USA > Vermont > Windham County > Brattleboro > Minutes and reports of the annual 125th annual meeting of the Vermont Congregational Conference and the 102nd annual meeting of the Vermont Domestic Missionary Society > Part 3
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resident membership is 47 less than last year.
The additions by confession were to 102 churches, a smaller number of churches thus sharing than in the preced- ing year, while 111 have received additions by letter. 79 churches have no additions. The following received ten or more by confession : Randolph, 41; East Braintree, 29; New- port, 25; Burlington First, 22; Barre, 20; Swanton, 19; Mor- risville and Pittsford, 18 each; Peacham, Rutland, and North Troy, 17 each; East Berkshire, Hardwick, St. Johnsbury South, and Waterbury, 16 each ; Fair Haven and St. Johnsbury North, 15 each; Bennington Second, Craftsbury, Wells River, Bellows Falls, and Woodstock, 13 each; East Barre, Danville, and Middlebury, 12 each; Coventry, Essex Junction, and Jer- icho Second, 11 each; Bakersfield, West Brattleboro, Johnson, and Westminster, 10 each. These data, it must be remem- bered, are for the calendar year 1919.
For another year we have to face a loss in Sunday school membership, the present number, 17,819, being 596 smaller than the number reported last year, at which time, it will be remembered, a loss of 1408 was reported. There is a slight improvement in membership of young people's societies, 3783, a gain of 83; and in men's and hoys' organizations, whose membership, 1772, is 64 more than last year.
The most encouraging aspect of the figures of the year is in the columns of benevolence. The amount received on the apportionment, $47,162, nearly equals the goal aimed at, which was $48,000, and is $10,962 more than was received the year before. Other Congregational gifts, $10,962, are at a gain of $1,372, and undenominational gifts, $8,615, at a gain of $1,210. These last two are imperfect, many churches failing to make a report. By a special dispensation, it has been promised that in the Vermont tables in the Year-Book, a blank and not a cipher shall represent "no report." Under "Other Congrega- tional" it is not intended to include payments of subscriptions to the Pilgrim Memorial Fund, but in some cases they may have crept into the reports.
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REPORT OF STATISTICAL SECRETARY
Home expenses might be expected to show an increase, and they have done so, to the amount of $30,210, the total now reported being $272,383. As little of this went into new build- ing or repairs, much the larger part must represent increased stipend for pastors. Seventeen churches have received lega- cies to an amount of $15,154. Invested funds, held by 158 churches with a total of $688,378, have increased $22,847, con- siderably more than the legacies. Increased appraisal of real estate largely accounts for the gain of $71,200 in valuation of church property, now reported at $2,542,700.
The items that will now be given have to do with the year ending with the date of this meeting, and not with the year of the statistical tables. The high cost of materials and labor may explain the few items of building and repairs. The lar- gest of these seems to be at West Newbury, where the church voted last summer to sell its parsonage and build a new one nearer the meeting house. This is now practically completed, at a cost of $2,500. At West Rutland the meeting house, now used by the three federated churches, has been renovated and redecorated, and a rededicatory service was held November 11. At Westfield, $800 to $900 has been expended on the par- sonage. Smaller amounts have been expended on the house of worship, parsonage, or other church property at Bakers- field, Bethel, Coventry, Quechee (on parish house), Chelsea (on pipe organ), Greensboro, Weybridge. At East Barre a new bell takes the place of one fractured in the victory cele- bration of November 11, 1918. A parsonage has been bought at Hardwick.
A few legacies are reported as shortly to be received .- $2,000 at Bellows Falls, $2,000 at Berlin from the estate of the lately deceased clerk, $728 at Bristol. $200 at Chester, $100 at Chelsea. St. Johnsbury South receives a gift of $2,000 from the family of a deceased deacon, to form a fund. There is a gift of $1,000 at Townshend, to be used in the same manner. At Bradford a service was held November 9 for the dedication of a gift of four memorial windows. At East Barre an aux-
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VERMONT CONGREGATIONAL CONFERENCE
iliary furnace is the gift of a member of the church. East Fairfield receives the gift of an individual communion service.
Two anniversaries have been formally observed,-the 25th anniversary of the East Barre church, and the centennial at Marlboro of the dedication of the house of worship, the church organization being much older.
The movement for consolidation of churches in the inter- est of efficiency and to prevent the scandal of a divided Chris- tianity has made progress during the year, but there was not opportunity to accomplish as much as in the preceding year. At Richmond, the Congregational and Universalist churches have federated, and at West Charleston, Colchester, and Graf- ton the Congregational and Baptist, while at Essex a lapsed federation has been restored. At South Hero and Grand Isle an arrangement has been made with the Methodists whereby the former town becomes Congregational territory and the latter Methodist, replacing the long prevailing custom by which each minister preached each Sunday to both commu- nities. Our own churches at Orwell and Sudbury have formed a federation for closer fellowship and more efficient work, but this is a federation of a different type.
Unclassified items of news include the continuance for the fifth season of union Sunday evening meetings by the two churches of our order in St. Johnsbury in a moving picture theatre, and the discussion of a community and parish house proposition by these churches. The North church has sub- stituted for the Christian Endeavor Society a "Carry On So- ciety" for its young people, meeting at the parsonage once in two weeks, and including devotional, missionary, and social features. At Bennington Second, a six weeks' school of mis- sions is noteworthy, held on Sunday evenings. A light supper was attended by whole families, which broke up into classes of all ages after a brief devotional service, text-books being em- ployed and dramatic impersonations. The average attendance was over 100. The same church, in conjunction with the Bap- tist and Methodist churches, held an open forum on Sunday
35
REPORT OF STATISTICAL SECRETARY
evenings on six other weeks, with expert speakers on indus- trial, social, and international questions, followed by discus- sions. Great interest was manifested, and the auditoriums filled. At Lyndonville moving pictures have been shown in the park to large audiences on Sunday evenings, joined with prayer and a brief address by the pastor. The same church has set up a bronze tablet in memory of its war heroes. At Wilder a moving picture outfit has been bought and is con- trolled by the federated church and its men's club. At Cas- tleton the federated church has provided a community play- ground, fitted with home-made apparatus and supervised in turn by a group of mothers. The Post Mills pastor promoted an undenominational missionary institute in August. This church avails itself of the help of neighboring summer camps in social and recreational features of its work. At Chelsea the Sunday evening service has been put in charge of four lay committees, who arrange for it in turn, and a good deal of un- suspected local talent has been discovered and developed. Bristol has sold its parsonage. evidently anticipating per- manence in the federation into which the church has entered.
The convocation of pastors at Middlebury may now be regarded as a stated annual event. At the third annual gath- ering in September, three-fourths of the active ministry of the state were present, and the effects have been apparent in the work of the year. A program of evangelism was adopted. which has been largely followed. so far as the conditions of a peculiarly trying and difficult winter have allowed. The Ver- mont Missionary for May tabulates a long list of additions to the churches which for the most part are attributable to this campaign, and this list will be much increased by additions at the May communion which it could not contain. Among churches sharing notably in these spring accessions are Barre, Bennington Second, Burlington First. Jericho Center. Lyn- donville, Montpelier, Rutland, St. Albans, the North and South churches of St. Johnsbury, Westminster, and West Rut- land. Evangelism other than of the pastoral type has been
36
VERMONT CONGREGATIONAL CONFERENCE
very little in evidence. At St. Johnsbury five churches of four denominations united for five weeks in February and March under the leadership of Rev. and Mrs. M. S. Rees. Of the 61 received at Easter by the North church only about one- fourth were actively interested during the evangelistic meet- ings, but the spiritual atmosphere engendered was of great help in winning them. The additions to the South church had an even remoter connection with these services.
Into the Interchurch World Movement our churches have in the main heartily entered, and have shown themselves ready for any measure of co-operation which the interests of the Kingdom have seemed to demand. Our denominational branch of this movement, beginning in a campaign of educa- tion and evangelism and culminating in the financial canvass just concluded, has been taken up with much enthusiasm. A more exact statement of results is given at this meeting by those having the matter more closely in hand.
It is difficult to avoid a personal note at this Brattleboro meeting, for the first report rendered by the present secretary was given at the meeting with this church in 1891. The pre- ceding fall the trustees of the Conference (then Convention) asked him to assume the statistical work which had been de- clined by one chosen at the annual meeting, and in 1891 he be- gan a series of annual reports which has now reached the thir- tieth. On looking over the Minutes of that year, it appears that but two Vermont pastors of that date are still in the same fields,-Messrs. Chapin of Saxton's River and Ball of Fair Haven. Six others then in Vermont pastorates are still at work in the state, but with other churches,-S. H. Barnum, W. R. Curtis, James Ramage, W. A. Remele, W. A. Warner, and Levi Wild. Secretary C. H. Merrill of the Domestic Mis- sionary Society, whose term began in 1888, is also still with us. Of the clerks who reported the data from their churches, 18 have withstood the buffetings of time and of the secretary, and are still performing their duties. The period of these thirty reports has brought many changes, most of which are in the
37
REPORT OF STATISTICAL SECRETARY
line of progress. There were in 1891 198 churches in the state; now there are 215. Twenty new churches have been formed, and in most cases time has justified the venture, though perhaps not in all. A few church names have disap- peared, and of a few others little but the name remains. The membership of the churches has increased nearly 12%, their home expenses 39%, and their invested funds 354%. On the other hand, their Sunday school membership has decreased 19%, and the enrollment in their young people's societies 31%. There has been a substantial gain in benevolences, but I do not venture to give figures, for the earlier data were not near- ly so trustworthy as the more recent ones. Until the days of the apportionment and the reliance upon the missionary societies rather than the churches for the data of benevolence, the most arduous task of the secretary was the reduction of the chaos of church reports of benevolence to some semblance of reason and an approach to probable fact.
In running over the statistical pages of 1891, I am struck with the progress in feminization that has since been made. Not in the membership of the churches, for the proportion of female members has slightly decreased, from 66.65% to 66.56% ; nor in the pastorate, for we still have but one woman pastor ; but in the official roll. In 1891, 19 clerks were women ; in 1920, 111; in 1891, seven women were superintendents of Sunday schools; in 1920, 44.
In these years there have been notable changes in outward form. The new Congregationalism means greater compact- ness and less independency ; greater efficiency, but no less spiritual strength. Team work is more in evidence; we have acquired the benefits of superintendency ; but we have still "a church without a bishop," as we have "a state without a king." The tests of orthodoxy may not be so rigid; but "the faith of our fathers" is still "a living faith."
JOHN M. COMSTOCK, Statistical Secretary
-
OBITUARIES
Note. These obituary notices are intended to include the names of all former pastors of our churches whose deaths have been reported during the Conference year, and to mention more briefly Congregational ministers born in the state who have never held pastorates here. .
Rev. William Penn Alcott, born in Dorchester, Mass., July 11, 1838. Williams College, 1861; Andover Seminary, 1865. Pastor at North Greenwich, Conn., 1868-74, being or- dained there February 18, 1868. Pastor at Brownington and Orleans, October 1874 to November 1876. Pastor, North Chelmsford, Mass., 1878-81; Boxford, Mass., 1881-3; West Newbury, Mass., 1883-6; Linebrook Church, Ipswich, Mass., 1886-1918. Home at Boxford from time of his pastorate. Died at Boxford, Mass., October 12, 1919, of old age, leaving a widow.
Rev. Walter Ellis Baker, born in Brantford, Ont., Feb- ruary 28, 1879. Congregational College of Canada, 1905, with courses in McGill University. Ordained May 8, 1905. Pas- tor at Yarmouth, N. S., 1905-7; Cowansville, Que., 1907-10. Began service at Morrisville, January 1, 1911 ; installed pastor June 22, 1911; dismissed April 3, 1917. Pastor First Church, Ottawa, Ont., from April, 1917, until his death from pneu- monia, December 25, 1919. He leaves a widow, a son, and a daughter.
Rev. William Stephen Blaisdell, born in Richford, Septem- ber 22, 1837. Ordained to Baptist ministry in 1868, and served churches of that denomination to 1876. Pastor, Randolph Center, March, 1876 to September, 1883. Resided thereafter at Tavares, Florida, where he was pastor, 1891-5. Died at Tavares June 22, 1919, leaving three daughters.
39
OBITUARIES
Rev. Oliver Brown, born at Kingston, R. I., March 31, 1830. Yale College, 1850; Andover Seminary, 1857. Pastor, Kingston, R. I., 1857-9, being ordained there December 21, 1857; Quincy, Mass., 1859-62; Everett, Mass., 1862-3; St. John, N. B., 1864-7; Fox Lake, Wis., 1867-70 ; Breckenridge, Mo., 1870-5. President Thayer College, Mo., 1875-6 ; professor of mathematics and natural science in Drury College, Mo., 1876-7, and of Latin and Greek, 1877-86. Pastor, Marseilles, Il1., 1886-8 ; Oneida, Ill., 1888-9; Magnolia and Modale, Iowa, 1889-91; Providence, Ill., 1891-2; North Yarmouth, Me., 1892-4. Pastor at Glover from October, 1894, being installed December 6, 1894, and dismissed January 17, 1897, having closed work there late in 1896. Pastor, Andover, Conn., 1896- 1901. Pastor at Peru, July, 1901, to May, 1904. Pastor, Lis- bon, Conn., 1904-6; Third Church, Alstead, N. H., 1906-18 (and Langdon to 1915). Died at Alstead, June 6, 1919.
Rev. Ernest Carlton Davis, born at Rochester, Mass., April 1, 1869. Revere Lay College, 1892. Acting pastor at Post Mills and West Fairlee, June, 1893 to February, 1894. Pastor, Plympton, Mass., 1894-9, being ordained there Decem- ber 5, 1894 ; Newcastle, N. H., 1899-1903; Hope Church, Marl- boro, Mass., 1903-5; Riverside Church, Lawrence, Mass., 1905-14; Forest St. Union Church, Methuen, Mass., 1914 until his death, April 17, 1920. A widow and a daughter survive.
Rev. Gabriel Havens DeBevoise, born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January 7, 1831. Studied at Williams College, 1853-6; grad- uated at Andover Seminary, 1864. Pastor, Walpole, N. H., 1865-8, being ordained there July 26, 1865; North Brookfield, Mass., 1868-80; Leominster, Mass., 1880-3; Supt. Cong. S. S. and Pub. Soc. for Mass., 1883-6; pastor, Second Church, Keene, N. H., 1886-96. Pastor at Westminster, January, 1899 to July, 1905, being also financial agent for Kurn Hattin Homes. Resided thereafter at Walpole, N. H., where he died September 12, 1919, of endocarditis, leaving a son.
Rev. Orson Cobb Dickerson, born at Naples, Ill., April 18,
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1831. Studied at Illinois College, 1850-1. Ordained in Meth- odist Protestant church March 17, 1857, and filled appoint- ments in that church, 1852-61 : Pastor Congregational church, Chandlerville, Ill., 1861-5; Boonsboro, Iowa, 1865-9. Worked under Am. S. S. Union in Northern N. E., 1870-2, and preached at Dover Center from 1871, becoming pastor of the church or- ganized there January 3, 1872, and remaining until September, 1874. Pastor, Owatonna, Minn., 1874-6; Boonsboro, Iowa, 1876-8 ; Garden Prairie, Iowa, 1878-9; Belle Plaine, Iowa, 1879- 82; Earlville and Pawpaw, Ill., 1882-6; La Harpe, Ill., 1886-8 ; Godfrey and Melville, Ill., 1888-96; North Aurora, Ill., 1896-9; Earlville, Ill., 1899-1909. Resided thereafter at Mendota, Ill., until his death January 6, 1920.
Rev. Elihu Loomis, born at Huttonsville, Va., October 13, 1823. Williams College, 1847; Princeton Seminary, 1850. Began work in 1850 at North Pownal, where a church was or- ganized May 21, 1851; ordained its pastor, October 22, 1851; left in ill health, December, 1852. Pastor, Littleton, Mass., 1854-70; Chesterfield, Ill., 1870-7; Memphis, Mo., 1877-81; Bonne Terre, Mo., 1881-2; Oakwood, Mo., 1882-5; Chester- field, Mass., 1885-95. Resided thereafter at Centerville, Mass., where he died March 2, 1920, leaving a widow and four chil- dren.
Rev. Sanford Smith Matyn, born at Haverhill, Mass., July 23, 1839. Yale College, 1865; Yale Divinity School, 1868. Pastor, Newington, Conn., 1868-70, being ordained there April 29, 1868; New Hartford, Conn., 1870-4; Olive St. Church, Nashua, N. H., 1874-5 ; Terre Haute, Ind., 1876-80. Pastor at Peacham, June, 1882 to January, 1887; at Windsor, May, 1887 to June, 1894 (and Ascutneyville, 1888-92). Pastor, Derby, Conn., 1895-1900 ; Haydenville, Mass., 1900-4. Died of cardiac embolism at Southington, Conn., December 5, 1919, leaving a widow and five children.
Rev. Eldridge Mix, born at Atwater, Ohio, January 15, 1833. Williams College, 1854; Andover Seminary, 1860. As-
41
OBITUARIES
sistant pastor West Presbyterian Church, New York City, 1860-1, being ordained there December 6, 1860. Installed pastor First Church, Burlington, September 4, 1862 ; dismissed August 20, 1867. Pastor First Presbyterian Church, Orange, N. J., 1867-81; Central Congregational Church, Fall River, Mass., 1882-90; Wellesley, Mass., 1890-2; Supt. Worcester (Mass.) City Miss., Soc., 1895-1908. Lived mostly thereafter in Grand Rapids, Mich. Received degree of D. D. from Princeton University in 1828. Died of apoplexy at Colches- ter, Conn., August 13, 1919, leaving one son.
Rev. George Wesley Osgood, born in Bangor, Me., April 27, 1851. Wesleyan University, 1874; Bangor Seminary, 1877. Pastor at Tunbridge from June, 1877; ordained pastor Jan- uary 17, 1878 ; dismissed December 31, 1880. ยท Pastor, Littleton, N. H., 1880-4; Provincetown, Mass., 1885-7; Hyannis, Mass., 1887-90; Prospect St. Church, Newburyport, Mass., 1890-4; Chestnut St. Church, Lynn, Mass., 1894-1901. Resided there- after in Lynn until his death May 28, 1919, leaving a widow and five children.
Rev. John Harrison Reid, born at Arlington, March 18, 1861. Studied at Lafayette College; Yale Divinity School, 1890. Ordained at Colorado Springs, Col., August 10, 1890, and pastor at Telluride, Col., 1890-2 ; Whitefield Church, New- buryport, Mass., 1892-8. Installed pastor at Bellows Falls, April 26, 1898 ; dismissed April 1, 1903. Then became editor and publisher of the Walden Citizen, Walden, N. Y., and later of Lebanon Evening Report, Lebanon, Pa. Died in Philadel- phia, Pa., June 6, 1919, of shock following an operation, leav- ing a widow and two children.
Rev. Samuel Bartlett Sherrill, born in Lebanon, N. Y., February 3, 1832. Amherst College, 1858; Andover Seminary, 1861. Pastor Presbyterian Church, Cato, N. Y., 1862-8, being ordained there February 4, 1863; Congregational Church, Bellevue, Ohio, 1868-73. Pastor at Fair Haven, October, 1874
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VERMONT CONGREGATIONAL CONFERENCE
to May, 1876. Pastor, Moravia, N. Y., 1877-80; West Bloom- field, N. Y., 1880-91. Home at Palmyra, N. Y., 1891-7; later at Clifton Springs, N. Y., and New Haven, Conn. Died of uremia at New Haven, Conn., April 29, 1919, leaving a widow and two children.
Rev. Wesley Wood Smith, born at New Providence, N. J., September 15, 1860. Wesleyan University, 1881; Drew Seminary, 1881. Entered ministry of M. E. Church in 1883, was ordained deacon in 1885, and elder April 17, 1887. Pas- tor Congregational Church, Portland, Conn., 1894-1901. Pas- tor at Weybridge, June, 1902 to March, 1906 ; Colchester, May, 1909 to November, 1916 ; Bakersfield, November, 1916 until his death of apoplexy May 5, 1920. A widow and eleven children survive.
Rev. Oramel Franklin Thayer, born at Stockholm, N. Y., February 5, 1855. Studied medicine two years, but had no col- lege or seminary training. Began work at Marlboro in Octo- ber, 1885, ordained pastor June 15, 1886, and dismissed April 2, 1889 ; pastor, Plainfield and Marshfield, April, 1889 to April, 1890. Pastor, Farmington, Wash., 1890-3, and Tekoa, Wash., 1890-2 and 1893-5 ; Cheney, Wash., 1895-6. Pastor at Danby, January, 1897 to October, 1898 ; at Waterford (both churches), October, 1898 to August, 1901. Pastor, Wardner, Ida., 1902-3; Mullan, Ida., 1903-5 ; San Jacinto and Little Lake, Cal., 1905-6 ; Pilgrim Church, Bakersfield, Cal., 1906-8; Sherman, Cal., 1909 till he died, February 19, 1920, of apoplexy, leaving a widow.
Rev. Joseph Brown Davison was born in Stratton, May 5, 1837, and died in Milwaukee, Wis., November 24, 1919.
Rev. Frederick William Greene was born in Brattleboro, November 29, 1859, and died at Jaffrey, N. H., January 4, 1920.
Rev. William Watson Ranney was born in Bennington, and died at Hanover, N. H., February 3, 1920.
MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATIONS
I. ADDISON ASSOCIATION
June 15, 1808. Rev. W. F. Frazier, Registrar. Meets third Tuesday of January, March, September, and November, and second Tuesday of May
II. BENNINGTON ASSOCIATION February 1, 1812. S. K. Perkins, Registrar. Last Tuesday of January, May, and September.
III. CALEDONIA UNION
January 10, 1811. Robert Clark, Scribe. Third Tuesday of January, March, May, September, and November. IV. LAMOILLE ASSOCIATION June 1, 1858. (This Association is dormant, having held no meeting since 1913.)
V. MONTPELIER UNION January 9, 1827. (No meetings have been held since 1915.) VI. NORTHWESTERN ASSOCIATION
June 15, 1808. F. W. Day, Scribe. Third Tuesday of January, second . Tuesday of May, and fourth Tuesday of September.
VII. ORANGE AND WHITE MOUNTAIN ASSOCIATION
October 17, 1801 (Orange); June 8, 1881 (White Mountain) ; united, November 5, 1901. Donald Fraser, Scribe. First Tuesday of February, May, September, and November.
VIII. ORLEANS UNION
June 17, 1823. Scribe. Third Tuesday of January, May, and September.
IX. RUTLAND ASSOCIATION
1788. W. A. McIntire, Registrar. Second Tuesday of February, May, September, and December.
X. WHITE RIVER UNION October 14, 1845. C. F. Echterbecker, Scribe. Second Tuesday of January, March, September, and November.
XI. WINDHAM-UNION ASSOCIATION
October 17, 1775. R. A. Beardslee, Scribe. First Monday of October, December, April, and June.
XII. WINOOSKI ASSOCIATION June 9, 1847. S. G. Barnes, Scribe. First Monday of February, April, June, October, and December.
ECCLESIASTICAL RECORD
CHURCH DISBANDED Brookfield Second, May 11, 1920.
MINISTERS ORDAINED, INSTALLED, AND RECOGNIZED
LELAND G. CHASE, o., East Fairfield, June 9, 1919. WALTER C. CARROLL, o., East Charleston, September 22, 1919.
FRANK L. STACY, r., Eden, October 22, 1919. CHARLES N. ST. JOHN, i., Montpelier, February 4, 1920.
MINISTERS DISMISSED
WILBUR RAND, Westmore, July 15, 1919.
C. F. HILL CRATHERN, Bennington First, November 24, 1919.
L. MYRVEN ISAACS, Orwell, April 15, 1920.
MINISTER DIED
WESLEY W. SMITH, p., Bakersfield, May 5, 1920.
STATISTICS
2
VERMONT.
CONGREGATIONAL CONFERENCE. Organized August 27, 1795. OFFICERS: George L. Dunham, Brattleboro, President; Rev. Charles C. Merrill, 83 Brooks Ave., Burling- ton, secretary; John M. Comstock, Chelsea, statistical secretary; Frederick W. Baldwin, Barton, treasurer. SESSION OF 1920: Brattleboro, May 18.
CHURCHES
PASTORS
MEMBERS
ADMITTED
REMOVED
BAPT.
FAM.
Cities or Towns
Org. Erctd
Names
Ord. Cld.
Ma.
Fe.
To.
Ab.
Conf. Let.
To.
Dth.
Let. | Rev
To.
Ad. Inf.
1 Albany,
1818|1867|Mrs. Delia H. Honey,
6
16
22
9
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
25
2 Alburg, Springs, R.F.D.
1824 1854
[J. Harold G. Way, M.E.]
'19
14
27
41
11
2
1
3
2
2
0
4
6
31
4 Andover, Simonsville,
1893 1850 Mrs. Alice E. Chase,
[Elmer H. Stevens, Bapt.]
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