall, res.


Thomas Hay, res.


Solomon Morse, res.


Zadoc Chapman, res. Henry Whitcomb, res. Dr. David Carter, res. Cyrus Piper. Moses Cragin.


Solomon Piper, Jr., owner and sum. res., 1852.


Mrs. Elvira Farnsworth, res.


Washington Proctor, 1866.


Heirs of Mr. Proctor, 1898. John A. Upton, 1905.


Various short term tenants.


Leon L. Patrick, res.


George A. Clukay, res.


Clifton P. Clukay, res. No. 7. Site of Wash- ington Proctor's blacksmith shop.


No. 2. Trinitarian Cong. Ch., 1877.


No. 1. - Paul Nelson. David Townsend.


Anna Townsend.


Isaac Remick, who married Anna Townsend.


Widow Anna Remick.


Willard H. Pierce, 1882.


First house on east side of the Monument road, going north from Monument. Not located on the map.


Leon L. Patrick, 1916. Mr. Patrick purchased the land in 1908.


Second house north of the Monument, on east side of the Monument road. Not located on the map. John Carter, 1911.


Third house north of the Monument, on the east side of the Monument road. Not located on the map.


Joseph E. Lord, 1911.


Fred. E. Hamberg, 1916, res.


LOT 8.


First house (1916) north of Monument, on the west side of the Monument road. Not located on the map. Earle E. Parkhurst, 1912. House vacant in 1916. No. 7. The Soldiers' Monument, dedicated, Oct. 27, 1870.


No. 6. - John Piper.


Heirs of John Piper, 1884. David Townsend, 1884, from Peterborough. Heirs of David Townsend.


Daniel Sewell, res. Harry F. Mason, res. George W. Eaves, res., 1916.


No. 5. - Mrs. Julia Piper,


643


OCCUPANTS OF LOTS


1837, widow of Jonas B. Piper, Sr.


Mrs. Julia Derby, owner, 1884. Charles W. Leffingwell, res. Fred. A. Pierce, res.


Miss Emily E. Derby, owner, 1911.


House a few rods north of Miss Derby's house at No. 5. Not located on the map.


William F. Gerard, 1910.


No. 4. - Henry C. Piper, 1857, purchased the land of his father, Rufus Piper. He died in 1894.


Widow Harriet E. Piper, died in 1914.


Dr. Henry H. Piper.


Mrs. Charles W. Leffingwell.


No. 3. - William Green- wood, Jr.


Joshua Greenwood. Asa Greenwood.


Luther Smith.


Rufus Piper, died in 1874.


Henry C. Piper, 1849 to 1857.


Widow Anna G. Piper, died in 1885.


James G. Piper, 1869, died in 1887.


Heirs of James G. Piper.


Rufus P. Pierce, 1889, died in 1902.


Mrs. Sarah M. G. Pierce.


Dr. Alfred H. Childs, 1911. Since this purchase, Dr. Childs lived two or three years in the Unitarian par- sonage, then returned to this house.


No. 10. - Fremont E. Ma- son, 1887. The land had formerly belonged to the Piper estate, at No. 3. - Very near the site of the house at No. 10. was an


ancient tannery. We were informed by the late Joseph Morse that it was built and operated by Micah Morse, who lived near, either in lot 8, range 6, or in lot 9, range 5. At a later time, there was a tannery here operated by Curtis Smith, who lived at No. 9. The little dam was built for water power to grind bark.


No. 2. - Isaac Adams, a weaver.


Joseph Abbot, merchant.


Dwelling removed.


Schoolhouse No. 1 built on this site in 1841, the fourth in the district.


- As these pages go to the press, an excellent large schoolhouse, the fifth in the district, is being built, just west of the preceding site, on the same side of the street. No. 9. - William Green- wood, 2d.


Jeremiah Greenwood.


Alline Newell.


Curtis Smith.


Jonathan K. Smith, owner. Made into double house. East side:


Mrs. Lucy Dearborn, 1847.


Thomas Perry, 2d, res.


Joseph W. Domett, 1865.


Granville Bruce Gilchrest, 1868.


Joseph Morse, 1879, owner. Granville Bruce Gilchrest, 1881.


Elmer B. Howe, 1890, died, 1898.


Widow Lucy J. M. Howe. Samuel A. Mason, res.


Edwin L. Twitchell, owner, 1903.


644


HISTORY OF DUBLIN


Edwin G. Kemp, res.


Mrs. Edwin G. Kemp, 1916, by will.


West side: Samuel L. Taggard, 1847.


Joseph Morse, 1850, died, 1904. Charles Willis Morse of Keene, owner.


Miss Eliza Adams, res.


Frank E. Clukay, res.


No. 8. - Mrs. Harriet L. Wait, 1889.


John H. Mason, 1906, died, 1913.


Widow of John H. Mason.


Ernest A. Gay, res.


William C. Greenwood, res.


George A. Clukay, res.


Walter B. Emery, 1916, res.


No. 1. - John Wilder.


Reuben W. Twitchell.


Luther Smith. Eli Hamilton. Henry Gould.


Joseph Turner, 1855.


Mrs. Mary G. G. Powers, 1858.


Heirs of Mrs. Powers, 1868.


William F. Wheeler, 1869.


George W. Gleason, owner, 1869.


Stephen Hazen, 1869.


Elliot Powers, 1872.


George E. Matthews, 1886. Alamander L. Ball, res., died, 1902. Samuel L. Straw, res.


George W. Gleason, owner, 1906.


Mrs. Ellen E. Houghton, 1907. LOT 9.


No. 13. Trinitarian Congrega- tional Parsonage. In 1837, a syndicate composed of Jesse Morse, Isaac Appleton, Abijah Richardson, and Mal- achi Richardson, purchased


land of the Daniel Fiske es- tate, and built this building for the accommodation of clergymen of their society. In 1866, they transferred the property to the Trinitarian Congregational Society, as a parsonage, under the condi- tions stated on page 321 of this history.


Occupants:


Rev. James Tisdale, 1836-39. Rev. Henry A. Kendall, 1840- 50.


Rev. Alonzo Hayes, 1851-53.


Samuel L. Taggard, res.


Rev. George S. Kemp, 1854-55. Rev. Edward F. Abbott, 1855- 59.


Rev. Nathan W. Sheldon, 1860-61.


Rev. Oscar Bissell, 1861-65.


Rev. Andrew J. Fosdick, 1866- 70. Rev. John F. Bassett, 1875-76. Rev. Richard M. Burr, 1877- 79.


Rev. George B. Cutler, 1884- 85.


Rev. George W. Ruland, 1894- 95.


Rev. Edwin B. Burrows, 1896- 97.


Rev. William F. Whitcomb, 1899-1900.


Rev. George H. Hefflon, 1901- 05. Wesley W. Shay, 1901-07.


Rev. Henry A. Coolidge, 1909- 12. Rev. Harry A. G. Abbe, 1912.


No. 12. - Warren L. Fiske, 1860.


Henry E. Fiske, 1912. No. 11. Stood formerly where the Unitarian church now stands.


645


OCCUPANTS OF LOTS


James Rollins.


Cyrus Chamberlain. James Chamberlain, 1st. Daniel Fiske.


Moved in 1852 to its present location. Daniel Fiske, died, 1878.


Widow Betsey Fiske, died, 1881. Diantha L. Fiske, res.


Warren L. Fiske, res., 1857- 60.


George D. Fiske, res., died, 1892.


Abraham Perkins, res.


Hiram A. Carey, res., 1888- 1902.


Wilfred M. Fiske, 1887. No. 10. - - Church of the First Congregational (Uni- tarian) Society, dedicated, March 2, 1853.


No. 9. - Site of the old union store, now occupied by the store of H. D. Allison. Merchants: Ebenezer Greenwood.


James A. Mason. Daniel Fiske. Charles W. Fiske.


George W. Gleason.


New store built, 1869:


Dexter Mason & Son, 1869. Milton D. Mason, 1871. Henry D. Allison, 1901. Resident over store: Milton D. Mason, 1871, owner, 1880.


- The oval plat, surrounded by a curb, between the two stores, was constructed in 1916, in connection with the work upon the "South Side State Road," constructed from 1914 to 1918.


No. 8. - Ebenezer Green- wood.


James A. Mason.


Dexter Mason, 1859, died, 1884.


Heirs of Dexter Mason, 1884.


Milton D. Mason, owner, 1889. John H. Mason, res. William W. Andrew, res.


Fay E. Armstrong, res.


No. 7. - N. Horace Hamil- ton (name changed to Ed- mund Horace Hamilton), 1880.


A few short term tenants. Frederick S. Willcox, 1910.


This house was an excellent inn, for two or three seasons, under Mr. Willcox, known as the "Willcox Inn."


The former brick Trinita- rian Congregational Church stood on a site between No. 6 and No. 7. It was built in 1835; dedicated, June 22, 1836; taken down in 1877.


No. 6. - George W. Glea- son, purchased land of Trin- itarian Congregational So- ciety, 1879.


Lilla F. Souther, 1879.


Widow Freelove Souther, 1882. Mrs. Eliza C. Farnham, owner, 1892. Charles R. Fiske, res. John A. Gleason, 1908. No. 5. - James Allison 1898. Henry D. Allison, 1904. No. 4. Hiram A. Carey, 1901.


No. 3. - Emmanuel (Epis- copal) Church, consecrated, August 3, 1888.


No. 2. Rectory of the Episcopal Church, built in 1889. « v. Reuben Kidner, 1889.


646


HISTORY OF DUBLIN


No. 1. - Prof. Albert Bush- nell Hart, 1901.


No. 14. William B. Cabot, 1905.


No. 15. James Allison. Ralph D. Childs, res.


Miss Annie M. Allison.


- House a few rods north- east of No. 15, on same side of road.


Walter B. Bailey, 1912.


- House a few rods north of the preceding, on the west side of the road.


William W. Andrew, 1912.


LOT 10.


No. 8. Moses Marshall, died, 1862.


Orlando Marshall, 1852.


Mary Ann Marshall, 1852.


Orlando Marshall, 1858.


Daniel Fiske, owner, 1866. Mrs. Caroline M. May ) and 1866. Lydia C. Dodge


from Lynn, Mass., sum. res. Mrs. Louisa T. Cragin, 1880, from Boston, sum. res. George A. Craigin, M. D., owner. House destroyed by fire.


No. 7. - Reuben Twitchell. Daniel Twitchell, 2d. John Piper.


Levi W. Leonard, D.D.


Rev. William F. Bridge, 1855. Joseph L. Richards, 1866.


Daniel Fiske and owners, 1866.


Jonathan K. Smith


Rev. George M. Rice, 1866, died, 1882. Widow Persis F. Rice.


No. 6. - Dr. Abel May- nard.


Abel Maynard, Jr., 1815, died, 1826.


Lucinda Maynard, dau. of Dr. Abel Maynard.


George A. Hamilton of Han- cock and Peterborough, owner, 1862. He was to maintain Miss Maynard and her sister here.


Mrs. M. Louise Norris of St. Louis, Mo., 1899, who pro- posed to build a fine cottage on the estate, but did not do so.


The house is gone. No. 10. - The proposed site of Mrs. Norris's cottage. No. 5. - The lodge of Fran- cis M. Jeneks, tenanted by his caretakers.


No. 4. - The site of the sec- ond meetinghouse of the First Congregational (Uni- tarian) Society, dedicated, December 3, 1818; taken down in 1852.


Horace P. Farnham, M.D., of New York, N. Y., purchased this site of the town of Dub- lin and erected the fine resi- dence now standing upon the spot. He died in 1886. Widow Eliza Carey Farnham. No. 3. - Site of a former log cabin. The first min- ister, Rev. Joseph Farrar, is said to have built a cabin near here and to have lived alone.


No. 11. - The old town pound. The north-east (or older) part of the cemetery is on this lot.


No. 9. Site of the first meetinghouse in Dublin, on the line between lot 10 and lot 11, used for public wor- ship from 1771 until 1818.


647


OCCUPANTS OF LOTS


Marstin Holt lived some- where on this lot in 1779.


No. 2. - Dr. E. Lindon Mellus of Baltimore, Md., sum. res.


No. 1. - Francis M. Jencks of Baltimore, Md., 1898, sum. res.


LOT 11.


A part of the first meeting- house in Dublin was on this lot. See lot 10, No. 9.


- The greater portion of the cemetery is on this lot, an older portion being on lot 10, range 6, and part of a more recent addition on lot 11, range 5.


No. 1. - Caspar Crownin- shield of Boston, 1878, built the cottage on this site, which was his summer resi- dence for several years. He was one of the pioneer sum- mer residents, and his in- fluence was instrumental in bringing to Dublin many of his Boston acquaintances. Mrs. Elizabeth Crowninshield, wife of George L. Peabody, of Boston and Hamilton, Mass., of the trustees under the will of Caspar Crownin- shield, 1898, sum. res.


Miss Amy Lowell of Brookline, Mass., 1901, sum. res.


No. 2. - Dr. Hamilton Os- good of Boston, 1878, sum. res.


Mrs. Martha E., wife of Pier- pont P. Flint of Boston, 1882, sum. res.


LOT 12.


No. 9. Joseph Hayward, Jr. Minott Hayward.


James Hayward.


Samuel L. Taggard, 1851. Samuel W. Hale, owner. Charles A. Hamilton, owner. Dexter Mason, owner, 1854. Cyrus E. Hardy, 1856. Ebenezer D. Richards, 1857. Freeman F. Myrick, 1863.


John Osgood of Boston and his children and their families boarded several seasons with Mrs. Myrick.


Prof. Lewis B. Monroe of Boston (house in Chelsea), Mass. 1872. He had sum- mered here several seasons previously.


Heirs of Prof. Monroe. No. 8. - - Site of Hayward tannery.


Just a few feet south of No. 7, Mrs. Mary A. Greene (widow of J. S. Copley Greene) of Boston built the first summer cottage in Dub- lin, which was begun in 1872 and occupied in 1873. A few years later, she aban- doned this cottage and built another south of the lake. This cottage was taken down. The land was pur- chased of Yardley and Hunt (see No. 7) and sold to Cas- par Crowninshield.


No. 7. - - Abel Twitchell. Dr. Nathan Burnap.


Nathan Bixby.


Joseph Hayward, 1781.


John Hayward. Dexter Mason.


William W. Yardley and - 1871.


Melvin O. Hunt


Caspar Crowninshield of Bos- ton, owner, 1878. Mrs. Harriet Crowninshield,


648


HISTORY OF DUBLIN


wife of David H. Coolidge, and, later, the wife of Isaac Norris, of the trustees under the will of Caspar Crownin- shield, 1898, who removed the former buildings and built the fine cottage now standing here.


Mrs. Constance (Coolidge) Ath- erton, sum. res., came into possession in 1907.


No. 6. - The place called "Lochstead," taken from the former Cyrus and John H. Mason farm.


George L. Osgood of Boston, owner, 1879.


William K. Browne of Boston, owner, 1884, who built the cottage.


Adolph Kuttroff of New York, N Y., trustee, 1913.


The cottage was rented to various summer tenants. Rev. Basil King, 1916, sum. res. No. 5. - The place called "Fairview," taken from the former Dexter Mason farm. George L. Osgood, owner, 1878. William K. Browne of Boston, owner, 1884. He built the cottage.


George E. Leighton of St. Louis, Mo., sum. ten.


Daniel Catlin of St. Louis, Mo. sum. ten.


Adolph Kuttroff of New York, N. Y., trustec, 1913.


Rented to summer tenants. No. 4. - The place called "Owl's Nest," taken from the former Cyrus and John H. Mason farm.


George L. Osgood, owner, 1879. William K. Browne of Boston, owner, 1884. He built the cottage.


Adolph Kuttroff of New York, N. Y., trustee, 1913.




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