Vital Records of Wayland, Massachusetts to the Year 1850

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Vital Records of Wayland, Massachusetts to the Year 1850 WAYLAND VITAL RECORDS W55"W3 Cornell University Library F 74W35 W3 3 1924 028 839 657 olin The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028839657 VITAL RECORDS OF WAYLAND MASSACHUSETTS TO THE YEAR 1850 PUBLISHED BY THE NEW ENGLAND HISTORIC GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY AT THE CHARGE OF THE EDDY TOWN-RECORD FUND BOSTON, MASS. 1910 THIS publication is issued under the authority of a vote passed by the New England Historic Genealogical Society, November 6, 1901, as follows: Voted: That the sum of $20,000, from the bequest of the late Robert Henry Eddy, be set aside as a special fund to be called the Eddy Town-Record Fund, for the sole purpose of publishing the Vital Records of the towns of Massachusetts, and that the Council be authorized and instructed to make such arrangements as may be necessary for such publication. And the treasurer is hereby instructed to honor such drafts as shall be authorized by the Council for this purpose. Committee on Publications Henry Winchester Cunningham Francis Everett Blake Charles Knowles Bolton Don Gleason Hill E0MUND Dana "Barbour Editor F. Apthorp Foster Stanbope iPtees H. GILSON COUPANY BOSTON, U.S.A. THE TOWN OF WAYLAND, Middlesex County, was formerly East Sudbury. April lo, 1780, a part of Sudbury was established as East Sudbury. March 11, 1835, ^^^ name of Ae town of East Sud- bury was changed to Way land. April 26, 1850, bounds between Wayland and Natick were established. Population by EXPLANATIONS 1. When places other than Wayland and Massachusetts are named in the original records, they are given in the printed copy. 2. In all records the original spelling is followed. 3. The various spellings of a name should be examined, as items about the same family or individual might be found under different spellings, 4. Marriages and intentions of marriages are printed under the names of both parties. When both the marriage and in- tention of marriage are recorded, only the marriage record is printed; and where a marriage appears without the intention recorded, it is designated with an asterisk. 5. Additional information which does not appear in the origi- nal text of an item, i.e., any explanation, query, inference, or difference shown in other entries of the record, is bracketed. Parentheses are used to show the difference in the spelling of a name in the same entry, to indicate the maiden name of a wife, to enclose an imperfect portion of the original text, and to separate clauses in the original text — such as the birthplace of a parent in late records. ABBREVIATIONS a. — age abt. — about b, — born ck. — child chn. — children Co. — county C.II.I. — church record, First Unitarian C.R.2. — church record, Evangelical Trinitarian d. — daughter; died; day Dea. — Deacon dup. — duplicate entry G.R.I. — gravestone record, North Cemetery G.R.2. — gravestone record, Center Cemetery G.R.3. — gravestone record, Lakeview Cemetery G.R.4. — gravestone record, Draper private lot. Tower Hill k. — husband hrs. — hours inf. — infant int. — publishment of intention of marriage Jr. — junior m. — married; month min. — minutes M.R. — Middlesex County Record rec. — recorded s. — son Sr. — senior w. — wife; week wid. — widow widr. — widower y. — year WAYLAND BIRTHS WAYLAND BIRTHS To THE YEAR 185O ABBOT (see Abbott, Abott), Abigail, d. Amos, bp. Jan. 3, 1808. C.K.I. Elizabeth Fay, d. Alpheus and Lydia, Jan. 24, 1803. Horace, s. Alpheus, bp. Aug. 17, 1806. c.e.i. Lewis, s. Amos and Lydia, Dec. 14, 1794. Lewis, s. Amos, bp. Jan. 3, 1808. C.K..1. Lucy, d. Alpheus and Lydia, Apr. 25, 1800. Nabby, d. Amos and Lydia, Sept. 9, 1796. ABBOTT (see Abbot, Abott), John S., s. Ephraim, , 1839. ABOTT (see Abbot, Abbott), Jonas, s. Amos and Abigail, May 13, 1788. ADAMS, Abel Briant, s. Seth and Betsey, Aug. 23, 1811. [Abel Bryant Adams, c.r.i.] Adaline, d. Seth and Betsey, Mar. 27, 1809. [Adeline, c.r.i.] Alfred, s. Seth and Elizabeth [Betsey, c.r.i.], Apr. 7, 1820. Benj[amin] F., s. John Q., shoemaker, and Adaline, June 28, 1849. Betsy, d; Seth and Betsy, Sept. 7, 1805. Charles, 's. Seth and Betsey, Feb. 12, 1815. Delia, d. Seth and Betsey, Jan. 27, 1817. Henry, s. Seth and Judith, June 5, 1797. John, s. Samuel and Frances Pamelia, Oct. i, 1839. John Edward, s. Timothy D. and Nancy J., June 5, 1843^ Nancy, d. Seth and Betsey, June 11, 1807. Nancy Malvina, d. Henry, bp. Sept. 4, 1829. c.r.i. Samuel, s. Seth and Betsey, Mar. 27, 1813. ADLINGTON, Ann Eliza, d. Thomas, chaise and harness maker, and Mary E., Aug. 9, 1844. Charles Henry, s. Thomas, harness maker, and Mary Jane, Aug. 9, 1848. ALEXAITDER, Edmund Kimball, s. Joseph, shoemaker, and Ann Mariah H., Mar. 2, 1844. 9 10 WAYLAND BIRTHS ALLEN, Betsey [ —], w. Duty, [1775]- g.r.2. Dieborah, d. Josiah and Deborah, June 22, 1778. Frances Jane, d. Wid. Allen, bp. June 16, 1816. c.r.i. John Wheelock, s. Rev. John W. and Ellen M., Dec. 21 [1847]. Maria M., d. Rev. John W. and EUen M., July 8, 1845. [Maria MoUeville Allen, c.R.2.] Molly, d. Josiah and Deborah, Mar. 7, 1780. Nabby, d. Josiah and Deborah, Jan. 16, 1782. W[illia]m, s. I. W., bp. Aug. 7, 1842. c.R.2. ALLISON, Harriett K., d. Walter H., tailor, and Mary, Oct. 28, [i8]44. AMES, Ebenezer C, s. Eben[eze]r and Lucy, Oct. 24, 1815. [Ebenezer CuUen Ames, s. Dr. Ebenezer and Lucy, C.r.i.] Lucy, d. Ebenezer and Lucy, July 3, i8i8. Lydia Warren, d. Dr. Eben[eze]r and Lucy, Apr. 28, 1831. Mary Lucy, d. Dr. Eben[eze]r and Lucy, Oct. 14, 1823. ARNOLD, William Wyman, s. Joseph and Nancy, Apr. 23, 1805. ATKHTSON, John, s. John and Mary, Apr. 17; 1765. Joseph, s. John aSid Mary, Mar. 27, 1772. BABCOCK, Augustus Hamilton, s. Rufus and Abigail, Aug. 16, 1818. BACON, Abigail, d. Capt. John, bp. Oct. 19, 1806. c.r.i. Asa R., s. Jonathan and Lydia, Aug. 6, 182 1. Jonathan E., s. Jonathan and Lydia, Oct. 27, 1824. Joseph, s. Joseph and Patty, June 19, 1782. Rebecka, d. Joseph and Patty, June 20, 1780. Samuel S., s. Jonathan and Lydia, Mar. 29, 1827. Susannah, d. Capt. John, bp. Oct. 19, 1806. c.r.i. Zipporah Golding, d. Jonathan and Lydia, Feb. 5, 1818. BALDWIN, David Sewall, ch. David and w., bp. , 1837. c.r.i. Ellen Emmes, d. W[illia]m and Hanah, bp. Oct. 11, 1818. c.r.i. George, s. Capt. David and Lydia, Oct. 3, 1799. George Sewall, s. William and Hannah, Jan. 25, 1816. Loammi, s. W[illia]m, bp. Oct. 24, 1833. c.r.i. Lydia Curtis, d. David and Deborah, bp. Oct. 11, 1818. c.r.i. Martha Williams, ch. David and w., bp. , 1827. c.r.i. Samuel Emmes, s. W[iUia]m, bp. Oct. 24, 1833. c.r.i. Samuel Maynard, s. David and w., bp. July 16, 1821. c.r.i. 1 WAYLANl? BIRTHS 1 Baldwin, William, Col., [1787]- g.r.i. William, s. William and w., bp. July 16, 1821. C.R.i. BARKER, Alexander William, s. George and Susan, Jan. 5, 1813. Charlotte, d. William and Sally, Dec. 19, 1779. Elmira, d. William and Sally, Nov. 26, 1781. Fanny, d. William and Sally, Mar. 5, 1776. Polly, d. William and Sally, Jan. 9, 1774. BARNEY, Patty, d. John (Borney), and Cumfort, Oct. 30, 1780. Sarah, d. John and Comfort, June 18, 1782. BELCHER, Eunice, d. Sarson and Fenton, May —, 1776. BEMIS, Henry Collins, s. John W., shoemaker, and Mary, Apr. 19, 1848. John Daniel, ch. Rachel, bp. Nov. 15, 1835. c.R.2. John Edward, s. John W., cordwainer, and Mary K., Sept. 12, 1845. Lewis Jones, s. Rachel, bp. Dec. 24, 1843, a. 5. c.R.2. Marshall TVI., s. Ephraim, butcher, and Lucy Ann, Nov. 26, 1845. Martha Abigail, ch. Rachel, bp. Nov. 15, 1835. c.R.2. Mary Jane, ch. Rachel, bp. Nov. 15, 1835. c.ft.2. Sally "So Called," d. Mary Revis, Aug. 30, 1774. BENJAMIN, Adeline Augusta, d. Stephen and Sally, bp. Sept 8, 1816. C.R.I. Elvira Ann, d. Stephen, bp. Dec. 4, 1808. c.r.i. George Washington, s. Stephen of Keen, N.H., bp. Sept. 24, 181 o. C.R.I. Lydia Carter, d. Stephen, bp. Dec. 4, 1808. c.r.i. Nancy Carter, d. Stephen and Sally, bp. Sept. 8, 1816. c.r.i. BENNET, John, s. Rolan and Lydia, May 8, 1767. Joseph, s. Rolen and Lydia, Dec. 22, 1769. Lydia, d. Rolen and Lydia, Oct. 10, 1771. Lydia, d. Rolen and Lydia, Dec. 7, 1772. Nathaniel, s. Rolen and Lydia, Feb. 8, 1777. Rolen, s. Rolen and Lydia, Sept. 14, 1768. Rolen, s. Rolen and Lydia, Oct. 22, 1774. William, s. Rolen and Lydia, Dec. 19, 1781. BENT, Abby Bruce, d. James M., trader, and Martha T., June 25 [1847]. Abigail, d. William Jr. and Polly, May 3, 1810. Angela Avilda, d. Jason and Elisabeth A., Sept. 27, 1837. 12 WAYLANfi BIRTHS Bent, Daniel Wyman, s. Rufus and Mary, Oct. 17, 1781. David, s. William and Abigail, Sept. 7, 1799. Elisabeth Ann Julia, d. Jason and Elisabeth A., Nov. 17, 1829. George, s. William and Abigail, Sept. 11, 1793. Hannah Waldo, d. Rufus and Mary, Sept. 3, 1779. Henry, s. Rufus and Mary, Oct.
Recommended publications
  • K:\Fm Andrew\21 to 30\27.Xml
    TWENTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1841, TO MARCH 3, 1843 FIRST SESSION—May 31, 1841, to September 13, 1841 SECOND SESSION—December 6, 1841, to August 31, 1842 THIRD SESSION—December 5, 1842, to March 3, 1843 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1841, to March 15, 1841 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—JOHN TYLER, 1 of Virginia PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—WILLIAM R. KING, 2 of Alabama; SAMUEL L. SOUTHARD, 3 of New Jersey; WILLIE P. MANGUM, 4 of North Carolina SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—ASBURY DICKENS, 5 of North Carolina SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—STEPHEN HAIGHT, of New York; EDWARD DYER, 6 of Maryland SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JOHN WHITE, 7 of Kentucky CLERK OF THE HOUSE—HUGH A. GARLAND, of Virginia; MATTHEW ST. CLAIR CLARKE, 8 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—RODERICK DORSEY, of Maryland; ELEAZOR M. TOWNSEND, 9 of Connecticut DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—JOSEPH FOLLANSBEE, of Massachusetts ALABAMA Jabez W. Huntington, Norwich John Macpherson Berrien, Savannah SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE REPRESENTATIVES 12 William R. King, Selma Joseph Trumbull, Hartford Julius C. Alford, Lagrange 10 13 Clement C. Clay, Huntsville William W. Boardman, New Haven Edward J. Black, Jacksonboro Arthur P. Bagby, 11 Tuscaloosa William C. Dawson, 14 Greensboro Thomas W. Williams, New London 15 REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Thomas B. Osborne, Fairfield Walter T. Colquitt, Columbus Reuben Chapman, Somerville Eugenius A. Nisbet, 16 Macon Truman Smith, Litchfield 17 George S. Houston, Athens John H. Brockway, Ellington Mark A. Cooper, Columbus Dixon H. Lewis, Lowndesboro Thomas F.
    [Show full text]
  • Wi-Hi GERYIS Ple De Ra L' Is M; Zqiixotrqes
    ’ ' “ ‘ WI - H I G E R Y I s PLE DE R A L i s M; ‘ z Q iI x o r Qe s a rol “ Q Fix- ? t Cl i green s 6 (h a fis m w r a nk “ W. ’ — mn of efi n t st t a . n From th e Boston Morning P o E x r o u m ent J erso , a d place i over the bones TH E I DE NTIT Y OF TH E OL D H AR TFOR D CONVE N o f F s t for ederali m , | hank themselves having com ‘ ‘ TI ON FE DE R AL I S TS WI TH TH E MODE R N WH I G ellediu s to ~ r t p restore it to its igh place , with its H AR R I EON P AR TY CA R E FUL L Y I L L U STR ATE D e t , true inscription , and expos the rottenness i h as BY L I VI NG S P E CI ME NS AND DE DI CATE D To TH E ' , beemsm ade to cove r; We would p ain no living - Y OU NG ME N OF TH E UNI ON. m o anm nnected with those scenes . Many of them f b in Old party distinctions are revived The und are venerabl e , an d most estima le private life . m g and national debt and National Bank sys We would tread lightly on the ashes of the dead ; t Of w h ff w — s — — ems.
    [Show full text]
  • Twenty-Fifth Congress March 4, 1837, to March 3, 1839
    TWENTY-FIFTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1837, TO MARCH 3, 1839 FIRST SESSION—September 4, 1837, to October 16, 1837 SECOND SESSION—December 4, 1837, to July 9, 1838 THIRD SESSION—December 3, 1838, to March 3, 1839 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1837, to March 10, 1837 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—RICHARD M. JOHNSON, 1 of Kentucky PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—WILLIAM R. KING, 2 of Alabama SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—ASBURY DICKENS, 3 of North Carolina SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—JOHN SHACKFORD, of New Hampshire; STEPHEN HAIGHT, 4 of New York SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JAMES K. POLK, 5 of Tennessee CLERK OF THE HOUSE—WALTER S. FRANKLIN, 6 of Pennsylvania; HUGH A. GARLAND, 7 of Virginia SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—RODERICK DORSEY, of Maryland DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—OVERTON CARR, of Maryland ALABAMA Samuel Ingham, Saybrook Jabez Y. Jackson, Clarkesville SENATORS Thomas T. Whittlesey, Danbury George W. Owens, Savannah William R. King, Selma Elisha Haley, Mystic George W. B. Towns, Talbotton John McKinley, 8 Florence Lancelot Phelps, Hitchcockville Clement C. Clay, 9 Huntsville Orrin Holt, Willington ILLINOIS REPRESENTATIVES SENATORS Reuben Chapman, Somerville DELAWARE John M. Robinson, Carmi Joshua L. Martin, Athens SENATORS Richard M. Young, Quincy 10 Joab Lawler, Mardisville Richard H. Bayard, Wilmington REPRESENTATIVES George W. Crabb, 11 Tuscaloosa Thomas Clayton, New Castle Adam W. Snyder, Belleville Dixon H. Lewis, Lowndesboro REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Francis S. Lyon, Demopolis Zadoc Casey, Mount Vernon John J. Milligan, Wilmington William L. May, Springfield ARKANSAS SENATORS GEORGIA INDIANA William S.
    [Show full text]
  • Butlers of the Mohawk Valley: Family Traditions and the Establishment of British Empire in Colonial New York
    Syracuse University SURFACE Dissertations - ALL SURFACE December 2015 Butlers of the Mohawk Valley: Family Traditions and the Establishment of British Empire in Colonial New York Judd David Olshan Syracuse University Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/etd Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons Recommended Citation Olshan, Judd David, "Butlers of the Mohawk Valley: Family Traditions and the Establishment of British Empire in Colonial New York" (2015). Dissertations - ALL. 399. https://surface.syr.edu/etd/399 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the SURFACE at SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations - ALL by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Abstract: Butlers of the Mohawk Valley: Family Traditions and the Establishment of British Empire in Colonial New York Historians follow those tributaries of early American history and trace their converging currents as best they may in an immeasurable river of human experience. The Butlers were part of those British imperial currents that washed over mid Atlantic America for the better part of the eighteenth century. In particular their experience reinforces those studies that recognize the impact that the Anglo-Irish experience had on the British Imperial ethos in America. Understanding this ethos is as crucial to understanding early America as is the Calvinist ethos of the Massachusetts Puritan or the Republican ethos of English Wiggery. We don't merely suppose the Butlers are part of this tradition because their story begins with Walter Butler, a British soldier of the Imperial Wars in America.
    [Show full text]
  • Alice Bartlett Stimson Ancestry Page 1
    Alice Bartlett Stimson Ancestry G2 G3 G4 G5 G6 G7 G8 G9 G10 G11 G12 G13 G14 G15 G16 G17 G18 G19 John? Stimson (connection to George is undocumented, but appears in numerous sources) Pvt. George “Timson/Stimpson” Stimson (c.1641-c.1695 Ipswich, arr. c.1654) unk. Mother George Stimson (8/27/1693 Chebacco (Ipswich), MA-d. Hopkinton, MA) [described as a “mariner?” in Rust history] Deacon Ensign Henry Phillips [Anc. & Hon. Artillery Co., 1640, Rep. to Gen. Ct., 1672] (1614/7 Wendover, Buckinghamshire?-c.2/3/1686 Dedham, MA, freeman-1638 Boston, MA) [butcher] Alice “Allis” Phillips (b. 1650?, m. 7/22/1676 Watertown, MA) John Dwight (c.1599 Dedham, Essex-1/24/1660/1 Dedham, MA, freeman-5/2/1638, arr. bef. 9/1/1635) Mary “Ann” Dwight (7/25/1635 Dedham, MA-2/3/1685/6, m.6/24/1653 Dedham, MA) Hannah “or Abigail?” Mann?” [Dwight] (d. 8/5/1656) Capt. George Stimson (11/20/1726 Chebacco (Ipswich)-11/8/1796 Windham, NY) Henry Rust (c.1614 Hingham, Norfolk?-c.1685 Boston, MA, arr. bef. 6/1635) Nathaniel Rust (2/2/1639/40 Hingham, MA-c.12/23/1713 Ipswich, MA, freeman-5/27/1674) [tanner/glover] Hannah “Appleton?” [Rust] (c. 1616-c.1674) Lt. Nathaniel Rust [Representative to Legislature, 1690, 91] (3/16/1667 Ipswich, MA-9/9/1711 Ipswich, MA) [teacher at first free school in Chebacco, 1695] John “Wardale” (res. Alford, Lincolnshire) William “Wardwell/Wardale” Wardell [dismissed, 1638] (1/4/1606/7 Alford, Lincolnshire-c.4/18/1670 Boston, MA, arr. bef.
    [Show full text]
  • ^8) Bale-Rope and 1
    ft sXs BANNER, ft r K A vmam E weekly, UkUSHED head and * CO.. 'lml>—*'* liicr, a man: body and v* BOBI^AIVD ill a tish, dollars a year, ^ & THthree It is entitled an act to provide revenue EV ADVANCE. by iposing duties on imports; falsehood and on rs OF ADVERTISING. ;eeption stamped the very front of it— TF' lb lines, or less, first insertion, ArllmnÆH bill to of provide revenue, which lays an av- a square fifty cents for each continu- 1 and May-mer« ei of 100 cent, on to be F »gc per several de- ioiw*’.1011 andend not 15, be RTFFE NO duty in lines exceeding bank-NO PROTECTIVE TARIFF-NO ■»vcr and not ex- MONOPOLIES OF ANV«Kl\n: mi at iMciiT>. of that would come into .are and a half—over 15, rations imports * in that proportion I tl c United to the amount of nv0 squares—and VOL. I States, $40,000,- .„ta 0 LITTLE VT * _ KJ under a revenue of 20 be ROCK, WEDNESDAY MARCH (j IS i 4. annually, July paid fer-HF-advanee, MORNING, , No. 2o. n am cr but which are now excluded AB some cent, totally b responsible person. R xm 1’ien at the above GOVERNMENT OF THE U. STATES. y these enormous duties, I will not iu- rlividual account, rates, XEW JERSEY. go in one a dis- GOVERNMENT OF ARKANSAS. n under $100, year 1 SPEECH OF ed under some whether su.-li an details ; but state that the du- inSSO and THE EXECUTIVE. Lucius Q.
    [Show full text]
  • John Nutting, of Groton, Mass
    NUTTING GENEALOGY A RECORD OF SOME OF THE DESCENDANTS OF John Nutting, of Groton, Mass. BY REV. JOHN KEEP NUTTING SYRACUSE, ;-./. Y. C. W. BARDEEN, PUBLISHER 1908 Groton P/antatiolt Toffelht"r .dt/1 Tmm Lini!!S exislirl,§{ ..R.D. 1885. ---,--+---; MUe~ Hea'Y Line" mark Original Lirnits. w If) :J m z w From Dr. Green's "The Boundary Lines of Old Groton" CONTENTS PAGE The story of the work 9 Jonathan Nutting's account book (see also 66) 1:3 John, the Founder . · 15 The Governor's island legend 17 As to our name . 19 And whence came we? 21 Concerning a Nutting coat of arms . 24 Groton . 26 Gibbet hill 27 Groton inn 30 The graveyard 29 The lakes, Baddycook, Massapoag 33 The Nashua river 35 Nod farm . 35 First generation . 40 The Rev. John Fiske's note book. 41 Remove to Groton . 42 Remote accommodations of John Nutting (see also 9.5) 45 John Nutting as a Groton town officer 46 as a land holder . 49 as a soldier . 53 The burning of Groton .53 King Philip's war 53 Return to Groton 61 Second generation 63 Third generation . 65 Jonathan Nutting's account book 66 The first shoe made in Groton 66 Starred names . 69 6 NUTTING GENEALOGY Fourth generation 72 Lieutenant William 72 David, the loyalist . 76 Fifth generation . 78 Nutting cemetery, Westford 79 Abel, the musketeer 81 William, Esquire, of Groton . 82 Continental currency 83 Shays's rebellion . 83 Vaccination . 84 Minute books 85 Captain John of Lexington 87 Uncle Eb's fife 87 John of Northampton 89 Sixth generation 93 Thomas, of Oswego county, New York 93 Asia Nutting's house on John 1 's accommodations 95 William, Esquire, of Randolph 96 The Patch branch 98 The Bardeen branch 98 Joseph Danforth Nutting 99 Professor Rufus Nutting 101 Nutting's English Grammar 101 The Chanzberlain branch.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    TWENTY-FIFTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1837, TO MARCH 3, 1839 FIRST SESSION—September 4, 1837, to October 16, 1837 SECOND SESSION—December 4, 1837, to July 9, 1838 THIRD SESSION—December 3, 1838, to March 3, 1839 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1837, to March 10, 1837 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—RICHARD M. JOHNSON, 1 of Kentucky PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—WILLIAM R. KING, 2 of Alabama SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—ASBURY DICKINS, 3 of North Carolina SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—JOHN SHACKFORD, of New Hampshire; STEPHEN HAIGHT, 4 of New York SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JAMES K. POLK, 5 of Tennessee CLERK OF THE HOUSE—WALTER S. FRANKLIN, 6 of Pennsylvania; HUGH A. GARLAND, 7 of Virginia SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—RODERICK DORSEY, of Maryland DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—OVERTON CARR, of Maryland ALABAMA Samuel Ingham, Saybrook Jabez Y. Jackson, Clarkesville SENATORS Thomas T. Whittlesey, Danbury George W. Owens, Savannah William R. King, Selma Elisha Haley, Mystic George W. B. Towns, Talbotton John McKinley, 8 Florence Lancelot Phelps, Hitchcockville Clement C. Clay, 9 Huntsville Orrin Holt, Willington ILLINOIS REPRESENTATIVES SENATORS Reuben Chapman, Somerville DELAWARE John M. Robinson, Carmi Joshua L. Martin, Athens SENATORS Richard M. Young, Quincy 10 Joab Lawler, Mardisville Richard H. Bayard, Wilmington REPRESENTATIVES George W. Crabb, 11 Tuscaloosa Thomas Clayton, New Castle Adam W. Snyder, Belleville Dixon H. Lewis, Lowndesboro REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Francis S. Lyon, Demopolis Zadok Casey, Mount Vernon John J. Milligan, Wilmington William L. May, Springfield ARKANSAS SENATORS GEORGIA INDIANA William S.
    [Show full text]
  • Of the United States Congress 1774-1989 Bicentennial Edition
    ONE HUNDREDTH CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION SENATE DOCUMENT NO. 100-34 BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS 1774-1989 BICENTENNIAL EDITION THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS SEPTEMBER 5, 1774, TO OCTOBER 21, 1788 and THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES FROM THE FIRST THROUGH THE ONE HUNDREDTH CONGRESSES MARCH 4, 1789, TO JANUARY 3, 1989, INCLUSIVE CLOSING DATE OF COMPILATION, JUNE 30, 1988 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1989 THIS PUBUCATION MAY BE PURCHASED FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS, U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20402. STOCK NUMBER 052-071-00699-1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data United States. Congress. Biographical directory of the United States Congress, 1774-1989, the Continental Congress, September 5, 1774, to October 21, 1788, and the Congress of the United States, from the First through the One Hun- dredth Congresses, March 4, 1789, to January 3, 1989, inclusive. (Document I 100th Congress, 2nd session, Senate; no. 100-34) "Edited under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing. editors in chief, Kathryn Allamong Jacob, Bruce A. Ragsdale"p. 1. UnitedStates.Continental CongressBiographyDictionaries. 2. United States. CongressBiographyDictionaries.I. Jacob, Kathryn Allamong. II. Ragsdale, Bruce A.III. United States. Congress. Joint Committee on Printing. N. Title.V. Series: Senate document (United States. Congress. Senate); no. 100-34. JK1O1O.U51989 093.3'12'0922 [B] 88-600335 The paper used in this publication meets the minimumrequirements of the Joint Committee on Printing's Standard for UncoatedPermanent Printing Paper (JCP A270) and ANSI Standard Z39.48-1984. SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION No. 85 NINETY-NINTH CONGRESS SUBMITTED BY MR.
    [Show full text]
  • Calculated for the Use of the State Of
    pw .>^*k :^ ^J w- ^^H^ ^;^-- A^MVE* Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2009 with funding from University of IVIassachusetts, Boston http://www.archive.org/details/pocketalmanackfo1831amer ,:P^^^i^^^ MASSACHUSETTS ^REGISTER, AND For the Year of our Lord 18^1, Being third after Bissextile, or Leap Year, and Fifty-fifth of American Independence. CONTAINING Civil Judicial,, Ecclesiastical and Military Lists in Associations, and Corporate Institutions For Literary, Agricultural, and Charitable Purposes. A List of Post-Towns in Massachusetts, with the names of the post-masters. CITY OFFICERS IN BOSTON. ALSO, Catalogues of the Officers of the GENERAZ. GOVERNMENT, With its several Departments and Establishments ; Times of the Sittings of the several Courts ; Governors in each Stale ; And a Variety of other Interesting Articles. BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY JAMES LORING, 132 WASHINGTON STREET. ECLIPSES 1831. MJon:as3ow,!'°"'^'^^"P^"^'''^y^"' two of the San and two of the • • • "''•f-Appar. time morning. sSr! : : MWdle ...".;'. 1 5/ ^"*^ 2 30 r Appar. time evening. l^uration 2 54 ) Digits eclipsed, IP 30' on the Sun's S. limb. '^"'^ ^^« ^^^o£^^:^^;^^^Z e^a7;h^^'?tMi^,i'r me a Inmiiu.as annular,^r^^;fform- .inir) and central in lH«ho«,U-,^'' If the air be clear aVthe time";:^,;; "'"' *^' ^"^°"- l^::,*!:,^?, i,°e°,Te'l" '^ "' ^'^ ^°«"' of couJe'; invisible."'" ^^'^--y ^^^ ^h. 6m. evening, ibK'-lj;:^?;:;!^!;;;^?^:::;;^""' August 7,at5h.lQm.evening,i.^^^^ IV. The fourth will be of tl.e Moon, A.igust 23, partly visible Beginning 3^. sgm. ) Moon sets 5 12 ( Middle 5 13 ? Appar. time morning. ^nd 6 29 > Digits eclipsed, 5° 48' on Moon's N.
    [Show full text]
  • Association' Franklin Medal Scholar
    ' . A S SO C I A T I O N FRANKLIN MEDAL SCHOLAR P R INTED T H E A S S OC I ATION F R OM T H E A N N "A L R EP OR T O F T H E S C H OO L C OM M ITTEE F O R 1857 . B O S T O N T GE O . O. R AND 85 AV E R Y I TY PRIN E RS , C , N o . 3 C O R N H TL L . A S S O C I A T I O N FRANKLIN M EDAL S RS CHOLA . P R INTED F OR T H E A S S OC I A TION F R OM T H E A N N "A L R EP OR T OF T H E S C H OOL C OM M ITTEE F OR 1857 . B O S T O N AV E R Y I TY PRINTE RS E . D G O C R AN , C , N o . 3 C O R N H I L L . L . F RANKL IN M E D A S No . 2 . No . NO . 4 . NO . 3 . NO . 6 No . 5 Gift T H E F R A N K L I N M E D AL . THE F ranklin M e dal “ e th e en , an honorary r ward for c o ura ement o f the e e o f de g scholarship in fr schools Boston, e e en F the e riv s its origin and nam from B jamin ranklin, gr at - - e st and most famous of our native born sons .
    [Show full text]
  • Happy Birthday to Us Volume V—Number 2 ______By Daphne Abeel
    Summer 2005 The Newetowne Chronicle/ 1 IN THIS ISSUE P E O P L E A N D P L A C E S Summer 2005 Happy Birthday to Us Volume V—Number 2 By Daphne Abeel _________________________ P E O P L E A N D P L A C E S Our big news—the Cambridge Historical Society is 100 years old. In 1905, a Happy Birthday to Us small group of amateur historians, led by Richard Henry Dana III, founded the cover story Society. Research to date has not revealed exactly what motivated them, but F R O M T H E P R E S I D E N T their first subject of study, as recorded in the organization’s Proceedings, was Letters to Sara Old Cambridge (or West Cambridge)—as distinct from East Cambridge, page 2 Cambridgeport, or North Cambridge. Streams of immigrants were settling those 19th-century neighborhoods, and it appears that the purpose of the Soci- F R O M T H E D I R E C T O R ety was to preserve Cambridge’s earliest history, that is, its Puritan-Anglo- Thank You! Yankee heritage. page 3 S O C I E T Y L E C T U R E Looking Backward: Club 47 and the 1960s Folk Music Revival page 4 D A N A F E L L O W E V E N T The Worcester House page 5 F R O M T H E L I B R A R Y & A R C H I V E Mark Time The Parmenter-Hunt Diaries page 8 S O C I E T Y N E W S The Restoration of the Chippen- dale Standing Desk C A L E N D A R O F E V E N T S The Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research hosted the Cambridge Historical page 10 Society’s Grand Centennial Celebration.
    [Show full text]