Historic Resources

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Historic Resources Supplemental Material | Durham Master Plan Update | 2015 Historic Resources I. Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of Congress, 1938 Durham, Strafford County, New Hampshire: . General John Sullivan House (NH-1) . Town Hall (NH-6) . Town Pound (NH-12) . Ebenezer Smith House (NH-14) . Pendergast Garrison (NH-22) . Woodman Garrison (NH-33) II. Archaeological Reports for sites in Durham, New Hampshire New Hampshire Division of Historic Resources – 40 Reports III. Historic Maps 1650 THE PROVINCE OF MAYNE Cartographer unknown, Baxter Rare Maps Collection, Maine State Archives 1660 PASCATWAY RIVER in NEW ENGLAND Cartographer John Scott, The British Library, London 1764 MAP OF LUBBERLAND Cartographer unknown, Durham Historic Association 1775 A PLAN OF PISCATAQUA HARBOR WITH ITS BRANCHES Cartographer James Grant 1784 NEW HAMPSHIRE Cartographer Samuel Holland 1805 A PLAN OF DURHAM Cartographer D. Smith, Durham Historic Association Supplemental Material | Durham Master Plan Update | 2015 1833 NEW HAMPSHIRE STAGE ROUTES Cartographer J.R. Goodno 1854 NEW HAMPSHIRE TOWNSHIPS & RAILROADS Cartographer J.R. Dodge 1856 DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE & DURHAM VILLAGE Cartographer J Chace Jr 1871 DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE & DURHAM POST OFFICE Sanford & Everts 1892 LANDMARKS IN ANCIENT DOVER c.1670 by Mary Pickering Thompson Map drawn by Harry E Hayes, reprinted by the Durham Historic Association 1965 1892 DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE & DURHAM TOWN D.H. Hurd 1895 U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY – DOVER QUAD SW 1913 OYSTER RIVER PLANTATION c.1690 from The History of Durham, NH by Stackpole, Thompson and Meserve; Map drawn by C.W.A, reprinted by the Durham Historic Association 1994. 1918 U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY – DOVER QUAD SW 1924 DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE Sanborn Map Company 1931 PROPERTY MAP OF DURHAM Cartographer CE Walker 1932 DURHAM, NEW HAMPSHIRE Sanborn Map Company 1941 U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY – DOVER QUAD SW 1956 U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY – DOVER QUAD SW 1964 HAZEL HILL ROAD c.1720 (aka Long Marsh Road or Langmaid Road) Map drawn by Philip E Johnson, Durham Historic Association IV. Bibliography Supplemental Material | Durham Master Plan Update | 2015 Adams, John P., Drowned Valley: The Piscataqua River Basin. Hanover NH: The University Press of New England, 1976. Anderson, Robert Charles, The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England: 1620-1633, Vols.I-III; 1634-1635, Vols.I-VII. Boston MA: The New England Historical and Genealogical Society. Babcock, Donald C., History of the University of New Hampshire 1866-1941. Rochester NH: The Record Press, 1941. Belknap, Rev. Jeremy, The History of New Hampshire Volumes I, II, III. Philadelphia PA: Robert Aitkin, 1804. Brighton, Ray, Port of Portsmouth Ships and the Cotton Trade 1783-1829. Portsmouth NH: The Portsmouth Marine Society by Peter Randall, 1986. Bolster, W. Jeffrey, Editor, Cross-Grained & Wily Waters: A Guide to the Piscataqua Maritime Region. Portsmouth NH: Peter Randall, 2002. Bouton, Nathaniel, et al., Editors Documents and Records Relating to New Hampshire, 1623-1800. [40 Volumes] Concord, Manchester, Nashua, Bristol NH: 1867-1943 Brown, Craig J., “The Great Massacre of 1694: Understanding the Destruction of Oyster River Plantation”. Historical New Hampshire Volume 53 Numbers 3&4, Fall/Winter 1998: pp.68-89. Clark, Charles E., The Eastern Frontier. New York NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 1970. Durham Historic Association, The Historic District of Durham: A Walking Tour. Hollis NH: Puritan Press 1992. Durham Historic Association, Durham New Hampshire: A History 1900-1985. Canaan NH: Phoenix Publishing 1985. George, Nellie Palmer, Old Newmarket, New Hampshire, Historical Sketches. Exeter NH: The Newsletter Press 1932. Getchell, Sylvia Fitts, The Tide Turns on the Lamprey, Vignettes in the Life of a River. Concord NH: Capital Offset Company 1984. Jewell, Bradbury; Marjorie Gane Harkness, Editor, The Fishbasket Papers: the Diaries, 1768-1823 of Bradbury Jewell, Esquire, of Tamworth, Durham and Sandwich, New Hampshire. Peterborough NH: R.R. Smith 1963. Noyes, Sybil; Charles Thornton Libby; and Walter Goodwin Davis. Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire. Portland ME: Southworth Press 1928-1939, reprinted 2002. Paine, Philbrook T.E., Report from the Village. New York NY: Norton 1965. Paine, Philbrook T.E., Squarely Behind the Beavers. New York NY: W.W. Norton 1963. Piscataqua Pioneers, Contributors, Selected Biographies of Early Settlers in Northern New England. Piscataqua Pioneers 2000. Supplemental Material | Durham Master Plan Update | 2015 Pope, Charles Henry, The Pioneers of Maine and New Hampshire, 1623 to 1660. Boston MA: C.H. Pope 1908, reprinted 1992. Quint, Rev. Alonzo H., Dedication of the Sullivan Monument at Durham, New Hampshire, Thursday, September 27, 1894. Concord NH: E.N. Pearson 1896. Quint, Rev. Alonzo H., Editor, Journal of the Rev. John Pike, of Dover NH. Cambridge MA: John Wilson and Son Press 1876. Quint, Rev. Alonzo H.; John Scales, Editor, Historical Memoranda Concerning Persons and Places in Old Dover, New Hampshire. Dover NH: 1900, reprinted 1983. Ross, William E. and Thomas M House, Durham: A Century in Photographs. Dover NH: Acadia Publishing, 1996. Saltonstall, William G., Ports of the Piscataqua. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 1941. Savage, James, Genealogical Dictionary of New England Vols. I-IV. Boston MA: Little, Brown and Company 1860-1862, reprinted 1972. Scales, John B. Colonial Era History of Dover New Hampshire. Manchester NH: J.B. Clark Company 1923, reprinted 1977. Stackpole, Everett S., Lucien Thompson, Winthrop Smith Meserve, History of the Town of Durham New Hampshire Volumes I & II Concord NH: The Rumford Press, 1913. Reprinted by the Durham Historic Association 1994. Thompson, Mary P., “If Only Uncle Ben…” Letters of Mary P. Thompson 1873-1888 in the Durham Historic Association Collection. Durham NH: Published by the Durham Historic Association, 1971. Thompson, Mary P. Landmarks in Ancient Dover, New Hampshire. Concord NH: Republican Press Association, 1892. Reprinted by the Durham Historic Association, 1965. Whitehouse, Robert A. and Cathleen C Beaudoin, Ports of Dover: Two Centuries of Shipping on the Cocheco. Portsmouth NH: The Portsmouth Marine Society, Peter Randall Publisher, 1988. Wilcox, Philip A, Durham, N.H.: History in an Oyster Shell. Dover NH: The Durham Historic Association, 1976 .
Recommended publications
  • United States Department of the Interior National Park Service 1
    NPS Form 10-900 \ W^ ^^-~ 1 \ OMB No. 1024-0018 (Rev. 10-90) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking "x" in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items. 1. Name of Property____________________________________________ historic name Temple Town Hall other names/site number Union Hall; Miller Grange Hall 2. Location street & number Main Street opp. the intersection of NH Rt. 45 and Gen. Miller Hwv. N/A D not for publication city or town _________Temple______________________N/A D vicinity state New Hampshire code NH county Hillsborough code Oil zip code 03084 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended, I hereby certify that this H nomination D request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property meets D does not meet the National Register Criteria.
    [Show full text]
  • Vacation on the White Mountain National Forest
    How Campers Can Help Protect the National Forest First of all, obtain your camp-fire permit from the Forest Supervisor, Gorham, N. H., or from any Forest officer; then observe the following rules: Build your camp fire near water, never against a log or tree. Be sure it is out before you leave it. When you throw away lighted matches, cigars, cigarettes, or pipe heels, STEP ON THRU. Dead and down trees, alder, pin cherry, striped and moose maple, may be used for fuel. LEAVE YOUR CAMP GROUNDS NEAT. THINK OF THE NEXT FELLOW. Bury your tin cans and burn garbage and papers—don't throw them in the streams. If you discover a fire and can not put it out, notify the nearest Forest officer or telephone the Forest Supervisor, Gorham, N. H. District rangers are located at Gorham, Woodstock, Bart- lett, and Pierce Bridge, N. H. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1920 United States Department of Agriculture Contribution from the Forest Service Department Circular 100 William B. Greeley, Forester Vacation on the White Mountain National Forest HE cloud-piercing peaks, the lakes and streams and waterfalls, the wind­ swept ridges, and the deep woods trails make the White Mountain National Forest a land of heart's desire to the lover of the outdoors. In summer the hiker and mountain climber, the camper and fisherman may take his pick of trail and cliff, camp ground and trout stream; and the camera hunter may shoot scenes of beauty of every variety from peaceful valley to granite peak. Even the motorist will find convenient camping places and vantage points with a lookout over wild forest and mountain scenery.
    [Show full text]
  • The Development of the Upper Connecticut River Valley of New Hampshire, 1750-1820
    University of New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository Honors Theses and Capstones Student Scholarship Spring 2012 From Forest to Freshet: The Development of the Upper Connecticut River Valley of New Hampshire, 1750-1820 Madeleine Beihl University of New Hampshire - Main Campus Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.unh.edu/honors Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Beihl, Madeleine, "From Forest to Freshet: The Development of the Upper Connecticut River Valley of New Hampshire, 1750-1820" (2012). Honors Theses and Capstones. 32. https://scholars.unh.edu/honors/32 This Senior Honors Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Scholarship at University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses and Capstones by an authorized administrator of University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. From Forest to Freshet: The Development of the Upper Connecticut River Valley of New Hampshire 1750-1820 Madeleine Beihl Senior Honors Thesis University of New Hampshire Spring 2012 Table of Contents Acknowledgements ......................................................................................................................... 2 Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 3 The Early Years, Pre-1750 .............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • New Hampshire's History‐Places‐Family Ties Known As the Granite State, New Hampshire Is One of America's Smallest States with 9,349 Square Miles Area
    New Hampshire's History‐Places‐Family Ties Known as the Granite State, New Hampshire is one of America's smallest states with 9,349 square miles area. New Hampshire's natural beauty is the White Mountains, including the tallest mountain in northeastern North America, Mount Washington at 6288 feet. "It was first climbed by Darby Field and two Native Americans. The Native American name for Mount Washington is ‘Agiocochook’, meaning ‘Home of the Great Spirit’ or, perhaps more appropriately, ‘Mother Goddess of the Storm.' The Algonquian Indians called it ‘Waumbik,' simply meaning ‘white rocks’. Another name offered for the mountain is ‘Kodaak Wadjo’, meaning ‘the top is hidden.’ Both names reflect the presence of the weather regarding the mountain. Mount Washington was named after the first US president, George Washington, though the exact date of this name is unclear". <armchairmountaineer.com> "The best‐known notches near Mount Washington are Crawford (south‐west) and Pinkham (south‐east), the latter dividing this range from the Wildcat range. Mount Washington feeds three rivers: the Androscoggin, the Connecticut and the Saco. The Androscoggin winds a 280 km (175 mile) course south and east to the Atlantic Ocean. Its name comes from an Algonquian Indian word meaning ‘fish‐curing place.' " <armchairmountaineer.com> The official flag and emblem of the U.S. state of New Hampshire has held two seals since it declared its independence from Great Britain on January 5, 1776. While both seals have been retained, most people are only familiar with the Great Seal due to its corporate use. "The history of New Hampshire as we know it began as a 1623 English land grant, three years after the Pilgrims set foot on Plymouth Rock.
    [Show full text]
  • Mid 20Th Century Architecture in NH: 1945-1975
    Mid 20th Century Architecture in NH: 1945-1975 Prepared by Lisa Mausolf, Preservation Consultant for NH Employment Security December 2012 Table of Contents Page I. Introduction 3 II. Methodology 4 III. Historic Context, Architecture in NH, 1945‐1975 5 IV. Design Trends in New Hampshire, 1945‐1975 43 Changes in the Post‐World War II Building Industry 44 Architectural Trends, 1945‐1975 61 Styles 63 V. Recommendations for Future Study 85 VI. Bibliography 86 Appendix A Examples of Resource Types 90 Appendix B Lists of NH Architects 1956, 1962, 1970 111 Appendix C Brief Biographies of Architects 118 2 I. Introduction The Mid 20th Century Architecture in New Hampshire Context: 1945‐1975 was prepared by Lisa Mausolf, Preservation Consultant, under contract for the New Hampshire Department of Employment Security. The context was prepared as mitigation for the sale of the Employment Security building at 32 South Main Street in Concord. The modern curtain wall structure was designed by Manchester architects Koehler & Isaak in 1958. A colorful landmark on South Main Street, discussion of the architectural significance of the building draws commentary ranging from praise “as an excellent example of mid‐ century Modern architecture and ideals of space, form, and function”1 to derision, calling it one of the ugliest buildings in Concord. NH Department of Employment Security, 32 South Main Street, Concord (1958) The Mid 20th Century Architecture in New Hampshire Context was prepared in order to begin work on a framework to better understand the state’s modern architectural resources. The report focuses primarily on high‐style buildings, designed by architects, and excludes residential structures.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical and Genealogical Holdings Leach Library, Londonderry, NH
    Historical and Genealogical Holdings Leach Library, Londonderry, NH. ============================= HIS REF 001.942 HIL Hill, Betty. A Common Sense Approach to UFOs. Greenland, NH: Betty Hill, [1995]. HIS REF 020.6 ROA Adamovich, Shirley Gray. The road taken: The New Hampshire Library Association, 1889-1989. West Kennebunk, ME: Phoenix Pub, [1989]. HIS REF 020.9 LEA Leach Library. Catalogue of the Leach Library, Londonderry, New Hampshire, 1914. Grantham, NH: Howe Press, [1914]. HIS REF 020.9 LEA Leach Library. Catalogue of the Leach Library, Londonderry, New Hampshire, 1880. Londonderry, NH: Chas. E. Copp, [1880]. HIS REF 028.7 ADA Adamovich, F. W. Index to New Hampshire Depository Documents, 1974. [1987]. HIS REF 030 OLD Old Farmer's Almanac. HIS REF 052 CAR Car-Del Scribe: The magazine for collectors, genealogists, historians. HIS REF 052 GRA The granite monthly: a New Hampshire magazine devoted to history, biography, literature and state progress. HIS REF 052 HIS Historical New Hampshire. Concord, NH: New Hampshire Historical Soc. Library holdings: Dec 1957; Dec 1958; Jun 1962; Oct 1963; spring 1964; 1970-1973; winter 1977; fall/winter 1985; spring, fall, winter 1987; 1988-1991; summer/fall, winter 1993; summer, fall, winter 1994; 1995-1996; spring/summer 1997; Spring/Summer 2002; Fall 2008. HIS REF 285.9 NEA Neal, Daniel. The history of the Puritans, or Protestant nonconformists from the Reformation in 1517 to the Revolution in 1688. NY: Harper & Brothers, [1871]. HIS REF 289.52 EDD Eddy, Mary Baker. The First Church of Christ Scientist and miscellany: A monthly magazine for youngest readers. Boston: Allison V. Stewart, [1914].
    [Show full text]
  • Revolutionary New Hampshire and the Loyalist Experience: "Surely We Have Deserved a Better Fate"
    University of New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository Doctoral Dissertations Student Scholarship Spring 1983 REVOLUTIONARY NEW HAMPSHIRE AND THE LOYALIST EXPERIENCE: "SURELY WE HAVE DESERVED A BETTER FATE" ROBERT MUNRO BROWN Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation Recommended Citation BROWN, ROBERT MUNRO, "REVOLUTIONARY NEW HAMPSHIRE AND THE LOYALIST EXPERIENCE: "SURELY WE HAVE DESERVED A BETTER FATE"" (1983). Doctoral Dissertations. 1351. https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/1351 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Scholarship at University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This reproduction was made from a copy of a document sent to us for microfilming. While the most advanced technology has been used to photograph and reproduce this document, the quality of the reproduction is heavily dependent upon the quality of the material submitted. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help clarify markings or notations which may appear on this reproduction. 1.The sign or “target” for pages apparently lacking from the document photographed is “Missing Page(s)”. If it was possible to obtain the missing page(s) or section, they are spliced into the film along with adjacent pages. This may have necessitated cutting through an image and duplicating adjacent pages to assure complete continuity. 2. When an image on the film is obliterated with a round black mark, it is an indication of either blurred copy because of movement during exposure, duplicate copy, or copyrighted materials that should not have been filmed.
    [Show full text]
  • Nathaniel and Armenia White's City: Concord, New Hampshire's History
    Southern New Hampshire University Nathaniel and Armenia White’s City: Concord, New Hampshire’s History Retold A Capstone Project Submitted to the College of Online and Continuing Education in Partial Fulfillment of the Master of Arts in History By Elaina M. Fisher Concord, New Hampshire September, 2018 Copyright © 2018 by Elaina M. Fisher All Rights Reserved ii Student: Elaina M. Fisher I certify that this student has met the requirements for formatting the capstone project and that this project is suitable for preservation in the University Archive. September 25, 2018 __________________________________________ _______________ Southern New Hampshire University Date College of Online and Continuing Education iii Abstract Nathaniel and Armenia White were nineteenth-century citizens of Concord, New Hampshire, whose business endeavors and philanthropic activities had a substantial social impact on the city that is still visible today. This research uses a social history approach to show that Nathaniel White was significantly responsible for the retention of the state capital at Concord, as well as the funding and organization of numerous public works projects, real estate developments, and charitable endeavors throughout the city. Armenia White’s involvement with abolition and the women’s suffrage movement is well-documented, and connects her activism to the physical places within the city that are known for these social movements. The final product of this research is a proposed exhibit trail that highlights the Whites and their legacy through the city’s built environment and social consciousness, and proposes a retelling of Concord’s history with a focus on the nineteenth-century developments that are visibly evident in the city today.
    [Show full text]
  • New Hampshire Geography” Unit, Students and Educators Explore Maps, Geography Skills, and the Land of New Hampshire
    Unit Summary In the “New Hampshire Geography” unit, students and educators explore maps, geography skills, and the land of New Hampshire. Geography is a wide-ranging topic but also an essential subject to study as it teaches skills necessary far beyond the classroom. The unit focuses first on upper-elementary vocabulary and map skills, then explores New Hampshire through its weather, land forms, and various boundaries. It engages students by teaching the history of New Hampshire’s land and borders through explainer videos and by having them practicing map-making skills in local areas. The unit provides a unique introduction to geography through the study of New Hampshire’s history, regions, land, and borders. Full Educator Overview The Big Picture This natural history unit covers a wide range of topics related to New Hampshire’s physical, geographic history: • Although New Hampshire is the fifth smallest state in the country, it contains a remarkable variety of topography, plant and animal life, and climate. • When the last ice age ended about 12,000 years ago, New Hampshire was a land of mountain ranges (notably, the White Mountains), rolling hills, hundreds of lakes, and several rivers (particularly the Connecticut and Merrimack Rivers), with a small stretch of rocky ocean shore. • Most of New Hampshire is classified as having a cool-temperate climate, although the many areas of the state that are at high elevations, particularly Mount Washington, have more extreme weather conditions. In addition, the range of latitude New Hampshire covers between its northern and southern portions creates two distinct climates for these regions, although all parts of the state experience four distinct seasons.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of the Town of Keene [New Hampshire]
    CHAPTER VIII. REvoLuTIONARY WAR-CONTINUED. 1776-1777. On the 5th of January. 1776, the Provincial congress took up the matter of establishing a temporary civil gov­ ernment for .the colo.ny, and "Resolved Th,at this Congress Assume the Name, Power & Authority of a house of Rep­ resentatives or Assembly for the Colony of New Hamp­ shire." A counc~l of twelve members was provided for, to be elected in the first instance by that house, afterwards by the people. Samuel Ashley of Winchester and Benjamin Giles of Ne\vport were chosen for Cheshire county. In de.. fault of a governor, the two houses assumed the executive duties during the session, and invested the committee of safety with that power during the recess. Precepts for elections were to be issued itt the name of the council and assembly, signed bJ~ the president of the council and the speaker of the house. Mesech Weare was chosen president of the council and chairman of the committee of safety, and thus became acting governor. He was also appointed chief justice of the superior court of judicature. On the 12th of April that committee of safety sent to the selectmen of each town the "ASSOCIATION TEST," which is given in the Annals of Keene as follows: To the Selectmen ofKeene. COLONY OF NEW HAMPsHIRE. IN COMMITTEE OF SAFETY, Apri112tb, 1776. In order to carry the underwritten RESOLVE of the Hon'ble Congress into Execution, You are requested to de­ sire all Males above Twenty-One Years of Age, (Lunaticks, Idiots, and Negroes excepted,) to sign to the DECLARA­ TION on this paper; and when so done to make return hereof, tog-ether with the Name or Names of all who shall refuse to sign the same, to the GENERAL ASSEMBLY, or Committee of Safety of this Colony.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Kingston New Hampshire 1694
    HIS,T-ORY. O-F KINGSTON N E W HAMPSHIRE . .... I.. .Mi ~.-- HISTORY OF KINGSTON NEW HAMPSHIRE COPY OF THE ORIGINAL CHARTER GRANTED BY THE KING AND QUEEN OF ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, FRANCE & IRELAND GTH DAY OF AUGUST 1694 TRANSCRIPT OF CHARTER ~lliam& Mary by the Grace of God of England, other officer or officers as shall be appointed to Receive w the same yearly the annual Quitt Rent or acknowledgment Scotland, France and Ireland King and Queen, Defendr. of the Faith, &c. To all people to whom these presents shall of one pepper Corn in the said Town on the 25th of come, greeting know ye that we of our special Grace October, yearly forever & for the Better order, Rule & certain knowledge & mere motion for the due Government of our Said Town, We do by these Presents, encouragement of settling a new plantation by & with the Grant for us our heirs & successors unto the said men & advise & consent of our Council have given & granted & by lnhabitants or those that shall inhabit the said Town that these presents as far as in us Lies Do Give & Grant unto yearly and every year upon the first Tuesday in March for our beloved subjects, James Prescott Sen. Isaac Godfrey ever They the said men & inhabitants & such as shall Gershom Elkins Thos Philbrick Jr. Samuel Colcord Thomas inhabit the said Town shall elect & chuse by the Major part Webster Sam'l Dearborn William Godfrey, Jacob Garland of them Two sufficient & able men, Householders of the John Mason Ebenezer Webster, Nathaniel Sandburn said Town to be constables for the year Ensuing, which Benjamin
    [Show full text]
  • HISTORY of WARNER (Extracts Taken from the Original Written in the “Red Book” in 1885) by FRED MYRON COLBY
    HISTORY OF WARNER (Extracts taken from the original written in the “Red Book” in 1885) BY FRED MYRON COLBY CHAPTER I The Grant and the Settlement.—The township of Warner is situated in the western portion of Merrimack County and is bounded as follows: North, by Sutton, Wilmot, Andover and Salisbury; east, by Salisbury and Webster; south, by Hopkinton and Henniker; west, by Bradford and Sutton. The area of the town comprises thirty-one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one acres; the number of acres of improved land is about twenty-one thousand. The centre of the town is eighteen miles from the State House at Concord in a northwesterly direction. The territory now embraced in the present limits of the town of Warner was granted in 1735, by the General Court of Massachusetts, to Thomas Stevens and sixty other inhabitants of Amesbury and Salisbury of that province, under the name of “Number One.” The terms of this grant were that each grantee should, within three years, clear and fence in five acres of land and build a house thereon, erect a church and “settle a learned orthodox minister;” otherwise it would revert to the province of Massachusetts. In April 1737, the several grantees met. The township was rechristened “New Amesbury,” in honor of the home of the larger number of the proprietors, and by June of the following year the allotments had been made and sixty-three house-lots, containing about five acres each, had been laid out. These lots were near the extreme southeast part of the town, at what is now called Davisville, where are located several excellent mill privileges.
    [Show full text]