USA > Vermont > Windham County > Gazetteer and business directory of Windham county, Vt., 1724-1884 > Part 44
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The Second Advent church, located on road 20, was organized by its first pastor, Rev. Solomon Cook, with fifteen members, in 1874. The church building, erected in 1860, will seat 150 persons, and is valued at $1,600.00. The society has thirty-four members, with Rev. J. Hemenway, pastor.
The Union Universalist church, located at Vernon Center, was organized by its first pastor, Rev. M. H. Harris, with twenty-nine members, July 27, 1879. The church building, a wood structure erected in 1845, will seat 300 persons and is valued at $3,000.00. The society now has thirty members, with Rev. E. W. Whitney, pastor.
W ARDSBORO lies in the western part of the county, in lat. 42° 59', and long. 4° 11', bounded north by Jamaica, east by parts of Town- shend and Newfane, south by Dover and west by Stratton. It originally contained an area of about 23,040 acres, chartered by Vermont to William Ward, of Newfane, from whom its name was derived, November 7, 1780. On October 18, 1788, an act was passed by the legislature dividing the town into two districts, called North and South Districts, making two separate and distinct towns, and on October 30, 1810, the South District was incorporated into a new town, and named Dover. November 5, 1838, a part of Somerset
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was annexed to the township, and November 11, 1851, another part from the same town was added.
The surface of the territory is very uneven, and in some places quite rocky, there being a high range of hills between it and Dover. The soil is better adapted to grazing than tillage, though there are some tracts of land having a very arable soil. It is watered by Whetstone brook and its tributa- ries, a large branch of White river affording some good mill-sites. The rocks entering into its geological structure are of gneiss and talcose-schist formation, the former being found in the western and the latter in the eastern parts. Among the rare minerals found tremolite and soisite are the most im- portant. The former is in fine crystals, sometimes six inches long, penetrat- ing quartz, while the latter is in prismatic crystals, sometimes a foot in length, and from one to two inches in width.
In 1880 Wardsboro had a population of 766, and in 1882 was divided into seven school districts and had seven common schools, employing three male and eight female teachers, to whom was paid an aggregate salary of $833.53. There were 188 pupils attending common school, while the entire cost of the schools for the year, ending October 31st, was $930.19, with H. M. Hopkin- son, superintendent.
WARDSBORO is a post village, familiarly known as "Wardsboro City," located in the northern part of the town, on a branch of West river. It has two churches (Methodist and Congregational), a hotel, two general stores, a hardware store, grist-mill, saw-mill, cabinet shop, blacksmith shop, harness shop, boot and shoe shop, etc., and about 150 inhabitants.
WEST WARDSBORO, a post village located in the western part of the town, on the same stream as the above village, has one church (Baptist), a hotel, a general store, a school-house, saw and grist-mill, two blacksmith shops, etc.
SOUTH WARDSBORO, a post village, lies in the southeastern part of the town, It has two churches (Congregational and Union), a saw-mill, blacksmith shop. shingle-mill, etc.
UNIONVILLE is a hamlet located near the central part of the town, on the west branch of Whetstone brook. It has a grist-mill, blacksmith shop, butter-tub factory, and about a dozen dwellings.
E. D. Plimpton's grist-mill, located on road 7}, was built by Waldo Con- verse, about thirty-eight years ago.
Herbert E. Kidder's saw-mill and chair-stock factory, located at South Wardsboro, turns out, aside from the lumber, about 200,000 shingles, and 200,000 chair posts per annum.
M. V. B. Wait & Son's saw-mill and chair-stock factory, located on road 40, turns out about 1,500 chair posts and 5,000 feet of lumber per day.
J. C. Estabrook's tub manufactory, located at Unionville, turns out about twenty-five tubs, buckets and pails per day.
Snow & Stevens's grist-mill, at Unionville, grinds a hundred bushels of grain per day.
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J. W. Ramsdell & Son's saw-mill, located on road 24, was built about forty-four years ago.
Brown & Shipman's grist and saw-mill, located at West Wardsboro, has the capacity for manufacturing 2,000 shingles, 6,000 feet of lumber, and 2,000 chair posts, and grinding 150 bushels of grain per day.
Edward R. Howe's saw-mill and chair-stock factory, located at Wardsboro, has the capacity for turning out 2,500 chair posts, 5,000 feet of lumber, and 20,000 shingles per day.
The settlement of the town was commenced in June, 1780, by John Jones, Ithamer Allen and others, from Milford and Sturbridge, Mass., and eleven years later, according to the census of 1791, the population had increased to 753 souls, only thirteen less than it has to-day. March 14, 1786, the town duly organized, Aaron Hudson being elected town clerk, who was elected the same year to represent the town for the first time in the legislature, and who was also the first justice of the peace. This meeting was held at the house of John Jones, on road 48, the other officers chosen being as follows: Ithamer Allen, John Ganson, Abner Holbrook, Ebenezer Sears, and Jacob Chamberlain, selectmen ; Thomas Jewett and Abner Slade, constables ; James Wallis, Abner Perry and Roger Birchard, listers ; Samuel Davis and Edward Walker, grand jurors ; Abner Allen, supervisor ; Samuel Bryant, leather sealer ; Elijah Baldwin and John Jones, tythingmen; Bezaleel Glea- son, horse brander; John Ramsdell, sealer of measures ; John Ganson, Silas Wright, Elkanah Woodcock, Thaddeus Wright, Samuel Davis, John Jones and Abner Perry, highway surveyors; Joseph Dix, Nathan Ganson, Elijah Baldwin, Edward Walker, Noah Sherman, John Jones, Abner Perry, and William Bradley, petit jurors ; and Thomas Jewett and Roger Birchard, haywards.
John Ramsdell came from Warwick, Mass., in 1786, and lived with his family of eight children in a log house situated on road 18, near where Icha- bod Chase now lives. He bought a thousand acres of land about his home, on which his children spent part of their lives, but some of them subsequently removed to other localities. The children were Robert; Farrington, who died in Washington, Vt .; John, Jr., who died in Shoreham, Vt .; Job, who was born in 1779, and died in 1870, and who, in May, 1803, married Abigail White of Wardsboro, who died in 1844 ; Gideon, who moved to Ohio ; Eunice, who married Ebenezer Eaton ; Sally, who married Nathaniel Fitts ; and Anna who married Peter Cleveland, and moved to Cleveland, Ohio. A daughter of John, Jr., is still living in Shoreham, Vt. Five of Job's eleven children are living, viz. : Joseph, who is seventy-nine years old, on road 18; Sylvia, who married Erastus Ramsdell, in Wisconsin ; Chester, in Minnesota ; Harriet, who married for her first husband Leonard Cook, by whom she had two chil- dren, one of whom lives in Wilmington and the other in Vernon, and for her second husband Alden Wakefield, and who is now living on road 37; and Roena, who married David H. Eager, and lives on road 20. Laura, one of
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Sally's six children, who married Willard Johnson, is living with her son-in- law, John B. Sage, Jr., on road 26.
Gen. Daniel Read, who was born in 1761, married, December 6, 1782, Sarah Brigham, of Westboro, Mass., whence he removed to Wardsboro about 1787. He was a tanner as well as farmer, and had a large tannery in the eastern part of the town. Each of his seven sons learned the tanning busi- ness. He derived his title of general from his connection with the military organizations in this vicinity, when each town had its company and Wards- boro had two. The general muster was held at Townshend, and Gen. Read was inspector for the whole regiment. He died August 31, 1845, aged eighty-five. His wife died June 27, 1836, aged seventy-two. Their eight children were Joseph, who died November 2, 1849, aged 65 ; David, who died November 20, 1859, aged 73; Daniel, who died March 25, 1869, aged 73 ; Charles P., who died September 14, 1814, aged 16; Edmund B., the only sur- vivor, who was born February 6, 1802, and still works his little farm on road 7}, and who has been steward and sexton of the M. E. church for fifty years ; Hamilton, who died February 5, 1872, aged 68; Elijah, who died April 4, 1864 ; and Sarah, who died July 8, 1851, aged 68. Davis Read married Lucinda Davis and had eight children, six of whom are living-Austin C., who was born March 30, 1817, has had three wives, and now resides on road 74; Eliza L., who married Judge Cook, and lives in Jamestown, N. Y .; Addison B., who is living with his second wife in Nebraska; Albert G., who is married and lives in California; Jerome P., who was born April 23, 1833, married Gracia Bixby, and lives on road 16 ; Marietta, who is mar- ried and lives in Baltimore, Md .; and Hamilton, who is living with his sec. ond wife. Elijah Read married a lady in Boston and lived and died in New Hampshire. Sarah married Simeon Fisher, and moved to Randolph, N. Y., where her husband died, when she returned to Wardsboro and died here.
Nathaniel Fitts was born August 3, 1759, and died June 13, 1849. He came to Wardsboro from Dudley, Mass., about 1790, and in 1793, married Sarah Ramsdell of Wardsboro, who died April 18, 1837. Their seven chil- dren were : Levi, who was born January 10, 1795, married Artene Clark, of Jamaica, November 19, 1822; Nathaniel B., who was born March 25, 1797, and died in June, 1808; Amasa, who was born July 23, 1800, married Eliza Ward, April 25, 1825, lived in South Wardsboro, and died in January, 1883; Ebenezer, who was born November, 2, 1802, married Matilda Morse of Newfane, Vt., December 6, 1827, and died July 19, 1847 ; Sarah, who was born February 3, 1805, married Joseph E. Knowlton, and lived in Wardsboro and Jamaica ; Joanna, who was born August 28, 1808, married Abner White, May 30, 1855, and died May 15, 1864, without issue ; and Laura, who was born June 11, 1811, married Willard Johnson, and lived in Dover and South Wardsboro. Most of them had large families. Three of Levi's five children are living in West Wardsboro, viz. : Lawretta L., who was born November 27, 1828, and married Darwin A. Hammond ; Osmer
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C., who was born August 13, 1830, married Abbie M. Twitchell, June 4 1864, and is postmaster of West Wardsboro; and Philura M., who was born February 26, 1833, and married Thomas F. Johnson, May 21, 1851. Of Amasa's nine children, Augustine M. was born January 30, 1828, and married Hiram B. Kidder, of Wardsboro; Albert was born August 16, 1831, married Cerintha Kilburn, August 21, 1864, and moved to Dummerston, Vt .; Mary was born January 26, 1835, and married Spencer Robinson September 27, 1854; and Emily S. was born July 30, 1840, and married Charles H. Rice, Sep- tember 15, 1864. Henry N. Fitts, one of Ebenezer's seven children, was born November 24, 1828, married Jane T. Newell, May 10, 1849, and still lives in Wardsboro.
Ebenezer Wakefield came from Massachusetts in 1794 and settled on the farm where his son Alden now lives, on road 37. He had eight chil- dren by his first wife, of whom William, who resides in Kansas, is the only one living. His second wife was Eledica Plympton, by whom he had two children. One of these is Alden, who lives on the homestead farm. Alden married Elizabeth Knowlton, by whom he had one child, who is now living with his father. He subsequently married Harriet A. Ramsdell, who bore him no children.
Archibald Pratt, who represented one of the oldest families in Wardsboro, came from Royalton, Mass., and after a few years' residence in Stratton. removed to Wardsboro. He built a frame house on road 7§, which still stands. though in poor condition. Three of his eleven children still live on road 74. viz .: Clarinda, who married George Wilder, Chandler, and Betsey, who mat- ried Richard W. Smith. A fourth, Lucretia, married and lives on road 8. A fifth, Diantha, is married and lives in Hinsdale, N. H. Several descendants of the family live in Wardsboro.
Nathaniel Hammond, from Massachusetts, was one of the earliest settlers in Wardsboro. He located on the farm now owned by Martin Wait. He married Mary Rogers in Massachusetts prior to his coming here, and had five sons and two daughters, who mostly removed from the town and State. His daughter Jemima married Elijah Newell, and lived on the farm now owne by Lucius Lyman, on road 22. Of their children, Linus lives in Grafton Mass .; Allwred, in Brattleboro ; Oscar, who married Rosetta Plimpton, on roz: 4, in Wardsboro ; Ozro, in Brattleboro ; Fanny, who married Horace Bisse. on road 17, in Wardsboro ; Lucretia A., who is dead, but leaves one daughter Adeline, who married Martin Plimpton, and lives on road 36; and Jane, wrb. married Henry Fitts, and lives on road 18. The latter have a son and : daughter, the former of whom, Elwin, is married and lives on road 17, whit the latter, namned Cora, resides at home.
Nathaniel Kidder came with his brothers, Jedediah, Richard and Samve. from Massachusetts about 1800, and settled on the farm now owned by Myror Shine. He had thirteen children, all of whom are dead, and all of whe moved to New York State, except one, who went to Massachusetts. Three
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of the sons entered the ministry, one as an Episcopalian and two as Congre- gationalists, while a fourth, also of Congregational persuasion, studied for the ministry, but died before his studies were completed. Foster Kidder, one of Jedediah's five children, all of whom are dead, lived and died in Wardsboro. Two of the others moved to New York, and two to Massachusetts. Richard had three sons and three daughters, of whom Moses, who removed to Massa- chusetts, is the only survivor. One, Asa, moved to Newfane, and Theda died unmarried in Wardsboro. Sylva and Celista married and moved to New York. Richard, Jr., married Mary Johnson and lived and died on the farm now owned by Mary's brother, Nathaniel B. Johnson. They had three sons and two daughters, four of whom survive-Henry, who married Marietta Hig- ley, of Dover, and resides on road 14; Herbert, who married Selina Ryder, and lives in South Wardsboro ; Richard, who moved to Worcester, Mass .; and Rosella, who married Henry Kenny and lives in Newfane. Samuel died after being in the town only a few years.
Oliver Willard and wife came here from Dudley, Mass., about 1803. He died in 1815, aged fifty-five. He had ten children, most of whom removed to distant States. All are dead, except Ada, who married John Widwell, and removed with her husband and four children to Illinois, accomplishing the entire journey with a two-horse wagon. Eli, son of Oliver, married Lucy Frost and lived on the farm on which A. Eddy now resides, of which he was the first occupant. He had five children, but not one is here, those who are living having removed to other localities. Oliver, another son, married and lived on the homestead ; but his children have moved to other parts. Asenath, daughter of Oliver, Sen., married Orin Simpson, and her children, Willard, Louisa, Charles and Oliver, live in Townshend. All are married, except Louisa, Hosea, son of the pioneer Oliver, was born in 1795 and died in 1877. He married and had three children, viz .: Mary, who married Henry Bruce, and lives with her two children on the farm formerly occupied by her grand- father, Oliver Willard; Warren H., who married and lives in Townshend, and has one son ; and Wales, who married Mary Dexter, has two children, and lives in Wardsboro village. One child, Silas, married and lives in Baltimore ; the other, Cora, married William Gleason, and lives in Jamaica.
Walter Morse was born October 24, 1794. andj came from Woodstock, Conn., about 1825. He settled on the farm now owned by Asa Eddy on road 15. He subsequently lived in various places in the town, and for three years in Jamaica. His last place of residence was where Charles Rice now lives, on road 16. He died there in 1844. In 1827 he married Laura Taylor, of Wardsboro, who was born September 30, 1801, and died in June, 1848. Their seven children are Samuel F., who was born March 9, 1829, married Abigail Rice, of Wardsboro, lived on a farm off road 4, and died August 21, 1883, leaving a wife and two children ; Abial T., who was born May 21, 1830, married Juliette Ramsdell, of Jamaica, in which town he lives, and has eight children : Edward S., who was born February 11, 1832, married Phi-
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linda M. Haskins, of Wardsboro, and is a Methodist minister, having received his first appointment in 1858, and preached continuously in this county until 1879, when ill health compelled him to leave his pulpit; Adaline D., who was born January 21, 1834, is a maiden lady, and lives in Jamaica; Hosea F., who was born October 6, 1836, married Minnie Witherell, of Boston, Mass., where he died in September, 1866, and where his widow, who remarried, still lives; Sarah M. who was born in September, 1838, and married Oliver Spafford, of West Ballston, Mass., where he still resides, and Mary A., who was born in 1814, married Eaton Ryther, of Dover, Vt., and still lives there.
Josiah Gleason, Jr., was born April 21, 1803, and came here from Jamaica in 1830. He settled on the farm on which his son Martin J. now lives, on road 7, and died March 7, 1873. He married Susan R. Morse, of Newfane, October 6, 1830, and had five sons and one daughter, viz .: Martin J., who lives on the homestead farm, where he was born October 31, 1831, and has one son named John, who resides with him ; James M., who was born Octo- ber 6, 1833, is engaged in the life insurance business, in Boston ; Edson G. who was born June 21, 1835, and died July 20, 1854; Sarah M., who was born February 13, 1838, and died April 10, 1843 ; William Henry, who was born April 25, 1840, and died March 26, 1841 ; and William Henry, 2d, who was born November 15, 1843, is married and lives in Chicago, where he has a wholesale jewelry store, and is a deputy sheriff. His (Josiah's) wife was born September 6, 1803, and died January 9, 1866.
Asahel Watson was born in 1816, and came to Wardsboro, from Jamaica, in 1840. He owned and operated for several years the saw-mill now owned by E. R. Howe. During the last twenty years of his life he owned and kept the Wardsboro House. He died in January, 1881, aged sixty-four. May 22, 1840, he married Adelphia Jackson, by whom he had eleven children, who were born between the years 1841 and 1860, all of whom are living, except the youngest, who died in infancy. Marion E. is married and lives in Newfane ; Isadore A. is married and lives in Westminster ; Victoria J. is mar- ried and lives in Barton, Vt., and like Marion and Isadore, has four children ; Charles C. is single and lives in Chicago; Lydia J., who is also single, is a dressmaker in Wardsboro village ; John H. is married, and is practicing law in Bradford, Vt .; Royal A. is married and lives in Ripon, Wis .; Rosella J. married H. P. Higgins, and lives on road 25, in Wardsboro ; Wales J. is mar- ried and is a hotel-keeper in Charleston, S. C .; Ella A. married Fred Under- wood, of Jamaica, in 1883, and with him keeps the hotel formerly owned by her father, in Wardsboro village.
John D. Watson, brother of Asahel, came here from Jamaica, in 1850, and has since resided here.
Dr. Franklin Martin came to Wardsboro, from Weston, Vt., in 1847, and has since practiced medicine here. He had nine children, two' of whom, Emeline and Joseph, are dead. Darius is married and lives in Milwaukee, Wis .; Addison is married and is a miller, and resides on road 6, in Wards-
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boro ; Charles lives with his father ; Maria is married and lives in Beloit, Wis .; Betsey is married and lives in Bridgehampton, Long Island, N. Y .; Albert and James are in Colorado.
David May was born in Brookfield, Mass., and moved, when a young man, to Wilmington, where he lived and died. His son Amos married Elizabeth Estabrook, of Brattleboro, and lived on Higley Hill, in Marlboro. He died at the age of fifty-four years. Elvin, son of Amos, married Nancy Hastings, of Marlboro, and lived on the homestead farm after his father's death. He is still living with his son Erasmus, on Higley Hill, in Marlboro, and is eighty- five years old. Lyman, another of Amos's sons, married for his first wife, Miss Bellows, of Marlboro, and for his second, Pattie Jones, of the same town. Amos's daughter Rosana, married Harvey Copeland, of Dover, and died a year after her marriage. Sally, another daughter, was a maiden lady, who lived in Marlboro, and died in Springfield, Mass. Danford, another of Amos's sons, married Susan Underwood, of Wardsboro, and has since lived in this town and Jamaica. His son Madison married Lucy Ellenwood, of Hub- bardston, Mass., and had a son who is now in the mercantile business in New York city. Amos May, Jr., married Martha Underwood, of Jamaica, and now lives in Brattleboro. Silas married Mary Batcheller, of Massachusetts, who died a year after her marriage. For his second wife he married Mary His- cock, of Springfield, Mass. William married Alsina Marsh, of Brattleboro, and lives in Wardsboro. His second wife was Lucy Warren, of Brattleboro. Siby married Madison Harris, of Dover. Betsey married Harvey Copeland, of Dover. Louisa died when eighteen years old. Amos married Lucy (War- ren) May, of Brattleboro; and Melinda, Henry Rice, of Dover.
Daniel Harris, from North Worcester, Mass., came to Wardsboro about 1780. Three of his eight children are living,-Arathusia, widow of Oliver Carpenter, resides in Brattleboro, at the age of ninety-three years; David, born in 1800, resides in Wardsboro ; and Alice, widow of Henry Miller, re- sides in Richland, N. Y., aged ninety years.
George Pond, from Keene, N. H., removed to Dover in 1834, and from there came to Wardsboro. In 1833 he married Lorinda Baldwin, of Dover, who bore him ten children. She now resides with her daughter, Mrs. Albert Fitts, of Dummerston, at the age of seventy-four years. George Pond died in Wardsboro, November 7, 1874. Five of the children are living,-Mrs. Albert Fitts and Mrs. Mary May, in Dummerston ; Emery, in Newfane; and George W. and Henry H., in Brattleboro.
Silas Waite came to Wardsboro from Hollister, Mass., about 1780, making the first clearing upon a tract of land in the eastern part of the town, where he lived alone several years. He married Susannah Vinton, of Sturbridge, Mass., in 1785, who bore him four children, Joseph, Joshua V., Thomas F., aud Mehitabel B. Joseph was a lawyer and settled in Jamestown, N. Y. Joshua V. married Julia Ames and settled in Dover. Thomas F. married Evalina Orcutt, reared eight children and died in 1846. Mehitable never
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married, and died in 1856. Four of Thomas's children are living, Alfred, Silas M., and Lucretia E., in Brattleboro, and Henry in Cleveland, Ohio.
Nathaniel Cheney came to Wardsboro from Orange, Mass., in 1803, built the first hotel here, and was a merchant until 1812. In 1813 he went to Jamaica. where he built the Jamaica House, which is still used as an hotel. He was twice married, to Betsey Hudson and to Hannah Reed, of Worcester, Mass, reared seven children, and died at Jamaica, October 30, 1844. His second wife died in 1860. Samuel T. R., youngest son of Nathaniel, was born in Wardsboro, June 29, 1805. He married first, Mary E. Kellogg, of Jamaica, who bore him two sons, and second, Martha A. Brown, of Jamaica, who bore him four children. He lived in Jamaica a number of years, and in 1860 he removed to Brattleboro, where he has been engaged in farming and garden- ing. He represented Jamaica in the legislature five years and was town clerk twelve years. Nathaniel, Jr., was born in Orange, Mass., in 1799, and came to Marlboro with his father. He married Maria Morse, of Newfane, and reared four sons. He was a merchant here several years, then removed to Jamaica, kept a store there, was also a merchant in Townshend, and died in Brattleboro.
Joseph Twitchell, son of Timothy and Sarah (Adams) Twitchell, of Hollis- ter, Mass., was one of the early settlers of the town, coming here from Barre. Mass., about 1786, settling upon the farm now owned by M. White. Between 1788 and 1790 he married Lucy Rice, who bore him eleven children, ten of whom reared families of their own. Two only are now living, Hollis, in Jamaica, aged eighty-nine years, and Jotham, in Boston. Joseph was one of the founders of the first Congregational church in Wardsboro, and his brother Timothy helped build the first house of worship. He died in 1835, aged seventy-two years. Hollis Twitchell married Charlotte Rugg, of Windham. March 23, 1820, and settled in Jamaica, though he subsequently, in 1836, purchased the farm now occupied by his son Adams, off road 23in that town. Three of eight children, Adams, Eliza and Lucy, are living. David, son of Joseph, settled in Jamaica and reared three sons and three daughters, of whom two of the sons are living. Mrs. Flora S. Rawson is one of the daughters. David died in 1881, aged seventy three years. Appleton, another son of Joseph, spent his life in Jamaica.
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