Celestial Seasonings – August 2023

By Heather Durham | July 31, 2023

Greetings, young astronomers of New Hampshire! August is a wonderful month for stargazing in our region. The warm summer nights provide a perfect opportunity to explore the night sky with the naked eye. Let’s embark on a celestial journey to witness some fascinating astronomical events that will grace our skies throughout this month.

August 1: The Sturgeon Super Moon

To kick off the month, we have a remarkable event – the Sturgeon Moon! On this day, the Moon appears as a full super moon, shining brightly in the night sky. A super moon occurs when the Moon reaches its perigee, the closest point to Earth in its orbit. As a result, the Moon seems larger and more luminous than usual. The name “Sturgeon Moon” dates back to Native American tribes, who named it after the abundant sturgeon fish caught during this time of year.

August 3: The Moon and Saturn Conjunction

As we venture into the night of August 3rd, cast your gaze towards the eastern horizon. There, you’ll witness a celestial dance between the Moon and Saturn. These two celestial bodies will appear close together in what we call a conjunction. While you won’t need any special equipment to observe this event, a pair of binoculars might help you get a clearer view of Saturn’s majestic rings alongside our Moon.

August 8: The Moon and Jupiter Duo

Keep an eye on the eastern sky once again on August 8th, as the Moon and Jupiter will put on a delightful show. Both will appear in close proximity as they rise towards the right. Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, will be a prominent and brilliant companion to the Moon. At the same time, today marks the first full Moon of the month, presenting a captivating sight known as the last quarter phase.

August 9: Half Phase of Mercury

On this day, let’s turn our attention to the innermost planet in our solar system – Mercury. Although observing Mercury can be a bit challenging due to its proximity to the Sun, on August 9th, it will be in a half phase. This means that we will see exactly half of Mercury illuminated by the Sun. Keep in mind that Mercury’s appearance quickly changes as it orbits between the Earth and the Sun, causing it to fade from view soon after.

August 13: The Perseid Meteor Shower Continues

Have you ever seen a shooting star? Well, you’re in for a treat! The Perseid Meteor Shower, one of the most popular annual meteor showers, started in July and will continue until around August 24th. This celestial spectacle occurs when the Earth passes through the debris left by Comet Swift-Tuttle. Find a dark spot away from city lights, lie back, and enjoy the show as bright meteors streak across the night sky.

August 18: K-Cygnid Meteor Shower Peak

Tonight’s the night for the K-Cygnid Meteor Shower! These meteors appear to radiate from the Constellation Draco, adding an extra touch of astronomical delight. Remember, you won’t need any fancy equipment to witness this event; just your eyes and a bit of patience will do the trick.

August 24: The First Quarter of the Second Moon

As the month progresses, we encounter the first quarter of the second full moon. A first quarter moon appears half-illuminated and is an ideal time for observing lunar features with just your naked eye or a basic pair of binoculars.

August 27: Saturn at Opposition

Today is a special day for observing Saturn! The ringed planet reaches opposition, which means it is directly opposite the Sun in the sky. As a result, Saturn will rise as the Sun sets and remain visible throughout the night. Don’t miss this chance to catch a glimpse of Saturn’s breathtaking rings through a telescope.

August 30: Saturn and the Blue Moon

We end the month with a fantastic finale! Saturn once again graces the night sky, rising alongside the Moon. But that’s not all; today’s full Moon is a Blue Moon – the second full Moon of the month. Moreover, this Moon also qualifies as another super moon, appearing larger and more awe-inspiring in our New Hampshire skies.

I hope you enjoy observing these celestial events in the beautiful nights of August in New Hampshire. Remember, the wonders of the universe are waiting for you to explore and appreciate. Happy stargazing!


References:

DEEPSPACE. (2023, July 24). Astronomical Events August 2023. YouTube, uploaded by DEEPSPACE. Retrieved from youtube/9A4PXo0OJOQ

Ford, D.F. (n.d.). July 2023. Retrieved from in-the-sky.org

Now Next. (2022, December). Don’t Miss These Astronomical Events in 2023. YouTube, uploaded by Now Next. Retrieved from youtube/qj6hbxbO9zc

West Milton Farmer Ambrose H. Wentworth (1832-1913)

By Muriel Bristol | July 30, 2023

Ambrose H. Wentworth was born in Middleton, NH, July 7, 1832, son of Ebenezer, Jr., and Sophia (Roberts) Wentworth.

Ebenezer Wentworth, a farmer, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Sophia [(Roberts)] Wentworth, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), John Wentworth, a shoemaker, aged thirty years (b. NH), Ambrosse Wentworth, a shoemaker, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH), E.P. [Eli Plummer] Wentworth, a shoemaker, aged twenty-six years (b. NH), and L.H. [Luther H.] Wentworth, aged fifteen years (b. NH). Ebenezer Wentworth had real estate valued at $3,500 and personal estate valued at $1,000. John Wentworth had personal estate valued at $500; Ambrosse Wentworth had personal estate valued at $300; and E.P. Wentworth had personal estate valued at $400. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Ira F. Howe, a farmer, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), and Mary A. Wakeham, aged thirty-five years (b. NH).

Milton sent Ambrose H. Wentworth and Thomas H. Roberts to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representatives, for the 1865-66 biennium. During their biennium, they would vote on two proposed additions to the U.S. Constitution, the Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments.

Ambrose H. Wentworth was assigned to Retrenchment and Reform Committee and Thomas H. Roberts was assigned to the Military Accounts Committee. They were allocated 105 miles for their travel allowance.

New Hampshire was the twenty-third state of the necessary twenty-seven state approvals necessary for ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

ARTICLE XIII. SECTION 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. SEC. 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the 215 NH House members [69.1%] that voted in favor of the Thirteenth Amendment, on Thursday, June 29, 1865, while another 96 NH House members [30.9%] voted against it. (Several absent members were permitted to add their votes, be they pro (2) or con (1), after the initial vote). Both houses of the NH General Court finalized their approvals by July 1, 1865. (Other states would add their approval to the Thirteenth Amendment after its ratification, some as late as 1995).

A year later, New Hampshire was the second state of the twenty-eight state approvals necessary for ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

ARTICLE XIV. Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Section 2. Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the Executive and Judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State. Section 3. No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability. Section 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void. Section 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.

Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the 207 NH House members [64.9%] that voted in favor of the Fourteenth Amendment, on Thursday, June 28, 1866, while another 112 NH House members [35.1%] voted against it. Both houses of the NH General Court finalized their approvals by July 6, 1866. (Other states would add their approval to the Fourteenth Amendment after its ratification, some as late as 2003).

On Friday, June 29, 1866, Rep. S.G. [Brig. Gen. Simon G.] Griffin (1824-1902) of Keene, NH, from the Military Affairs Committee, presented a petition seeking to authorize towns to “equalize” enlistment bounties. (Some towns had outbid others during recruiting). He moved that it should be ruled inexpedient to legislate (ITL). Rep. Isaac Adams (1802-1883) of Sandwich, NH, moved the alternative that it should be recommitted to the Military Affairs Committee in order that they might produce a bill on the subject. In the roll call vote that followed. Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the minority of 97 members [43.3%] that voted to recommit, as opposed to the majority of 127 members [56.7%] that voted not to recommit.

On Friday, July 6, 1866, Rep. Alvah M. Kimball (1829-1869) of Rochester, NH, moved that a committee report on spiritous liquors, which recommended indefinite postponement of sundry petitions and bills related to the subject, be accepted. Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the minority of 102 members [42.1%] that voted to accept the report, as opposed to the majority of 140 members [57.9%] that voted not to accept the report.

Ebenezer Wentworth, a farmer, aged seventy-two years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Sophia [(Roberts)] Wentworth, keeping house, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), Ambrose H. Wentworth, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), William E. Goodwin, aged sixteen years (b. NH), Ellen A. Corson, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), and Ralf S. Corson, aged four months (b. NH). Ebenezer Wentworth had real estate valued at $2,500 and personal estate valued at $1,075. Sophia Wentworth had personal estate valued at $500; Ambrose H. Wentworth had personal estate valued at $2,200. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Samuel Sanborn, a farm laborer, aged seventy-four years (b. ME), and Ira F. Howe, a farmer, aged sixty-three years (b. NH).

Father Ebenezer Wentworth died of a spinal complaint in Milton, April 24, 1874, aged seventy-six years, ten months. (The original death certificate had a bracketed question mark next to the 1874).

Brother John W. Wentworth died of consumption in Haverhill, MA, July 1, 1877, aged forty-seven years, twenty-two days. He was a married shoe cutter.

Luther H. Wentworth, a traveling agent, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his son, Randolph Wentworth, aged nine years (b. MA). (Luther H. Wentworth was divorced). They shared a two-family residence with the household of Ambrose H. Wentworth, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), who headed the other portion of the two-family residence. His household included his mother, Sophia [(Roberts)] Wentworth, a widow, aged seventy-seven years (b. NH). She had rheumatism. This two-family residence appeared in the enumeration between the household of Mary A. Varney, keeping house, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), and Thomas J. Howe, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH).

Mother Sophia (Roberts) Wentworth died in Milton, August 16, 1883, aged eighty years, three months.

DEATHS. In West Milton, August 16, after years of suffering, Sophia, widow of the late Ebenezer Wentworth, aged 8o years, 3 mos. (Farmington News, August 24, 1883).

Hiram Barker (1815-1887) died of paralysis in Farmington, NH, March 26, 1887, aged seventy-one years, three months, and five days. His last will was challenged over the issue of whether or not his mind had been sound when he made his last will. Ambrose Wentworth was one of a number of witnesses who testified in January 1888.

BARKER WILL CASE. … Ambrose Wentworth. I live in Milton. Have known Hiram Barker from my boyhood and the son [Hiram Henry Barker (1851-1915)] since he was three years old. My first intimacy with the father was due to my love of learning. My debative powers led him to solicit my society. Mr. Barker used to come to my store frequently and converse with me about his son. He told me there was no one who could care for his son so well as I. Hiram wanted me to induce his son to go to school. He once said to me that these saloons were tending to injure his son. That “he is sure to be a drunkard as the waters are to run down hill. I have had at least a hundred conversations with the elder Barker. He had a “chronic fear” that his son would be a drunkard. I have no knowledge at all of young Hiram’s drinking. The son seemed perfectly diligent in business. The son was closer than his father, and I told him so. I once told his father that his son never drank half as much as those democratic members of congress which he used to talk about. I asked his father if he saw the evils of liquor in his family? He said, “no, no, no, not that.” He said he used his influence to have the son arrested in order to benefit him when influenced by liquor. Hiram has called me in and consulted about spiritualism. It was after his wife’s death [in 1880]. He said a Boston medium told him that his wife wanted him to build a tomb. He said, “Ambrose, I am going to heed this voice. I am going to build this tomb because of the mighty influence which I have heard from Boston.” He once told me he had hot flashes in his brain and prickly sensations in his limbs. Asked me what I thought of them? I told him the symptoms of my father. I went to his office once and paid a note due from my brother-in-law. He could not cast the interest. Said he was growing worse, and laid it to tobacco. Once told me that he had tried to leave off tobacco, but had a terrible fright. He once told me, “You are happier than I.” I once told him I considered him wrong. A hundred times he called me into his office and talked to me upon that most delicate and wonderful subject of spiritualism. He believed in it. [Witness still on the stand when going to press]. (Farmington News, January 6, 1888).

LOCALS. Cyrus Elkins purchased a pair of work horses in Boston last week. He has the contract to haul the wood from the Ambrose Wentworth lot to the depot (Farmington News, October 26, 1888).

WEST MILTON. Summer travellers have returned to their homes, excepting Mr. and Mrs. Luther Wentworth, who are still rusticating in the Green Mountain region, while Wentworth Farm is under the control of Mr. Ambrose Wentworth, who has been receiving a visit from Mr. John Wakeham (Farmington News, October 28, 1892).

LOCALS. Mr. Wilder has been visiting his friend, Ambrose Wentworth at West Milton (Farmington News, April 6, 1894).

Ambrose H. Wentworth, a farmer, aged sixty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his brother, Luther H. Wentworth, a commercial traveler, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), and his sister-in-law (of seven years), Flora N. [(Nelson)] Wentworth, aged forty-five years (b. VT). Ambrose H. Wentworth owned their farm, free-and-clear. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Edwin Kenney, a carriage dealer, aged sixty-two years (b. ME), and J. William Harriman, a farmer, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH).

WEST MILTON. Ambrose Wentworth, who broke his ankle so badly about New Year’s, is not yet able to be up. A troublesome abrasion where the bone cut through, and his age, have retarded his recovery, but improvement is perceptible week by week (Farmington News, March 15, 1901).

WEST MILTON. L.H. Wentworth and wife have moved to their new home in Farmington. Ambrose Wentworth, who has been a lifelong resident of Milton, will make his home with them (Farmington News, November 28, 1902).

PERSONAL. Mr. Ambrose Wentworth, who has been confined to his bed for the past month, is able to be about the house (Farmington News, May 29, 1903).

PERSONAL. Ambrose Wentworth was 74 years old Saturday. Since January 1st, when he became partially paralyzed, he has not left his bed, but can feed himself, and enjoys his pipe and newspaper (Farmington News, July 13, 1906).

LOCAL. Ambrose Wentworth of North Main street, who has not been dressed since he experienced a paralytic shock Jan. 1, ’07, was 77 years old the seventh of this month no says he feels as well as ever, although eyes, ears and teeth are failing. His appetite is good, and this eccentric bachelor who is a “two mealer” finds digestion still perfect (Farmington News, July 23, 1909).

Luther H. Wentworth, a traveling salesman, aged sixty-five years (b. NH), headed a Farmington, NH, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Flora N. [(Nelson)] Wentworth, aged fifty-six years (b. VT), and his brother, Ambrose H. Wentworth, aged seventy-seven years (b. NH). Luther H. Wentworth owned their farm on North Main Street, free-and-clear. Flora N. Wentworth was the mother of two children, of whom zero were still living. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Frank W. Walsh, a shoe factory foreman, aged thirty-six years (b. NH), and William L. Barry, a bank bookkeeper, aged fifty-six years (b. NH).

Personal. Mr. Ambrose Wentworth entered on his 80th year July 7 (Farmington News, July 14, 1911).

Personal. Mrs. E. Plummer Wentworth of Haverhill, Mass., was recently in town to visit her brother-in-law, Ambrose Wentworth, who is failing in health (Farmington News, October 17, 1913).

Ambrose H. Wentworth died of old age in Farmington. NH, November 4, 1913, aged eighty-two years, three months, and twenty-seven days. He had resided there for ten years, i.e., since circa 1903, with his previous residence having been in Milton. P.H. Greeley, M.D., signed the death certificate.

West Milton. Many of the old friends and people of Ambrose Wentworth were saddened to learn of his death which occurred at his home in Farmington last week (Farmington News, November 14, 1913).

Brother Luther H. Wentworth died of myocardial insufficiency at the NH State Hospital in Concord, NH, December 1, 1917, aged seventy-three years, and thirteen days.


References:

Find a Grave. (2014, September 21). Hiram Barker. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/136232079/hiram-barker

NH General Court. (1866). Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=szgtAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA5

Milton Mills Sketch of 1911 – 3

By Muriel Bristol | July 23, 2023

Continued from Milton Mills Sketch of 1911 – 2

Asa A. Fox lost his Milton Mills grocery store to a fire in March 1876. The local Independent Order of Odd Fellows (I.O.O.F.) society rented his store’s second floor as their meeting hall and lost everything. (See Milton in the News – 1876).

THE NEW ODD FELLOWS BLOCK. For some time the project of acquiring the land and the old Congregational church building had been talked of by the members of the Miltonia Lodge of Odd Fellows No. 52, but the business was not completed until Tuesday, April 19, of last year. The land on which the church set was given to the society by the late John Nutter with the provision that if the church should be used for other purposes the land should revert to him or his heirs. The committee from the lodge first had to make arrangements with the heirs and then with the pew owners. There were a few of those whose memory of it as a sacred place and the church home of their youth, made them hesitate about selling their holdings; but the evident fact that its days as a church were numbered, and that it would be made good use of if the Odd Fellows owned it, backed up by generous offerings from the lodge committee, finally induced all to consent to the sale.
The structure has been completely remodeled inside. There are lodge and suitable ante rooms on the upper floor and down stairs is a reception room, banquet hall and modernly equipped cuisine. The Miltonia Lodge of Odd Fellows will have the credit of improving the looks of the village and furnishing the society with as good a home as possessed by any lodge in the county. The name Miltonia, that has been given to this lodge, and is also the name of the mills, would make an appropriate one for village and it is within the possibilities that eventually it will be so called.

ASA A. FOX. Undertaker. One of the occupations or professions that require peculiar and special qualifications is that of undertaker. To enter the home where his services are needed and carry the feelings and manner that will lighten the sorrows of the inmates who have suffered loss, is one of the requirements of the profession. It is not necessary that the undertaker mourn with the afflicted family but it is well that he should have a natural appreciation of the situation and be able to show it in his every act without dissimulation. We have been moved to mention these things because they are the natural qualities of Mr. Asa A. Fox who has been the undertaker in Milton Mills for twenty-seven years, and have distinguished him in his line of work. Mr. Fox was born in Milton Mills being the son of the late Asa Fox and knows intimately all the people there and in the surrounding towns and is by nature kindly-hearted and sympathetic. Long before the business became his profession he was among the first to render assistance to those whose homes had been visited by death.
Mr. Fox early in life learned the carpenter’s trade and for six years worked at that business in Lawrence and Brookline, Mass. After returning to Milton Mills he acted as express messenger between Rochester and Union when the railroad terminated as
[at] that town. He filled that position for three and a half years. After that he conducted a clothing manufacturing business and also a general store. That was in the building that was burned in 1885 [1876] on the site where the Central block is now located. He built that block and later sold it to the late Henry H. Townsand.
Previous to that he had given some study to the undertaking business and was able to pass examination in Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts. He is a licensed embalmer in the three states and can answer any calls in them and has business in them all. Notwithstanding the fact that he is located in a small village his equipment is equal to that of the larger establishments and his rolling stock is not excelled by any in the State. He is assisted by his son, Charles D. Fox, who is thoroughly proficient in the business. He has passed his examinations in Maine and New Hampshire with the highest degree in rank. He is president of the Undertakers’ Association of New Hampshire and belongs to several secret orders.
Mr. Fox, senior, has been interested in civic affairs all his life and has been selectman of the town and in 1880 represented this class in the legislature. He was also deputy sheriff for nine years. Mr. Fox is in the truest sense a useful man whose sense of the duties and privileges of life have led him to associations that exemplify the fact. It may not be to his liking to have the matter mentioned here, but it seems fitting that mention should be made of the fact that he has invited the old persons of this and nearby villages to an annual dinner and social gathering which he has furnished at his beautiful home on School street. This custom has been six years in vogue and the enjoyment of the occasions is one of the pleasantest of each year. All persons over seventy years of age with attendants are included in the invitation. In contrast to this event Mr. Fox has several times invited the children to a May party and the event has been celebrated In the good old country style of a May pole with decorations, in bright colors, and children, overbrimming with joy, dancing around it. They were furnished a dinner and given a day of keenest enjoyment. These things are done by Mr. Fox as an expression of that natural disposition to make good use of the opportunities and favors that fortune has placed in his hands. He is the founder of the Odd Fellows and the Knights of Pythias lodge in Milton Mills; belongs to the Grange and the United Workmen.

ASA FOX & SON. General Merchants. The firm of Asa Fox & Son has been intimately connected with the business and history of Milton Mills since 1834. At that period business was carried on in a way so different from the present methods that it would seem that there was hardly any connection between then and now; yet in this firm we have the evolved business of that period of time with all the elements of modernism and only the records and the memories of the days when there were but two shipments of goods received per year to recall the primitive system.
Mr. Elbridge Fox, who is now the senior member of the firm and is in partnership with his son, Everett F. Fox, began clerking in his father’s store when a small boy at the age of 16 was sent to Boston to buy the half-year’s stock of goods for the store. From that time to the present, he has been constantly engaged in business and has been, and is now, one of the most active men in business life on New Hampshire. The firm name has not changed from the time when it became Asa Fox & Son and the business is carried on on the same site, although new buildings have been erected. The original founder of the business died in 1887.
The junior partner was admitted to the firm when 21 years old. He is possessed of the sturdy qualities that made his father and grandfather successful men and in his turn is bearing the brunt of the hard work in the conduct of the business. He has been on the school board and is now town treasurer.
The business is that of a general country store – the stock consisting of groceries, dry and fancy goods, drugs and medicines, hardware and farming implements, furniture, and a variety of merchandise that belongs to stores of the kind. A larger or more varied stock of goods is not to be found in this section. As long as the oldest patron can remember the store has been headquarters for household supplies and will so continue for years to come.
It is a remarkable record but it is true that Mr. Elbridge W. Fox been in public life almost as long as he has been in private business. For forty-five years he has been county correspondent for the Department of Agriculture at Washington. He has held nearly every office within the gift of the town and other positions connected with the national and state governments. Since 1878 he has been supervisor of the check list (a state office in New Hampshire) and in 1899 to 1901 was a senator from the 12th district. He is a member of the Board of Health. From 1865 to 1885 he was postmaster. Mr. Fox has had an almost unequaled record in public service, yet he has never sought it and has been an unwilling official many times and has found the exactions hard, when private business demanded his constant attention. He is today in his seventy-seventh year, well, active and attending daily to his various interests, which extend beyond the bounds of the store.  It is a pleasure to meet and talk with a man of his character, whose memory and active service connect the past system of business with the present. He is thoroughly abreast of the present methods and appreciates the benefits of the changes that have come and in referring to the interesting ways of the old time traders, he is contrasting to show the vast improvement and is not, as now and then some men do, sighing for a return to “the good old days.”
The business standing of the firm has been of the highest possible character for many years and the personal estimate placed upon the individual members of it are of the same degree. They are public spirited and pleasant men in all the relations of life. The village of Milton Mills is well favored in the possession of such a firm and such citizens.

Concluded in Milton Mills Sketch of 1911 – 4


References:

Find a Grave. (2013, July 31). Asa Fox. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114673689/asa-fox

Find a Grave. (2013, July 31). Asa Augustus Fox. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114695724/asa-augustus-fox

Find a Grave. (2013, July 31). Charles D. Fox. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114673535/charles-d-fox

Find a Grave. (2013, July 31). Elbridge Wood Fox. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114673509/elbridge-wood-fox

Find a Grave. (2013, August 4). Everett Fremont Fox. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114891790/everett-fremont-fox

Find a Grave. (2013, August 12). Henry H. Townsend. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115352239

Milton Manufacturer Joshua Holland (1812-1896)

By Muriel Bristol | November 29, 2023

Joshua Holland was born in Leeds, England, December 7, 1812, son of John and Hannah A. (Brunell) Holland.

Joshua Holland immigrated into the U.S. at Boston, MA, September 29, 1825, aged twelve years. He accompanied his parents. John Holland, a cloth draper, aged forty-four years, and Hannah Holland, aged forty-seven years; and his siblings, Joseph Holland, a cloth draper, aged twenty-four years, John Holland, a tailor, aged nineteen years, Thomas Holland, aged seven years, Charles Holland, aged five years, and Mary Holland, aged three years. (Ann Holland, aged twenty-six years, traveled with them too). They sailed from Liverpool, England, September 20, 1825, for Boston, MA, on board the 366-ton ship Olive Branch of Boston, MA.

Late Foreign News. FROM ENGLAND. From the Boston Statesman, Sept. 29. By Olive Branch, Capt. Harding, arrived below last evening from Liverpool, whence she sailed on the 21st of August, London and Liverpool papers to the 20th were received (Pittsfield Sun (Pittsfield, MA), October 6, 1825).

John Holland headed a Somersworth, NH, household at the time of the Fifth (1830) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 40-49 years [himself], one female aged 50-59 years [Hannah A. (Brunell) Holland], one male aged 15-19 years [Joshua Holland], and one female aged 5-9 years. All four persons were aliens who had not been naturalized.

Joshua Holland married (1st) in Somersworth, NH, January 30, 1831, Mary H. Dore, both of Somersworth, NH. Rev. Henry Blackaller performed the ceremony. She was born in South Berwick, ME, circa 1809, daughter of Benaiah and Mary (Pray) Dore.

(The known children of Joshua and Mary H. (Dore) Holland were: Henry John Holland (1832–1902), Joseph Wentworth Holland (1833–1906), Nancy J. Holland (1836–1886), John Holland (1838–1892), James A. Holland (1841–1875), Charles F. Holland (1843–1921), Joshua Holland (1845–1896), Thomas A. Holland (1849–1901), and Mary T. Holland (1855–1932)).

Son Henry John Holland was born in Salmon Falls, i.e., Somersworth, NH, May 24, 1832.

Son Joseph Wentworth Holland was born in South Framingham, MA, August 13, 1833. Daughter Nancy J. Holland was born in Framingham, MA, in 1836.

Son John Holland was born in Lyndeborough, NH, July 28, 1838.

John Holland [Sr.] headed an Alfred, ME, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 50-59 years [himself], one female aged 60-69 years [Hannah A. (Brunell) Holland], and one female aged 15-19 years [Mary A. Holland]. One member of his household was engaged in Manufacture & Trade.

Joshua Holland headed a Rochester, NH, household at the time of the Sixth (1840) Federal Census. His household included one male aged 20-29 years [himself], one female aged 30-39 years [Mary (Dore) Holland], two males aged 5-9 years [Henry J. Holland, and Joseph W. Holland], one female aged under-5 years [Nancy J. Holland], and one male aged under-5 years [John Holland]. One member of his household was engaged in Manufacture & Trade.

Son James A. Holland was born in Rochester, NH, October 8, 1840. Son Charles F. Holland was born in Gonic, Rochester, NH, January 10, 1843.

Joshua Holland took up residence in Milton, circa 1844, and remained there until he departed for what would become “Hollandville,” in Limerick, ME, circa 1857-59.

Son Joshua Holland, Jr., was born in Milton in 1845.

John H. Varney, Sr., who had operated the former Milton Three Ponds fulling mill of John Fish, since 1825, sold it to Joshua Holland, in 1847.

William Sargent succeeded Ira Fish in the fulling mill business in 1820, and carried on the business until 1825, when he was succeeded by John H. Varney, who after some twenty-two years of successful business sold out to Joshua Holland in 1847. Mr. Holland went into the manufacture of woolen goods, which business he carried on with success for some ten or twelve years. The mill was subsequently burned (Scales, 1914).

Joshua Holland appeared in New England Business Union Directory of 1849, as a Milton Three Ponds wool carder and cloth dresser.

Son Henry J. Holland married (1st) in Rochester, NH, March 3, 1850, Vienna W. Carley, he of Milton and she of Rochester, NH. She was born in Rochester, NH, circa 1834, daughter of Dana and Sally (Whitehouse) Carley.

Joshua Holland, a woolen manufacturer, aged thirty-eight years (b. England), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Mary [(Dore)] Holland, aged forty years (b. ME), Joseph W. Holland, a manufacturer, aged sixteen years (b. MA), Nancy J. Holland, aged fourteen years (b. MA), John Holland, aged twelve years (b. NH), James A. Holland, aged nine years (b. NH), Charles Holland, aged seven years (b. NH), Joshua Holland, aged five years (b. NH), Thomas A. Holland, aged one year (b. NH), Ann Goodwin, aged forty years (b. ME), and Ascenath Goodwin, aged twenty-nine years (b. ME). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Thomas P. French, a shoemaker, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), and David D. Pike, a shoemaker, aged twenty-three years (b. NH).

Two pair of blankets made by Joshua Holland of Milton appeared in a Boston, MA, exhibition in September 1850. His blankets appeared in the Domestic Woolen Goods and Yarns category.

1374. JOSHUA HOLLAND, Milton, N.H., by PARKER, WILDER & Co., Boston. Two pair Blankets (MA Charitable Mechanics Association, 1850).

Mother Hannah (Brunell) Holland died in Alfred, ME, March 5, 1851.

Father-in-law Beniah Dore died in Milton, in 1854.

Daughter Mary T. Holland was born in Milton, January 3, 1855.

Joshua Holland appeared in the New England Business Directory of 1856, as a Milton Three Ponds woolen manufacturer (blankets and cassimeres).

Daughter Nancy J. Holland married, circa 1856, John H. Varney [Jr.]. He was born in Milton, March 29, 1832, son of John H. [Sr.] and Betsy (Cloutman) Varney.

Son Joseph W. Holland married in Wolfeboro, NH, November 13, 1857, Ellen M. Holland, he of Limerick, ME, and she of Alfred, ME. Rev. Sumner Clark performed the ceremony. She was born in Alfred, ME, circa 1840, daughter of Thomas and Isabella (Grant) Holland.

Father John Holland died in Alfred, ME, May 2, 1858.

Daughter-in-law Vienna W. (Carley) Holland died of consumption in Milton, August 16, 1858, aged twenty-four years. (Her infant son, Charles Holland, had died of a liver complaint in Milton, July 20, 1858, aged six months).

In 1852 [1857-59?], Joshua Holland moved to Limerick and established his Woolen Blanket Mills. He purchased the rights to Brown’s Brook and developed Holland’s Ponds, now Sokokis Lake. He employed 125 people. The wage of his help was one dollar a day. Employees worked six days a week from 6:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. with one hour for lunch. A 6:00 a.m. bell called the workers in the morning and a 6:00 p.m. bell dismissed them. A 9:00 p.m. bell signaled them to return home if they were out. When one of Holland’s workers was ill, he would visit them, call the doctor, and pay all the doctor’s bills for them. Holland lived to be 84 years old (Cornish, et al., 2005).

James Bradbury erected the first mill at Limerick soon after 1800. Later the mill property was purchased by Jeremiah M. Mason and Luther Moore. After a short period it was sold – about the time of the Civil War [i.e., 1861]– to Joshua Holland who made the mill and himself famous, for the name of Holland when applied to bed blankets meant goods of the highest grade (Textile American, September 1910). 

Son Henry J. Holland married (2nd) in Limington, ME, January 7, 1859, Abigail Ann “Abbie” Foss. She was born in Limington, ME, June 29, 1838, daughter of Joseph and Martha (McClellan) Foss.

Joshua Holland, a woolen manufacturer, aged forty-eight years (b. England), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Mary H. [(Dore)] Holland, aged fifty years (b. ME), James A. Holland, “idiotic,” aged nineteen years, Charles Holland, aged seventeen years (b. NH), Joshua Holland, Jr., aged fifteen years (b. NH), Thomas A. Holland, aged twelve years (b. NH), Mary T. Holland, aged five years (b. ME), Charles Eastman, works in factory, aged forty years (b. ME), Charles W. Eastman, works in factory, aged thirteen years (b. ME), Albra Guptill, works in factory, aged twenty-three years (b. ME), Ann Goodwin, works in factory, aged fifty years (b. ME), and Abbie S. Clark, works in factory, aged sixteen years (b. NH). Joshua Holland had real estate valued at $10,000 and personal estate valued at $45,000.

Joseph Foss, a farmer, aged eighty-one years (b. ME), headed a Limington, ME, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Martha [(McClellan)] Foss, aged fifty-nine years (b. ME), Henry J. Holland, a cordwainer, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), Abba Ann [(Foss)] Holland, aged twenty years (b. ME), and Allen J. Holland, aged seven months (b. ME). Joseph Foss had real estate valued at $2,000 and personal estate valued at $366.

J.W. Holland, a machinist, aged twenty-six years (b. MA), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Ellen [(Holland)] Holland, aged twenty years (b. ME). He shared a two-family residence with the household of Thomas Nicklie, a machinist, aged thirty-six years (b. England). J.W. Holland had real estate valued at $750 and personal estate valued at $450. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Charles Cobbett, works in factory, aged forty-two years (b. MA), and Joshua Holland, a woolen manufacturer, aged forty-eight years (b. England).

John H. Varney, a shoemaker, aged twenty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Nancy J. [(Holland)] Varney, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), M.C. Blackwell, a shoemaker, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), George H. Staples, a shoemaker, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), Wallace Smith, a shoemaker, aged twenty-six years (b. NH), Mellissa Smith, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), Samuel Clements, a shoemaker, aged twenty-six years (b. NH), Elisha B. Watson, a shoemaker, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), Charles E. Whitehouse, a shoemaker, aged twenty years (b. NH), John S. Varney, a shoemaker, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), John M. Brackett, a shoemaker, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), George W. Brackett, a shoemaker, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Daniel J. Chamberlin, a shoemaker, aged nineteen years (b. NH), John Robinson, a shoemaker, aged sixteen years (b. NH), Charles A. Varney, a shoemaker, aged twenty-six years (b. NH), and Sophia J. [(Nute)] Varney, aged nineteen years (b. NH). John H. Varney had personal estate valued at $300. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of George W. Tasker, a shoemaker, aged thirty years (b. NH), and H. Wentworth, a shoe manufacturer, aged forty-one years (b. NH).

John Holland, a teamster, aged twenty-one years (b. ME [SIC]), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Octavia [(Warren)] Holland, aged twenty-three years (b. ME), Warren J. Holland, aged ten months (b. ME), and Mary Flye, work in factory, aged sixteen years (b. ME). John Holland had personal estate valued at $100.

Son-in-law John H. Varney of Milton, aged twenty-nine years, enlisted in Co. H. of the Sixth NH Volunteer Infantry Regiment, November 4, 1861. He mustered in as a Private, November 28, 1861, was promoted to Sergeant, November 30, 1861. Sgt. John H. Varney was promoted to 2nd Lieutenant of Co. K of the Sixth NH Volunteer Infantry Regiment, February 1, 1863.

Mother-in-law Mary (Pray) Dore died in Milton, in 1863.

Son Henry Holland of Amherst, MA, a merchant, aged thirty-one years (b. MA), registered for the Class I military draft in Amherst, MA, in June 1863.

Sons Joseph W. Hollang [Holland], a manufacturer, aged twenty-nine years (b. MA), John Holland, a manufacturer, aged twenty-five years (b. MA), and Charles Holland, a manufacturer, aged twenty years (b. MA), all of Limerick, ME, registered for the Class I military draft in Limerick, ME, in June 1863.

Joshua Holland of Limerick, ME, paid $6.67 for his manufacturer’s license in the U.S. Excise Tax of 1863, June 5, 1863. He paid $85.50 on $2,850.00 worth of Army blankets; $203.77 on $6,792.50 worth of Army blankets; $326.70 on $10,590.00 worth of Army blankets; $249.08 on $8,302.50 worth of Army blankets; $245.52 on $8,184.00 worth of Army blankets; paid $323.07 on $10,769.00 worth of Army blankets; and $196.68 on $6,556.50 worth of Army blankets. In total, he paid $1,629.32 on $54,044,50 worth of blankets. (These totals would be the prices for about 11,000 Army blankets).

Joshua Holland of Limerick, ME, paid $263.55 on $8,785.00 worth of Army blankets, in January 1864; he paid $254.82 on $8,494.00 worth of Army blankets, in January 1864; he paid $198.39 on $6,613.00 worth of Army blankets, in February 1864; he paid $118.80 on $3,960.00 worth of Army blankets, in March 1864; he paid $165.39 on $5,513.00 worth of Army blankets, in April 1864; he paid $59.28 on $1,976.00 worth of Army blankets, in May 1864; he paid $174.90 on $5,830.00 worth of Army blankets, in June 1864; he paid $206.80 on $4,136.00 worth of Army blankets, in July 1864; he paid $428.65 on $8,573.00 worth of Army blankets, in August 1864; he paid $415.15 on $8,303.00 worth of Army blankets, in September 1864; he paid $509.50 on $10,190.00 worth of Army blankets, in October 1864; he paid $337.60 on $6,752.00 worth of Army blankets, in November 1864; he paid $582.65 on $11,653.00 worth of Army blankets, in December 1864. (These totals would be the prices for about 18,000 Army blankets).

Son Joshua Holland, Jr., married (1st) in Cornish, ME, December 8, 1864, Georgiana A. Cobb, he of Limerick, ME, and she of Limington, ME. She was born on Limington, ME, in 1848, daughter of Andrew and Caroline D. (Cole) Cobb.

Henry Holland, an engineer, aged thirty-three years (b. Rollinsford, NH), Abbey Holland, aged twenty-five years (b. Limington, ME), and Alvin Holland, aged five years (b. Limerick, ME), were among twenty boarders in the Florida, MA, household of George R. Swan, an engineer, aged thirty-three years (b. Peterborough, NH)., at the time of the Second (1865) MA State Census.

Joshua Holland of Limerick, ME, paid, $10.00 for his manufacturer’s license in the U.S. Excise Tax of 1865, in May 1865.

Son John Holland of Limerick, ME, paid $10.00 for his retail dealer’s license, $1.00 for his carriage, $1.00 for his watch, and $59.95 (a 5% tax) on his income of $1,199.00, in 1865. He paid $637.80 on $12,756.00 worth of Army blankets, in January 1865; he paid $286.35 on $5,727.00 worth of Army blankets, in February 1865; he paid $254.65 on $5,093.00 worth of Army blankets, in March 1865; he paid $411.54 on $6,859.00 worth of Army blankets, in April 1865; he paid $400.98 on $6,683.00 worth of Army blankets, in May 1865; he paid $1069.20 on $17,820.00 worth of Army blankets, in June 1865; he paid $231.30 on $3,855.00 worth of Army blankets, in July 1865; he paid $289.50 on $4,825.00 worth of Army blankets, in September 1865; he paid $329.82 on $5,497.00 worth of Army blankets, in October 1865; he paid $659.70 on $10,995.00 worth of Army blankets, in November 1865; he paid $329.70 on $5,495.00 worth of Army blankets, in December 1865. (These totals would be the prices for about 17,000 Army blankets).

Son Charles F. Holland married, in 1867, Ellen A. Lamb. She was born in Claremont, NH, March 15, 1845, daughter of John and Margaret (Keating) Lamb.

… Limerick people say their town is about 6 miles square, and contains about 1500 inhabitants and that about one-fourth of the whole are in the village and suburbs. There are in the village some four or five grocery and dry goods stores, one shoe store, a harness shop, 1 chain factory, 1 tannery, (Mr. David Eastman’s), and several nice dwellings. Luther Moore, Esq., has a fine residence – cost about $20,000. J.M. Mason, Esq., also has a nice brick residence: cost about $8,000. The Academy at the north side of the village is said to be in a flourishing condition, and now has about 80 students – Mr. Mayberry of Hiram, Principal. It is a Congregational institution, but the trustees are selected in part from other denominations. About a half mile from the main village is another of about a dozen houses and one woolen mill with its appurtenances, valued all together at about $150,000, and owned by Mr. Joshua Holland. He employs about 60 hands in and around the mill; manufactures mostly woolen blankets, of which he makes about 100 pairs per day. He pays from 40 to 45 cts. per pound for wool, and gets his supply from Maine, Vermont, and Boston. I send you from this town 14 new subscribers. J. Clay (Union & Journal (Biddeford, ME), December 13, 1867).

Son Thomas A. Holland married in Limerick, ME, April 18, 1868, Laura Ella Strout. She was born in Limington, ME, June 2, 1848, daughter of Seth and Martha (Anderson) Strout.

MANUFACTURES. We visited the mills of Mr. Joshua Holland, where the celebrated “Holland Blankets” are manufactured. Mr. Holland gives employment to 80 hands now, and when his new mill – now being built – is finished, additional operatives will be employed. They are now turning out 250 blankets per day, for which he finds a ready market in Boston (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), February 4, 1869).

YORK COUNTY. The stone dam at Brown’s brook, (a branch of the Little Ossipee,) at Limerick, was carried away last Saturday night. It was built by Joshua Holland, and was just completed (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), October 26, 1869).

YORK COUNTY. A correspondent of the Democrat says that among the many manufacturing establishments in York county is that of Joshua Holland, one mile from Limerick village, which is by no means inferior to the best. His principal mill at this time consists of a building, 140 feet in length, and 40 feet wide; three stories high with five full sets of machinery, for the manufacturing of blankets of all kinds and prices, from $5.50 to $18.00 per pair. His goods rank among the first class and he always finds a ready sale for all he can manufacture. Finding he could not supply the trade with all that was called for, he has erected another building (which is nearly completed) forty by sixty feet, three stories high which will contain two full sets of machinery. He will give employment to over one hundred hands, the monthly pay of which will amount to nearly or quite $2500.00. This is quite an item to be distributed among the laborers in this small village (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), October 30, 1869).

YORK COUNTY. A kerosene lamp exploded in the woolen factory of Joshua Holland at Limerick Friday morning Nov. 19th. The fire was communicated by machinery and material but was extinguished speedily and with but slight damage (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), November 26, 1869).

Joshua Holland, a manufacturer, aged fifty-seven years (b. England), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Mary H. [(Dore)] Holland, keeping house, aged sixty years (b. ME), James A. Holland, “blind,” aged twenty-nine years (b. ME), Mary T. Holland, help at home, aged fifteen years (b. ME), Annie Goodwin, works in woolen mill, aged sixty-one years (b. NH). Joshua Holland had real estate valued at $10,000 and personal estate valued at $5,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Amos Felch, a farmer, aged sixty years (b. ME), and Joshua Holland, Jr., works in woolen mill, aged twenty-four years (b. NH).

Martha [McLellan] Foss, at home, aged sixty-five years (b. ME), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Henry Holland, a stationary engineer, aged thirty-eight years (b. ME), Abbie A. [(Foss)] Holland, keeping house, aged thirty-two years (b. ME), Allie Holland, at school, aged ten years (b. ME), Therell Varney, a shoemaker, aged thirty years (b. ME), Waldo Mclallen, a baggage master, aged twenty-five years (b. ME), and Leonard Mclallen, a watchman, aged twenty-three years (b. ME).

Jos. W. Holland, a woolen manufacturer, aged thirty-six years (b. MA), boarded in the Waterboro (“North Waterboro P.O.”), ME, household of Henry McKinney, a grocer, aged fifty-seven years (b. ME) at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Ellen [(Holland)] Holland, works in woolen mill, aged thirty years (b. ME), and Joseph D. Holland, at school, aged nine years (b. ME) boarded there with him. Jos. W. Holland had real estate valued at $1,000 and personal estate valued at $1,500.

John H. Varney, works in shoe factory, aged forty years (b. MA [SIC]), headed a Haverhill, MA, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Nancy J. [(Holland)] Varney, aged thirty-three years (b. MA).

John Holland, a super in woolen mill, aged thirty-three years (b. NH), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Mary O. [(Warren)] Holland, keeping house, aged thirty-three years (b. ME), Warren J. Holland, aged ten years (b. ME), and John B. Holland, aged eight years (b. ME). John Holland had real estate valued at $700 and personal estate valued at $250.

Charles Holland, a farmer, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Ellen [(Lamb)] Holland, keeping house, aged twenty-five years (b. MA), and Nancy E. Holland, aged three months (b. ME). Charles Holland had real estate valued at $1,000 and personal estate valued at $300.

Joshua Holland, Jr., works in woolen mill, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Georgiana [(Cobb)] Holland, aged twenty-two years (b. ME), and Fannie Holland, aged four years (b. ME). Joshua Holland, Jr., had real estate valued at $400. His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Joshua Holland, Jr., works in woolen mill, aged twenty-four years (b. NH), and Thomas Holland, works in woolen mill, aged twenty-one years (b. NH).

Thomas Holland, works in woolen mill, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Laura [(Strout))] Holland, aged twenty-two years (b. ME). His household appeared in the enumeration between those of Joshua Holland, a manufacturer, aged fifty-seven years (b. England), and Benj. A. Sawtell, works in woolen mill, aged forty-four years (b. ME).

LOCAL AND OTHER ITEMS. During a thunder shower Monday night Luther Ayer’s house was struck by lightning, but no damage done. Also the house of Joshua Holland in Limerick was struck and set on fire, but the flames were soon extinguished, says the Biddeford Journal (Bangor Daily Whig & Courier (Bangor, ME), June 25, 1870). 

Mary H. (Dore) Holland died of breast cancer and lung oedema at Massachusetts Hospital in Boston, MA, October 6, 1872, aged sixty-four years.

DIED. At Massachusetts General Hospital, Mrs. Mary, wife of Joshua Holland, of Limerick, aged 63 years (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), October 11, 1872).

Joshua Holland married (2nd), after July 1874, Hannah Margaret (Rand) Ladd, both of Limerick, NH. She was born in Deerfield, NH, May 8, 1832, daughter of Edmond and Julia (James) Rand. (Her first husband, Rev. Enoch P. Ladd, had died in Limerick, ME, July 14, 1874).

Son James A. Holland died in Limerick, ME, May 8, 1875.

DESTRUCTIVE FIRES. The Ossipee woollen mill in Waterborough, owned by Joshua W. Holland, was totally destroyed by fire on Saturday evening. The fire caught on the roof from sparks from the chimney. A large amount of stock on hand was saved. The loss may reach $50,000; insurance $16,500 (New England Farmer (Boston, MA), February 26,1876).

NEW ENGLAND. Biddeford, Me. A Biddeford despatch says that the total insurance on Joseph W. Holland’s blanket mill, burned [at Waterborough, ME,] last Saturday, was $17,500, divided as follows: Royal, of Liverpool, $1500; Pennsylvania, of Philadelphia, $1000; Springfield, of Springfield, $1000; North British and Mercantile, $2000; Fire Association, of Philadelphia, $2000; Atlas, of Hartford, $1500; Commercial Union, $2500; Shawmut, of Boston, $2000; Globe, of Boston. $1500; and Amazon, of Cincinnati, O., $2500. The insurance was placed at the agency James G. Young, Great Falls, N.H. (Boston Globe, February 26, 1876).

MAINE. Fire in Limerick. Biddeford, May 26 – The house of Joshua Holland, manufacturer of woolens at Limerick, was burned to the ground yesterday morning, between 12 and 2 o’clock. How the fire caught is not known (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), May 27, 1879).

Joshua Holland, woolen manufacturer, whose energy and enterprise have given to the town [of Limerick, ME,] the village called “Hollandville” (Clayton, 1880).

Joshua Holland retired circa 1880 and handed over the management of his blanket mill to his son, John Holland.

John Holland succeeded his father Joshua in operating the mill for a period of over seventeen years, after which the mill became the property of the Garners, under whose control it was operated as a woolen mill for about three years. It then passed into the ownership of the Limerick Mills corporation, which included Allan Garner, [et al.] (Textile American, September 1910).

Joshua Holland, a farmer, aged sixty-seven years (b. England), headed a Limerick (“Hollandville”), ME, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Hannah [((Rand) Ladd)] Holland, keeping house, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), his daughter, Mary T. Holland, at home, aged twenty-five years (b. NH), and his stepson, Eugene J. Ladd, at school, aged fourteen years (b. NH).

Henry J. Holland, runs a stationary engine, aged forty-eight years (b. MA), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Abby A. [(Foss)] Holland, aged forty-one years (b. ME), and his boarder, Fred’k G. Cooley, a gasfitter, aged thirty-three years (b. MA). They resided at 8 Way Street.

Joseph W. Holland, a manufacturer, aged forty-six years (b. MA), boarded in the Newbury, MA, household of Andrew Savage, a farmer, aged fifty-three years (b. MA) at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. Ellen [(Holland)] Holland, aged forty years (b. ME), J. Douglas Holland, a student, aged nineteen years (b. ME) boarded there with him.

John H. Varney, a retired shoe manufacturer, aged forty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Haverhill, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Nancy J. [(Holland)] Varney, aged forty-four years (b. MA), and his niece, Fannie E. Holland, aged fourteen years (b. ME). They resided at 21 Nichols Street.

John Holland, a woolen manufacturer, aged forty-two years (b. NH), headed a Limerick (“Hollandville”), ME, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Octava M. [(Warren)] Holland, keeping house, aged forty-three years (b. ME), and his son, Warren J. Holland, a printer, aged twenty years (b. ME). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Joshua Holland, a farmer, aged sixty-seven (b. England), and Joshua Holland, Jr., a woolen mill overseer, aged thirty-five years (b. NH).

Charles Holland, a farmer, aged thirty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Limerick (“Hollandville”), ME, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Ellen [(Lamb)] Holland, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), and his children, Nancy E. Holland, aged ten years (b. ME), Harry Holland, aged eight years (b. ME), Maggie Holland, aged six years (b. ME), Tildean J. Holland, aged four years (b. ME), James L. Holland, aged two years (b. ME), and Katie A. Holland, aged four months (b. ME).

Joshua Holland, Jr., a woolen mill overseer, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), headed a Limerick (“Hollandville”), ME, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Georgia A. [(Cobb)] Holland, keeping house, aged thirty-one years (b. ME), and his children, Fannie E. Holland, at school, aged fourteen years (b. ME), and Freddie D. Holland, aged nine years (b. ME). Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of John Holland, a woolen manufacturer, aged forty-two years (b. NH), and Albert L. Chandler, works in woolen mill, aged twenty-four years (b. ME).

Thomas A. Holland, works in woolen mill, aged thirty-eight years (b. ME), headed a Gorham, ME, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Lora E. [(Strout)] Holland, keeping house, aged thirty-two years (b. ME), and his children, George E. Holland, at school, aged ten years (b. ME), and Albert F. Holland, aged seven years (b. ME).

Georgiana A. (Cobb) Holland died of diphtheria in Limerick, ME, February 17, 1882.

Limerick. The Biddeford Times says then have been three deaths at Hollandville, Limerick, since Thursday morning, all from diphtheria. One a young man named Cram, aged about 27 years; also a child by the same name, aged about 20 months, and the wife of Joshua Holland jr. (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), February 20, 1882).

Holland Blankets. Shepard, Norwell & Co. are offering great bargains this week in the famous Holland and Crown blankets. The former will be found very cheap at $4.50 per pair, and good judges will acknowledge superior bargains in the famous crown blanket ranging in price from $6 to $9.50. These goods should be examined by purchasers, as their value has not before been offered by this house (Boston Globe, October 4, 1882).

Joshua Holland appeared in a ME State Report on the Industries of Maine in 1883, as having an assessed [product] value $3,500 and forty employees (ME Secretary of State, 1883).

LIMERICK. Furniture -F.R. Swasey & Son, $800, 2. Grist Mill – D.W. Chick, $500, 1. Harnesses – Chas. F. Libby, $Lumber – A.B. Leavitt, $200, 3. Staves – S. Folsom, $200, 2. Woolen Blankets – Joshua Holland, $3,500, 40. Total assessed value, $5,400. Hands, 51.

The unfortunate lad of twelve years in what follows would seem to have been Frederick D. “Freddie” Holland (1870-1955), a son of Joshua Holland, Jr., and his recently deceased wife, Georgiana A. (Cobb) Holland.

LIMINGTON. Dr. Dearborn of Parsonsfield, assisted by Drs. Sweet of Parsonsfield, Moulton of Limington, and several others, successfully amputated the right leg of Joshua Holland, Jr., son of Joshua Holland of Limerick, a lad of 12 years, between the second and lower third of the thigh, on Tuesday last. The operation was to remove a scrofulous affection of the knee, developed by going in swimming to excess (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), August 27, 1883).

Son John Holland occupied a Merrimac woolen mill that burned down on September 7, 1883.

Woolen Mills Burned at Merrimac. MANCHESTER, N.H., Sept. 7th. The Henderson woolen mills at Merrimack, occupied by John Holland, blanket manufacturer, burned to-day. Total loss. Hendersen insured, four thousand; Holland on machinery and stock, $60,000, sixty operatives are out of employment (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), September 7, 1883).

Holland Blankets Sale - SJ911201Among this large lot of goods are a number of cases of WHITE BLANKETS! Slightly imperfect and we shall offer a limited quantity at this sale. We shall sell three cases of the celebrated HOLLAND BLANKET 10-4 size at $2.10. This is a regular five dollar blanket. We shall sell the 11-4 size at $3.10 This size sells at six dollars. We shall only sell one pair to each customer (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), May 19, 1884).

Son Joshua Holland, Jr., was injured in a fall, February 19, 1885, during a fire on the dry house of the Holland blanket mill.

LIMERICK. Thursday afternoon Feb. 19th, the dry house of Holland’s Mills was burned. Loss on blankets $2,000, buildings $500; no insurance. Joshua Holland, Jr., while at the fire was injured very badly by walking off a pair of stairs (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), February 21, 1885).

Son Joshua Holland, Jr., married (2nd) in Lewiston, ME, April 22, 1886, Cora B. Eastman, both of Limerick, ME. She was born in Limerick, ME, August 11, 1859, daughter of Charles and Lydia A. (Day) Eastman.

MARRIAGES. In Lewiston, April 22, Joshua Holland, Jr., and Miss Cora B. Eastman, both of Limerick (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME, April 27, 1886).

Joshua Holland’s mill at Limerick, ME, experienced a somewhat inexplicable month-long strike in July-August 1886.

June 30, 1886, the employes of Joshua Holland, manufacturer of bed blankets, at Limerick, struck and went out of the mill without making any demand upon the firm. Most of the hands belonged to the Knights of Labor. They remained out about four weeks, when the mill was started with about half a crew. The leaders of the movement have not been taken back into the mill. The firm has never cut down the wages paid to their employes and they have remained the same for ten years, being about fifteen per cent in advance of what is paid by several other firms for the same class of work (ME Secretary of State, 1886).

LABOR MATTERS. The trouble in the Hollandville Mills, Limerick, is being amicably adjusted and work will be begun in about ten days (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME, July 23, 1886).

Daughter Nancy J. (Holland) Varney died of marasmus in Haverhill, MA, August 21, 1886, aged fifty years, one month, and four days.

Daughter Mary T. Holland married, circa 1890, Frank W. Smith. He was born in Newfield, ME, January 11, 1855, son of James H. and Frances G. (Chellis) Smith.

BIDDEFORD AND SACO. A lively discussion between Holland, the blanket man, and a dry goods clerk last evening, of which blankets was the subject, was overheard by a crowd in front of the Biddeford house (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), November 28, 1891).

BIDDEFORD AND SACO. Holland, the blanket man, intended to close his sale last night but will continue it another night at the same stand (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), December 10, 1891).

Son John Holland died in Wayne, ME, December 6, 1892.

Son-in-law John H. Varney died of “suicide by shooting in head” in Haverhill, MA, January 28, 1893, aged sixty years, ten months. He was a shoe manufacturer.

WOOLEN MILLS RESUME OPERATIONS. Binghampton, March 4. The Binghampton Woollen Mills, which went into the hands of a receiver recently, owing to the financial reverses of the Ross family, the principal stockholders, resumed operations this morning, under the name of the Ross Valley Woollen Company, with Thomas A. Holland, E.L. Wilson and another as proprietors (NY Tribune, March 5, 1895).

Joshua Holland of Limerick, ME, offered to sell his Holland Woolen Mill in August 1895.

MILL FOR SALE OR TO LET. THE Holland Woolen Mill, of Limerick, Maine,  consisting of five set of Cards with all other Machinery necessary to make blankets, or dress goods. Permanent water power, lighted by electricity; terms easy, reference. Address JOSHUA HOLLAND, Limerick, Maine (Fibre & Fabric Boston, MA), August 17, 1895).

Joshua Holland died of old age and endocarditis in Limerick, ME, May 22, 1896, aged eighty-three years, five months, and fifteen days. He was a woolen manufacturer. S.O. Clark, M.D., signed the death certificate.

OBITUARY. Joshua Holland. Joshua Holland, for many years a respected citizen of Limerick, passed away very suddenly this morning at about 9. Mr. Holland had been sick but one day and his death is a great shock to the community. He has been a resident of Limerick for many years and one of its foremost citizens in every way. Until within a few years, when he has operated Holland’s woolen mills, whoso product is known all over the United States. He was a member of the Congregational church and will be much missed there, as he was one of the leading members of the society. His age was 85 years (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), May 23, 1896).

JOSEPH [JOSHUA] HOLLAND. Well Known Mill Owner Dies of Heart Disease. Mr. Joshua Holland, owner of Holland’s mills at Limerick, died suddenly of heart disease Friday morning, at the age of 85 years. Mr. Holland was a native of England, but came to this country when a boy. He came to Limerick and purchased the mills which he had run successfully for over forty years. The Holland blankets are known the country over. The past few years he had taken no active management in the running of the mill. Mr. Holland has been twice married, his second wife being the widow of Rev. E.P. Ladd. He leaves by his first wife, five sons, Joseph J. [Joshua Jr.] and Charles of Limerick, Thomas of Auburn, Jos. W. of Byfield Mass., and Henry of Boston, and one daughter, the wife of Dr. F.W. Smith of Dam’s Mills, Newfield. A widow and one brother also survive him (Portland Evening Express (Portland, ME), May 23, 1896).

Son Joshua Holland, Jr., died of chronic Bright’s Disease in Limerick, ME, August 30, 1896, aged fifty-one years. He was a machinist. W.E.S. Preston, M.D., signed the death certificate.

Biddeford & Saco. Joshua Holland of Limerick, son of the late Joshua Holland, died Monday aged fifty-one years. He had been connected with the Holland blanket mills for many years (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), September 3, 1896).

Alexander Graham Bell’s original telephone patent expired in 1894, after which a new telephone model became available.

NEW “HELLO” SYSTEM. … Thomas Holland, a blanket manufacturer on Cayuga street, was one of the most outspoken in favor of the new telephone. He thought it was the best machine ever and felt confident it would soon have more subscribers than the old one, whose stock is losing value. He now has two telephones, one of each kind, for $5 a year more than he formerly paid for one Bell machine (Fall River Daily Herald (Fall River, MA), December 18, 1899).

Henry J. Holland, a stationary engineer, aged sixty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-eight years), Abbie A. [(Foss)] Holland, aged fifty-five years (b. ME), his son, Allen J. Holland, a dentist, aged thirty-seven years (b. ME), and his daughter-in-law (of fifteen years), Mary E. Holland, aged thirty-six years (b. MA). Henry J. Holland rented their house at 943 Washington Street. Abbie A. Holland was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.

Joseph W. Holland, retired, aged sixty-six years (b. MA), headed a Newbury, MA, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of forty-two years), Ellen M. [(Holland)] Holland, aged sixty years (b. ME). Joseph W. Holland owned their house, free-and-clear. Ellen M. Holland was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.

Eugene Ladd, a winder (paper), aged thirty-five years (b. NH), headed a Westbrook, ME, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Hattie E. Ladd, aged thirty-six years (b. ME), his sons, Dana L. Ladd, aged ten years (b. ME), and Enoch E. Ladd, aged one year (b. ME), his mother, Hannah M. [((Rand) Ladd)] Holland, aged sixty-eight years (b. NH), and his boarders, Ralph H. Bridger, a laundry laborer, aged twenty-six years (b. ME), and Della M. Bridger, aged twenty-five years (b. ME). Eugene Ladd owned their house on Brown Street, free-and-clear. Hattie E. Ladd was the mother of three children, of whom two were still living. Hannah M. Holland was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.

Octavia M. [(Warren)] Holland, a landlady, aged sixty-three years (b. ME), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. Her household included her sister, Elfretta E. Warren, aged fifty-four years (b. ME). Octavia M. Holland rented their house.

Charles Holland, a farmer, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-three years), Ellen A. [(Lamb)] Holland, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), and his children, Henry C. Holland, a barber, aged twenty-eight years (b. ME), Marguerite Holland, a school teacher, aged twenty-five years (b. ME), Tilden J. Holland, a day laborer, aged twenty-three years (b. ME), James L. Holland, a day laborer, aged twenty years (b. ME), Katherine A. Holland, a bookkeeper (grocery), aged twenty years (b. ME), and Mabel G. Holland, at school, aged eighteen years (b. ME). Charles Holland owned their farm, free-and-clear. Ellen A. Holland was the mother of ten children, of whom seven were still living.

Lydia [(Day)] Eastman, a landlady, aged seventy-four years (b. ME), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. Her household included her daughter, Cora B. [(Eastman)] Holland, aged forty years (b. ME). Lydia Eastman was the mother of four children, of whom three were still living. Cora B. Holland was the mother of one child, of whom zero were still living.

Thos. Holland, a woolen manufacturer, aged fifty-one years (b. ME), headed an Auburn, NY, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-two years), Laura E. [(Strout)] Holland, aged fifty-two years (b. ME). Thos. Holland rented their house at 48 N. Division Street.

Frank W. Smith, a dentist, aged forty-six years (b. ME), headed a Newfield, ME, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of ten years), Mary T. [(Holland)] Smith, aged forty-six years (b. ME), and his daughter, Charlotte T. Smith, aged twelve years (b. ME). Frank W. Smith owned their house, free-and-clear. Mary T. Smith was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living.

Son Thomas A. Holland died in Auburn, NY, February 28, 1901.

Son Henry J. Holland of Boston, MA, died of a cardiac problem in Quincy, MA, February 14, 1902, aged sixty-nine years, eight months, and twenty-one days. He was an engineer.

DEATHS. HOLLAND – In this city, Feb. 14, Henry J. Holland, 72 yrs. 9 mos. Funeral private (Boston Globe, February 15, 1902).

Hannah M. Holland appeared in the Westbrook, ME, directory of 1904, as the widow of Joshua, with her house at 127 Brown street.

Son Joseph W. Holland died of apoplexy in Byfield, Newbury, MA, May 10, 1906, aged seventy-two years, nine months.

H. [Hannah] Margaret ((Rand) Ladd) Holland died of pneumonia at 127 Brown Street in Westbrook, ME, January 1, 1909, aged seventy-six years, six months. Thomas P. Smith signed the death certificate.

DIED. Westbrook – 1st, Hannah Margaret Holland, aged 76 (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), January 4, 1909).

Daughter-in-law Ellen A. (Lamb) Holland died of autoinfection and cerebral hemorrhage in Limerick, ME, September 19, 1909, aged sixty-four years, six months, and four days. W.E.S. Preston, M.D., signed the death certificate.

NEWFIELD. Dr. F.W Smith and Mrs. Smith went to Limerick Wednesday to attend the funeral services of Mrs. Charles Holland, sister-on-law of Mrs. Smith (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), September 25, 1909).

Ellen M. [(Holland)] Holland, a widow, aged seventy years (b. ME), headed a Newbury, MA, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. Ellen M. Holland owned her house, free-and-clear. Ellen M. Holland was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.

Charles Holland, a farmer, aged sixty-six years (b. NH), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included Tilden J. Holland, a farm laborer (home farm), aged thirty-three years (b. ME), and Katharine A. Holland, a bookkeeper (grocery store), aged twenty-nine years (b. ME). Charles Holland owned their house, free-and-clear.

A.T. Holland, a blanket shop foreman, aged forty years (b. ME), headed an Auburn, NY, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his mother, Laura [(Strout)] Holland, aged sixty years (b. ME). A.T. Holland rented their house at 50 N. Division Street. Laura Holland was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living.

Frank W. Smith, a dentist, aged fifty-five years (b. ME), headed a Newfield, ME, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty years), Mary T. [(Holland)] Smith, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), and his sister-in-law, Octavia M. [(Warren)] Holland, aged seventy-three years (b. ME). Frank W. Smith owned their farm on the “road from Newfield village towards Limerick & Parsonsfield,” free-and-clear. Octavia M. Holland was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.

Daughter-in-law Abigail A. (Foss) Holland of 943 Washington Street, Boston, MA, died of broncho-pneumonia at 108 Revere Street in Boston, MA, February 26, 1911, aged seventy-two years, seven months, and twenty-seven years.

DEATHS. HOLLAND – At the Home for Aged Women, 108 Revere street, Feb. 26, Mrs. Abbie A. Holland, 72 yrs. Funeral service on Tuesday, Feb. 28, at 11.30 A.M. Relatives and friends are invited to attend (Boston Evening Transcript, February 27, 1911).

Daughter-in-law Laura E. (Strout) Holland died in Haverhill, MA, November 8, 1917.

Ellen M. [(Holland)] Holland, a widow, aged eighty years (b. ME), headed a Newbury, MA, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. Ellen M. Holland owned her house on Main Street, free-and-clear. Ellen M. Holland was the mother of one child, of whom one was still living.

Charles Holland, a farmer (retired), aged seventy-six years (b. NH), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included Cora R. [(Rand)] Clogston, a housekeeper, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), and Iretta M. Noyes, aged thirteen years (b. MA). Charles Holland owned their farm on Washington Street, free-and-clear.

Octavia M. [(Warren)] Holland, a widow, aged eighty-two years (b. ME), headed a Newfield, ME, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. Her household included her sister, Alfretta Warren, aged sixty-five years (b. ME). Octavia M. Warren rented their house.

Frank W. Smith, a dental surgeon, aged sixty-four years (b. ME), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Mary T. [(Holland)] Smith, aged sixty-four years (b. NH). Frank W. Smith owned their house on Elm Street, free-and-clear.

Son Charles F. Holland died in South Portland, ME, December 11, 1921.

CHARLES HOLLAND. (Communicated). With the death of Charles F. Holland passes the last surviving son of the late Joshua Holland, who owned and operated so successfully for over 40 years the Holland Woolen Mills at Hollandville, Limerick, Me. Born in Gonic, Jan. 10, 1843, he took up residence in Limerick with his father at the age of 12. In the early twenties he went to San Francisco where he managed the first woolen mill on the Pacific Coast. Through the persuasion of his mother he returned East bringing with him bride from the “Golden State.” The remainder of his life was spent in Limerick, being associated with his father and brothers in the manufacture or Holland blankets, known the Country over. The past few years he had retired, living quietly at Shadeland, his Limerick home. Two years ago his health failed. About a month ago he came to Portland to spend the Winter but failed rapidly and passed over the Great Divide at his daughter’s home in South Portland. He was a lifelong Mason, member of Freedom Lodge, No. 42. He is survived by seven children: Mrs. J.C. Dresser, South Portland; C. Harry Holland, Portland; Mrs. S.H. Griffin, Providence, R.I.; Tilden J. Holland, Limerick; James L. Holland, York; Mrs. F.H. Willard, Lawrence, Mass.; Mrs. O.W. Hardy, Lowell, Mass.; and one sister, wife of Dr. F.W. Smith of Limerick. Service from the home of his daughter, 71 Ocean street, South Portland, Wednesday, 11 a.m. (Portland Evening Express (Portland, ME), December 21, 1921).

NEWFIELD WOMAN 89 YEARS OLD TODAY. Mrs. Octavia M. Holland of this town will celebrate her 89th birthday and in spite of her advanced years, she possesses a keen intellect and takes much interest in the affairs of the day. Mrs. Holland was born at Limerick, Maine, Oct. 28, 1836. She is up and around the house every day and can walk without a cane and is able to get her breakfast and supper and has until a year ago been able to serve for the Ladies’ Aid of which she is a member. Mrs. Holland has never had a sickness that caused her to be confined in her bed (October 22, 1925).

Daughter-in-law Ellen M. (Holland) Holland died in Lynnfield, MA, February 21, 1927, aged eighty-seven years.

LYNNFIELD CENTER. DIES AT HOME OF SISTER. Mrs. Ellen Holland, aged 87, died Monday noon at the home of her sister, Mrs. George Lambert. For the past several winters Mrs. Holland has made her home during the winter months with her sister, returning in the summer to her home in South Byfield. She had been a resident there for over 40 years, her husband, the late Joseph W. Holland having been for many years the superintendent of the Byfield Woolen Mills. She leaves her sister, Mrs. Lambert, a brother, Edward Holland of Methuen, a niece, Mrs. Isabelle Ray of Westbrook, Me., a nephew, George Lambert, Jr., of Lynnfield Centre, and a daughter-in-law, Mrs. Douglas Holland of Melrose (Daily Item (Lynn, MA), February 24, 1927).

Octavia M. [(Warren)] Holland, a widow, aged ninety-three years (b. ME), headed a Newfield, ME, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. Her household included her sister, Alfreta E. Warren, aged eighty-seven years (b. ME). Octavia M. Warren rented their house, for $10 per month. They did not have a radio set.

Frank W. Smith, a dentist, aged seventy-five years (b. ME), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty years), Mary T. [(Holland)] Smith, aged seventy-five years (b. ME), and his servant, Rose E. Howard, aged twenty-one years (b. MA). Frank W. Smith owned their house on Elm Street, which was valued at $3,500. They had a radio set.

Daughter Mary T. (Holland) Smith died in Limerick, ME, January 25, 1932, aged seventy-seven years.

LIMERICK. Mrs. Mary Holland Smith, 77, wife of Dr. Frank Smith, and last surviving member of the family of Joshua Holland, widely known blanket mill owner, died Wednesday at her home on Elm street after a long illness. She was married to Dr. Smith, a resident of Newfield, in 1891, and they made their home in that town until 1914, when they came to Limerick. In 1917 Mrs. Smith suffered serious injuries in a fall and had been an invalid since that time. Besides her husband, she leaves two step-daughters and several nephews and nieces. Private funeral services will be conducted at the home Saturday afternoon at 3 o’clock by the Rev. Lewis A. Jones of the Baptist church, and interment will be at Newfield (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), January 28, 1932).

Daughter-in-law Octavia M. (Warren) Holland died in Newfield, ME, December 23, 1932.

NEWFIELD. Mrs. O. Holland passed away at her home on Main street last Friday evening (Sanford Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), December 29, 1932).

Daughter-in-law Cora B. ((Eastman) Holland) Watson died in Augusta, ME, November 7, 1934.

LIMERICK. Word was received Thursday that Mrs. Cora Eastman Watson, who has been in Augusta for several months, had passed away and would be brought to Limerick for funeral services, Saturday at 2 p.m., at her home. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eastman, who passed away many years ago, and the widow of Lincoln Watson, who has been dead several years. The funeral will be conducted by Rev. Lewis A. Jones. Interment will be at Highland cemetery (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), November 10, 1934).

Frank W. Smith, aged eighty-five years (b. ME), headed a Limerick, ME, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his housekeeper, Lura A. Fogg, a private housekeeper, aged sixty-six years (b. ME).

Son-in-law Frank W. Smith died on Elm Street in Limerick, ME, August 13, 1942, aged eighty-seven years.

Limerick. Dr. Frank Smith. Dr. Frank Smith died at his home on Elm street at noon last Thursday. He had been in failing health for some time but not confined to his bed until the past few weeks. He was born in Newfield, Jan. 11, 1855, the son of the late James Hervey Smith and Frances Chellis Smith. Dr. Smith was a dentist coming to Limerick over 60 years ago and working constantly at his profession until about two years ago when failing eyesight and health forced him to retire. A few years ago he was presented with an honorary plaque from the Maine Dental Society. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Howard Moore of Newfield, Miss Charlotte Smith, a teacher in South Portland, and one granddaughter, Miss Lucille Moore of Newfield. Funeral services were held at his residence, Sunday, conducted by the Rev. Lewis A. Jones. Interment was at Newfield (Biddeford-Saco Journal-Tribune (Biddeford, ME), August 20, 1942).


Reference:

Cornish, Limerick, Limington, Newfield, and Parsonsfield-Porter Historical Societies. (2005). The Ossipee Valley. Acadia Publishing.

Find a Grave. (2015, November 3). Charles F. Holland. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/154587005/charles-f-holland

Find a Grave. (2014, July 11). Henry John Holland. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/132661114/henry-john-holland

Find a Grave. (2015, November 1). James A. Holland. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/154503017/james-a-holland

Find a Grave. (2020, March 13). Joseph Wentworth Holland. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/207861668/joseph-wentworth-holland

Find a Grave. (2015, November 2). John Holland. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/154527903/john-holland

Find a Grave. (2015, November 2). Joshua Holland, Jr. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/154533914/joshua-holland

Find a Grave. (2015, November 1). Joshua Holland, Sr. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/154499086/joshua-holland

Find a Grave. (2018, September 9). Thomas A. Holland. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/192997729/thomas-a-holland

Find a Grave. (2013, December 8). Hannah Margaret Rand Ladd. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/121397980/hannah-margaret-ladd

Find a Grave. (2015, October 11). Mary T. Holland Smith. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/153544180/mary-t-smith

Find a Grave. (2020, October 20). Nancy J. [(Holland)] Varney. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/217524629/nancy-j-varney

Find a Grave. (2015, April 2). Cora B. Eastman [Holland] Watson. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/144494808/cora-b.-watson

MA Charitable Mechanics Association. (1850). First Exhibition and Fair (Second-Eighth Exhibition) of the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=ptzeA4dO2NsC&pg=PA69

ME Secretary of State. (1883). Industries of Maine. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=HKU6AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA51

ME Secretary of State. (1886). Statistics of Industries and Finances of Maine. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=eYNIAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA100

Milton Businesses in 1856

By Muriel Bristol | July 16, 2023

Here may be found extracted the Milton entries from the New England Business Directory and Gazetteer of 1856.


Bakers. Swasey, Charles, Milton (Mills).

Blacksmiths. Duntley, Hazen, (3 Ponds) Milton; Osgood, Ebenezer, Milton (Mills); Rines, Nathaniel, Milton (Mills); Rines, Samuel F., Milton (Mills); West, Stephen, (West) Milton.

Boot and Shoe Manufacturers. Berry, Lewis, (3 Ponds) Milton; Colbath, John, (West) Milton; Goodwin, John E. & Co., (West) Milton; Hart, John F., (3 Ponds) Milton; Sayward & Lord, (3 Ponds) Milton; Varney, Nathaniel, (West) Milton; Warren, Daniel P., (3 Ponds) Milton; Wentworth, H.V. & E., (3 Ponds) Milton.

Clergyman. Barber, Dan’l W., (M.E.), Milton.

Clothing Dealers and Tailors. Scates, John, (3 Ponds) Milton.

Country Stores. Fox, Asa & Son, Milton (Mills); Goodwin, Chas. H. & Co., (West) Milton; Jewett, Asa, Milton; Palmer, Daniel E., (3 Ponds) Milton; Simes, Bray U., Milton (Mills); Twombly, Ezra H., (3 Ponds) Milton; Wentworth, H.V. & E., (3 Ponds) Milton.

Counsellors. Jones, Cyrus, (3 Ponds) Milton.

Grist Mills. Leighton, Thomas, (3 Ponds) Milton; Townsend, John, Milton (Mills); Varney, William, Milton.

Physicians. Drew, Stephen (3 Ponds) Milton; Harris, George W. (3 Ponds) Milton; Palmer, Daniel E. (3 Ponds) Milton; Swinerton, John L., Milton (Mills).

Postmasters. Edgerly, John S., Milton; Colbath, J., (West) Milton; J.L. Swinerton, Milton Mills.

Public Houses. Edgerly, John S. (Milton Hotel), (3 Ponds) Milton.

Sawmills. Horne, George, Milton (Mills); Plumer, Lewis, (3 Ponds) Milton; Varney, William, (3 Ponds) Milton.

Shingle Mills. Leighton, Thomas, (3 Ponds) Milton.

Stables. Edgerly, John S., (3 Ponds) Milton.

Woolen Manufacturers. Holland, Joshua (blankets and cassimeres), (3 Ponds) Milton; Townsend, John (blankets and flannels), Milton (Mills).


Previous in sequence: Milton Businesses in 1849; next in sequence: Milton Businesses in 1860


References:

Adams, George. (1856). New England Business Directory and Gazetteer. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=bk7rIIhvXwQC&pg=PA485

Milton Farmer Thomas H. Roberts (1833-1916)

By Muriel Bristol | July 9, 2023

Thomas H. Roberts was born in Albion, ME, December 20, 1833, son of Nicholas H. and Dorothy (Hurd) Roberts.

Nicholas H. Roberts, a farmer, aged forty-eight years (b. ME), headed an Acton, ME, household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Dorothy [(Hurd)] Roberts, aged forty-eight years (b. ME), Thomas H. Roberts, a farmer, aged seventeen years (b. ME), May Roberts, aged thirteen years (b. ME), Hannah Roberts, aged nine years (b. ME), Pheba Roberts, aged seven years (b. ME), and Dorothy Roberts, aged four years (b. ME). Nicholas H. Roberts had real estate valued at $1,500.

Thomas H. Roberts was twenty-one years of age, i.e., circa 1854, when he lost his right hand.

Nicholas H. Roberts, a farmer, aged fifty-eight years (b. ME), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills P.O.”) household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Dorothy [(Hurd)] Roberts, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), Thomas H. Roberts, a farm laborer, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), H.J. Roberts, aged nineteen years (b. NH), Mary Roberts, aged twenty-one years (b. NH), Phebe Roberts, aged seventeen years (b. NH), B.A. Roberts, aged thirteen years (b. NH), and Charles C. Roberts, aged ten years (b. NH). Nicholas H. Roberts had real estate valued at $2,000 and personal estate valued at $500.

Milton sent Thomas H. Roberts and Ambrose H. Wentworth to Concord, NH, as its NH State Representatives, for the 1865-66 biennium. During their biennium, they would vote on two proposed additions to the U.S. Constitution, the Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments.

Thomas H. Roberts was assigned to the Military Accounts Committee and Ambrose H. Wentworth was assigned to Retrenchment and Reform Committee. They were allocated 105 miles for their travel allowance.

New Hampshire was the twenty-third state of the necessary twenty-seven state approvals necessary for ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

ARTICLE XIII. SECTION 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. SEC. 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the 215 NH House members [69.1%] that voted in favor of the Thirteenth Amendment, on Thursday, June 29, 1865, while another 96 NH House members [30.9%] voted against it. (Several absent members were permitted to add their votes, be they pro (2) or con (1), after the initial vote).

The New Hampshire legislature has passed the amendment to the Constitution by a vote of 217, including 8 democrats, against 98 (Ellsworth American (Ellsworth, ME), July 7, 1865).

Both houses of the NH General Court finalized their approvals by July 1, 1865. (Other states would add their approval to the Thirteenth Amendment after its ratification, some as late as 1995).

A year later, New Hampshire was the second state of the twenty-eight state approvals necessary for ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

ARTICLE XIV. Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Section 2. Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the Executive and Judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State. Section 3. No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability. Section 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void. Section 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.

Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the 207 NH House members [64.9%] that voted in favor of the Fourteenth Amendment, on Thursday, June 28, 1866, while another 112 NH House members [35.1%] voted against it.

The Legislature of New Hampshire has adopted the amendment to the Constitution proposed by Congress: yeas, 203; nays, 107, a strict party vote (Vermont Christian Messenger (Montpelier, VT), July 5, 1866).

Both houses of the NH General Court finalized their approvals by July 6, 1866. (Other states would add their approval to the Fourteenth Amendment after its ratification, some as late as 2003).

On Friday, June 29, 1866, Rep. S.G. [Brig. Gen. Simon G.] Griffin (1824-1902) of Keene, NH, from the Military Affairs Committee, presented a petition seeking to authorize towns to “equalize” enlistment bounties. (Some towns had outbid others during recruiting). He moved that it should be ruled inexpedient to legislate (ITL). Rep. Isaac Adams (1802-1883) of Sandwich, NH, moved the alternative that it should be recommitted to the Military Affairs Committee in order that they might produce a bill on the subject. In the roll call vote that followed. Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the minority of 97 members [43.3%] that voted to recommit, as opposed to the majority of 127 members [56.7%] that voted not to recommit.

On Friday, July 6, 1866, Rep. Alvah M. Kimball (1829-1869) of Rochester, NH, moved that a committee report on spiritous liquors, which recommended indefinite postponement of sundry petitions and bills related to the subject, be accepted. Rep. Roberts and Rep. Wentworth, both of Milton, were among the minority of 102 members [42.1%] that voted to accept the report, as opposed to the majority of 140 members [57.9%] that voted not to accept the report.

Thomas H. Roberts married in Acton, ME, November 9, 1866, Eliza Jane “Jennie” Hilton. She was born in Acton, ME, February 28, 1841, daughter of Andrew and Eliza Ann (Paul) Hilton.

(The known children of Thomas H. and Eliza J. (Hilton) Roberts were Dora Etta Roberts (1872-1956), and John Hilton Roberts (1875-1955)).

Thomas H. Roberts received an initial appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, April 11, 1868. (He does not seem to have had a renewal appointment, which would have been due in 1873).

MILTON. JusticesCharles Jones, Luther Hayes, State; Elbridge W. Fox, Joseph Plumer, Ebenezer Wentworth, Charles A. Cloutman, Asa Jewett, Joseph Cook, Robert Mathes, Ira C. Varney, George Lyman, George W. Peavey, Martin V.B. Cook, John T. Hersey, George W. Tasker, Edward W. Fox, Ezra H. Twombly, Thomas H. Roberts, John U. Şimes, Larkin A. Craig [Lang] (McFarland & Jenks, 1869).

Nicholas H. Roberts, a farmer, aged sixty-eight years (b. ME), headed a Milton household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. His household included Dorathy [(Hurd)] Roberts, keeping house, aged sixty-eight years (b. ME), Thomas H. Roberts, a farm laborer, aged thirty-six years (b. ME), Jane E. [(Hilton)] Roberts, house keeping, aged twenty-nine years (b. ME), Mary Roberts, works in woolen mill, aged thirty-two years (b. ME), and Frank Guptill, a farm laborer, aged sixteen years (b. NH). Nicholas H. Roberts had real estate valued at $3,000 and personal estate valued at $830.

The Milton Selectmen of 1870 were Charles Hayes, David Wallingford, Jr., and Thomas H. Roberts. Thomas H. Roberts was also the Town Treasurer.

Daughter Dora Etta Roberts was born in Milton, April 22, 1872.

Mother Dorothy (Hurd) Roberts died of consumption in Milton, May 17, 1872, aged seventy years, five months.

Father-in-law Andrew Hilton died in Acton, ME, December 27, 1873, aged sixty-four years.

Son John Hilton Roberts was born in Somersworth, NH, March 9, 1875.

Father Nicholas H. Roberts died of gangrene of the foot in Shapleigh, ME, September 12, 1879, aged seventy-eight years. Dr. [Horace] Webber was his attending physician.

DEATHS. In North Shapleigh, Sept. 2, Nicholas H. Roberts, aged 77 years, 6 months (Portland Daily Press (Portland, ME), September 12, 1879).

Thomas H. Roberts, a clerk in woolen mill, aged forty-six years (b. ME), headed a North Shapleigh, ME, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Jennie E. [(Hilton)] Roberts, keeping house, aged thirty-nine years (b. ME), his children, Dora E. Roberts, aged seven years (b. ME), and John H. Roberts, aged five years (b. ME), and his sister, Mary A. Roberts, aged forty-three years (b. ME).

North Shapleigh. Mrs. Thomas H. Roberts has gone to Lewiston to spend a few weeks with Johnny and Dora Roberts who are attending college there (Biddeford Daily Journal (Biddeford, ME), April 8, 1887).

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. The following real estate transfers in York county for the week ending Feb. 18, 1880, have been recorded at the register of deeds office: … SHAPLEIGH – Feb. 1. John Cook of Shapleigh to Thomas H. Roberts of same place, real estate in Shapleigh for $250 (Biddeford Daily Journal (Biddeford, ME), February 20, 1889).

SOMEWHAT PERSONAL. … Miss Dora Roberts, Bates, ’94, left Lewiston, Monday, for a few weeks’ visit to Boston (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), December 8, 1890).

Mother-in-law Eliza A. (Paul) Hilton died in Lewiston, ME, October 24, 1891, aged seventy-five years.

BATES COLLEGE. … Miss Dora Roberts, Bates ’94, of Elm street, Lewiston, whose critical illness was reported some time ago has recovered sufficiently to be about again but will not return to her class for some time yet (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), February 19, 1892).

Thomas H. Roberts would later be said to have spent a year in the “West,” and was then employed for several years as a bookkeeper for an iron foundry in Auburn, ME.

ANDROSCOGGIN TRANSFERS. AUBURN. – David H. Leavitt to Thomas H. Roberts, land – 850 (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), September 8, 1892).

Roberts, Dora E.
Dora Etta Roberts (1872-1956)

Son J.H. Roberts, Auburn, and daughter, Miss Dora Roberts, [Auburn,] were among the 33 excursionists that departed the Auburn Central Station, September 11, 1893, for the World’s Columbian Exposition (or World’s Fair), held in Chicago, IL, between May and October 1893. Over two hundred made the same trip that week (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), September 11, 1893; Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), September 18, 1893).

OUR CITIES AND COUNTY. A number of people on one of the Lewiston excursions were in the railroad smashup at Ravenna, O. [Ohio], while en route for Washington. Among the party were Mrs. Addison Small, Miss Dora Roberts, Mr. John Roberts, Miss Bolster of Auburn and Mr. Roscoe Small. None of our local friends were hurt (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), September 23, 1893).

OUR CITIES AND COUNTY. Miss Dora Roberts and Miss Virgie Golder of Lewiston returned from the World’s Fair, Saturday (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), September 26, 1893).

Daughter Dora E. Roberts was to speak on “Accuracy: An Index to Character” at the Junior Exposition at Bates College, June 26, 1894 (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), June 25, 1894). She would have been graduating with the Senior class were it not for her previous illness.

AUBURN CITY AFFAIRS. … The following petitions which have been tabled were taken up and referred to the appropriate committee: … Of Thomas H. Roberts for building a street between Fourth avenue and Jefferson street (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), May 20, 1896).

Daughter Dora Etta Roberts of Auburn, ME, spoke at her own graduation with the Class of 1895 on “Possunt quia posse videntor” [“They can because they think they can”], which was held at the Main Street Free Baptist Church, June 27, 1895. She received First Honor in Modern Languages.

OUR CITIES AND COUNTY. … Miss Dora Roberts of Auburn, daughter of Treasurer Roberts of the Auburn Stove Foundry, has been elected assistant teacher of the Pittsfield Institute at Pittsfield, Me. (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), July 20, 1895).

MAINE MATTERS. … The Trustees of the Maine Central Institute have elected Dora E. Roberts, A.B., of Auburn, as teacher to succeed Miss Eva Taylor, who resigned to accept a situation in Connecticut (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), July 26, 1895).

PERSONAL. … Miss Dora Roberts, Bates ’95, who has been teaching in Pittsfield, returned Saturday to her home on Park hill, Auburn, where she will spend her two weeks’ vacation (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), November 27, 1895).

Daughter Dora E. Roberts gave up her school teaching job in Auburn, ME, in November 1896, due to illness.

OUR CITIES AND COUNTY. Miss Dora Roberts, a teacher in the Edward Little High School, Auburn, has resigned on account of ill health (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), November 5, 1896).

ANDROSCOGGIN TRANSFERS. AUBURN. – Thomas H. Roberts to Albert H. Conant – 1 (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), November 18, 1896).

OUR CITIES AND COUNTY. CITY EDITOR’S TELEPHONE CALL 355-2. JOURNAL BUSINESS OFFICE CALL 20-2. … Mr. Thomas H. Roberts has certified to his election as clerk of the Auburn Stove Foundry Co., and Mr. George E. Davies has certified to his election as clerk of Hutchins, Curtis & Co. (Lewiston Evening Journal Lewiston, ME), January 29, 1898).

Thomas H. Roberts left his position at the Auburn Stove Foundry due to cataract vision problems and purchased a farm in Acton, ME.

PERSONAL. Thomas H. Roberts of Auburn is moving to Union, N.H. (Lewiston Daily Sun (Lewiston, ME), April 4, 1899).

Thomas H. Robberts, a farmer, aged sixty-six years (b. ME), headed an Acton, ME, household at the time of the Twelfth (1900) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of thirty-three years), Eliza J. [(Hilton)] Robberts, aged fifty-nine years (b. ME), and his children, Dora E. Robberts, a teacher, aged twenty-eight years (b. ME), and John H. Robberts, a farm laborer, aged twenty-five years (b. NH). Thomas H. Robberts owned their farm, free-and-clear. Eliza J. Robberts was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living.

Son John H. Roberts married in Acton, ME, January 29, 1902, Alice Caverly Laskey, both of Acton, ME. He was a farmer, aged twenty-six years, and she was a housekeeper, aged twenty-six years. Rev. E.W. Churchill performed the ceremony. She was born in Dover, NH, February 13, 1875, daughter of Jonas S. and Sarah A. (Vinal) Laskey.

A GRADUATE OF BATES. Miss Dora E. Roberts Unanimously Elected Assistant Teacher at Dover High School, N.H. Dover, N.H., April 4 – Miss Dora E. Roberts of Lewiston, Me., has been unanimously elected assistant teacher at the High school here to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Robert J. Sisk. Miss Roberts is a graduate of the Lewiston High school and of Bates College – She now is a teacher in the Lincoln Academy at New Castle, Maine (Lewiston Daily Sun (Lewiston, ME, April 5, 1902).

ANDROS. TRANSFERS. AUBURN. – Thomas H. Roberts to Warren McFadden – 200 (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), April 23, 1902).

Thomas H. Roberts, a farmer (own farm), aged seventy-six years (b. ME), headed an Acton, ME, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of forty-three years), Eliza J. [(Hilton)] Roberts, aged sixty-nine years (b. ME), his son, John H. Roberts, a farmer (home farm), aged thirty-five years (b. NH), his daughter-in-law (of one year), Alice C. [(Laskey)] Roberts, aged thirty-five years (b. NH), and his grandson, Luther H. Roberts, aged three years (b. ME). Thomas H. Roberts owned their farm, free-and-clear. Eliza J. Roberts was the mother of two children, of whom two were still living.

Laura M. Beecher, a hospital nurse, aged nineteen years (b. VT), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Thirteenth (1910) Federal Census. Her household included her lodgers, Margaret M. Wyman, a hospital laborer, aged thirty-six years (b. Canada), Edna N. Adam, a hospital nurse, aged twenty-two years (b. MA), Eva Holloway, a hospital nurse, aged twenty-six years (b. Canada), Mary E. Rofter, aged nineteen years (b. MA), Belle W. Fox, a hospital nurse, aged twenty-three years (b. NH), Frances R. Renear, a hospital nurse, aged twenty-one years (b. MA), Dora E. Roberts, a hospital clerk, aged thirty-eight years (b. NH), Marion E. Sweeny, a hospital nurse, aged twenty-two years (b. MA), Josephine G. Kennedy, a hospital nurse, aged nineteen years (b. MA), and Rose A. Dever, a hospital nurse, aged twenty-five years (b. Ireland). Laura M. Beecher rented their house at 92 Charles Street.

The Acton farmhouse of Thomas H. Roberts was mentioned in a 1911 description of Milton Mills.

On the Lebanon road [in Acton, ME,] and a little farther off is the farm home of Thomas H. Roberts. It is appropriately named Valley View.

ACTON. (Special to the Tribune). … Mr. Thomas H. Roberts is very low with pneumonia (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), March 24, 1916).

Thomas H. Roberts died of double lobar pneumonia in Acton, ME, March 29, 1916, aged eighty-two years, three months, and nine days. H.E. Anderson, M.D., signed the death certificate.

ACTON. THOMAS H. ROBERTS. Thomas H. Roberts, a well-known and highly esteemed citizen, passed away with the dreaded disease, pneumonia, at his home last Tuesday at the advanced age of 82 years. Mr. Roberts was born at Albion, Maine, but the most of his early life was spent in Milton, N.H., where a portion of that time was devoted to farming, and a portion to teaching. At the age of 21 he had the misfortune to lose his right hand but although handicapped in this way success seemed to attend his every undertaking. He spent several years as agent in the woolen manufacturing mill at North Shapleigh, one year in the west and several years in Auburn, where he was associated in an iron foundry business. In this business he worked as bookkeeper and finally his eyesight became greatly impaired by cataracts so that he disconnected himself from the business came to this town bought a farm on which he moved and spent the remainder of his life. Mr. Roberts was deeply interested in all good causes especially that of the church to which he contributed freely of his means. He was a member of the Free Baptist church for a great many years. At the age of 33 he married Jennie Hilton of Hilton Ridge who with two children, Miss Dora Roberts of Boston, and Mr. John Roberts, who lives at the home: one grandson, Luther H. Roberts and one sister Mrs. Jane Durgin, live to mourn their loss. Funeral services were held at the home Saturday afternoon, Rev. George Southwick officiating. Interment in cemetery at Milton Mills, N.H. Floral tributes were numerous and beautiful (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), April 7, 1916).

Dora E. Roberts, an institutional matron, aged forty-seven years (b. NH), headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. She was matron of the Home for Aged Women at 108 Revere Street, which had eighty-four “inmates,” i.e., patients or residents, and twenty-seven “servants,” i.e., staffers.

John H. Roberts, a blanket mill wrapper, aged forty-four years (b. NH), headed an Acton, ME, household at the time of the Fourteenth (1920) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Alice C. [(Laskey)] Roberts, aged forty-four years (b. NH), his son, Luther H. Roberts, aged thirteen years (b. ME), his mother, Eliza J. [(Hilton)] Roberts, a widow, aged seventy-eight years (b. ME), and his boarder, Margaret G. Patch, aged fourteen years (b. ME). John H. Roberts owned their farm on the Fox Ridge Road, free-and-clear.

Eliza J. “Jennie” (Hilton) Roberts died in 1920.

Daughter Dora E. Roberts appeared in the Boston, MA, directory of 1923, as a matron at 108 Revere street, with her residence at the same address. She joined the Bates College residential staff circa 1923 and did not appear in the Boston, MA, directory of 1924.

Other Faculty Changes. … Miss Doris P. Goodwin, who came to Bates from Simmons College, has given satisfaction as director of the College commons. Although without previous experience she has been resourceful in meeting what has always been a difficult situation. Miss Dora E. Roberts, for the last five years director of the Rand hall dining room, will succeed Miss Goodwin. Miss Roberts will be relieved of her responsibilities as director of women’s residences and will next year have the management of both dining rooms. She has more than proved her competency to assume this larger responsibility (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), June 16, 1928).

Clifton D. Gray, [Bates] college president, aged fifty-five years (b. MA), headed a Lewiston, ME, household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-nine years), Neva B. [(Ham)] Gray, aged fifty-four years (b. NH), his son, Clifton D. Gray, Jr., aged thirteen years (b. IL), his mother, Alida M. [(Daggett)] Gray, aged eighty-one years (b. MA), his servant, Minnie I. Currie, a private family cook, aged sixty-three years (b. Canada), his lodgers, Blanche M. Hayes, [Bates] college French instructor, aged thirty years (b. France), Dora E. Roberts, [Bates] college dietician, aged fifty-seven years (b. NH), Ransford M. Smith, aged twenty years (b. ME), Milford L. Coombs, aged twenty-four years (b. ME), and Nevel W. Huff, aged twenty-three years (b. MA). Clifton D. Gray rented their house at 256 College Street, for $100 per month. They had a radio set.

John H. Roberts, a general farm farmer, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills Village”) household at the time of the Fifteenth (1930) Federal Census. His household included his wife (of twenty-six years), Alice C. [(Laskey)] Roberts, aged fifty-five years (b. NH), his son, Luther Roberts, an odd jobs laborer, aged twenty-three years (b. ME), his adopted children, Harold Roberts, aged nine years (b. NH), and Margaret Roberts, a woolen mill weaver, aged twenty-four years (b. ME), and his nephew, Ira S. Laskey, an odd jobs laborer, aged forty-two years (b. NH). John H. Roberts owned their farm on the Union Road. They had a radio set. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Henry Amory, an odd jobs laborer, aged seventy years (b. ME), and Othello Runnells, a fibre mill dryer, aged twenty-eight years (b. ME).

Prof. Blanche Townsend Gilbert of the Bates College faculty, who is on a leave of absence and is staying at Safety Harbor, Fla., for the winter, is reported much improved in health. Miss Dora E. Roberts, a former dietician at Bates, is with her (Lewiston Sun-Journal (Lewiston, ME), February 5, 1938).

LITTLE WHITE SCHOOL PUPILS HAD REUNION. There was a happy reunion of four classmates of the North Shapleigh Little White school house at the home of Mrs. Don A. Wright in Sanford over the week-end, the quartette having attended this school more than two score years ago. The group included Miss Dora E. Roberts of Milton and Boston, Miss Mabel E. Boynton of Oneonta, N.Y., and Mrs. Florence M. Emery of Sanford, widow of Edward H. Emery, who was for many years active in the work of the Christian Civic League of Maine. It was through an article in a Portland paper several years ago concerning Miss Roberts, that she was rediscovered by her old classmates. Miss Roberts was for 14 years dietitian at Bates college where she was known as “Ma” Roberts to both students and faculty members. She retired from this position a year ago and was succeeded by Mrs. Willis H. Folsom of Springvale. Miss Boynton was critic and model teaching instructor at the Oneonta Normal school for many years, retiring from teaching five years ago. Mrs. Wright and Mrs. Emery have married and have made their homes in Sanford (Biddeford-Saco Journal (Biddeford, ME), August 15, 1938).

E. Dora Roberts, aged sixty-seven years, headed a Boston, MA, household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. E. Dora Roberts rented her apartment at 52 South Russell Street, for $42 per month. She had resided in Lewiston, ME, in 1935.

John H. Roberts, a teamster, aged sixty-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton (“Milton Mills”) household at the time of the Sixteenth (1940) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Alice C. [(Laskey)] Roberts, aged sixty-three years (b. NH), his children, Luther H. Roberts, aged thirty-three years (b. ME), Margaret G. Roberts, a blanket mill weaver, aged thirty-five years (b. ME), Harold F. Roberts, aged nineteen years (b. NH), and his boarder, Ira Laskey, aged fifty-two years (b. NH). John H. Roberts owned their farm on Main Street, which was valued at $2,500. They had all resided in the “same house” in April 1935.

John H. Roberts, a farmer, aged seventy-five years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventeenth (1950) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Alice C. [(Laskey)] Roberts, aged seventy-five years (b. NH), and his children, Margaret J. Roberts, a woolen mill weaver, aged forty-five years (b. ME), Luther H. Roberts, aged forty-three years (b. ME), and Harold F. Roberts, a farm helper, aged twenty-nine years (b. NH). Their house was the “7th house on the left.”

Daughter Dora E. Roberts donated $200 to the Milton Cemetery Fund, July 21, 1952 (Milton Annual Report, 1952).

Daughter Dora E. Roberts appeared in the Boston, MA, Directory of 1953, as having her house at 52 S. Russell Street.

Son John H. Roberts died in Milton Mills, April 11, 1955, aged eighty years.

John H. Roberts. John H. Roberts, 80, died Monday evening last week at his home after a long illness. He was born in Somersworth, N.H., Mar. 9, 1875, the son of Thomas H. and Eliza Hilton Roberts, and had lived here most of his life. He was a member of the Milton Mills Baptist Church and Pleasant Valley Grange. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Alice Laskey Roberts; two sons, Luther and Harold; a daughter, Miss Margaret Roberts; and a sister Miss Dora Roberts, Boston, Mass. Funeral services were held in the Methodist Church last Thursday with Rev. Buell Maxfield, pastor of the Baptist Church, officiating. Burial was in the Milton Mills Cemetery. Bearers were Clyde Laskey, Crosby Laskey, Ralph Laskey, John Hobbs, and Lester Hobbs. Arrangements were under the direction of the C.L. Peaslee Funeral Home of Union, N.H. (Sanford Tribune (Biddeford, ME), April 21, 1955).

Daughter Dora E. Roberts died in at the Sturtevant Nursing Home in Brookline, MA, December 13, 1956, aged eighty-four years.

Dora Etta Roberts. Miss Dora Etta Roberts, 84, a former resident of this community more than 17 years, died Dec. 13 at the Sturtevant Nursing Home Brookline, Mass., after a long illness. Bom at Milton, N.H., April 22, 1872, she was the daughter of Thomas and Eliza J. Hilton Roberts. In 1896 she was an instructor in Auburn schools. From 1923 to 1928 she was director of residences for women at Bates College and later became director of dining halls. She held this post until 1937 at which time she resigned. Well known in this community Miss Roberts attended local Baptist churches and was treasurer at the Androscoggin Woman’s Literary Union from 1936 to 1937. In 1942 she was a record librarian at the Massachusetts General Hospital (Lewiston Journal (Lewiston, ME), December 21, 1956).

Daughter-in-law Alice C. (Laskey) Roberts died in Milton, August 13, 1961, aged eighty-six years.

DEATHS. MRS. ALICE L. ROBERTS. Milton Mills – Mrs. Alice L. Roberts, 86, died Sunday at her home after a long illness. A native of Dover, she had been a longtime resident of Milton Mills. She leaves two sons, Luther H. Roberts and Harold P. Roberts, a daughter, Miss Margaret O. Roberts, all of Milton Mills. Funeral services were at the Methodist Church Wednesday afternoon. Burial was in the Milton Mills cemetery (Farmington News, August 17, 1961).


References:

Find a Grave. (2014, September 20). Andrew Hilton. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/136150775/andrew-hilton

Find a Grave. (2013, July 29). Dora Etta Roberts. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114610323/dora-etta-roberts

Find a Grave. (2013, August 11). John H. Roberts. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/115296844/john-h-roberts

Find a Grave. (2013. July 29). Nicholas H. Roberts. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114610371/nicholas-h-roberts

Find a Grave. (2013. July 29). Thomas H. Roberts. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/114610470/thomas-h-roberts

NH General Court. (1866). Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=szgtAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA5

Wikipedia. (2023, May 11). Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution

Wikipedia. (2023, May 6). Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thirteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution

Wikipedia. (2023, May 23). World’s Columbian Exposition. Retrieved from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World%27s_Columbian_Exposition

Milton Town Clerks, 1802-1957

By Muriel Bristol | July 8, 2023

John Scales compiled a list of Milton Town Clerks from 1802 through 1884 for his History of Strafford County and Representative Citizens.

The following have been town clerks during the first eight [eighty] years: 1802-06, Gilman Jewett; 1807-10, John Fish; 1811-22, Levi Jones; 1823-39, Stephen M. Mathes; 1840, James M. Twombly; 1841-51, Robert Mathes; 1852-53, Daniel E. Palmer; 1854-55, Ezra W. [H.] Twombly; 1856-68, Joseph Mathes; 1869, George W. Tasker; 1870-74, Joseph Mathes; 1874-84 [-87], Charles H. Looney;

To which may be appended another list of Milton Town Clerks from 1884 through 1957 compiled from Milton Town Reports.

1888-95, Charles D. Jones; 1896-36, Harry L. Avery; 1937-42; Louise P. Avery; 1943-57, Ruth L. Plummer.

References:

Scales, John. (1914). History of Strafford County and Representative Citizens. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=nGsjAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA512

Milton Shoe Manufacturer Daniel P. Warren (1815-1881)

By Muriel Bristol | July 2, 2023

Daniel P. Warren was born in Rochester, NH, March 26, 1815, son of William and Susannah (Roberts) Warren.

Daniel P. Warren received an initial five-year appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, December 14, 1840. Enoch Banfield received one also the same day.

Justices of the Peace. MiltonLevi Jones, Stephen Drew, Daniel Hayes, Hanson Hayes, John Nutter, Theodore C. Lyman, John L. Swinerton, Joseph Cook, John J. Plumer, Daniel Hayes, jr., Enoch Banfield, Daniel P. Warren, Joseph Cook, James Berry, Wm. B. Lyman (NH Register and Farmer’s Almanac, 1844).

Daniel P. Warren received a five-year renewal appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, December 23, 1845. Enoch Banfield received one also the same day.

Justices of the Peace. MILTONLevi Jones, Stephen Drew, Hanson Hayes, John Nutter, Theodore C. Lyman, John L. Swinerton, Joseph Cook, John J. Plumer, Daniel Hayes, Jr., Enoch Banfield, Daniel P. Warren, James Berry, William B. Lyman, Levi Hayes, Jr., James Furnald (NH Register and Farmer’s Almanac, 1846).

Daniel P. Warren married in Milton, March 3, 1847, Irena B. Twombly. She was born in Milton, August 31, 1826. daughter of James M. and Eunice (Burrows) Twombly.

(The known children of Daniel P. and Irena B. (Twombly) Warren were: Edgar B. Warren (1851-1907), and Eunice E. Warren (1857-)).

Daniel P. Warren appeared in a New England business directory of 1849, as proprietor of a Milton dry goods, grocery and variety store.

Daniel P. Warren, a shoe manufacturer, aged thirty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Seventh (1850) Federal Census. His household included Irene B. [(Twombly)] Warren, aged twenty-four years (b. NH). Daniel P. Warren had real estate valued at $2,500. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of Leonard Ricker, a shoemaker, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), and George Carlisle, a machinist, aged fifty-four years (b. ME).

Daniel P. Warren received a five-year renewal appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, November 1, 1850.

Son Edgar B. Warren was born in Milton, September 16, 1851.

The NH Annual Register & US Calendar of 1853 identified Milton’s Justices of the Peace as being Stephen Drew, John L. Swinerton, Joseph Cook, John J. Plumer, Daniel Hayes, Jr., Daniel P. Warren, James Berry, Ichabod H. Wentworth, Joseph Pearl, Robert Mathes, Elias S. Cook, David Wallingford, John E. Goodwin, Charles C. Hayes, Jas. Jewett, Thos. Y. Wentworth, Asa Fox, James Connor, and Eli Wentworth (Lyon, 1853).

Daniel P. Warren received a five-year renewal appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, November 2, 1855.

Daughter Eunice E. Warren was born in Milton, March 30, 1857.

Father William Warren died in Alton, NH, July 24, 1857.

Mother-in-law Eunice (Burrows) Twombly died of consumption in Milton, March 2, 1859, aged fifty-nine years, nine months, and twenty-four days.

Daniel P. Warren was mentioned as an abutter when Thomas M. Wentworth foreclosed on the mortgage of a neighboring property in January 1860.

Notice of Foreclosure. The undersigned hereby gives public notice that Elisabeth J. Wentworth, of Lebanon, in the county of York and State of Maine, married woman, by her deed of Mortgage dated Feb. 14th, 1839, recorded Feb. 14th, 1839, in Book 260, pages 341-2 of York County Records, conveyed to Caroline E. Wentworth, of the same Lebanon, married woman, a certain tract or parcel of land situate in said Lebanon, and bounded and described as follows, to wit: – by the road leading from West Lebanon to Three Ponds Village, in Milton. North-Westerly by land of Daniel P. Warren, South-Westerly by land of John Lucas and land of Orrin Merrow, and South-Easterly by land formerly owned by the Congregational Parish in Lebanon. The aforesaid Caroline E. Wentworth sold and assigned and made over the aforesaid mortgage on the 5th of September, A.D. 1839, to one Charles H. Ricker, duly recorded, as will appear by the York County Records, Book 262, pages 391-3, and the aforesaid Charles H. Ricker sold, assigned and made over the aforesaid mortgage to Thomas M. Wentworth, of Lebanon aforesaid, the undersigned, who is now the holder and owner thereof, on the 19th of September, A.D. 1839, as will appear by York County Records, Book 262, pages 391-3. The condition in said deed been broken, and by reason whereof the undersigned claims to foreclose the right of redemption of said mortgaged tract of land. THOMAS M. WENTWORTH. Dated at Lebanon the twenty-sixth day of January, A.D. 1860 (Biddeford Union & Journal (Biddeford, ME), February 10, 1860).

D.P. Warren, a shoe manufacturer, aged forty-four years (b. NH), headed a Milton household at the time of the Eighth (1860) Federal Census. His household included Irene B. [(Twombly)] Warren, aged thirty-two years (b. NH), Edgar B. Warren, aged eight years (b. NH), and Eunice E. Warren, aged three years (b. NH). D.P. Warren had real estate valued at $4,000 and personal estate valued at $7,000. Their household appeared in the enumeration between those of E.R. Lord, aged thirty-nine years (b. NH), and James W. Nutter, a shoemaker, aged thirty-one years (b. NH).

Daniel P. Warren received a five-year renewal appointment as a Milton justice-of-the-peace, November 24, 1860. In the renewal column there was instead a notation “Boston,” i.e., he had removed to Boston, MA, prior to his renewal date of November 1865.

Daniel P. Warren, L.L. Leighton, and C.E. Wiggin signed the last will of Paul Jewett of Rochester, NH, as witnesses, April 9, 1861 (Strafford County Probate, 70:426).

George Barker had Daniel P. Warren arrested for a debt, on December 26, 1864, while Warren and his family were enroute to Marlborough, MA. (Warren would not be renewed as a Milton justice-of-the-peace due to his removal to Massachusetts).

ASSUMPSIT. On the 26th of Dec., 1864, the defendant was arrested on the writ, which had upon it the plaintiff’s affidavit of the defendant’s indebtedness to him in more than $13.33, and of his belief that the defendant was about to leave the State to avoid the payment of his debts. The defendant gave bail, and at the return term of the court furnished his affidavit and answered under oath all interrogatories proposed by the plaintiff, and moved that he and his bail be discharged. It appeared that the defendant, the last of October or first of November, 1864, made arrangements to change his residence from Milton in this county to Marlborough in Massachusetts; that while on his way there with his family he was arrested on the writ in this case; that though he intended to leave this State, it was not for the purpose of avoiding the payment of his debts, but solely for the purpose of taking up his residence in Marlborough and endeavoring to get into business there in order to support himself and his family; that after he had given bail he went to Marlborough with his family, and has ever since been and still is a resident of Marlborough intending to remain there permanently. The court ruled that the defendant’s motion should be granted. The plaintiff excepted, and this case was reserved (NH Supreme Court, 1867).

Daniel P. Warren, a farmer, aged forty-five years (b. Rochester, NH), headed a Marlborough, MA, household at the time of the Second (1865) MA State Census. His household included Irena B. [(Twombly)] Warren, a housekeeper, aged thirty-nine years (b. Milton, NH), Edgar B. Warren, aged thirteen years (b. Milton, NH), and Eunie E. Warren, aged eight years (b. Milton, NH).

Proceedings in Bankruptcy. IN BANKRUPTCY. The undersigned hereby gives notice of his appointment as Assignee of the estate of DANIEL P. WARREN of Hudson, Mass., adjudged a Bankrupt on his own petition. ALBERT COLBY. ap22 W3t (Boston Evening Transcript, April 29, 1868).

Daniel P. Warren of Massachusetts appeared in the National Bankruptcy Register in 1869 (Deller, 1869).

Betsy M. [(Roberts)] Meserve, keeping house, aged fifty-eight years (b. NH), headed a Charlestown, MA, household at the time of the Ninth (1870) Federal Census. Her household included Daniel P. Warren, a grocer, aged fifty-three years (b. NH), Irene [(Twombly)] Warren, aged forty-two years (b. NH), Edgar B. Warren, attending school, aged eighteen years (b. NH), and Eunie Warren, attending school, aged thirteen years (b. NH). Betsy M. Meserve had real estate valued at $3,500. (Betsy M. Meserve was the widow of Milton native Charles Y. Meserve (1815-1869)).

Daniel P. Warren appeared in the very extensive list of Boston justices-of-the-peace in 1873.

Son Edgar B. Warren married in Boston, MA, December 2, 1878, Flotella M. Tibbetts, he of Somerville, MA, and she of Boston, MA. He was a salesman, aged twenty-six years, and she was aged twenty-three years. Rev. Alfred A. Wright performed the ceremony. She was born in Charlestown, MA, circa 1853, daughter of Sewall D. and Melissa [(Hammond)] Tibbetts.

Daughter-in-law Flotella M. (Tibbetts) Warren died of childbirth peritonitis at 15 Eden Street in Boston, MA, November 15, 1879, aged twenty-four years, two months, and seventeen days.

Daniel P. Warren, a book agent, aged sixty years (b. NH), headed a Somerville, MA, household at the time of the Tenth (1880) Federal Census. His household included his wife, Irena B. [(Twombly)] Warren, keeping house, aged fifty-two years (b. NH), his children, Edgar B. Warren, shoe business, aged twenty-seven years (b. NH), and Eunie E. Warren, a music teacher, aged twenty-two years (b. NH), and his boarder, Dyer Smith, at home, aged seventy-nine years (b. MA). They resided at 2 Murray Street.

Daniel P. Warren died of heart disease in Winthrop, MA, June 7, 1881, aged sixty-seven years, two months, and twelve days. He was a carpenter.

Father-in-law James M. Twombly died in Lebanon, ME, October 25, 1885.

Irena B. Warren appeared in the Somerville, MA, directory of 1889, as widow of Daniel P. Warren, with her house at 2 Charles street. Edgar B. Warren appeared twice. In both entries he dealt in boots and shoes at 111 Summer street, Boston, MA, boarding in one entry at 42 Vinal street and boarding in the other entry at 2 Charles street. Miss Eunie E. Warren appeared as a music teacher, boarding at 2 Charles street.

Irena B. Warren appeared in the Somerville, MA, directory of 1892, as the widow of Daniel P. Warren, with her house at 2 Charles street. Edgar B. Warren appeared as a traveling salesman (134 Summer street, Boston), boarding at 2 Charles street. Eunice E. Warren appeared as a music teacher, boarding at 2 Charles street.

Irena B. (Twombly) Warren died of consumption of the bowels and pulmonary tuberculosis at 259 Broadway Street in Somerville, MA, May 30, 1894, aged sixty-seven years, nine months. She was at home.

Daughter Eunice E. “Eunie” Warren has not been found in the record after 1894. She does not seem to have been reported missing, but her brother would mention her status in 1903 as “whereabouts unknown.”

Edgar B. Warren appeared in the Boston, MA, directory of 1895, as treasurer at 134 Summer street, with his house at Somerville, MA. He appeared in the Boston, MA, directory of 1898, as employed at 134 Summer street, with his house at Newton Centre, MA.

Son Edgar B. Warren of Boston, MA, made his last will, April 17, 1903. He devised $500 to Alfred S. Hill of Somerville, MA, “in memory of our long friendship and his willingness to act as my executor without compensation.” He devised a lot of land in Quincy, MA, to his cousin, Florence M. Twombly of Jamaica Plain, MA. He devised his interest in the estate of his late grandfather, James M. Twombly of Lebanon, ME, to his cousin, Edith G. Twombly of Jamaica Plain, MA. He devised to his sister-in-law, Grace A. [(Tibbetts)] Shapleigh, formerly of Somerville, MA, but now of Southern Pines, NC, all his books, personal papers, jewelry, clothing, furniture, and other household goods not hereinafter specified in gifts to others. He devised to his housekeeper, F. Etta Eagleson, his estate in Florida, MA, with its stock, tools, furniture, and other household goods, excepting those items given already to Grace A. Shapleigh.

Edgar B. Warren devised all his remaining property, real and personal, money, all stocks, mortgages, notes, or other evidences of indebtedness to me to Alfred S. Hill. He was to control, administer, invest and reinvest by him in his discretion, in trust, in order to pay an allowance to his sister, Eunice E. Warren, whose present whereabouts are unknown to me, during her natural life. Upon her death, Hill should pay over $500 to Florence M. Twombly, $500 to Grace A. Shapleigh, and the remainder to the Boston Young Men’s Christian Union. Should either Florene M. Twombly or Grace A. Shapleigh predecease his sister, their share should go to the said Boston Young Men’s Christian Union. George L. Mayberry, Frank L. Washburn, and Edgar Weeks signed as witnesses.

Son Edgar B. Warren of Boston, MA, died of stomach dilation in Florida, MA, August 17, 1907, aged fifty-five years, eleven months, and seventeen days. Charles H. Bradley, M.D., of Readsboro, VT, signed the death certificate. [His housekeeper and legatee] F. Etta Eagleson provided the personal details.

OBITUARY. EDGAR B. WARREN. Edgar B. Warren of Boston, 55, died Saturday night at his summer home in Florida. His death was caused by a complication of diseases with which he had suffered for some time. He was a retired merchant. He owned the place where he died, having bought it for a summer home. It is about 2 miles from Hoosac Tunnel station. The body was shipped on the 11.44 train yesterday from Hoosac Tunnel to Boston, where the funeral will be held and the body cremated (Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, MA), August 20, 1907).

The last will of Edgar B. Warren of 553 Washington Street, Boston, MA, was proved in Suffolk County Probate court, September 12, 1907. Copies appeared in probate court records of Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania.


References:

Claremont Manufacturing Co. (1846). New Hampshire Register and Farmer’s Almanac. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=5ucWAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA102

Deller, George T. (1869). National Bankruptcy Register: Containing Reports of the Leading Cases and Principal Rulings in Bankruptcy of the District Judges of the United States. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=ScZFAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA78

Farmer, John, and Lyon, G. Parker. (1844). New Hampshire Register and Farmer’s Almanac. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=BJIBAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA106

Find a Grave. (2022, April 5). James Meserve Twombly. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/238539223/james-meserve-twombly

Find a Grave. (2022, April 6). Daniel P. Warren. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/238563886/daniel-p-warren

Find a Grave. (2013, May 19). Edgar B. Warren. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/110837582/edgar-b-warren

Find a Grave. (2022, April 6). Irene Twombly Warren. Retrieved from www.findagrave.com/memorial/238563840/irene-warren

NH Supreme Court. (1867). Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Superior Court of Judicature for the State of New-Hampshire. Retrieved from books.google.com/books?id=CJc0AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA124