John Clarke and Mary Ashley.
John Taber and Penelope Howland.
James Winstanley and Lydia Eldredge.
John Tennaut and Elizabeth Peterson.
Constant Tabor and Francis Gardner.
William Weaver and Nelly Gibbs.
William Cornell and Mary Mumford.
Samuel Spooner and Lucy Lowcar.
Stafford Russell and Caroline Russell.
John Wanton and Lydia Gilbert.
Jonah Bill and Hannah Tennant.
James Martin and Patience Slocum.
Henry Daj^ton and Mary Coggeshall.
Donly Vial and Sarah Hill.
John Read and Mary Dunham.
Benjamin Church and Elizabetli Barney.
Philip Dunham and Mary Child.
Peter Langley and Elizabeth Lowdon.
246 MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY.
July 21. Robert Sanford and Elizabeth Phillips.
" 25. Francis Marvil and Margaret Bill.
" 25. John Buckley and Sarah Dayton. ^
Aug. 5. Thomas Wade and Sarah Forbes.
" 12. Peirce Spear and Dorcas Snell.
" 12. James Durfee and Dinah Spencer.
" 29. Lillibridge Worth and Mary Barker.
Sept. 12. Daniel Safford and Ann Vaughn.
" 12. John Burroughs and Sarah Johnson.
" 19. Daniel Munks and Elizabeth Simpson.
" 30. Daniel Vaughan, Newport, and Hannah Gorton,
Warwick.
Oct. 16. Elisha Clarke and Elizabeth Brown.
" 28. Christopher Durfee, Portsmouth, and Mary Fisher.
" 31. James Carr, Jamestown, and Desire Tew.
Nov. 20. Thomas Burnham and Ann Dyre.
" 26. John Hicks and Elizabeth Hookey.
Dec. 2. Jonathan Albro, Portsmouth, and Elizabetli
Taber, Little Compton.
Dec. 2. Nathaniel Jenkins, Newport, and Elizabeth Man-
chester, Middletown.
Robert Dunbar and Eunice Barker.
Samuel Clarke and Ruth Peckham, Middletown.
George Manuel and Mary Carr.
Henry Northup and Mary Gardner.
Jonah Moll and Abigail Church.
Caleb Allen and Ann Durphy, Portsmouth.
Walter Clarke, Middletown, and Lydia Luther,
Newport.
William Appleby and Jane Britson.
Ruppe Batchellar and Sarah Parsons.
Isaac Smith and Elizabeth Stoddard, Middletown.
Josiah Russell, New Bedford, and Patience Wing.
Newport.
John Dockray and Mary Wilkey.
Joshua Bliven and Desire Burroughs.
n,
9.
a
9.
i,i,
13.
177J.
20.
1 ( J 'T.
Feb.
18.
Mar.
10.
Apr.
29.
May
8.
K
25.
((
26.
11
29.
(I
29.
June
1.
MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTOllY. 247
June 26. Aaron Sheffield and Mary Nichols.
July 18. Richard Thomas and Ann Elizabeth Decotee.
" 22. Sampson Shearman, Newport, and Waite Greene,
South Kingston.
" 22. Job Gladding, Dighton, and Mary Claggett, New.
port.
" 24. Paul Cartwright and Nancy Munro.
" 24. Benjamin Lawton and Abigail Price.
Aug. 25. Robert Cole and Sible Hall.
" 28. John How and Elizabeth Hargil.
Se})t. 15. Wing Shepard and Dunerous Slocum.
" 25. Joseph Vickery and Elizabeth Taylor.
Oct. 16. Benjamin Smith and Hannah Woodman.
" 30. John Peters Jorden and Francis Sanford.
Nov. 13. John Brewer and Rebecca Negers.
Dec. 6. Elijah Sanford, Dartmouth, and Sarah Sanford,
Portsmouth.
" 11. Joseph Perry and Mary Stanton.
" 'Z9. John Limbricths and Susanna Thurston.
1775.
Jan. 1. Samuel Carr and Sarah Lewis.
Feb. 1. John Scott and Nancy Slocum.
Mar. 7. Samuel Phillips and Sarah Lambert.
Apr. 19. Thomas Gleason and Sarah Dun well.
May 1. John Potter and Susanna Austin.
"• 18. Ebenezer Averett and Sarah Grossman.
June 22. William Dennis and Mary Nichols.
July 7. Benjamin Baker, Newport, and Rhoda Slocum,
Jamestown.
" 9. Daniel Case, West Greenwich, and Hart Arnold,
Newport.
Ausf. 15. William Moore and Deborah Pender.
" 17. James Center and Mary Howard.
Se})t. 6. William Burch and Susannah Almy.
" 7. Edward Dillingham and Hannah Ambrose.
Oct. 15. Ashton and Hannah Weeden.
248 MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY.
Nov. 16. Jonathan Wilson and Sarah Weeden, Middle-
town.
George Allen and Dorcas Pearce, Providence.
Isaac Barker and Sarah Peckham, Middletown.
Jonathan Bennett Ingraham and Mary Sixles.
Deacon William Tillinghast and Sally Holmes.
Gideon Cornell and Rebeckah Hunt.
Sanford Ross and Hannah Briggs.
Hannah Gladding, Newport, and Susannah Torey,
Middletown.
Jonathan Fugurson and Ann Briggs.
Josej)!! Burroughs and Deborah Mitchell.
Joseph Lyon and Mary Underwood.
William Hacker and Sarah Ash.
Thomas Devans and Elizabeth Caswell.
Silas Whitman and Ann Weedon.
Joseph Freeborn, Newport, and Elizabetli Wood,
Middletown.
William Gyles and Mary Caswell.
Benjamin Holt and Edith Easton.
Charles Lassells and Prissilla Manchester.
Samuel Stevens and Ruth Fry.
Thomas Stevens and Ann Williams.
Thomas Creapon and Penelope Rhodes.
Nathaniel Tyley and Mary Nichols.
Ezekiel Sheffield and Mary Tomlin.
Josiah Coggeshall, Middletown, and Mary Hors-
well.
Thomas Scranton and Rebekah Nickerson.
Daniel Miller and Hannah Moore.
Obiah Tripp and Mary Nixon.
Jonathan Lawton and Sarah Nichols.
Samuel Wilkey and Elizabeth Hayes.
Joseph Phillips and Elizabeth Gardner.
Jeremiah Coleman and Ruth Gilbert.
William Burt and Mehitable Fowler.
u
23.
Dec.
2.
a
21.
u
25-
1776.
Jan.
11.
Feb.
27.
Mch.
7.
Apr.
18.
May
30.
June
9.
ti
16.
((
30.
a
30.
July
12.
(;
15.
i.i
22.
i.i
30.
Aug.
2.
a
15.
((
26.
Aug.
29.
Sept.
19.
Oct.
10.
((
17.
Nov.
4.
n
6.
((
9.
tc
9.
;(
14.
Ik
17.
u
18.
Nov.
28
1777.
Jan.
5.
ii,
16.
a
12.
i(.
29.
Feb.
6.
April
5.
ii
12.
u
24.
June
1.
July
9.
Aug.
25.
Sept.
13.
Oct.
18.
Dec.
4.
a
27.
1778.
Jan.
1.
4b
17.
it
22.
IC
25.
n.
28.
11
29.
Feb.
15.
Mch.
17.
Mar.
17.
i(
26.
n.
29.
Apr.
16.
ii
16.
(i
19.
MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND IIISTOllY. 249
. Guy Rogers and Margaret Canol.
William East and Sarah Macknear.
John Britton and Lucy Cahoone.
Henry Prold and Content Crandall, Middletown.
John Simpson and Mary Harrison, "both belong
ing to the Royal Regiment of Artillery."
James Ingraham and Rebekah Johnson.
Wm. P'reeborn and Mary Brownell, Portsmouth.
John Goddard and Mary Howard.
Cook Wilcox and Sarah Eslick, Portsmouth.
Peleg Thurston and Phebe Lawton, Portsmouth.
Joshua Sisson and Elizabeth Strange, Portsmouth.
Nathan Hammett and Catherine Yates.
Edward Simmons and Amey Ferrent.
Jeremiah Stacy and Ann Stanton.
Jabez Sisson and Ann Sanford, Portsmouth.
James Moody and Polly Fairbanks.
Gideon Durphy and Susannah Freeborn, Ports-
mouth.
John Easton and Mary Easton.
William Douj^las and Sarah Sweet.
George Stevens and Mary Veogy.
Benjamin Cornell and Martha Wilbour.
Giles Lawton and Ann Perry, Middletown.
Joseph Cozzens and Mary Johnson,
William Batty and Rebecca Tears, Jamestown.
Thomas Duganand Ruth Dayton.
Jethro Jackson and Lillica Robertson.
William Stevenson and Jane Holt.
Francis White and Catharine McDonald.
Newport Townsend and Philis Whitehorn.
Clarke Fowler, Jamestown, and Anstres Ingiaham
Newport.
(To be continued.)
Book Notes.
[Publishers and authors wishing a notice in this department should send
copies of their publications to R. H. Tilley, Newport, R. I.]
Year Book of the Societies composed op Descend-
ants OF THE Men of the Revolution — By Henry Hall.
New York: 1890. — This volume is a large octavo, set in
handsome old-style type, bound with cloth covers and uncut,
380 pages.
It describes in detail the history of each one of the twenty
or more State Societies and the National Society of the Sons
of the American Revolution, California being given with
great fulness ; of the four local Societies and General Society
of Sons of the Revolution ; of the New Hampshire Sons of
the Revolution ; the Daughters of the American Revolution,
and The Society of the Cincinnati.
In every case where it has been possible to obtain them
(and that means in the case of all, except two or three of
the Societies), the full roll of Membership of the S. A. R.
and S. R. is given with a memorandum of the names, rank,
services, etc., of each member's revolutionary ancestor or an-
cestors from whom eligibility has been acquired. The roll of
membership of the Cincinnati is also given.
All of the respective Constitutions are given in full.
There are also included in the work a long list of dates of
conspicuous events in the seven years' war, and a Calendar
f(U' each one of the years of the Revolution.
This book is a magnilicent compilation, upon which great
care, labor and expense have been lavished, the object of the
MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY. 251
author Ijeinfj to make it an accurate book of reference for all
who are interested in the great movement for the organiza-
tion of the descendants of Revolutionary sires, which is
spreading all over the United States.
Price, 2.00 per copy. The book will be sent by express at
the cost of tlie purchaser, or will be delivered in New Yoik
City by messenger. Orders and remittances may be ad-
dressed to The Republic Press (The New York Printing
(^ompany), 536-538 Pearl St., New York City.
History and Genealogy of the Burgner Family in
America. — Mr. Jacob Burgner, of Oberlin, Ohio, has recent-
ly issued the "Burgner Family in America." It contains
about two hundred pages, is illustrated by portraits and
family trees, and is substantially bound in half roan. Mr.
Wm. B. Chamberlain, of Oberlin College, thus speaks of it:
"Among the special histories, prepared from original
sources, not the least interesting and valuable are the Chroni-
cles of families that have formed a part of our pioneer life in
America. One such family history it has been my privilege
to see and in part to examine. It is a record of the Burgner
family, of Swiss descent, settling in Eastern Pennsylvania
and from thence diverging in many directions, especially
into northern Ohio. The pictures of pioneer life are graphic
and interesting, true to the life, as we know fiom many othor
sources, yet alwa3^s given with the air of reality and almost
of personal participation, which marks the truly original
production. The author, Mr. Jacob Burgner, of Oberlin, has
spared neither time nor effort in collecting, sifting, arranging
and retouching the details which make up this very interest-
ing story. Such special histories have a value beyond their
interest to the members of the family. Including, as they
do, many minute pailiculars, which a general history cannot
give, they preserve the very life and experience of the days
they recount, enabling the reader to realize for himself what
has been endured by the fathers in founding homes for the
present and future generations; and thus keep alive the true
252 MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY.
Spirit of patriotism and loyalty to all that makes the Ameri-
can, Christian home.
Another advantage is the presentation, in accessible form,
of authenticated facts which may serve as material, or at
least as corroboration, for larger works and those of more in-
terest to the general reader. Thus they help to maintain
tlie true historic spirit. Full indexes and an ingeniously
elaborated "family tree" add greatly to the value of this
readable family history."
The book will be sent by mail, postpaid, for S3. 00.
History of Salisbury, N. H. — One of the most valuable
and interesting of New Hampshire town histories is that of
the town of Salisbury, which has just been published and is
now ready for distribution. It is a volume of 888 pages,
printed in clear type on heavy paper and bears the Imprint
of William E. Moore, Manchester. The material for the
work, which covers a period from the time of the settlement
of the town to the date of publication, 1890, was collated by
Dr. John J. Dearborn of Salisbury and edited by the late
James O. Adams of Boscawen and Hon. H. P. Rolfe of Con-
cord. The volume, which is profusely illustrated with cuts,
maps and portraits of distinguished citizens, is very hand-
somely bound in dark cloth with gilt lettering. Tlie price of
the history is $4.00.
The Grave of Myles Standish. — The evidence con-
cerning the grave of Myles Standish and his family is now
ready for publication. There is also evidence about the
burial place of John Aldenandhis wife, Elder Brewster and
all the early settlers of Duxbury, Mass. There is a vast
amount of new and most valuable information in the mate-
rial arranged. Tlie evidence will be illustrated so far as is
necessary. Before submitting the matter to the printer the
publishers wish to have guaranteed at least 300 copies at $1
each. All who wish to have the evidence })ul)lished, will
please send a postal card to Box 97, Duxbury, Mass. Wlien
the requisite number of subscribers is secured, the manu-
script will be printed at once.
MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY. 253
The Sabbath in Puritan New England, by Alice
Morse Earle. — "The author has brought before us tlie every-
day life of the New England Puritans in a manner that im-
presses one at once as vivid and truthful. One seems to see
the rough, bare 'meeting-house' of tlie earlier days, high on
some bleak hill, unshaded by trees and wearing more the ap-
pearance of a fortress than of a house of worship. All the
relaxations which made bearable the long service are duly
set foi'th — the fennel and carraway seed that seem to have
been the Puritan substitutes for marshmallows and chocolate
creams, and the quainter custom as well whicli [)ermitted
members of the congregation to stretch their limbs, say, at
the 'nineteentlily' of the sermon, by rising from their seats
and leaning against their pew doors — in some cases with dis-
astrous results. Women were ordered to remove their bon-
nets in meeting, which strikes one as a little singular, con-
sidering the Puritan's reverence for the letter of the Scrip-
ture and St. Paul's directions upon that subject. Chapters
on 'Seating the Meeting,' 'The Tithingman and the Sleep-
ers,' 'The Icy Temperature of the Meeting-House,' gives
us still further details of the circumstances of Puritan wor-
ship.
We of this degenerate age, who have a complacent sense
of duty performed if we attend service once, or twice at the
most, on Sundays, both services not taking more than three
hours out of the twenty-four, can but wonder how the fami-
lies of Puritan ministers endured a long family service on
Sunday morning, followed by the well-nigh interminable pub-
lic services of the morning and afternoon ; then a private
repetition of the afternoon's discourse, with other services,
and a Psalm after supper ! Verily, there was no lack of ma-
terial for 'edification !'
The authority of the Puritan minister seems to have been
all but boundless in the earlier days, and the punishments
which were inflicted for merely verbal criticism on the part
of his parishioners, to say nothing of interruptions during
the service, emphasi/.e the respect which was felt to bo his
254 MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY.
due. The congregation stood as lie entered, thus following
the custom which now prevails in the 'High' Episcopal
churches, though probably inspired by a different motive.
Singularly enough, this far-reaching authority did not in-
clude the right to perform the marriage service ; and to this
day (the writer believes) a minister can only perform that
service by virtue of his authority as a magistrate, which is
given him for that act only.
Some of the older observances still lingfer. Even in Bos-
ton a "meeting-house" or two may be found where the con-
gregation stands dui'ing one prayer, at least, and to go out-
side that building, the ordinance against smoking in the
street was not formally repealed until a few years ago.
There are several chapters too, which treat of the different
Psalm books of the time, and the really terrible "•Church
Music" of that day is set forth in such a manner as almost to
reconcile one to the modern fashionable choir.
That our Puritan ancestors possessed a highly ingenious
orthography and a fondness for rum is made evident, but
Miss Earle does abundant jijstice to their nobler qualities ;
and her sense of the ludicrous never betrays her into irrever-
ence. That their life was stern and naiTOw in its outward
circumstances has long been known; but the sympathetic in-
siofht shown in 'Tlie Sal)bath in Puritan New Eno-land' re-
veals something of the brighter side of Puritan society as
well; the sober but heart-felt cheer that must exist in all
heroic lives." — Boston Commoriwealth.
Vital Rrcord of Rhode Island, Providence County.
— Mr. James N. Arnold, of Providence, has the manuscript
for the second and third volumes of his records nearly ready
for the printer. Volume If will comprise the city of Provi-
dence and the towns of Cranston, Johnston and North Provi-
dence. Volume III will contain the records of Burrillville,
Glocester, Scituate, Foster, Smithfield and Cumberland.
The two volumes will give a full record of Births, Marriages,
and Deaths of Providence county. The price of each vol-
ume wdl be five dollars.
MAGAZINE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY. 255
I^ecent Publicaticps.
Annals of the Redwood Library, Newport, R. I. —
Mr. George C. Mason has completed his work on tliis book,
and has produced a valuable history of one of the oldest in-
stitutions of its kind in America. It contains many illustra-
tions and portraits. Published by the Evans Printing House,
Philadelphia.
Eastern Worcester; its First Settlers and tiieiii
Locations. Historical and Genealogical. By Calel) A.
Wall, Worcester. 1891. pp. 52. 50 cents.
Soldiers in King Philip's War, containing list of the
soldiers of Massachusetts colony, who served in the Lidian
war of 1675-1677, with sketches of the principal officers, and
copies of ancient Documents and Records relating to tlie
War. By George M. Bodge. Boston. 1891. pp. XXIV-370.
Edition limited. Cloth. $5.00. Send orders to the author,
185 Lexington St., East Boston, Mass.
Some Phases of the Sexual Morality and Church
Discipline in Colonial New England. By Charles
Francis Adams. Cambridge. 1891. Paper, pp. 4Ij.
The One Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary of the
Founding of St. James Parish, Birmingham (in the town
of Derby) Connecticut, and the unveiling of a memorial
tablet to the Rev. Richard Mansfield, D. D., Rector of the
Parish for seventy-two consecutive years, 1748-1820. Paper.
pp. 37.
Notes and Additions to the History of Gloucester,
Mass.. Second series. By John J. Babson. Salem : 1891.
pp. 178. 11.50
The Ladd Family. A Genealogical and Biographical
memoir of the Descendants of Daniel Ladd, of Haverhill,
Mass., Joseph Ladd, Portsmouth, R. L, John Ladd of Bur-
lington, Vt., and John Ladd of Charles City Co., Va., com-
l)iled by Warren Ladd, 1890, cloth, pp. 414.
256 magazine of new england history.
An Account of the Centennial Celep.kation of the
First Congregational Church of Christ in Hinesburg,
Vermont. Burlington, 1890, pp. 78.
The Goodwins of Hartford, Connecticut, Descend-
ants of William and Ozias Goodwin, compiled by James
Junius Goodwin, Hartford: 1891, cloth, pp. 798.
Illustrated Popular Biography of Connecticut,
compiled and published by J. A. Spalding, Hartford: 1891,
cloth, pp. 375.
An Autobiographical Sketch of Rev. Royal Crafts
Spaulding, and extracts from letters of himself and his
wife, edited by Francis Barnes, Houlton, Maine, 1891, pp.
63.
Salem Witchcraft in Outline, by Caroline E. Upham,
Salem: 1891, pp. 161.
Genealogical Records of the Descendants of John
and Anthony Emery of Newbury, Mass., 1590 — 1890.
compiled by Rev. Rufus Emery, Salem: 1890, pp. Xn-610.
The Sayward Fa:mily ; being the History and Genealogy
of Henry Sayward of York, Maine, and his Descendants.
With a brief account of other Saj^wards who settled in
America. By Charles A. Sayward. Ipswich, Mass. ; Inde-
pendent Press, E. G. Hull. 1890.
A Genealogy of One Branch op the Warren Fami-
ly, witli its intermarriages, 1637-1890. Compiled for Moses
Conant Warren, by Mary Parker Warren. Edited by Emily
Wilder Leavitt. Printed for Private Circulation. 1890.
Genealogy of the Bigelow Family of America, from
the Mari'iage in 1642 of John Biglo and Mary Warren to the
Year 1890. By Gilman Bigelow Howe. Worcester, Mass.
Printed by Charles Hamilton. 8vo. pp. 517. 1890
Index to Names in Volume 1
Abbott, 73 87.
Adams, 7, 74 75 99 102
104 105 123 229
238 239 240 252
255.
Adgate, 214.
Ad lam 169.
Ady, 57.
Akley, 150.
Albro, 55 246.
Alderi, 252.
Aldridge, 126.
Alexander, 96.
Allen, 44 74 75 96 102
124 125 136 139
141 142 152 189
213 214 215 224
344 246 249.
Allin, 51.
Ailing, 117.
Allyn, 238.
Allis, 85.
Allison, 124 128 151.
Allyn, 76.
Almy, 245 247.
Ambrose, 247.
Ames, 80 213.
Amory, J 2.
Anderson 45 48 49 52
128 243.
Andrews, .56 58.
Angier, 110.
Antbonv, 53 60 63 124
151 244.
Apis, 102 105.
Appieby, 246.
Appleton, ;3-i.
Apply, 214.
Arnold. 54 80 132 190
191 217 218 219
247.
Arber, 157, 158.
Askey, 150.
Ash, 249.
Ashbo, 215.
Ashley, 84 245.
AslitoD, 247.
Atcliinson, 43 45.
Atkinsor, 16 19 127 181
243.
Atwell, 45 46 47 49 214
2.5.
Atwood, 125.
Austin, 52 64 102 117
214 225 247.
Avereti, 247.
Avery, 43 45 46 47 48
91 96. 187 214 215.
Babcock. 3S 102 104 105
12S 144.
Babson, 255.
Bachelder. 111.
Backus, 112 172.
Badcock, 82 99.
Bailey, 144 216.
B.ilch, 5.
Baldwin, 48 79.
Bannister, 100.
Banks, 226.
Berber, 83.
Barbage, 115.
Barker, 7 42 46 52 53
55 110 118 125 15)
151 152 186 189
213 214 215 243
244 246 247 248
Barnard, 33 34 84.
Barnes, 86 256.
Barns, .54.
Barney, 153 245.
Barrin^jton. 99 100.
Barron, 127.
Barrows, 81.
Bartlett, 7, 103.
Barton, 99 100 102 J 03
104 105 107 108.
Bassell, 151.
Bassett. 51 128.
Bates, 63 228 230 231.
Bate man, 150.
Batchellar, 246.
Battey, .53.
Batty, 126 151 249.
Baxter, 125 128.
Bayley, 127, 152.
Bazell, .53.
Beau, 7.
Beard, 126.
Boauchamp, 227.
Beebe, 124 214.
Beeby, 128.
Belcher, 57 114 127 152
243.
Beldiug, 85.
Belknap, 242.
Bell, 128 1.52.
Bellingham, 106.
Benackiand, 151.
Bemont, 146.
Bennett, .55 127 128.
Bentley, 29 31 54.
Biard, 1 2.
Bigley, 153.
Biiflo, 2.56. ,
Bill, 54 215 245 246.
Bi)iings,7 53126 128 214.
Bird, 91.
Birdsall, 117 148.
Biscoe, 86.
Bishop, 189,
Bissell, 79.
Blakely, 188.
Blanchard, 181.
Blasiu, 125.
Bliss, 47.
Bliveu, 126, 246.
Blodget, 116.
Bradbury, 7.
Bradison, 52,
Bradley, 141 145.
Bradford, 47 48 93 150
188 213 214 215.
Bradstreet, 83.
Braman, 151.
Brandish, 193 195.
Brandon, 205.
Brasier, 184.
Brattle, 235.
Brayton, 54 125 131 141
142.
Breed, 79.
Brewer, 74 78 90 247.
Brewster, 118.
B riant, 1.50.
Bridge, 90 127.
Bridges, 53.
Briggs, 36 102 105 107
128 150 152 245 248.
Brigham, 10 11.
Bright, 28.
Index to Names in Volume 1.
Brinley, 170 171.
Britton, 249.
Brooks, 12 54 201.
Brown, 7 42 49 54 89
102 105 127 144 150
151 152 214 221 243
240.
Browning, 244.
BrowueJl, 249.
Bruce, 75.
Bruff, 105 153.
Board man. 109.
Bodge, 225.
Bolles, 214.
Boltwood, 86.
Bond, 68 86.
Bonnis, 152,
Booth, 14.
Borden. 128.
Boss, 143.
Bosworth, 116.
Bourne, 8 9.
Bow, 116.
Bowditch, 224.
Bo wen, 75 83 117 165.
Bower, 152.
Bowman, 114.
Boyes, 119.
Boyd, 4 5.
Boyden, 110.
Boylston, 239.
Budge, 4.
Buckley, 246.
Buel, 15.
Bugbee, 89.
Bulliod, 245.
Bullock, 138 139.
Burr, 192.
Burch, 126 152 247.
Burden, 52.
Burdett, 30.
Bardick. 175 198 244.
Burg. 199.
Burgs, 80 81 199,
Burges, 199 244.
Burgper, 251.
Burke, 07 187.
Burnes, 152.
Burnham, 246.
Burrell, 153.
Burroughs, 124 126 153
244 246 248.
Burt, 77 125 248.
Bush, 124.
Bussell, 3.
Button, 213.
Cadwell, 163.
Cahoore, 53 152 243 245
249
Calef, 79.*
Callend<»r, 169.
Camp, 49.
Campbell, 42 53 96 153
245.
Canol, 249.
Carr, 7 52 54 124 150 152
244 246 247.
Carroll, 151.
Card, 54 55 125 150.
Carpenter, 52 125 1.39
1.52 216.
Carter, 55 153.
Cartin, 150.
Canwiight, 119 126 208
210 211 224 247.
Cary, 147 151.
Case, 244 247.
Casey, 129 144.
Castle, 120.
Caswell, 51 53 54 168 248
Center, 247.
Chace, 127.
Chadwick, 52 54 126153.
Cnaujbers, 1^3.
Chamberlain, 251.
Champlin, 152.
Chandler, 126.
Chanuing, 150.
Chape), 213 214 215.
Chapptl, 214.
Chappell, 44 186 244,
Chappali-r, 138,
Chapin, 77 215,
Chapiin, 82.
Chapman, 49 .52 114 127
150 214 215 243.
Chase, 52 54 118 119 141,
Cheeseborough, 232 2-34
Chester. 76 84 119 186
187 188 189 215.
Cheiney, 82 91,
Chickering, 70.
Child, 71 86 153 245,